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User: clickclickdrone

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  1. Re:Exploding manholes on Thousands of Gas Leaks Discovered Under Streets of Washington DC · · Score: 2

    You can't call them manholes any more, it's sexist. They're called street level person apertures.

  2. Re: Usefullness of LASERs. on Lasers Unearth Lost 'Agropolis' of New England · · Score: 1

    And if you cook bacon with lasers, all manner of wonders happen.

  3. Re: Summary (and article's first paragraph) mislea on Lasers Unearth Lost 'Agropolis' of New England · · Score: 2

    I'm in the UK and live in a 400+ year old house so anything post 1800 feels pretty new fangled to me.

  4. Re: Summary (and article's first paragraph) mislea on Lasers Unearth Lost 'Agropolis' of New England · · Score: 1

    But is it in danger of being crushed by a dwarf?

  5. Re:can it explain... on Algorithm Aims To Predict Fiction Bestsellers · · Score: 1

    Reason's she had were it was far too long, kids books don't make money etc. It only got published as a favour after the publisher's 8yo daughter got sight of the manuscript and pestered him for more. The initial print run was 500 copies, they really weren't expecting it to sell.

  6. Re: Momentum on Security Expert: Yahoo's Email Encryption Needs Work · · Score: 1

    but how did they "do" things without encountering Windows Explorer?

    Probably same way as sqrt's aquaintence. They'd open Word and use the file/open dialog to look around the filesystem.

    How did they manage not using that or even clicking on it by accident.

    No idea. They didn't seem to use the Start Button much for anything.

    But doesn't that require them to not run IE maximized and drag the address bar to the desktop?

    No, they use file/send to/desktop as a shortcut.

    You have made my head explode

    You should worry, I was their go-to person for IT queries and it's really hard hiding the 'WTF?' face when dealing with such people.

  7. Re: Momentum on Security Expert: Yahoo's Email Encryption Needs Work · · Score: 1

    True but they never used to actively use it i.e. on purpose. If they wanted to find a file, they'd open Word and use the open/file option to move around the directories.

  8. Re: Momentum on Security Expert: Yahoo's Email Encryption Needs Work · · Score: 2, Informative

    You think that's bad? I know someone who has been using Windows daily in their job for 20 years and yet they have never heard of/seen Windows Explorer (not IE) and only found out that start/all programs lets you see what apps you have, a few weeks ago. They save all their IE short cuts to the desktop, not to IE. Basically, their desktop is one huge splat of shortcuts to apps and web pages. They even keep their photos and docs there (mercifully in a folder).

  9. Re:can it explain... on Algorithm Aims To Predict Fiction Bestsellers · · Score: 1

    Or Harry Potter which as Rowling was constantly told, had none of the right tick boxes ticked and many of the 'avoid' ones ticked. Didn't end up doing too badly as I recall after the first few dozen rejections. To be fair, that probably falls into the ~15% 'got it wrong' region the story mentions.

  10. Re: The dumbing down of Slashdot on World's Oldest Decimal Multiplication Table Discovered · · Score: 0

    Yes, this. The level of arrogance here can be amazing.

  11. Re: The ancients on World's Oldest Decimal Multiplication Table Discovered · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, I don't find any of this very suprising. At school we learned all about various ancient civilizations gong back thousands of years, Romans, Greeks, Egyptians, Chinese etc so grew knowing all about the amazing things they got up to and the things they invented across science, engineering, medicine etc. Jarred Diamond has some good books on this.

  12. Re: Ends of Moore's Law in software ? on End of Moore's Law Forcing Radical Innovation · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Seems amazing now that you could get spreadsheets and word processors running in 8 to 48k. The only time in recent years I've seen amazing efficiency was a graphics demo that drew a fully rendered scene using algorithmically generated textures. Demo ran for about 5 minutes scrolling about the buildings and hills and was only about 150k

  13. Bank Holiday Monday on Emmett Plant Talks About the Paper-Based RPG Game Business (Video) · · Score: 1

    (Non Brits stop reading now, this won't make any sense) Back around 1980 a friend developed an RPG called Bank Holiday Monday where you could play a Mod, Rocker, Punk, New Waver etc and was based around the regular mass fights that featured heavily at seaside resorts back then between the various factions. He had maps of Southend, Brighton etc and you moved around, using weapons and vehicles etc to try and demolish the other faction. You could build your characters up with skills like 'Motor Cycle maintenance' if you were a mod or 'Chain attack' if you were a rocker. ISTR a 'More eyeliner' skill for New Wavers that made it likely an enemy would get scared and retreat. Was quite good fun in an English sort of way.

