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User: jythie

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  1. Re:Lets all stop pretending on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People tend to overlook that in attacking this, one is also saying that women simply do not have as much merit and ability as men. And then people are surprised when they are called sexist for it.. it shows just how deeply ingrained the idea of female inferiority is in their minds... that the natural order, which just happens to disproportionately benefit them, is simply the way nature intended and any attempt to question that is somehow hurting them.

  2. Re:Do we really need a artcle about so called sexi on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, it is a problem every day. That is one of the things about the 'privilege' concept, privilege gives one the luxury of not having to think about or notice something because it does not impact them. Which is why you get such a big backlash of 'I do not want to hear about this' from guys on boards like this, it is not their problem, they can't see it, they do not want to think about it. They really do not want to consider they might be feeding into a problem that hurts people who are not like them.

  3. Re:Who keeps posting this garbage? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Ah, the old 'we are abused, so we need someone below us in order to feel better!' argument.

    Hate to break it to you, but 'nerdy men' who are not sexist bitter asshats have no particular problem with women, esp when they do not act like only the most popular women around are worthy of their attention and *gasp* date people within their own social tier.

  4. Re:Again? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: -1, Troll

    If nursing and elementary education paid the same as STEM, or if you had piles of complaints about how men are treated in those fields including things like lack of promotions (oddly enough, in nursing and education, somehow the men manage to bubble up to higher paid positions such as administration, go figure), then you might have a point.

  5. Re:Again? on A Plan On How To Stop Sexism In Science · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well of course not. Problems that face men are 'real' problems worth discussing. Women's problems are only problems if they ALSO affect men, otherwise it is just 'social justice warriors'.

  6. Re:The trick... on Douglas Williams Pleads Guilty To Training Customers To Beat Polygraph · · Score: 1

    He could have done this easily enough, but it would have resulted in less sales. He had to weigh the advantages of the marketing ploy against the risk of, well, what happened. If he had advertized as 'novelty only' and kept to just the specific polygraph training he probably would have been fine, or at least a much stronger case.

  7. Re:.txt on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Best Open Document Format? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And here I am without mod points...

    Generally when I have to worry about integration or longevity, it is still hard to compete with ASCII & LaTeX. While they do not have the every day visibility of various office document types or pdfs, renderers, search tools always know exactly what to do with them. They can even interact with version control systems cleanly since the underlying tools do not need to know anything about the formatting to manipulate it.

  8. Re:Right conclusion, wrong reasoning. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 1

    *nod* in a way, I think agile, as an actual methodology, has not failed at all, but instead has been integrated into the toolbag of any competent project manager (or ad-hoc equivalent). What has failed is the hyped up "A"gile method, which, like any hype, over promised on its universalness as a replacement for everything.

    Sometimes I wonder if tech people are just inherently excitable. So much of our culture and identity is linked to loving what we do and related topics, it would not surprise me if we are unusually (but not uniquely) susceptible to irrational exuberance.

  9. Re:Double Standards of Course... on Film Consortium Urges ISPs To Dump Ineffective "Six Strikes" Policy For Pirates · · Score: 1

    That would be an excellent example. If you use copyright to gain more control than you are legally permitted to have (there are limits in contract law regarding what a contract can and can not do) more than 6 times than you lose your ability to use such enforcement mechanisms. Given how they have been pushing to treat each download as a seperate infringement, that would mean if your DRM prevented more than 6 cases of time shifting than that is 6 violations and your rights are revoked.

  10. Re:Right conclusion, wrong reasoning. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 1

    Oh I agree those are real cases, but you get that with pretty much any development methodology . I have no problem with companies being called out on implementing a system badly or 'in name only', but that really does not feel what the author is doing. Instead he is casting failure of agile to be a failing of inferior developers and if people were more willing to work or change then it would have worked. This will no doubt be true in some cases, but it is also true when looking at waterfall or spiral patterns, so it really can not be claimed as a problem with 'agile' adoption.

    All he has really done is rehash the 'if people were smart and hard working they would realize how brilliant I am' argument rather than address opposing views as having actual points or other solutions having their own strengths which shine or tarnish depending on the project.

  11. Re:You cannot know *WHO* is voting on Online Voting Should Be Verifiable -- But It's a Hard Problem · · Score: 1

    This.

