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User: curunir

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  1. Re:And they'll still buy the next iPhone on Major Backlash Looms For Apple's New Maps App · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As an iOS user, I'm actually happy with the iOS 6 situation. The Google maps on iOS lags behind the version in Android because it's part of the core OS and only gets updated during OS upgrades. As a third-party app, Google will be free to update Maps more often.

    The only way that the new development becomes a negative is if either Apple pulls App Store shenanigans with Google's Maps app or if Google doesn't put in the effort to keep the app current. Otherwise, this is a huge win for iOS users...we get an app that sits idle most of the time but has the cool flyover feature and we get a more current version of Google Maps.

  2. Re:User ID vs year joined? on Slashdot Turns 15, What Are You Doing Later? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I started reading late '97 but wasn't convinced to actually sign up until sometime in '99. My guess is that you signed up early 2000. There were a lot of people who lurked and posted anon back then rather than sign up, so slightly higher IDs aren't really an indication that people missed the early days.

  3. Re:'Fair Use' is not sufficiently well defined on The Algorithmic Copyright Cops: Streaming Video's Robotic Overlords · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem with your argument is that fair use is not a right. Instead, it's a defense against infringement. Even if something is within the boundaries of fair use, no one is required to respect that...it only protects you from being liable for infringement. So when someone (or some machine) denies that fair use, there's nothing legally wrong with doing so.

    The problem isn't (yet) with the definition of fair use, it's with the lack of protection of fair use as a right. For the purpose it serves, fair use is defined well enough...it describes enough to explain the intent and purposefully leaves the interpretation to judges and juries. To protect against cases like the one in the story, we need to first make it against the law to deny fair use...then we can worry about more explicitly defining what is and isn't fair use.

  4. Re:640 years on How Long Do You Want To Live? · · Score: 1

    That's the thing that's not mentioned in the story...when faced with the proposition of extending our lives, they don't indicate which part of our lives would be extended. If you narrow the choices to 80 or 120, the answer for many people would depend on whether you spend that extra 40 years as a creaky, wrinkled older person who's taking 10 different meds to stave off death or whether they somehow figure out how to extend the 20s, 30s and 40s to give you the extra longevity.

    The way that science has previously approached increases in longevity has been to try to understand and prevent the final disease or malady that finishes us off. Increasingly, that won't be enough. We'll need to concentrate more of our efforts into combating aging and keeping people young longer rather than just alive longer.

    Basically...more time in my 20s and 30s? Yes please. More time as a cantankerous old man opining about how great life used to be before all the young 'uns started playing on my lawn? I'll pass.

  5. Re:No professional developer uses WYSIWYG on Ask Slashdot: Value of Website Design Tools vs. Hand Coding? · · Score: 1

    While I agree with what you've said, there's one piece that I think is necessary to make hand coding work. If you've got a client like the kid in the story has, use a rapid mock-up tool like Balsamiq to create mock-ups that the client can ok before you start coding by hand. Hand coding produces the best results, but it's also the slowest method. If you go through many iterations before you get to a finished product, you'll waste a lot of time using hand coding alone. It's better to reach some semblance of consensus/accord prior to writing the code so you can limit the number of iterations you'll have to go through. The client will always have feedback and will always need additional revs of the design before they're satisfied. But okaying the skeleton ahead of time can limit the number of revs that need to happen.

    Also, as others have pointed out, hand coding in Notepad is very different than hand coding in an editor that can do content assist and has integrated documentation. I know very few good developers that have wasted their time memorizing the DOM and JavaScript to the point where they don't need reference. Switching between the editor and a browser sucks. Use an IDE that will help you type less.

  6. Re:No, it won't on Firefox OS Will Win Big With Developers - Mozilla · · Score: 2

    Sounds like WebOS...developers wrote WebOS apps in HTML/JavaScript too. By all accounts I've heard, the software was excellent and peopled loved the OS. Yet it didn't exactly take over the mobile market or even "win big." I wish Mozilla the best of luck with trying the same play ~3 years later, but I'm not betting one red cent on them (or wasting any of my time developing apps for their OS.)

  7. Re:Flamebait in Headline on SQL Vs. NoSQL: Which Is Better? · · Score: 2

    The name noSQL itself is flamebait.

    It's also incredibly misleading. If they'd named it correctly, it would be NoACID. That's the real issue at hand...making a different CAP compromise. The programming interface is really not that big of an issue. Yes, it's different, but as programmers we should be able to adapt to both fairly easily. What really is important is how to achieve high scalability. People have rightly zeroed in on the fact that if your application can tolerate eventual consistency, that problem can get a lot easier than the ACID-compliant data stores. The fact that those data stores all use SQL is more of a coincidence or a byproduct of the history of how databases developed rather than a fact of life...you can have a non-ACID SQL database and you can have an ACID non-SQL database.