  14. Re:Does anyone remember Star Fleet Battles? on Emmett Plant Talks About the Paper-Based RPG Game Business (Video) · · Score: 1

    That was one of the first (might even be the first) paper based games I ever played. I remember trying to get the sheets photostatted (not photocopied, get off my lawn etc) to prolong the life. Just looked it up on Google and it still seems to be around. Plus Google images game me a major nostalgia rush so thanks for that :-)

  15. I miss Classic Traveller and my 3 little black books. Spent a huge chunk of my teens/twenties running games. That is all.

  16. nearly there. on First 3D Printed Liver Expected In 2014 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just need to print the bacon and you'll have a fine meal in no time.

  17. Re:Nothing to see here. on How Healthcare.gov Changed the Software Testing Conversation · · Score: 1

    Thank you, yes, what you said. I forgot, the phrase 'big government' means something else in the US and has strong connotations for some people.

  18. Nothing to see here. on How Healthcare.gov Changed the Software Testing Conversation · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This is just yet another big government project gone awry. We get these in the UK all the time. I seriously doubt anyone is talking about the testing of this particular project though. Those involved in testing will just keep doing what they do, good ones doing it properly, bad ones doing it, well badly. The other 99% of the population will just bitch about the site as being generally crap but they won't be saying 'They really should have done more integration and load testing'

  19. Re: Cents as an integer on Asm.js Gets Faster · · Score: 1

    Plus of course, not all currencies have just 2 decimals and some have exchange rates which produce huge numbers such as the Yen.

  20. Re: Cents as an integer on Asm.js Gets Faster · · Score: 1

    I work in a bank. Our end of day processing runs up numbers in the trillions. Individual currency accounts used for internal processing can easily be in hundreds of billions.

  21. Re:I find the term "hobbyist" to be offensive on IDC: 40 Percent of Developers Are 'Hobbyists' · · Score: 1

    Indeed. I've picked up some PHP to build myself a CMS for a personal website project and C# for another pet project. TBH, my employer tends to work with safe, tried and tested tech for stability so the only way I could get exposed to anything particularly new and 'trendy' is to do it myself and how better to learn something than a project or two at home?

  22. Re:Why bother? on How To Avoid a Scramble For the Moon and Its Resources · · Score: 1

    Based on previous examples, what seems to work well for American's to really get it together tech wise is to have a president outline a grand, almost impossible plan then shoot them. Worked for Kennedy/Apollo and Reagan/Star Wars although obviously Ronnie got better.

  23. Re:I find the term "hobbyist" to be offensive on IDC: 40 Percent of Developers Are 'Hobbyists' · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone agree with me here?

    Not really, hobbyist isn't a synonym for bad.

  24. Re:1% on IDC: 40 Percent of Developers Are 'Hobbyists' · · Score: 2

    Plus everythng I write is commented to death with notes about how something works, why it was done like that, things to watch for if changing it later etc.

  25. Re:1% on IDC: 40 Percent of Developers Are 'Hobbyists' · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Which is why you give a programming test onsite.

    Any number of which I'd probably fail as pulling random function names/jargon out the air isn't my forte. OTOH, I've been coding for 35 years, know where to find the answers to anything I need to know and can crank out pretty much bug free code until the cows come home. As an e.g., last task I was given was to monitor an IBM MQ for SWIFT payments, parse them, pull out the good stuff, validate it and put it in an oracle DB. Wrote it in ProC. Never used ProC (had used C though), Oracle or MQ before yet amazingly it went through testing with only one minor bug and that was a problem with the spec rather than the code. I even threw in diagnostic modes you could select with switches at run time to give verbose logging. Last count I've used 20+ languages from Assembler to 4GLs, across various Unix, DOS, Windows and VMS. As I said though, I'd be amazed if I could answer more than a handful of questions on the spot even though I was (so long ago..) a MCSD or whatever the MS dev training used to be called.