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  1. Re:Price on Pre-Orders Start For Neo900 Open Source Phone · · Score: 1

    I personally have a Windows phone and I agree about that being a decent phone OS but i'm not sure what that has to do with anything here. $533 US is quite reasonable compared to many smartphones in the US and remember that electronics in Europe cost significantly more than they do in the US for whatever reason -- so if it sells for 480€ it will probably sell for closer to $400 US, assuming it even comes here. Maybe you and I wouldn't spend that much on a phone, but it's been proven time and time again that a lot of people will.

  2. Re:Schizo on Battle To Regulate Ridesharing Moves Through States · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but I can't follow the point you're trying to make. I seriously just don't get the analogies. Who said anything about whether you could take handicapped people or not? Uber is just a marketplace; the drivers don't work for Uber. That's like saying the companies who sell things on E-Bay work for E-Bay. They don't. E-Bay is just a marketplace.

  3. Re:Price on Pre-Orders Start For Neo900 Open Source Phone · · Score: 1

    Some of the sites came up for me, looks like the fully assembled down payment is 480€. I'm not sure what that means for the full price, though.

  4. Re:Not easiest to read, but forgiving... on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 5, Funny

    Give him a break, he's been programming in java for 15+ years.

  5. Re:Corollary: It's difficult to be "clever" in Jav on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    Yes -- You have to be clever about being clever.

  6. Re:Schizo on Battle To Regulate Ridesharing Moves Through States · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, I tend to agree with you on this one and am a bit surprised by the anti-ridesharing stance here on slashdot today. That said there is a line between what you described and some of what appears to actually be happening, which is basically self-employed taxi services. In the aviation world we already have a rule that takes care of this problem. With your private pilot's license, you are allowed to carry passengers. Your passengers are allowed to chip in to pay for part of the flight, however the regulation states they can't pay more than their share and also they can't influence the decision to fly nor the plan. That is -- they can ride along and pay for half the gas and they can't tell the pilot where to take them. If you want to carry passengers for a profit, you have to pursue further certification.

    A regulation like this but for automobiles would take care of the problem legally. Then all you have to worry about is enforcement (and IMO that's where it really gets difficult).

  7. Re:Yay! More acronym buzzwords! on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 1

    You don't need to create a new one, just use DevOps!

  8. Yes, but not because it's a bad idea on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 2

    Agile is great in theory and if you can get everyone involved to understand it then it's great in practice, too. The reason I say agile is a failing concept is because those of us in the industry understand it but are remarkably terrible at selling it to the non-technical people we need to have involved in order for our projects to be successful. What good Agile methodology really drives at is an effective amount of involvement from all parties -- customer, analyst, technical team, testers, operations, etc. Most businesses want to fire things at their IT department and then go off and do other things while the project is underway. This is clearly more conducive to the "waterfall" model (which we all know is terrible) and it prevents them from ever seeing and effective agile development implementation.

    So, yes, Agile is a failing concept. Not because the idea bad, but because it's so incredibly difficult to implement fully, and it's not very valuable when partially implemented (you basically just turn it into mini-waterfalls).

    I foresee DevOps ending up with a similar problem.

  9. Re:Liberty on Two Gunman Killed Outside "Draw the Prophet" Event In Texas · · Score: 1

    If the society I am part of is brought undue harm because of my actions, I fully expect that society to hang me out to dry. Freedom does not mean irresponsibility. What we see here in Texas is petty religious bickering which ended in two deaths and at least one other injury. For these people to be representing two religions that claim to value life, that seems like a pretty shitty way to conduct yourself.

    Members of BOTH religions should be denouncing what happened there.

  10. Re:Many years ago ... on Yes, You Can Blame Your Pointy-Haired Boss On the Peter Principle · · Score: 1

    Layoffs don't get rid of low talent, they get rid of excess workers regardless of talent and skill. If you want to get rid of low talent, you fire them, or "manage them out"

  11. Re:This is stupid on New Study Suggests Flying Is Greener Than Driving · · Score: 1

    It is called a train, not a huge bus. 300 people is about 6 busses.

    Buses. Yes, I know it's stupid, but that's how the English language determined that the plural of "bus" is spelled.

  12. Re:What about a bus? on New Study Suggests Flying Is Greener Than Driving · · Score: 2

    I was about to ask how many seats you have in your butt.

