Slashdot Mirror


User: awright69

awright69's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
29
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 29

  1. Employee owned on Why Bad Jobs (or No Jobs) Happen To Good Workers · · Score: 2

    I work for a large (150,000+), employee-owned company - that's larger than Macy's and McDonalds. We consistently score in the Fortune Top 100 Companies to Work For in the general employee population, and Computerworld Best Places To Work in IT. Our customer satisfaction scores are always in the top 3 out of hundreds of players in our marketspace. Although we're far from perfect, one of the keys to our success (and, therefore, the propagation of our culture) is that from day one, the fact - and responsibility - of employee ownership is instilled in every single employee. Once inside, people move from department to department with a fair degree of fluidity, and nobody is scared to test their skills in a position because they have a vested interest as a stockholder. If more companies were majority-owned by the shop floor rather than the top floor, I think you'd see more of those companies succeed, with happier customers to boot.

  2. Re:Makes one wonder... on Licensing an Abandonware Game? · · Score: 1

    No... no, they'd pretty do that immediately.

    Did you accidentally an adverb?

  3. Re:Safety Critical on Toyota Pedal Issue Highlights Move To Electronics · · Score: 1

    Actually, it can be pretty useful for slowing down without your brake lights coming on, such as when a cop is trailing you.

    I admit I've used them for just this purpose.

  4. Re:Spoiler: Why it's dying; emits one last factoid on End of the Road For NASA's Mars Rover? · · Score: 1

    I wonder what the creationist community would be shitting in that case :)

    Bibles.

  5. Re:The comment may also be complex.. on If the Comments Are Ugly, the Code Is Ugly · · Score: 1

    I second that. I am responsible for supporting a steaming pile of code from a major electronics company well-known for their reasonably good hardware. I can't tell you how many times I was told, "But all the modules passed their unit tests!" - to which I reply, "All fine and dandy, but did any of your tests check the INTEROPERABILITY of the modules, or the application's behaviour when linked and assembled?" I've caught them in this little oopsie too many times; I'd have had the SQA manager fired long ago were I a direct employee of said organisation.

  6. Re:Floating? on Find DARPA's Balloons, Win $40K · · Score: 1

    Flash the message "Somethings out there!" We all know what happens after that, too.

  7. Re:What's next? on Singer In Grocery Store Ordered To Pay Royalties · · Score: 1

    I was going to say "bollocks to that", but I'd probably have to pay royalties to the Sex Pistols.

    Never mind the Sex Pistols - Here's the BOLLOCKS!

  8. Re:seriously? on Japan Plans $21B Space Power Plant · · Score: 1

    I'd have modded you Insightful if you weren't swung over so far in the Funny direction already!

  9. Re:1.4 billion? What is that describing? on High-Tech Blimps Earning Their Wings · · Score: 1

    Hmm, lots of hang time, continuous 24/7 monitoring, sounds more likely to be used over zones of occupation and perhaps even domestically, rather than any actual battlefields. For that investment dollar it certainly sounds like they will be loading them up with much more than just radar systems and will be looking to incorporate every kind of monitoring equipment available as well as the latest in telecommunications interception and tracking systems.

    Israel uses aerostats similar to these to hold aloft monitoring and jamming equipment for long periods, and I assure you that if you have a fleet of jets and ground based anti-aircraft batteries, you can guard them well enough

  10. The solution? PURE ELECTRIC. on Toyota Builds a Patent Thicket For Hybrid Cars · · Score: 1

    Tesla is already doing it. Aptera and others soon (hopefully!) will go regional or national with practical, electric-only cars. Battery tech is only going to get better (electron bottles, anyone?) Bypass the "hybrid" patent thicket; do away with dirty, parts-heavy ICEs entirely and just get the maximum well-to-wheel efficiency possible, short of having a Mr. Fusion retrofit.

  11. Sounds like "Becalmed in Hell" on Device Reads Messages From Surface of the Brain · · Score: 1

    .... by Larry Niven. His first SF short story, I believe. Space miner has catastrophic accident, his CNS is salvaged and connected to a ship which has a breakdown while visiting Venus. A good read; I remember it as one of my early favorites to entice people to get interested in SF.