    The whole article is wrong-headed as it only examines the programming interface which is, for the most part, unimportant. A valuable discussion of the topic would have examined what an ACID-compliant database would need to do to achieve the kinds of scale that a non-ACID database can and would have looked into the kinds of application logic that would be necessary to cope with the eventual consistency situation in non-ACID databases. Instead we got a primer on how to use both types of databases without any why, when or gotchas.

  8. Get a ball on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Future of Standing/Walking Workstations? · · Score: 1

    Get a balance exercise ball to replace your chair. Keep your chair for the first couple of months as it will take some time until your back is strong enough to sit on one for the entire day. In the end, the working position is just as comfortable as a chair but you spend a large part of the day working your core (not strenuously, but it adds up.)

    These are the ones that many people in my office have (adjust size according to your height.)

  9. Re:Ron Paul on SSID As the New Community Bulletin Board and Yard Sign · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, it's because any AP with an SSID of Romney will not respond consistently. Then again, any AP with an SSID of Obama is heavily compromised and, even when given full power, does almost nothing.

  10. Re:Second half of the phrase.... on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    No, it isn't. Everyone parrotting what you've said invariably lives away from the tech centers of the US and is, essentially, complaining that they can't get a tech job in an area where there aren't tech jobs.

    Meanwhile, back in Silicon Valley, San Francisco or any of the other areas where tech companies cluster, we have a serious lack of talent available to us. We've had open positions for well over a year that we just can't fill. Our offers are not low, or at least they wouldn't be if we could find anyone we'd want to hire. And our list of qualifications isn't long...know how to program in Java and have some clue as to how to solve problems. You'd think that anyone willing to pay $120k-$150k for someone with those attributes would have plenty of takers. You'd be wrong.

    It may not be fair that you have to move to get a good tech job, but that's how the industry works. But it doesn't mean that tech companies are scheming to hire foreigners and screw Americans.

  11. Re:Salaries on IT Positions Some of the Toughest Jobs To Fill In US · · Score: 1

    I see people making this kind of complaint and then I see the endless parade of unqualified applicants for our developer positions (some of which have actually managed to get offers, despite my protestations) and I almost never see anyone capable of meeting our meager requirements. Those requirements, basically, boil down to 3-5 years of Java and the ability to solve a few rather simple problems. The ability to speak English has even been relegated to a "nice to have." For that, we're willing to offer $120k-$150k/yr and a sane 40 hour work week.

    I don't know about you, but that doesn't sound like slavery to me. My experience indicates that you're right in one regard...there's no shortage of people who want jobs. What there is a shortage of is people non-delusional people who've taken the time to gain the relatively small amount of experience to justify giving them that job.

  12. Look for US companies that offshore on Ask Slashdot: Find a Job In China For Non-native Speaker? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Rather than looking for work there, try to find US companies that offshore work to China. Failing that, try applying with a firm that works with US companies, though don't expect to be paid much above what they pay their locals.

    My employer has an offshore team in Beijing. Most of the developers there speak pigeon English and would welcome a native speaker to help improve and we'd welcome someone to help bridge the language gap that can be quite difficult over Skype and such. I'd look for companies like us and inquire about whether we'd be willing to hire you to work in the China office. If you've got a good Java background, I'm sure we'd seriously consider hiring you to work at our China office. We might require you to train for a couple of weeks in SF first and come back for a couple weeks a year, but I'd hope that wouldn't be a problem for you. As a bonus, you'd likely not have to deal with getting a Chinese work permit, though you should probably confirm that.

    If you're interested, respond to this comment with some way to contact you and I can send your resume to HR.

  13. Re:A week? on Who's Pirating Game of Thrones, and Why? · · Score: 1

    Some of us downloaded them because we didn't want to wait the years it would take before HBO aired them. Mind you, I downloaded them from Amazon on my Kindle and actually paid for them.

    It's one thing to have to wait a week for a crack-on-tv show like Lost and an entirely different thing to have to wait a week for a show based on a book that's been available for years. Besides...the show has become a bad parody of the book...they're making lame changes for no good reason and generally rushing through everything while simultaneously adding bizarrely-long bits of dialog that weren't in the book.

  14. Re:What about OBESE models? on Israel Passes Photoshop Law To Combat Anorexia · · Score: 1

    BMI is an good indicator of health, not a good measurement of it. Someone with a BMI in the healthy range is very likely to be a healthy weight. Someone out of that range needs more accurate (and more expensive) tests to determine whether they are over or under weight. For the CS grads out there, BMI is like a compact Bloom Filter...yes, you get false positives, but it's still a really useful data structure if you understand its purpose.

