Isaac Asimov, "The Feeling of Power", 1958. People have completely forgotten how to do math, and rediscovering how to do it is a military research project.
Yes, cursive is faster, but only really legible if you do it neatly. Clear handwriting takes practice, and time that nowadays is spent on other things. I learned to print much faster for engineering and architectural-style drawing, which was a class we had to take when I rode my dinosaur to engineering school.
That's because what the utility company calls "trim", most people call "cut", if not "butcher". The root of the problem goes further back: The telephone/power poles are all placed just off the edge of the road, between the curb and the sidewalk, and the town plants trees IN THE SAME STRIP - directly under the wires. Trees belong further away from the wires, but people have this idea of a "nice lawn" (which nobody ever uses, at least not in the front of the house). I see this being done in brand new construction, too.
I think the suggestion is that it requires *other* skills, namely hacking skills. However, since hacks would be wind up being distributed (after all, doesn't information want to be free, even if one person worked on it and everyone else is just freeloading?), the skill would be "researching hacks" rather than 'creating hacks".
Umm . . . yes, I realize that the operands of the "less than" operator are ambiguous. One could understand it in the same sense as "half of the population is above average". What I meant to say, though, was that 0.1% of the population makes more money than ALL OF THE OTHER 99.9% combined.
"destroying it could eliminate evidence that the government wide surveillance system does not perform as intended", so we'll prove that it wasn't necessary by revealing everyone who looked at it and publicly cross-checking them against troublemaker lists? What could go wrong?
... rather than having their own web page, and then the only way you can find out about scheduled events etc. is if you log into Facebook. It's even more of a "walled garden" than Compuserve or AOL used to be.
Agreement. I have no objection to a vegetarian alternative to egg-based mayonnaise; OTOH I can see Hellman's point that calling it "just mayo" isn't right. When I first saw the name "Just Mayo" I assumed it was non-preservative, or no-added-whatever, or non-GMO, or some other health-food variant of "pure"; I did NOT infer that it was other-than-dictionary-definition-of mayonnaise.
In contrast, I don't have the same issue with "soy milk" or "almond milk" not being some mammal's milk, like the dairy industry is complaining about, because the non-milk-base ingredient is right there in the name.
I've worked with white American-born female computer programmers and engineers, and they fit the normal bell curve of competence - including one of the best-organized and most methodical people I've ever worked with, another solid engineer who became a terrific group leader, and a third "why did someone hire this person???" The best female engineer I interviewed was American-born to Indian parents; does that count as "native"?
http://www.newyorker.com/magaz...
Under civil forfeiture, Americans who haven't been charged with wrongdoing can be stripped of their cash, cars, and even homes.
http://gothamist.com/2014/01/1... How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers Any arrest in New York City can trigger a civil forfeiture case if money or property is found on or near a defendant, regardless of the reasons surrounding the arrest or its final disposition.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10...
“Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?” The federal government does.
Using a law designed to catch drug traffickers, racketeers and terrorists by tracking their cash, the government has gone after run-of-the-mill business owners and wage earners without so much as an allegation that they have committed serious crimes.
As an engineer-type mindset, if there's an easy way to do something more efficiently and regulations are standing in the way, I blame the regulations, not the new solution for sufficiently stupid values of regulation (obviously safety regs are a different matter).
Ensuring that a taxi driver is a safe person, and that the taxi is a safe vehicle in good repair, sounds like "safety regs" to me. When Uber and Lyft claim that they can ignore all of those "archaic" regulations, I compare it to chemical companies complaining about environmental regulations when they used to dump waste products in the stream out back instead.
New York City has very specific differences between "taxi" and "car service", both of which are licensed and regulated. Maybe some of those differences really are archaic, and maybe one should be able to "call" a taxi to your door (whether by phone or app makes no difference) rather than have to go to a main street and hail one. The communication part of the business model is a great concept. Adding lots of unlicensed unregulated unchecked drivers may not be.
