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User: 140Mandak262Jamuna

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  1. We should learn from municipalities, not toyota. on Mixing Agile With Waterfall For Code Quality · · Score: 1
    Agile process has its roots in the process used by the industrial engineers of Toyota, Japan in improving the quality of the process. It is interesting to note that the success of Toyota, Japan, is not easily replicated, and even Toyota, USA and other siblings are not able to be as efficient as Toyota, Japan. This process is good for making multiple copies of a well known object using large number of workers with highly interchangeable skills, and the process could be broken down into very small pieces where any team member could do any task.

    Software development is not making the same widget again and again. This is the fundamental misapplication that is messing up agile implementations.

    Software grows more like a city. Any new functionality needs to interface with and restricted by existing infrastructure. A large software project is like adding a new skyscraper to an throbbing downtown. If we could distill the collective wisdom of the town planners about clearly marking existing interfaces, existing users, the typical use case scenarios that will be affected by the reengineering, detours and diversions needed while the project is going on, we would get a better process. Agile is simply promising too much to the top management and then blaming the developers for "not doing agile right".

  2. Status quo ante can be restored easily. on As Prison Population Sinks, Jails Are a Steal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The main reason for the drop in prison population is because so many criminals in Wall Street went scot free after the 2009 crisis. Just make up the short fall in prison population by jailing the top people of large financial firms. They have long ago gone from "too big to fail" and "too big to jail" to "too big to be free".

  3. These two patients are different. on Positive Ebola Test In Second Texas Health Worker · · Score: 1

    They contracted ebola in the USA. Which means these ebola viruses is natural born US Ebola viruses, invested with more constitutional rights than an alien undocumented ebola virus. So these viruses must be given their due process. So it would take longer to process them.

  4. It is small, not sure it consumes less than 100MW on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1
    In all the fusion research the key question is, "Is it producing more energy than it consumes?" The article is silent about it. Looks like they have shrunk the size of the reactor. But might not have made it net energy producer. It speculates it could power a ship. But does not say clearly they have made it net energy producer. If Fusion produces significant amount of excess energy (more than it consumes) for a significant period, that facet alone, by itself, is a major break through, irrespective of size.

    Looks like a desperate team trying to generate headlines to keep their funding going.

  5. We need cold hard facts. on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    uh oh, wait. Cold? Fusion? It aint gonna work noway nohow.

  6. Radical changes are not (always) good. on Fighting the Culture of 'Worse Is Better' · · Score: 1
    Take a look at evolution. Sexual reproduction has so many hurdles to jump through before a beneficial mutation could find a toehold. In asexual reproduction individuals can rapidly and radically adjust to the changing environment and pass on the beneficial mutations to the next generations. They produce teeming masses of viruses, bacteria, fungi, insects, and at most reptiles. (A confirmed case of parthenogenesis of a shark sent shock waves through the biologists. But I think it has never happened among mammals).

    Sacrificing backward compatibility and interoperability for radical changes would lead a large population of rapidly mutating code and runtime environment. You see this both in biology and software. Malware proliferates, ditches backward compatibility and interoperability and tries to adapt as quickly as possible to exploit newly discovered vulnerabilities. Giant organisms and big pieces of software change slowly, spend enormous amount of energy and effort in maintaining a thriving eco-system.

    Radical changes (saltations) has its advantages but also limitations. Slow incremental changes has its limitations but also advantages.

  7. Good passwords are everywhere. on Password Security: Why the Horse Battery Staple Is Not Correct · · Score: 1

    Just look at the usernames in slashdot. They all make very good passwords. Take my username, please. It is a damn good password. If I can casually waste it as user id, imagine how many more goodies where it came from. 263Bhaskar 264Kuppa 261Shyam 260Thomas 259Raghu 258Siva ... Passwords just make themselves...

  8. Re:The Russian space program was amazing on First Man To Walk In Space Reveals How Mission Nearly Ended In Disaster · · Score: 1

    Thanks, I stand corrected.

  9. Re:The Russian space program was amazing on First Man To Walk In Space Reveals How Mission Nearly Ended In Disaster · · Score: 1

    The apocryphal story goes, the fountain pens with ink did not work well in zero gravity. So NASA invented the pressurized ball point pens. Russians switched to pencils.

  10. Thanks Obama. on Birth Control Pills Threaten Fish Stocks · · Score: -1, Troll

    Someone has to say it.