  15. Re:Cue huge pushback from the AMA in 3...2... on FDA May Let Patients Buy More Drugs Without Prescriptions · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And it's precisely because doctors are too busy that something like this makes sense. It's been the case for a number of years that doctors have been less able to keep up-to-date with the latest information on prescription drugs. Between the rate of release, marketing from the pharmaceutical companies and the various medical studies, it's ton of information to process. Doctors either choose to concentrate on a very limited subset of available drugs or they fall woefully behind. Pharmacists are, in my experience, much more able to keep up, since they only have to care about the medication side of the equation.

    For what it's worth, I'm not talking about experience as a patient. In a previous job, I worked for a PBM (prescription benefits management) company and was in charge of integrating a third-part drug database into one of their web products. I attended conferences with doctors and pharmacists and both seemed to echo the sentiment that keeping abreast of both medical developments and new drug therapies was almost impossible. The conclusion that I reached was that it makes sense to decouple the diagnosis from the prescription process. Doctors should be free to recommend or prescribe specific medications, but they should prefer to simply supply a diagnosis and allow the pharmacist to prescribe the proper medication given a patients allergies, other medications and insurance.

    This seems like a sensible step towards that.

  16. Re:hope we luck out on Oracle Vs. Google and the Right To Use APIs · · Score: 1

    He was merely pointing out that a judge even after months of study is unlikely to fully understand the ramifications as well as someone who has been studying and developing API's and languages for decades.

    Similarly, the judge is much less likely to have any personal stake in a legal decision on the issue than someone who has been studying and developing APIs and languages for decades.

    As a software developer, it's occurred to me how cool it would be to have a chance to serve on the jury in this case. I think it would be an amazing opportunity to learn about the legal issues involved in my chosen profession and a chance to get a deep-dive into one of the technologies that I have to use on a daily basis. I'm not sure which way I would end up deciding...despite the prevailing pro-Google opinions on this site (some of which I agree with), Java is licensed the way it is for an important reason. By producing an implementation that only supports a subset of Java's functionality, Google has forced developers to target a "lowest common denominator" subset of the Java's feature set. As a developer, if I distribute a software library, I now have to consider whether I want it to work on Android and possibly ignore better ways of implementing functionality to support that platform. That decision sucks and is the reason that Sun wrote the license the way they did.

    But in all my internal deliberations, I'm entirely cognizant that I'm in no way impartial. I'm constantly thinking about how it affects me, even if it doesn't represent a bias towards one side or another. There's a reason why experts testify at cases rather than decide them. It may feel frustrating to people who feel like they know better, but I firmly believe that unbiased and ignorant is superior to biased and informed.

  17. Re:Paper and Pen on Ask Slashdot: How Can I Get Through To a Politician By E-mail? · · Score: 1

    Any foolproof way of getting thru the layer of flak catchers wouldn't survive being public knowledge for very long.

    That's bullshit. There has been just such a method and it's been common knowledge for quite some time. You simply need to include a check with at least 3 zeros between the leading non-zero digit and the decimal point. If you actually want them to do more than look at the opinions expressed in letter (i.e. care), add more zeros.

  18. Re:world record... on Ask Slashdot: The Very Best Paper Airplane? · · Score: 2

    This article has a brief discussion of the overall design of the plane. Not really a step-by-step how-to, but there's enough in there for someone with some physics knowledge and Googling skills to create something similar.

  19. Re:Better way to give out tickets on Google I/O Sells Out In 20 Minutes · · Score: 1

    I think there was actually a way for developers to game the registration process. For example, the registration page was doing client-side validation on date, so setting the system clock on your machine forward to past 7am would let you agree to the terms and move on to the next phase before the 7am live time.

    Unfortunately for me, I only thought to do that about 6:45am, so I wasn't able to figure out how to game the second step in time. Did anyone else navigate the whole path this way?

  20. Sensationalist Headline on Selling Used MP3s Found Legal In America · · Score: 5, Informative

    The linked story is from some fly-by-night news site that cites a Yahoo! news posting that totally misinterprets an ArsTechnica posting that actually analyzes the actual decision (which is hosted on Wired.) Somehow in this online news game of telephone, it went from the actual story, posted accurately earlier in the day by NewYorkCountryLawyer, that the judge denied the plaintiff's motion for an injunction to the sensationalist story that the judge had ruled in favor of the defendant and ruled that their business is legal. Denying the injunction means that ReDigi gets to keep doing business during the trial. That's it, nothing more. They could still lose at trial. The trial hasn't even started, let alone been decided in a way that would mean that reselling mp3s is legal.

    In short, this is a misinformed dupe of the story posted by NewYorkCountryLawyer earlier in the day. Read and comment on that one because this is sensationalist garbage. Nothing to see here. Move along.