"The press is not beyond question"; on the other hand, Someone talking openly about blackmailing his opposition, or exposing something about them in an ad-hominem attack having nothing to do with the facts under debate, is talking about dirty tricks (at best) shading towards evil (at worst). To me this suggests that the opposition has valid grounds for suggesting that the Someone is acting unethically. The company as a whole (or at least the concept of the company) is ethically neutral, but the person running it may not be.
I went to RPI. Yes, we had classes with county-high-school valedictorians who were totally shocked to be the least-prepared in the room. Since I had been in an NYC specialized schools (nowadays you'd call it a "magnet" school) it was just another day at the office. Well, maybe a little more painful.
Many moons ago, my senior year at engineering school, the placement office sent me a note (on actual paper!) that a big bank wanted to interview me. I couldn't imagine why, since I hadn't expressed any interest in business IT. A few days later, I met with a close-to-retirement VP who frankly admitted that he knew nothing about technology; his function was to assess people. The bank wanted people for their new IT headquarters in New York City, and I was on their list because I already lived there (or my parents did); they were trying to avoid hiring people who were looking for an excuse to move to NYC. We had a pleasant conversation, in which I freely admitted I didn't expect much technical challenge, and the older gentleman convinced me to put my resume in the queue anyway.
A few weeks later I went to the bank headquarters in NYC for "a technical interview", and it was every disaster on this page. The interview time was a myth, as was the person I was expecting to see; instead an HR person who had been a fresh-out last year, and who had no idea what he was doing in his own area let alone IT, gave up on questions and gave me a "skills test" to fill out (presumably my soon-to-be Computer Science degree from a top engineering school didn't count).
So I went back to school, took out my trusty typewriter and the VP's business card, and wrote him a letter describing my experience (staying polite!), and making clear that while meeting with him had been pleasant, the mismanagement after things left his hands convinced me that there was absolutely no way that I would ever want to work for the bank. I heard nothing for a few weeks, then a brief note of apology.
A few weeks later, my parents called me to tell me to go find a copy of The New York Times for that day. In the business section was an 1/8th page ad for that same bank with two profiles, one with a speech bubble including a dozen or more tech buzzwords, the other with a thought bubble empty but for a question mark. The sub-heading of the ad was: "Is your interviewer qualified to interview you?" I guess that old VP still had some pull . . .
Don't tar everyone with the brush of extremism. I work/worked with people who are about as Muslim as Jon Stewart is Jewish - they know their heritage and some key words, they celebrate some holidays (especially if older generations are around), and mostly it doesn't matter. On the other hand, the good Christian folks who want "faith-based" laws scare me just as much as the guy interviewed on 60 Minutes last week, insisting that it was his democratic right to tell a woman to cover herself with a hijab AND expect her to comply,
People don't deliberately "put their company somewhere where the cost of living is high and there's a shortage of talent"; they start a company where they currently live (maybe even in their current home!), and if they're starting a tech company because they're tech people and previously worked in tech, they probably live in a tech area. And they're going to start by hiring other tech people who already live in the tech area. That's how these things grow (some would say fester) in one neighborhood.
Anything networked has this problem (as multiple posters have pointed out) (cue Battlestar Galactica quotes about the dangers of networking). The only way to get "convenience" - which I conflate with "functionality" for this discussion - while retaining privacy is to use standalone devices. My GPS doesn't tell anyone where I go, because it's never connected to anything else (and because of that design, I'm betting it doesn't even bother trying to store anything for later retrieval). Of course, that means that a device needs all of its information locally, and updating has to be strictly controlled.
Google is offering a service. You're not paying them. As often said, if you're not the seller or the purchaser in a transaction, then you are the thing being sold. Just like broadcast radio & TV, the "entertainment"/"information" is the lure to bring you to view advertising, and in the networked era to encourage you to allow yourself to be followed.
Isaac Asimov, "The Feeling of Power", 1958. People have completely forgotten how to do math, and rediscovering how to do it is a military research project.
How many kids can't multiply 1-digit numbers in their head? Or make change???
Sorry, but I'd bet most Americans would say "script".
