Slashdot Mirror


User: Mean+Variance

Mean+Variance's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
168
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 168

  1. Re:Without Napster we'd still be buying all CD's on Napster Being Shut Down · · Score: 1

    It's been a few years, but your comment reminds of the band Matchbox Twenty whose style of music was perfectly captured and critiqued.

  2. Obligatory from The Onion on TV Ownership Declines For Second Time Since 1970 · · Score: 5, Funny

    An oldie but timeless.

    Man doesn't own a TV

  3. Make an effort to be visible on Does Telecommuting Make You Invisible? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am a telecommuter. I negotiated 80%/20%, i.e. I come into the office 150 miles away once a week. The purpose is to schedule meetings on projects, attend a weekly team meeting, and it gives the opportunity to mingle and see my coworkers.

    That arrangement really helps. In addition, I use software that routes my phone extension to my home office (so people don't have to keep my phone# on a post it), I use Yahoo IM for chats, and of course email.

    The point is, if you are a telecommuter, make yourself accessible at any time that you would be if you were in the office. If things are quiet for an extended period, make an effort to touch base with your immediate team (speaking from the perspective of a software developer here). Does anyone need me to pitch in on anything? Send a link to a funny or interesting article.

    Generally my work is so busy and requires so much collaboration that it creates the necessary visibility, but just be sure you aren't making it difficult to be contacted and embrace the discussions, even mundane ones unless it gets out of hand.

    In software dev, also have your screen ready to share for discussion (myriad of choices). I find that helps to collaborate and be more visible to my colleagues.

  4. Re:Some clarifications about credit unions on Fee Increase Attempt Inspires 'Dump Your Bank Day' · · Score: 1

    It is really difficult to start one, thus you don't see too many start these days. Realtors FCU is one that comes to mind that is newish. It does need a capital infusion from the chartering group, e.g. a company, a trade group that will form the membership. Then you need deposits. Profits then begin to build and maintain the capital base.

  5. Re:Some clarifications about credit unions on Fee Increase Attempt Inspires 'Dump Your Bank Day' · · Score: 1

    Board members are not executives. I'm not hoodwinked. I know exactly what I'm doing.

  6. Some clarifications about credit unions on Fee Increase Attempt Inspires 'Dump Your Bank Day' · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am on the board of a credit union. Credit unions must make a profit or they will die. They must have some fee structure to offset costs of members who are expensive to service. The idea is that fees should be minimized to the extent that the CU can run a healthy business in accordance with its mission.

    Since it is a non-profit, the board is unpaid. We are members who volunteer our time. We must make decisions in the interest of the membership as a whole and that means working with the executive staff on decisions related to which services we can provide to the members and how those services will be paid for.

    The distinguishing difference between a credit union and a bank is that banks can raise capital in the open markets by issuing shares, issuing debt, or taking on risky bets in the form of loans and investments.

    Credit unions, on the other hand, can maintain capital only through profits from loans, investments, and certain income like fees and interchange fees. The investment side is tightly controlled. Investments are boring - bonds, CDs, money markets. The best income is from loans.

    There are good credit unions and bad ones. When the bad ones go under, the credit unions are collectively assessed via the NCUSIF (in most cases) to make the the depositors whole. Or the NCUA works with the failing credit union to merge them into a healthier one. But we are all collectively responsible for each other in a small way -- yet we compete against each other and banks too.

    Even though I've been with the same credit union for 22 years (and now on the BOD for 3 so far), I don't label "credit unions = good, banks = bad." I also have an account with ING Direct and had excellent customer service - all by phone, mail and email - for a mortgage a few years ago.

    Do your homework and figure out what you need and talk to people you trust. Don't think that you are necessarily constrained by a credit union. You might not be. It depends.

  7. Re:I did on Fee Increase Attempt Inspires 'Dump Your Bank Day' · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oh, same deal if you want to deposit your check. If you can't find your own bank branch, you're going to be learning their bank-by-mail process.