  12. Re:Maybe on How To Have an Online Social Life When You're Dead · · Score: 1

    I don't go to anyone's funerals. Why should I? they're NOT going to show up at MINE!

  13. Re:Another good reason. on The Underappreciated Risks of Severe Space Weather · · Score: 1

    I recall someone in my high-school art class - a real Dylan Klebold type - bringing this handbook to class back in 1985. Using hastily-scribbled recipes we copied from its pages that following summer, we had a grand time making craters in empty cow pastures, launching rockets powered by the "red-or-white powder" propellant. Of course if you tried doing most of the stuff in there now, you'd get put away under "Homeland Security / that there group of kids are terrarists" bullcrap, but we had no such problems back then. Just good clean fun.

  14. Re:Did I miss the news? on So Who's Running Apple Now? · · Score: 1
    Flamebait? Hell, I'd mod you +5 Serious if there were such an option!

    Guess I'll have to settle for Insightful.

  15. Re:I need a new computer, this one is full... on Woman Claims Ubuntu Kept Her From Online Classes · · Score: 1

    Not sure if that's intentional commentary on the show, or an ironic spelling mistake.

    It's BOTH, you insensitive clod!

  16. Re:Sun angle on Switching To Solar Power — Six Months Later · · Score: 1

    (or Boeing surplus!)

    Ummmm... you want WORKING screw-jacks, don't you?

  17. Re:flicker crashes on New York City Street Lights To Go LED · · Score: 1

    This "flicker" could be solved by putting one half of the LEDs in a given light array on "positive" half of the AC waveform and the other half on the "negative" half of the AC waveform, push-pull fashion. Of course modern PWM LED power supplies should provide efficient rectification and current limiting so as to negate the need to do this.

  18. Re:When passing the event horizon, it's expected. on Astronomers Dissect a Supermassive Black Hole · · Score: 1

    As for the souls, who knows?

    Call it an exercise in metaphysics.

  19. Re:Could this be.. on William Gibson's AGRIPPA Recovered and Revealed · · Score: 1
    Let me introduce you to the 733T nibble-mode VCR pair I hacked together in the 80s..... Helical scan-signal direct copying! State of the art - copied MV right along with control and audio track information..... 100% source-compatible!

    Wait, it's here in my garage SOMEwhere!

    Ahhh, the heady days of the 80s...

  20. All I can say is..... on Opus the Penguin Retired · · Score: 1

    "Pffft." "Ack!"

  21. Re:Please no! on Keeping Older Drivers Behind the Wheel · · Score: 1

    RobertM: My grandmother did the exact same thing - moved downtown where the bus service could take her anywhere she needed to go... .She lived another 15+ years like that before she died. I also plan to follow in her wise footsteps some day.

  22. Re:Still not a good idea on IBM Leapfrogs Intel With 22nm Chips · · Score: 1

    or some chinese subcontractor going, "hmm, I wonder what'd they buy that big an electron gun for... too big for electron microscopy... could it be they're using electrons at this many electron-volts instead of light?"

    Can't get the thought out of my head, sorry: Chinese subcontractors wondering about ERECTRON GUNS.....

  23. Re:First Post on Inside Intel's Core i7 Processor, Nehalem · · Score: 1

    From TFL you embedded: (wikipedia.org) "Intel has historically named IC development projects after geographical names (since they can never be trademarked by someone else) of towns, rivers or mountains near the location of the Intel facility responsible for the IC. Many of these are in the American West, particularly in the state of Oregon (where most of Intel's CPU projects are designed; see well-known project codenames). As Intel's development activities have expanded, this nomenclature has expanded to Israel and India. Some older codenames refer to celestial bodies."

  24. Re:whether there's He3 there or not on What Shall We Do With the Moon Once We Get There? · · Score: 1

    "Once upon a time, the American West was looked at as an unprofitable, useless wasteland." Ummm, looking at job and housing markets there (especially in Si Valley and the tech corridor) right now, I'd say they weren't too wrong....

  25. Re:Hardly... on US Plans "Disposable" Nuclear Batteries · · Score: 1

    quoth thou....
    "it's just that coal seems "natural", it comes out of the ground and hippies can hold it in their hands."

    I assume you meant "natural" in the sense that hippies can hold it in their hands without dying of radiation poisoning.