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User: NewWorldDan

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  1. Re:who controls? on Child Experts: Just Say 'No' To Facebook's Kids App (apnews.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We were setting up our new XBox and my kid said, "I'm going to say on my account that I'm 21 so I can get M rated games." The fact is, by the time kids are 10, they have figured out that they can watch anything or use any service just by changing their birthday.

    Most kids aren't that interested in Facebook. That's something that their parents and grandparents use. They've cobbled together their own social media experience with platforms that I've never heard of. Some may want to be on Facebook, but apparently not my kid or any of her friends. That's something that Facebook is genuinely worried about. Their success is mostly built on inertia. If they don't grab the next generation early, those kids will go do something else and soon Facebook is reduced to MySpace.

  2. I completely disagree. What you need is a critic that you reliably agree with, or at least one that you understand what they do and don't like. Critic aggregation, like Rotten Tomatoes provides, is a good indicator of quality for mainstream movies. It also pays to read some reviews to understand why they rated things as they did.

    I wanted to like Bright, but it just wasn't very good. As a concept, I want to see more contemporary set fantasy (Shadowrun and similar fare). I want better writing and story telling.

  3. Re:This argument works both ways on "The FCC Still Doesn't Know How the Internet Works" (eff.org) · · Score: 2

    The most fundamental thing to understand about how the FCC operates is that they are run by lawyers. Lawyers do not think like either engineers or normal people. They only think in terms of rules and rule frameworks, and they use language in these rule frameworks that is fairly decoupled from reality.

    What I mean by this is that if you want to change the FCC, you need a lawyer that can translate your concerns into their language, and play their game for making rules and procedures. Right now, the ideology at the top is in favor of making rules that let ISPs do whatever they want. If I had a meaningful choice of ISPs for my home internet, I would actually agree with that approach. Unfortunately, I only have 2 choices, and they both already suck, so I'm in favor of minimal regulation telling them to not be total dicks.

  4. I don't believe I said anything about giving a fuck about any company. I don't. I'm looking for return on investment. Likewise, whoever I bought my stock from either wants a different investment or they are looking to get cash out. That's why it's called a market.

    Now, when you go out and work your 9-5 job at some big corporation, you're not being payed 100% of the value of your labor. The corporation profits off your work. This is a suitable arrangement because they have resources that let you be more productive than you would be on your own, and it's less risky than being self employed. I buy stock in the corporation so that I can profit off your labor. I buy mostly index funds, which are an amalgamation of hundreds of different corporations to spread my risk around. When I walk around downtown, I smile at all the people I see, because I know that their hard work is actually putting money in my pocket. That's why stocks are awesome. The future belongs to whoever owns it.

  5. Re:Not that strange on Nearly a Third of Millennials Say They'd Rather Own Bitcoin Than Stocks (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bitcoin has essentially nothing in common with stocks. Stocks are ownership in a real world corporation that, ideally, pays regular dividends to share holders. The corporation has actual assets. Bitcoin is just numbers on a computer. It is effectively a currency, and while currency trading does occur, the currency markets are a great way to lose money. Bitcoin has no intrinsic value, but rather maintains its value by the utility it offers and the number of people who hold Bitcoin. This makes it very similar to any fiat currency, actually. At least investing in metals gives you something with intrinsic value.

    But, whatever. Millennials can be as stupid as they want, it just means better returns for me. You do you, I've studied how rich people build and maintain their wealth, and I'm going to do that.

  6. Nice try dude, but you'll never find the listening bug that the NSA has implanted in your head.

  7. Low quality and oversupply on Hollywood is Suffering Its Worst-attended Summer Movie Season in 25 years (latimes.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I see two major problems:

    The low quality as addressed in TFA. Most of them weren't terrible, but they're not what anyone wanted. Good movies - Spider-man Homecoming, for example - did just fine. Reboots and sequels aren't inherently bad, if they're done well. Some have certainly used up whatever good will they had left.

    The other problem I'm seeing from a lot of people is oversupply. They've already watched everything on Netflix and Amazon and Hulu and HBO. They've gone to the buffet and eaten so much there's no appetite left. In the last decade, I've been given every superhero movie I could have possibly asked for. There isn't anything left to look forward to. Instead of watching movies, I'm doing other things, like making pottery. And waiting for something that's actually worth watching, like The Tick.

    In general, I suggest that studios once again become a little more selective about what they make, and most importantly, hire good writers. So much bad writing out there...

  8. Re:Great idea! on Ask Slashdot: How Can You Teach Programming To Schoolchildren? · · Score: 1

    You must not have children. By age 8, some have both the ability and interest to learn programming, and many more by age 12. Here's the great thing - you don't actually have to do anything. There are so many resources out there to learn programming, they find them and share them with each other. It's fantastic watching them learn and grow and explore. My daughter is 14 now and it's just been a marvelous journey watching her develop.