Yes, cursive is faster, but only really legible if you do it neatly. Clear handwriting takes practice, and time that nowadays is spent on other things. I learned to print much faster for engineering and architectural-style drawing, which was a class we had to take when I rode my dinosaur to engineering school.
That's because what the utility company calls "trim", most people call "cut", if not "butcher". The root of the problem goes further back: The telephone/power poles are all placed just off the edge of the road, between the curb and the sidewalk, and the town plants trees IN THE SAME STRIP - directly under the wires. Trees belong further away from the wires, but people have this idea of a "nice lawn" (which nobody ever uses, at least not in the front of the house). I see this being done in brand new construction, too.
I think the suggestion is that it requires *other* skills, namely hacking skills. However, since hacks would be wind up being distributed (after all, doesn't information want to be free, even if one person worked on it and everyone else is just freeloading?), the skill would be "researching hacks" rather than 'creating hacks".
Umm . . . yes, I realize that the operands of the "less than" operator are ambiguous. One could understand it in the same sense as "half of the population is above average". What I meant to say, though, was that 0.1% of the population makes more money than ALL OF THE OTHER 99.9% combined.
I explained why. They're called "something milk", not just "milk". Nobody mistakes "peanut butter" for "butter", either.
"destroying it could eliminate evidence that the government wide surveillance system does not perform as intended", so we'll prove that it wasn't necessary by revealing everyone who looked at it and publicly cross-checking them against troublemaker lists? What could go wrong?
... rather than having their own web page, and then the only way you can find out about scheduled events etc. is if you log into Facebook. It's even more of a "walled garden" than Compuserve or AOL used to be.
And by the way, get off his lawn.
Agreement. I have no objection to a vegetarian alternative to egg-based mayonnaise; OTOH I can see Hellman's point that calling it "just mayo" isn't right. When I first saw the name "Just Mayo" I assumed it was non-preservative, or no-added-whatever, or non-GMO, or some other health-food variant of "pure"; I did NOT infer that it was other-than-dictionary-definition-of mayonnaise.
In contrast, I don't have the same issue with "soy milk" or "almond milk" not being some mammal's milk, like the dairy industry is complaining about, because the non-milk-base ingredient is right there in the name.
I've worked with white American-born female computer programmers and engineers, and they fit the normal bell curve of competence - including one of the best-organized and most methodical people I've ever worked with, another solid engineer who became a terrific group leader, and a third "why did someone hire this person???" The best female engineer I interviewed was American-born to Indian parents; does that count as "native"?
Half the population makes less money then the other half ...
If only. It's more like "99.9% of the population makes less money than the other 0.1%."
An introduction, for the lazy:
http://www.newyorker.com/magaz...
Under civil forfeiture, Americans who haven't been charged with wrongdoing can be stripped of their cash, cars, and even homes.
http://gothamist.com/2014/01/1...
How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers
Any arrest in New York City can trigger a civil forfeiture case if money or property is found on or near a defendant, regardless of the reasons surrounding the arrest or its final disposition.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10...
“Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?”
The federal government does.
Using a law designed to catch drug traffickers, racketeers and terrorists by tracking their cash, the government has gone after run-of-the-mill business owners and wage earners without so much as an allegation that they have committed serious crimes.
As an engineer-type mindset, if there's an easy way to do something more efficiently and regulations are standing in the way, I blame the regulations, not the new solution for sufficiently stupid values of regulation (obviously safety regs are a different matter).
Ensuring that a taxi driver is a safe person, and that the taxi is a safe vehicle in good repair, sounds like "safety regs" to me. When Uber and Lyft claim that they can ignore all of those "archaic" regulations, I compare it to chemical companies complaining about environmental regulations when they used to dump waste products in the stream out back instead.
New York City has very specific differences between "taxi" and "car service", both of which are licensed and regulated. Maybe some of those differences really are archaic, and maybe one should be able to "call" a taxi to your door (whether by phone or app makes no difference) rather than have to go to a main street and hail one. The communication part of the business model is a great concept. Adding lots of unlicensed unregulated unchecked drivers may not be.