  21. Re:It's not a choice on No Pardon For Turing · · Score: 1

    Marriage is a deal between two people and the rest of the community. You go make babies to wipe my ass when I'm old, and I'll subsidize your relationship.

    All that might make sense if we had a shortage of babies. But with low infant mortality rates and parents who are able to conceive later in life, there's less need to subsidize people having children before they can afford to do so. I can see society having an interest in certain people procreating, but a blanket policy to provide economic subsidies to everyone who wants to procreate is, at best, unnecessary and, at worst, irresponsible.

  22. Re:I'm glad I support the Republicans on How the GOP (and the Tea Party) Helped Kill SOPA · · Score: 1

    my main objective now is to stop that bunch of lunatic Democrats who are doing everything to restrict everybody's rights

    The reason it's Democrats doing that is because the Democrats are in charge. If you put the Republicans back in charge, the only change is that it's now lunatic Republicans restricting everybody's rights. Have you forgotten what it was like under Bush? Does the PATRIOT act ring a bell? Warrantless wiretaps? The attacks on online pornography?

    The truth is both parties suck. They just suck in subtly different ways. The Democrats pass trillion dollar healthcare legislation that's been sufficiently neutered by insurance carrier to be next to pointless. The Republicans start trillion dollar wars, increase military spending and funnel public money to defense contractors (and the financial industry, though the Democrats are fully behind that too.) If you want change, you can throw your support behind Ron Paul, but supporting Romney or Gingrich won't help the situation one bit. The only long-term solution is to vote in candidates from outside the two major parties. So far, only Vermont has been able to do that (I don't count Lieberman.)

  23. Re:Gee, I wonder what Slashdot will think on Pirate Bay Founders Lose Final Appeal · · Score: 2

    I think a lot of us believe that stealing the metaphorical car in this case is wrong. But we also believe that the penalty for stealing the metaphorical car shouldn't be 10 consecutive life sentences. We don't like that researching car security systems is a crime and that simply telling someone where there is an easily-stealable car is viewed no differently than actually stealing it. We're worried that if that precedent is set, we might one day inadvertently help someone steal a car and be subject to these extreme penalties.

    I think it's a bit of a strawman argument to claim that most people here advocate piracy. We don't like it and we want to see content creators fairly compensated. We want to pay for DRM-free content that gives us the flexibility to consume it however we'd like. And we want to see those responsible for the piracy punished fairly. We see an industry that should be able to provide their product to customers at a price they're willing to pay and, seemingly, refuses to do so and blames customers for looking elsewhere to find the product they want.

    I, personally, support filing lawsuits against torrent users, but I believe the potential damages should be limited to the maximum value of sales lost by the infringer's actions. If there are 100 people downloading a torrent of a movie that could be bought for $20, the damages should be capped at $2000. I don't believe in jailing people that index or help other people violate copyright. It may make illegal downloading more convenient, but the transgression belongs to the person actually violating the copyright. However I also support anyone's right to research pretty much anything...the pursuit of knowledge and the exercise of curiosity are basic human rights. And we're social beings, so I support our need to share our cultural experiences.

    As an example, about a year ago, my father passed away. I spent the better part of 2 days putting together a slideshow for his memorial that included photographs of him, our family and friends and also his artwork and artistic photographs. I set the slideshow to 4 of his favorite songs...songs that he loved and that had become associated with many fond memories for myself and many others. I received no less than 100 requests at the memorial for a copy so that they could re-watch it. Currently, copyright law does not allow me to do so, but I did it anyways. Considering that my father bought each song in question 2-3 times (CD, iTunes and one on vinyl as well), I don't feel that I'm in the moral wrong on this one. We've let copyright law get in the way of creating new art and I disagree with that.

    So there you have it...my shade of grey as an answer to your black and white. Most of us are not immoral people. We want to do what we feel is right. But what we feel is right does not conform perfectly to the law's version of what is allowed and what isn't. I'm sorry I can't relate that back to a car analogy.

  24. Re:Not all religions are bad on Christopher Hitchens Dies At 62 · · Score: 1

    Leviticus 11 also says that God's followers shouldn't eat pork, but that doesn't stop millions of Christians around the world from having their morning bacon.

    Claiming a biblical basis for homophobia makes most Christians hypocrites who selectively apply the bible to support their prejudices. They should admit that they're against it for the eww-factor and not because their religious beliefs dictate it.

  25. Node.js? on Ask Slashdot: One Framework To Rule Them All? · · Score: 1

    If you're bound and determined to use a scripting language (which, from what you listed, you appear to be), why not use the same language on the server side as you do on the client? It will allow you to share code on both sides and there's plenty of reasonable MVC frameworks that will work on Node. And Node should out-perform PHP and Ruby and likely Python as well.

    I tend to lean towards the Java/Spring approach, but I've been pleasantly surprised with Node.