    My advice to all is simply, don't worry about it. My kid's school does hour of code before school once a month. There's no structure to it, just parents who volunteer their expertise to answer any questions the kids have. From there, the kids mostly help each other out and teach each other. It's brilliant and you can't devise a more effective program then to just let kids do their own thing.

  9. As in all things, there is cost benefit analysis. Phones have reached the point that they are now effectively a 3 year device (while early smart phones were 1.5 year devices). The things holding back longevity are screens that get damaged and non replaceable batteries. Otherwise, the specs on a 3 year old phone are very good. The other thing holding back older phones is discontinued OS support. On the other hand, the battery and screen in my 2 year old Galaxy S6 are both doing great and the OS is still being updated. A couple of minor scratches on the screen and the battery holds a charge for a full day. I've had to switch to wireless charging because the USB connector on the phone doesn't hold the cable in anymore. What do I use the phone for? Email, web, calendar, and sometimes maps. I'm boring.

    Comparison: desktop computers. 15 years ago, a new desktop computer was functionally obsolete after 2 years. Technology matured and hit a plateau such that my current home desktop is 8 years old and performs most tasks very well. Really, the biggest thing that drags it down are badly designed websites, and that's hardly my hardware's fault. I'm looking at updating it in the near future. While I would have only spent $500 max on a build a decade ago, in this case, I'm going to follow the Woz paradigm and use first class component for everything because I expect to be using the same computer for the next decade at least, barring any unexpected new advances in technology. My budget is about $1200, which will make it the most expensive computer I've ever bought.

    In conclusion, if I were buying a phone today, I'd still buy something that was towards the higher end. I've had bad phones before, and they're miserable. On a 3 year time frame, buying a good phone is worth it. I'm not an Apple person, so I wouldn't get an iPhone. On the other hand, I'm not poor, so I have the extra $200 to spend on a phone that doesn't suck.

  10. Which is why I favor spaces over tabs. There can be a mix of spaces and tabs and it will display in an unpredictable fashion. Spaces always display the same. Then again, I use the autoformat in my IDE, and I have no idea what that outputs (nor do I really care). I figure the boffins who created Visual Studio know more than I do, but I've been wrong before. I mean, I use the tab key, but I'd like that to just be shorthand for entering 4 spaces.

  11. Re:It's heartbreaking that politicians don't do sh on Clinton: It's 'Heartbreaking' When IT Workers Must Train H-1B Replacements (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    What that says to me is that H-1B holders are being paid below market wages. I would assume this is due to their lack of mobility in changing jobs. The natural solution to me, it seems, is to replace the H-1B with a long term unrestricted visa. How many of those would be imported if they weren't indentured servants?

  12. Re:What? on PC Gaming Is Still Way Too Hard (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    What would be more interesting is examining all the games that can be played at acceptable quality on an Intel i3 CPU with the stock Intel HD graphics. You'll find that it's really quite extensive.

    Investing $150 in a solid mid-range GPU is not outrageous when you're spending $50/game and provides a huge boost. I've got a 6 year old CPU and a 5 year old mid-range GPU (total cost for the whole system was under $500) and it plays everything that I throw at it.

  13. Re:Which is recommended for Linux gaming? on NVIDIA Announces GeForce GTX 1060, Fierce Competition For the Radeon RX 480 (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    Now I'm left to wonder if the infamous Radeon mouse cursor corruption bug also exists on Linux. That damn thing has been around for more than a decade and I'm not buying another Radeon unless it gets fixed.

  14. Strawman on Revisiting Why Johnny Can't Code: Have We "Made the Print Too Small"? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As the parent of a 12 year old girl, I can assure you all, kids today are not having trouble learning to code. They have resources today that I couldn't have dreamed of when I was their age, and they are using them. There are two major problems that I see happening: there are too many languages out there and no one works in text/console mode anymore.

    Computers were text based when I was learning basic 3 decades ago. As such, BASIC made a perfectly sensible starting point. Instead, today, a web or mobile app requires knowledge of HTML, JavaScript, CSS, some backend language such as C# or Java, SQL, and probably some other things AI haven't thought of.

    Really, if you want to bring back a version of BASIC that was reasonably accessible but could still write something resembling a modern app, bring back Visual BASIC 6.

    But like I said, kids today aren't really having much of a problem. My kid and her friends are learning JavaScript and C# and C++ and I have no idea what else. There are lots of resources out there and kids are taking advantage of them.

  15. Re:Google Keep on Ask Slashdot: Open Tools For Logbooks and Note-taking? · · Score: 5, Informative

    I would similarly also suggest Microsoft's OneNote for all the same reasons. It's probably the best Microsoft product that you're not using. Since I operate in pretty much a straight up Microsoft environment, that's what I use. Keep and OneNote are both fantastic products.

