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User: tedrlord

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  1. Re:Reboot how? on Spider-Man 4 Scrapped, Franchise Reboot Planned · · Score: 1

    Indeed, if they breach his cannon, it will likely backfire the next time he tries to use it. He could be seriously injured.

  2. Re:Shrimp free zone? on Air Canada Ordered To Provide Nut-Free Zone · · Score: 1

    Good grief. I'm far more inconvenienced by the fat turds that take up half my seat but I don't get a special "fat free" zone.

    Wait, seriously? Sitting next to fat people is more inconveniencing than having your airways close off and going into shock because the airline decided it was clever to serve the food item with the most potentially deadly allergic reaction in a small cabin with recycled air?

    Oh, wait. You mean inconvenient to you. Right. I suppose other people potentially dying isn't a problem then. Carry on.

  3. Re:There seems to be some confusion here... on Should You Be Paid For Being On Call? · · Score: 1

    The difficulty with including oncall pay in the base salary of the position is that oncall time and difficulty can vary greatly depending on circumstances, and there's no way to reflect that in one's salary in a timely manner. If one member of the team gets ill and another has to cover two 24/7 shifts, he is not going to be happy if he's not getting compensated. Extra comp time would help, but that's more or less identical to paying a bonus, except that you're getting less productivity out of the department.

    There are also longer term issues. If an employee is promoted, quits, or dies (it's happened =(), the oncall rotation can change a lot, and in addition to the extra work required of the team to make up for the missing position, it can brew discontent fairly quickly. People can talk about salaries and agreements and sucking it up and such, but if you have a good team they probably realize it as much as you do, and screwing them over with extra work that they were not expecting when they were hired and without appropriate compensation is not a good way to keep people around.

  4. Re:I think they should skip this name... on Sci Fi Channel Becoming Less Geek-Centric "SyFy" · · Score: 1

    See, I read it as "Bugger," which is a great name for the channel.

  5. Re:Code comments as documentation on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    Self-documenting code is ideal, as long as it also includes comments.

  6. Re:brilliant or dangerous? on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    Don't underestimate the power of the re-org. Someone moves into a position above you, decides everyone needs a fresher approach, and suddenly there's a contractor in, documenting the code for you, and you're replaced by a cheaper or more friendly face.

    Watching it happen from the outside, the transition can be painful, but nobody is as irreplaceable as they think.

  7. Re:brilliant or dangerous? on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 2, Funny

    Embedded programming is an entirely different beast, I'm sure. The way you talk about it, I think all programmers should be forced to write and maintain embedded code for a year or two before they're allowed to work on anything else.

  8. Re:brilliant or dangerous? on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    I agree that sometimes it's required, especially where performance is the main factor and the compiler isn't able to optimize well enough on its own. Hopefully, it's either part of the original design, or at least discussed by the team beforehand. In those cases it needs to be commented very well.

    I was talking about cases where clever node is written for the sake of being clever, or because it was the most expedient solution to a non-performance issue. Those kind of things can really build up, and can ruin a codebase. I worked for a company where the only person that really understood the code was a developer they kept on as a consultant. There were years of cruft built up to the point where they attempted a re-write, which causes its own problems.

  9. Re:brilliant or dangerous? on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    Pleasant programmers are, on the whole, more valuable to corporations than good programmers, for certain values of good. A total genius that writes awesome code nobody else can read is a terrible asset to the company. If the software product is their main product, it could bring the entire company down. Assuming it's their own fault because nobody else is as "smart" is just hubris, and probably delusion.

    An actual good developer, while needing actual ability and experience, also needs to be able to work with the rest of the team to write code that potentially any of them can maintain. The developer might quit or die, leaving everyone stuck, or he might just be on vacation when a P1 bug occurs. I know it's more personally validating for your manager to have to call you up because you're the only one that can possibly fix something, but it's really not valuable to the company.

  10. Re:Lack of Documentation == dangerous on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 1

    It's called commenting. Proper commenting is just as good and often better than documentation. -Especially- when you're being rushed through a deadline, because that code is probably going to be badly planned and may bite you or someone else in the ass later.