    Small town corruption has always been a significant and insidious problem, and you can do a case study with pretty much any town under 20k people with a few families holding the power and retribution being common enough to simply assume.

  12. Re:You cannot know *WHO* is voting on Online Voting Should Be Verifiable -- But It's a Hard Problem · · Score: 2

    On the other hand, one of the big 'battle grounds' with voting right now are conflicts regarding how narrow those windows are for casting a ballot, with a focus on decreasing availability to populations based on, well, who they tend to vote for.

    One major advantage of postal and internet voting is they both are things that individuals can take steps to access on their own schedules, while polling places require enough community organization to counter decisions being made by other organizations. Individuals have little say.

  13. Re:You cannot know *WHO* is voting on Online Voting Should Be Verifiable -- But It's a Hard Problem · · Score: 0

    While a similar problem, there is an issue of scale. With postal voting there is indeed an individual problem involved with not being able to determine who actually voted. Internet voting on the other hand opens up new problems of mass fraud by individuals or small groups, which presents a very different risk.

  14. Right conclusion, wrong reasoning. on Is Agile Development a Failing Concept? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is hard to take someone seriously when the argument seems to be 'my idea is brilliant! but most people are not good enough to implement it!' rather than 'hrm, maybe my idea is not the universal solution and one needs to fit the methodology to the requirements and resources involved?'

  15. Re:rather expected on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 1

    What country are you from? This was something specific to catholic groups operating in African nations. They were actively spreading rumors such as condoms being laced with AIDS.

  16. Double Standards of Course... on Film Consortium Urges ISPs To Dump Ineffective "Six Strikes" Policy For Pirates · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every time I see calls for harsh anti-piracy initiatives, I picture what would happen if equally harsh rules were put in place for some of the dirty IP tricks or outright theft MPAA members engage in. "Oh, your studio got caught taking a copyrighted screenplay submission, rejecting it, then handing it over to one of your own people again? Sorry, your access to distribution has been cut off and you will not be able to produce movies anymore"

  17. Re:I'm shocked, shocked, I tell you... on After Over a Year of Police Action, Dark Net Black Markets Still Growing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Do not forget another big winner, retrogressive social reformers. The war on drugs has been a powerful tool in keeping racism alive while 'proving' it is all their fault in the first place and that brown people are simply too weak willed to join polite society.

  18. Re:Bigger != Better on After Over a Year of Police Action, Dark Net Black Markets Still Growing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem is, drug laws are doing exactly what the designers intended. They were intended to be public weapons against minority groups and immigrants, as well as assist in the political careers of people involved.... of which they have been extremely successful.

  19. Chilling Effect. on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, I guess this is a nice visceral example against the argument that "only" government can censor people or affect what people say publically.

  20. Re:Lies! Lies! All lies! on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 1

    I am sure that gays who have been beaten to death or blown up, doctor who have been shot, etc, would feel this comparison is not exactly off.

  21. Re:guess what on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 1

    Religious leaders (official and unofficial) tend to pick and choose which parts of OT they claim people need to keep following and which they do not, I guess depending on the political advantages of it.

  22. Re:rather expected on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 2

    "Listening" is a relative concept. People are not going to stop having sex, but they can be scared into avoiding condoms, which is what the Catholic Church was doing in some African regions for quite some time.

    One does not need to follow all doctorin to be influenced by a subset.

  23. Re: Swift is destroying Rust. on Swift Vs. Objective-C: Why the Future Favors Swift · · Score: 1

    My point is that the problem still exists in Java, and just like other languages there are solutions, but none are complete and all fail if not used.

  24. I also work in the field, I see new research and discoveries every year. Scientists are constantly learning new things from the attempts and we are constantly constructing systems with greater flexibility and capability.

    As for 'database with search capability', what do you think human intelligence is in the first place? It is not some magical ability, is a combination of various capabilities interacting with each other, with data storage and retrieval being a significant component.

  25. Depends on your perspective I guess. One of the other major things going on since then has come from the other direction, with a great deal being learned about existing non-human intelligence and how much more complicated and, well, real, than people had believed. So the simple metric of 'does it act like a human' has become a lot fuzzier when actually looked at.