    You only really need one.

  13. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system on William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

    So maybe we should develop solar plants there and not almond farms. Just sayin'

  14. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. on William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California · · Score: 1

    My thought is: More than half of Washington is desert (or semi-desert) and they want to pipe water from that state to another state to water a different desert...? How ridiculous. Although, I was pretty sure he was going to suggest diverting from the great lakes and nearby rivers, so at least we aren't going THERE again.

    Quick read if you think all of WA is as rainy as the coast: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E...

  15. Re:Encryption + (cloud or offsite) on Ask Slashdot: Best Medium For Storing Data To Survive a Fire (or Other Disaster) · · Score: 1

    Good point -- I was about to ask the GP where he planned to store the 20 character random passphrase that was also safe from fire or other disasters...

  16. I don't know how much I'd classify myself an environmentalist, but I do care about what's happening and think we should do something. I'm all for building new reactors to replace & reduce fossil fuel consumption. Put a candidate on my ballot who actually wants to do it (and who doesn't want batshit crazy social policies).

  17. Re:Only $10B? on How the Pentagon Wasted $10 Billion On Military Projects · · Score: 1

    I don't know anyone who only wastes 1.5% of their money

    I don't disagree with your post, but it always strikes me as funny when people compare federal government budgets for the largest economy in the world with their personal finances. It's NOT the same, no matter how much the presidential candidates like to pretend it is. No individual's revenue comes from within itself like a government's does. No individual has their own internal "economy" to mind.

  18. Re:April fools on World's Largest Aircraft Seeks Investors To Begin Operation · · Score: 1

    FYI The article is dated Tuesday 31 March 2015 03.40 EDT

  19. Just curious, couldn't they make it out of bulletproof glass? Then the aesthetics would be great because it's clear and yet the glass is slippery so there's nothing to grab hold of in order to climb over.

  20. Business Model? on Facebook Successfully Tests Laser Internet Drones · · Score: 2

    I have not clue how this relates to their business model, but more power to them anyway. I hope society learns a lot from experiments like this -- will its solar panels really supply enough power? At 60k feet they can cover a humungous land area, which potentially means millions of customers. I can't imagine the power consumption of laser communication between this unit and all of the potential customers. Can this really cover an area that big or is it just flying that high to stay out of flight levels of commercial aircraft?

    So many questions that this experiment might be able to answer.

  21. Re:On a side note, if she wins the nomination on Clinton Regrets, But Defends, Use of Family Email Server · · Score: 1

    I think her best chance at the nomination was in the 2008 election, and she failed to secure it. If she runs again, there are lots of other options who would be much better both politically and from a competency standpoint.

  22. Re: No it doesn't. on Clinton Regrets, But Defends, Use of Family Email Server · · Score: 1

    Agreed, and both sides use that same childish argument ALL THE TIME. Sometimes I think we should put them all over our knees and spank them like the misbehaving children they are.

    But no, we still re-elect most of our incumbents every 2, 4 and 6 years in both parties because we aren't really interested in change, we just want to act like we are.

  23. Re:What difference does it make? (TM) on Clinton Regrets, But Defends, Use of Family Email Server · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ok, I'm not big on all the hubub around these emails either -- but we need to be the change we want to see in the world. If Democrats like Hillary want our political discourse to be better then they need to set the standard, not act like children and point the finger back across the aisle. If all we're going to do is wait and see which party will do the right thing first, then they will NEVER do the right thing. We, as a governed populace, should be looking for a government that does the right thing even when it means admitting they had previously done the wrong thing.

  24. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion on Mental Health Experts Seek To Block the Paths To Suicide · · Score: 1

    I don't think this is remotely true. Most religions don't reflect kindly on suicides, and most people committing suicide aren't looking for "Anything better", they just want their pain to end. If what follows suicide is "nothing" then they will not feel pain anymore. They will feel nothing, which is preferable to someone in that kind of distress.

    Religions can be credited with a lot of bad things in society but I don't think this is one of them.

  25. Re:Gun statistics in suicides on Mental Health Experts Seek To Block the Paths To Suicide · · Score: 1

    It's not evidence that the availability of guns is the causal factor in the attempt.

    GP didn't say guns were a causal factor in the attempt. You did. He said they provide an easy way to kill yourself with a high success rate, which is a pretty obvious statement. He said nothing about cause at all.