"The press is not beyond question"; on the other hand, Someone talking openly about blackmailing his opposition, or exposing something about them in an ad-hominem attack having nothing to do with the facts under debate, is talking about dirty tricks (at best) shading towards evil (at worst). To me this suggests that the opposition has valid grounds for suggesting that the Someone is acting unethically. The company as a whole (or at least the concept of the company) is ethically neutral, but the person running it may not be.
Obviously people have already forgotten MCI (Microwave Communications inc.)
I went to RPI. Yes, we had classes with county-high-school valedictorians who were totally shocked to be the least-prepared in the room. Since I had been in an NYC specialized schools (nowadays you'd call it a "magnet" school) it was just another day at the office. Well, maybe a little more painful.
Many moons ago, my senior year at engineering school, the placement office sent me a note (on actual paper!) that a big bank wanted to interview me. I couldn't imagine why, since I hadn't expressed any interest in business IT. A few days later, I met with a close-to-retirement VP who frankly admitted that he knew nothing about technology; his function was to assess people. The bank wanted people for their new IT headquarters in New York City, and I was on their list because I already lived there (or my parents did); they were trying to avoid hiring people who were looking for an excuse to move to NYC. We had a pleasant conversation, in which I freely admitted I didn't expect much technical challenge, and the older gentleman convinced me to put my resume in the queue anyway.
A few weeks later I went to the bank headquarters in NYC for "a technical interview", and it was every disaster on this page. The interview time was a myth, as was the person I was expecting to see; instead an HR person who had been a fresh-out last year, and who had no idea what he was doing in his own area let alone IT, gave up on questions and gave me a "skills test" to fill out (presumably my soon-to-be Computer Science degree from a top engineering school didn't count).
So I went back to school, took out my trusty typewriter and the VP's business card, and wrote him a letter describing my experience (staying polite!), and making clear that while meeting with him had been pleasant, the mismanagement after things left his hands convinced me that there was absolutely no way that I would ever want to work for the bank. I heard nothing for a few weeks, then a brief note of apology.
A few weeks later, my parents called me to tell me to go find a copy of The New York Times for that day. In the business section was an 1/8th page ad for that same bank with two profiles, one with a speech bubble including a dozen or more tech buzzwords, the other with a thought bubble empty but for a question mark. The sub-heading of the ad was: "Is your interviewer qualified to interview you?" I guess that old VP still had some pull . . .
Don't tar everyone with the brush of extremism. I work/worked with people who are about as Muslim as Jon Stewart is Jewish - they know their heritage and some key words, they celebrate some holidays (especially if older generations are around), and mostly it doesn't matter. On the other hand, the good Christian folks who want "faith-based" laws scare me just as much as the guy interviewed on 60 Minutes last week, insisting that it was his democratic right to tell a woman to cover herself with a hijab AND expect her to comply,
People don't deliberately "put their company somewhere where the cost of living is high and there's a shortage of talent"; they start a company where they currently live (maybe even in their current home!), and if they're starting a tech company because they're tech people and previously worked in tech, they probably live in a tech area. And they're going to start by hiring other tech people who already live in the tech area. That's how these things grow (some would say fester) in one neighborhood.
Ford, I guess . . . .
Anything networked has this problem (as multiple posters have pointed out) (cue Battlestar Galactica quotes about the dangers of networking). The only way to get "convenience" - which I conflate with "functionality" for this discussion - while retaining privacy is to use standalone devices. My GPS doesn't tell anyone where I go, because it's never connected to anything else (and because of that design, I'm betting it doesn't even bother trying to store anything for later retrieval). Of course, that means that a device needs all of its information locally, and updating has to be strictly controlled.
Google is offering a service. You're not paying them. As often said, if you're not the seller or the purchaser in a transaction, then you are the thing being sold. Just like broadcast radio & TV, the "entertainment"/"information" is the lure to bring you to view advertising, and in the networked era to encourage you to allow yourself to be followed.
Were you on the debate team? :-)