    You need to do some research. First, how many people have checks to cash while on travel? I would take care of that while home. But even if I did, I can go to any 7-Eleven in the U.S. and most credit unions in the co-op network and deposit a check. Getting access to money is easy.

    My local credit union in Fresno has served me well even when I lived in the Bay Area for 12 years. It's amazing what can be accomplished with great customer service, even before ubiquitous online banking.

  8. Depends on why I'm referring to my profession on Career Advice: Don't Call Yourself a Programmer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In casual conversation among people who wouldn't know the nuances of the various "programmer"-like terms, I do say, "I'm a programmer." It gets the point across simply that most people understand.

    If I'm in a semi-professional setting of white collar adults, I usually say "software developer."

    On a resume or among those who know the industry standard, I say "I'm a software engineer" because that's my title.

    If it's tied to a conversation that might have career potential, I give the true classification at work: senior software engineer.

  9. Don't use inflation on Redbox Raises Its Prices To $1.20 Per Day · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't see this as an inflation response, nor is it a fair comparison to Netflix. Redbox is a la carte. You subscribe to nothing. Use it a little, a lot, or not at all.

    As they built out their system $1 was a simple price point, easy to advertise and a good entry point. Now they have a business model and usage metrics. $1.20 is a price point that they probably think is sustainable and will generate revenue and profit.

    I like Redbox and probably use it 3-5 times a month. It's easy to grab something for the family and just as easy to return to about 10 different boxes within 2 miles of my home and shopping areas.

  10. Launchy did it for me on Microsoft Killed the Start Menu Because No One Uses It · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Once I started using Launchy that pretty much took away my need for the Start button.

    Launchy plus the Quick Launch toolbar (for Windows XP) pretty much does the job.

    Once in awhile I go to Start and am surprised by how much stuff I have installed.

  11. Something Microsoft does well on Google Kills Desktop Search and Gadgets · · Score: 1

    During that heyday of competing desktop search products, I tried all that I could find.

    I ended up settling on MS Desktop Search. It didn't seem to get in the way, searches were decent. To this day, it just runs on my work machines and comes in handy from time to time.

    It's a very useful product when needed but not very sexy. I didn't RTA, but I presume Google got bored and couldn't monetize their version.

  12. Re:So simple on Google Pulls Plug On Programming For the Masses · · Score: 1

    So simple, even a woman can do it.

    Yeah, that caught my eye too. My manager (woman), team architect (woman), staff engineer (woman) and last 3 dev hires (women) really depended on tools to empower themselves.

    Maybe I need some male empowerment since the 3 women on my team of 5 outrank me. Or, that's just how things came together.

  13. Re:GoDaddy Girls on GoDaddy Sells To Investor Group · · Score: 1

    Well one of the GoDaddy girls at least has a day job if they change marketing themes: Danica Patrick, Indy Car/NASCAR racer.

  14. Top of Vancouver on Using Crowdsourcing To Identify Vancouver Rioters · · Score: 1

    I was in Vancouver for the first time a year ago. Lovely place. Friendly, welcoming people. The most "dangerous" people we encountered were the junkies in the alleys, but they were pretty much harmless.

    The best view to survey the area is Top of Vancouver. It's a rotating restaurant. Don't pay the tourist fee of $15. Go straight to the restaurant and have a $15 drink instead.

    Anyway, I was just discussing with my wife that there would have been some interesting view of the riots from that restaurant. Safe entertainment from afar.

    If you go, visit the Salt Tasting Room. (It's in one of those alleys.)

    I am a fan of many sports, hockey, not so much. I get that emotional rush of wanting a team to win and hating when they lose. But when it's over, it's over. Geez. Move on.

  15. Lotus Symphony on The Future of OpenOffice.org · · Score: 1

    Really? I didn't even realize that product still existed.

  16. Make the story end on Ask Slashdot: What To Do When the Rapture Comes? · · Score: 0

    The only thing worse than the attention to this ridiculous "story" is all the predictable jokes that come from it.