  11. Re:brilliant or dangerous? on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They may appreciate the clever implementation, but in the large scheme of things that is not efficient, nor awesome.

    Whenever I hear the word "clever" relating to code, I cringe. I generally use it as an insult. In any professional project, clever code generally means "unmaintainable."

  12. Re:What are you trying to do? on Locking Down Linux Desktops In an Enterprise? · · Score: 2, Informative

    Custom kickstart with all the required configurations, and some basic configuration management software, makes it -extremely- easy to manage. The requirement is having an admin that knows how to set it up correctly in the first place.

    Lock out root accounts, mount user home directories from a separate partition/disk/network share and you can even reinstall the base OS without touching their files. Any decent configuration management software (there are a lot of choices) would also allow IT to add rpms or make individual config changes on each user's machine by adding a line to a script or a file to a host-specific directory. Even easier to track who's running what, or who has a weird setup. And if the box explodes or they break something, it can be rebuilt to the same configuration in like 15 minutes.

    Again, this is all with an admin that knows how to manage this. That's where you hit the problems, and that's why Linux is probably not appropriate for corp IT currently. There aren't enough people that can manage it well, and those that can will probably have better jobs than planning out desktop migrations.

  13. Re:that sounds like overgeneralization on Why Doctors Hate Science · · Score: 1

    The difficulty, in my limited but frustrating experience as a patient, is which numbers to use for each patient. I have a certain combination of chronic health issues that seems to be unusual, so I get a lot of different opinions on what the actual problem is.

    The end result is that I will visit my general practitioner, who will think that I should see a specialist in problem A, but thinks I might also have problem B. The specialist in problem A says that I can't have problem B because they often have similar general symptoms and are not comorbid. Then specialist in problem B will say that it actually looks like I may have this problem, and I should try this medication, which helps for problem B. Though the medication may exacerbate problem C, which wasn't much of an issue until then. Later on I will find that problem A and problem B are actually comorbid in a significant subset of people, but may have been excluded from studies due to misdiagnosis or existing conditions, and the treatments I've been given are actually incorrect in my case and have caused more problems overall.

    So I go back to my general practitioner, who is very good, and he gives me an OTC medication and some vitamins, and the occasional short course of prednisone if I'm having a lot of trouble, and I'm feeling better.

  14. Re:If we're gonna have a medicine flamewar... on Why Doctors Hate Science · · Score: 1

    Your average doctor visit without any coverage is often between $100-$200, maybe more. That would count as half a semester's tuition at a community college. Of course, taking in X-rays, follow-up appointments and specialists (soft tissue damage can be hard to diagnose), it could easily end up in the thousands. Personally I wouldn't let it deter me from an initial visit even if I didn't have insurance, but it does for a lot of people, especially those with very little income.

    There are free or sliding-scale clinics that will provide care for less based on your income. They're often pretty stressed and quality of care can suffer, but it's far better than nothing.

  15. Only Skype? on European Crackdown On Skype "Loophole" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Somebody better tell them about all the other evil loopholes that criminals can use to talk over the internet. They'd better also be able to wiretap Yahoo and Windows Messenger voice, oh, and X-Box chat, and we're going to have to change the RTP protocol to send them a copy of all communications, of course. I'm guessing we'll have to hack all ssh clients to unencrypt VoIP traffic if somebody tries to tunnel it, too.

    Or, you know, just get on Skype's case because authorities apparently have no idea what they're doing and seem to believe that Skype is the only way to talk over the internet. I'm sure the criminals appreciate the heads up so they can make sure to use more secure methods.

  16. Re:Curse of the Cursed Cursor on Tales From the Support Crypt · · Score: 2, Funny

    Back in my support days, I always used the "can you make sure the power cable isn't loose?" approach. Sometimes that was actually the case even when they had checked before, but usually it reminded them that it might not actually be plugged in.

    Honestly, ignorant home users aren't nearly as difficult to deal with as java developers.

  17. Re:It's Evolving on Survival-Horror Genre Going Extinct? · · Score: 1

    Oblivion and Fallout are just Adventure with graphics.