  16. Re:Read the actual reviews on Why You Should Be Suspicious of Online Movie Ratings (fivethirtyeight.com) · · Score: 1

    I think the trick is to find a reviewer that makes sense to you. You don't have to agree 100% with him*, you just need to understand why he likes some movies and not others.

    (* a note on pronouns: my preferred critic is a dude, so I used male pronouns)

  17. Re: "risks serious damage to the system" on NVidia Puts the Kibosh On Overclocking of GTX 900M Series · · Score: 1

    Desktop cards are easy to replace and you're only out the cost of the card. Fry the GPU on the laptop and in a lot of cases you have a repair that costs as much as the laptop did new. NVidia doesn't want to anger their customers, but there is probably enough hardware that they're paying warranties on that this has become necessary.

  18. Re:If it works, DO NOT FUCK WITH IT!!! on Ask Slashdot: What Tools To Clean Up a Large C/C++ Project? · · Score: 1

    Oh, it gets worse. I had a programmer that created some circular dependencies between the libraries. It was literally impossible to compile everything from scratch for a while. "But I can compile it just fine" That's because you have the current copies of everything on your machine. I deleted them and told him not to commit anything else until everything compiled cleanly.

  19. Re:If it works, DO NOT FUCK WITH IT!!! on Ask Slashdot: What Tools To Clean Up a Large C/C++ Project? · · Score: 1

    plan that has worked for me is to separate the code into two piles. The application, which remains a fucking mess, and a library which only gets clean code

    No, I've tried that. I have an ecosystem of 23 applications that make my project work. There are now 6 separate libraries of various generations that need to be maintained. Ugh. I just don't have the staff to clean everything up while getting everything done that needs to get done.

  20. Re:Your rights don't include infecting my kid or m on Mississippi - the Nation's Leader In Vaccination Rates · · Score: 1

    Your rights don't include injecting whatever the hell you think you should into my body or my child's. Now personally, my child is vaccinated against pretty much everything. At the same time, I'm very strongly against having public schools. Every private school should have the right to refuse service to any unvaccinated child. Also, while my child is vaccinated, I still fill out the conscientious objection form, because it's none of the state's business.

    Frankly, what I've been seeing from the latest outbreaks is it's overwhelmingly the unvaccinated who are getting sick with a very small percentage of the ill being those who have been vaccinated. With results like that, I don't think the argument that the unvaccinated put the rest of the population at risk holds that much weight.

    Once a few children get sick and die from these preventable diseases, a lot of people will decide that vaccination is the right course of action. It won't take any government mandate, either.

  21. Re:Novelty Media is Novelty on Vinyl's Revival Is Now a Phenomenon On Both Sides of the Atlantic · · Score: 1

    How much manual labor do you do? When I worked in fast food and manufacturing, I spent more of my spare time reading, gaming, and writing software. I still do those things in my spare time, but now, as a desk jockey, I do a lot more woodworking, cooking, and biking. I trained for a week long bike ride across Iowa. Best shape I've been in in years because of it. As I spoke with my fellow riders among the corn fields, I found a lot of professional workers. I didn't find any carpenters or plumbers or electricians.

    I assume that one of the reasons you find running to be rewarding is because of the amount of work it takes to successfully prepare for a marathon. Running a marathon in anything under 5 hours is a major achievement. We do these things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Some guy that builds houses for a living? He doesn't need any more hard work.

  22. Re:Novelty Media is Novelty on Vinyl's Revival Is Now a Phenomenon On Both Sides of the Atlantic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think we're also at a point in society where many things have become just a bit too easy. I can carry around one thousand albums and play them back on a device the size of a pack of gum. Vinyl forces you to store and manage a bulky item. You can't take it on the go, you put on one album and you listen to it (or even only half of it). It's a listening ritual.

    Similarly, people who don't find themselves doing enough real work do things like running marathons. Food preparation these days, especially for dinner parties, is often about showcasing how much time you have to devote to the process. In a world where you can have anything you want delivered the next day from Amazon, people are starting to want things that require a bit more effort.

  23. Re:"In 1966..." !! on Science Cannot Prove the Existence of God · · Score: 1

    All right thinking people know that God died on May 16, 2010. In 1966, he hadn't yet even founded the precursor of Elf. \m/

  24. Re:They said that about cell phones on The One Mistake Google Keeps Making · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Exactly. Also I doubt Google wants to be in the business of making and servicing cars. They want to be the technology platform that you don't see, that Ford and Toyota are paying $1000/car royalties on. That's where the monopoly market is and that's where they want to be.

  25. Re:70 years on How Venture Capitalist Peter Thiel Plans To Live 120 Years · · Score: 1

    Tell me about it. I've already lived over half of that with a tenuous connection to reality. I intend to continue eating fatty foods and with luck, I'll go out in a single massive heart attack around that age.