  11. Come on, Elon, quit fooling around. on Tesla Announces Dual Motors, 'Autopilot' For the Model S · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Give us model E, the 40 K sedan. The rich people have paid enough money and you have built the credibility. Continuing to make play things too expensive for the masses is not how you are going to have long term impact or create disruptive technologies.

  12. Your IT tech support seems to be worse. on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With an Unresponsive Manufacturer Who Doesn't Fix Bugs? · · Score: 1

    If you think your security appliance is bad, wait till the management hears about the tech support appliance used by your IT. It seems to consist of posting a vague statement to Slashdot and hoping to get a solution. It is not how IT is done, buddy.

  13. On the recieving end of racism. on Former Infosys Recruiter Says He Was Told Not To Hire US Workers · · Score: -1, Troll

    May be now some of those candidates would know what it means to be on the receiving end of racism and look with some sympathy and understanding when black, brown, yellow Americans complain about it.

  14. Re:People on Is an Octopus Too Smart For Us To Eat? · · Score: 1

    And Soylent Green has been trade marked.

  15. Re:Wondering why it took so long... on A Garbage Truck That Would Make Elon Musk Proud · · Score: 1
    You are right in saying the electric part actually reduces efficiency, the only reason to have it is to eliminate the gear box/transmission. But once the technology is in why did it take 60 years to scale the system down to handle trucks? While the automotive engineers spent all that time designing gear boxes to couple the diesel to the 18 wheel truck's wheel, why did not think of going electric? The greatest advantage would be in removing the low end torque requirement. Diesels have better low end torque than gasoline engines. But electric motor has the best torque vs power profile. Using an electric motor to remove the first gear alone would allow them to optimize the engine better for fuel economy, freed from the low rpm torque requirements.

    Well we have the benefit of hindsight.

  16. Re:levels are 1-4 on GlaxoSmithKline Released 45 Liters of Live Polio Virus · · Score: 1

    Based on your utter and complete lack of knowledge about the situation, you've completely made things up in your own head and you're ready to crucify the first person you see.

    I specifically said, don't rail road some low level schmuck and go after the big guys who have lot more to lose. As long as corporations can blame low level employees and let the big fish get away free, these things will keep happening. To prevent recurrence, big guys should lose big. Otherwise we don't mean it and they wouldn't care.

  17. Wondering why it took so long... on A Garbage Truck That Would Make Elon Musk Proud · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The diesel-electric locomotive took over from the steam locomotives at incredible rate of adoption. Many steam locomotives pf Baldwin Loco Works, Philadelphia, made just one run from assembly line to scrap yard. It was that fast, technology changed before the order pipeline was flushed. In just 10 years, between 1950 and 1960. But even very large earth movers, even those that needed lots of electric power on board, stubbornly stayed with diesel instead of diesel-electric.

    This conversion of diesel trucks to diesel-electric or gas-turbine-electric trucks is long over due. In the case of steam locomotives, the efficiency went from 6% for steam to 15% diesel-electric. But coal was much cheaper than diesel. Here the efficiency boost is probably from 20% to 30%. Going from expensive fuel to slightly cheaper fuel. It might not beat the speed at which steam was made obsolete. But it could come close.

  18. Re:Not surprised in the least on Marriott Fined $600,000 For Jamming Guest Hotspots · · Score: 1

    The posting-wallah is deliberately saying wallah to drive his filthy rich relatives crazy.

  19. Re:Inverse Wi-fi law on Marriott Fined $600,000 For Jamming Guest Hotspots · · Score: 1

    cheap hotels though are competing on stuff like free wifi, free breakfast, etc where the nicer hotels are competing on location, beautiful facility, etc.

    In cheaper hotels the guests are paying for their own stay. Most swanky hotel guests are too rich to care or their corporations are picking up the tab. All the company executives carefully look at the bills. As long as the porn bill is not identifiable, they shrug and sign it off.

  20. Re:Let us not over react nor under react. on GlaxoSmithKline Released 45 Liters of Live Polio Virus · · Score: 1

    There is no honour among thieves. Set up proper ways to rat on their bosses, throw in some incentives for them, you can find enough evidence and witnesses. If the politicians let it happen and if the government goes after them, they can be sent to jail. But the politicians will never will let it happen.