  18. Re:It's Evolving on Survival-Horror Genre Going Extinct? · · Score: 1

    Fallout 3 is buggy, and it has its problems, but it's not as breakable as you say. I killed Burke before he could get a shot off on the sheriff, and Simms just walked out the door. When I went up to him afterwards, he thanked me and said he must be getting slower in his old age.

    Fallout definitely has a lot of bugs (important people disappearing randomly like that) and annoying decisions (traders being mauled by Deathclaws because it's "realistic") but they did think it through somewhat.

  19. Re:cuz nobody has EVER been able to fool that on Replacing Metal Detectors With Brain Scans · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The specific problems I thought of immediately were:

    1) people who are afraid of flying/crowds/etc or just prone to panic attacks would most likely set this off far more often than terrorists. Not to mention the fear of setting this off causing people to be more nervous.

    2) Actual terrorists would probably be organized enough to take this into account and pop a valium or two before going through the security checkpoints. I mean, c'mon. The circumstances are a lot less controlled than a polygraph, and are therefore a lot easier to alter.

    Hell, the more seriously religious ones might just show up in a calmer state naturally, knowing they will be martyred for their cause. If you're the type of person that dedicated enough to blow yourself up for a religious sect, it's not that difficult to believe that your faith will protect you from capture. I know an otherwise seemingly sane guy that apparently never wore his seatbelt because he thought that God would decide when his time came anyway, so why fight it? He drove like a maniac too, relaxed as can be. I think psychologists call it "magical thinking," and I seriously doubt they're taking it into account.

  20. Re:google.com/ig on iGoogle Users Irate About Portal's Changes · · Score: 1

    They did add new functionality of a sort, but I really don't like the direction they're going with it. It's like a technology preview with no actual thought as to what it really adds. Most of the widgets don't really expand into anything especially useful except for their gmail application, which expands into, well, gmail. I suppose it saves a second of loading the actual gmail page, but it takes away the rest of the functionality of the page. Plus it doesn't work with the back button on browsers, and new pages load the same widget as before. Meaning that if you click gmail, then go to a new igoogle page, gmail is still expanded.

    This uses up screen space, breaks expected web browser functionality, and removes features that people appreciated in the previous version. I'm going to stick with the google.co.uk site until that's upgraded, then I'm probably going to have to find a new home site. Or just use the regular google.com search bar. Sure it's not the end of the world, but it bugs me when they provide a service that I really appreciated then remove it and announce everyone will love it more. But who am I to disagree with Google, I guess?

  21. Re:The worst part on DHS Allowed To Take Laptops Indefinitely · · Score: 1

    That's a cool page. Now I know that "1MQGptAc" (from pwgen -s) is a weaker password than "AAAAAAAAAA" (from me holding down the A key).

    I suppose it's all in how you look at it.

  22. Holy crap! on USB Flash Drive Life Varies Up To 10 Times · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, wait. Are you telling me that better quality products will perform better and last longer? You've blown my mind here! My whole worldview will need to be adjusted.

  23. Re:Spam for McCain! on McCain Asks Supporters To Campaign On Blogs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Today it looks like those principles have been prostituted on the altar of political expediency and "electability."


    Which, to my mind, is what one has to do to get elected. This isn't McCain's fault, it's the fault of a shallow, lazy electorate that here's the word "issues" and flips the channel to watch Survivor. I was right up there with you until he voted against that torture bill. He was hardline against even our perceived use of torture up until then. If the guy's willing to change his mind on that in the name of politics, I can't trust him.
  24. Re:Magneto? on Eric Lerner's Focus Fusion Device Gets Funded · · Score: 1

    I'd be way more likely to believe Magneto could pull something like that off. Of course, he'd just take the money and use it to destroy us lesser homo sapiens.

  25. Re:what they want and what they'll get rarely matc on Air Force Aims for Control of 'Any and All' Computers · · Score: 2, Funny

    I bet when the military was studying psychic remote viewing and psychic assassination the project goal was for completely functional capabilities as well. How did that turn out? ;) I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill you. Remotely.