    "I guess I don't to pay my bills since the world is going to end." If I had a nickel for every variant of that joke I've heard, ...

    Get a life everyone.

  17. Re:Prescription Correlates + to # of Prescribers on Doctors Are Creating Too Many Patients · · Score: 1

    By the way, there is a new Urologist in my town of 10,000, with a lovely office. He just told my wife that both our sons need teen circumcision, under anethesia.

    May I ask why he said your teen sons need to be circumcised?

  18. Re:Google Voice and TextFree on Facebook May Bust Up the SMS Profit Cartel · · Score: 1

    GV is my phone number for everything. It points to my T-Mobile prepaid (using Comet Android), my iPod Touch TextFree, and my office phone.

    If I get a text it goes to the T-Mobile (okay, that actually does cost me 5 cents), TextFree, the GV account, and email. I then carry on the conversation from whatever device or app I happen to be near. I use the free apps if I'm in a wifi zone or at home where I work. I may carry the conversation on T-Mobile and pay the fees, but that might amount to $2.00 a month at the most.

    For me a text conversation is useful for about 4-6 texts, then I go to phone call at that point. It's what works for me.

  19. Google Voice and TextFree on Facebook May Bust Up the SMS Profit Cartel · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've found the available workarounds are sufficient to the point that I could give a crap about texting fees. I use GoogleVoice and TextFree and they work great. My wife uses Virgin Mobile for $25/mo (that's it no extra taxes or garbage) and can text to her delight.

  20. My favorite audiophile shopping sites on Apple in Talks to Improve Sound Quality of Music Downloads · · Score: 1

    Just for the shock value that they exist and that someone is paying these prices.

    Audioquest: 8 feet of speaker cable for $8,450

    Pear Cable: 12 feet for $7,250

    Here's 3 meters for $12,700

    A voltage stabilizer for $11,500 (what is that?)

    A turntable cartridge for $20,000

    And here's the winner: 8 ft of speaker cable for $39,999

    You can't make this stuff up

  21. Re:Too Bad... on Paul Haggis vs. the Church of Scientology · · Score: 1

    Here's the Scientology episode.

    There's a reason I cannot find the Islam episode.

  22. Re:Too Bad... on Paul Haggis vs. the Church of Scientology · · Score: 1

    I don't care what certain religions have done in the past. I do care what's happening now.

    With that, I'd say the most dangerous one is that which Trey Parker and Matt Stone are afraid of.

  23. Re:884 APs on Behind-The-Scenes Superbowl Tech · · Score: 0

    What about: Charlie Sheen, David Letterman, Rush Limbaugh, Tom Hanks, Michael Moore, Mark Zuckerberg, J. K. Rowling, Jay Leno, Katie Couric, Oprah, and many other ultra rich non-jocks. Are you mad at them too?

  24. Stressful job, but not a bad one on Study Says Software Engineers Have the Best US Jobs · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have carried the title "Software Engineer" for 13 years. I'm of mixed opinion about how great the job is. It pays pretty well, but much of that is relative to what you're comparing to.

    There are worse jobs out there, no doubt, but we're not just coders at least in my experience and many people I know in Silicon Valley. You have to read a lot of boring documents. You have to know how to write. There are meetings. There are customers to talk with. For me what makes it "not the greatest job in the world" is that it's stressful in a way that people don't understand.

    Deadlines always loom, and they are always too short. A good SE has to constantly decide where to unit test, design, explain to management, or just hack to get it done. There's no worse feeling when management decides that a project is taking too long and asks "who can we add to the project?" like we and our code is just plug-n-play factory work.

    That is stressful and few people understand the kind of stress created on the job. I'm not asking for pity. It's a good gig overall, but sometimes I wish I would have stuck with my original, lower paying pursuit of teaching junior college mathematics.

  25. Not a new app on New App Mixes New Drinks With What You Have · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have been using Top Shelf for at least 3 years. It's one of the first apps I ever installed on my 1st gen iPod Touch.