  21. Re:Let us not over react nor under react. on GlaxoSmithKline Released 45 Liters of Live Polio Virus · · Score: 4, Informative
    Yes, India and Bangladesh became polio free. In Pakistan it was confined to one slum of Karachi. Just when victory was about to be had, the terrorists accused the doctors and workers of being American spies and killed an aide worker. The progress stopped. Then the virus spread to the hinterlands of Wazirstan and NWFP. Then the Haj pilgrimage brought it to Mecca and it spread to Nigeria and Indonesia. That is where it stood last year. Not sure where it is now.

    [I was clearly wrong to have used the phrase "Right now". I should have said, till about 10 or 15 years ago]

  22. Re:I'd like to know the facts , what happened on GlaxoSmithKline Released 45 Liters of Live Polio Virus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It appears that someone accidentally dumped the wrong bucket down the drain . From that, you infer:

    > create incentive systems that encourage the violation of the same policies, and claim immunity, ... Nominal financial penalties for those who were negligent are in order. But extraordinary penalties, amounting to all the pay and bonuses collected by the upper management in the last five or ten years should be assessed.

    >

    It is 45 liters of concentrated virus. It is polio this time it could be just simple salmonella or E Coli next time or ebola. The point is not to look one person dumping the wrong bucket. Something as serious as concentrated polio vaccine should not have reached this person pouring stuff down the drain. Every ml every drop of dangerous viruses and bacteria must be accounted for. There should be clear audit trails about who is getting what and how it was disposed of eventually. There should be a clear protocols to track it. One should not be able to get 45 liters of polio in ones hand to dump. Setting up procedures like this costs money. That is where the company cut costs. That is where perverse incentives come in. The top honchos will have a policy directive that says "you must follow these procedures to handle viruses classified as ABC". Then do not hire enough people to enforce the policy. If any team lead points it out, ruin that person's advancement and as an example to others. Nothing on paper. But everyone understands why the promising career of Dr XYZ suddenly foundered. That is how it is done. That is what we should go after.

    It would be far too easy to fire some low level schmuck and pretend everything is hunky dory.

  23. Let us not over react nor under react. on GlaxoSmithKline Released 45 Liters of Live Polio Virus · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Let us not overreact:

    45 liters, even concentrated, of polio virus does not pose great danger, especially since it went into a modern sewage treatment facility. I am a polio victim myself, got it in 1966, 10 years after Salk released the vaccine in USA, but I was in rural South India with very very poor sanitary conditions. All through high school in every class I had another polio victim, typical class sizes are 50 to 60 in India at that time. So it works out to some 4% of the sample population (account for survivor bias, the dead victims did not make it into this sample). I was lucky, lost just part functionality in one leg. Right now in the slums of India, Pakisan and Bangladesh people are living constantly exposed to polio and still the infection rate is not all that high. So we need not go hyperbolic with this news.

    Let us not underreact

    We are giving more and more rights to the corporations, equating money with speech and even religious beliefs to corporations. But when it comes to criminal penalties they get to use limited liability corporation laws. Do not go after the underlings. Top management should not be able to create policy documents on one hand, then create incentive systems that encourage the violation of the same policies, and claim immunity, "Well, that employee violated our own established policy. It is her fault. Don't you think of touching my bonus!". Nominal financial penalties for those who were negligent are in order. But extraordinary penalties, amounting to all the pay and bonuses collected by the upper management in the last five or ten years should be assessed. Their performance review policies should be reviewed, and if they have practices that create perverse incentives to violate their own corporate policies, even harsher penalties are in order.

  24. Cost of doing business for it. on Marriott Fined $600,000 For Jamming Guest Hotspots · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Unless they made less than 600K by this scheme, they are coming out ahead. Such slap in the wrist is not likely to stop such practices.

    I am very sure it is not the top management of Marriot that dreamt up this scheme. The top honchos of most companies are so technologically inept they need tech support to turn on their iPads. It is most likely a local operation. The local manager lamenting not showing any revenue increase despite installing the WiFi access point server. And from the ranks someone down realizing jamming is possible. After that it is simple making bonus and making numbers for the local team that set up the scheme. The top guy has collected his bonus and will find another job. The mid level guys who knew it would be fired and have to look for a new job. The tab is paid by a big faceless corporation. This is likely to happen again.

  25. OK, OK correlation != causation. on Lost Sense of Smell Is a Strong Predictor of Death Within 5 Years · · Score: 2

    OK, Ok, I agree, correlation is not causation. I am not claiming to be an expert or have all the answers. All I am doing is raising the question: Why do they always occur together? Is it a mere coincidence? I report, fair and balanced, and you decide. That is all I am saying.