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  1. I think you missed the meaning of the GP.

    You can turn them off. Completely. It's really that simple.

    There are exactly zero websites I want to be able to "push" content to me. I thought we had gotten over that entire model when broadcast TV died? Why are we now revisiting a battle we won, in a medium that's essentially "pull" from the ground up?

  2. Because institutional knowledge is still a thing. on Why Hasn't The Gig Economy Killed Traditional Work? (npr.org) · · Score: 1

    A few people have answered this from the employees' perspective, but there's a much more obvious answer...

    My projects at work are almost always multi-week, sometimes even taking the better part of a year. Just getting familiar with the systems my employer uses took me over a year, and that's already having been completely competent in the base platform and proficient at the tools and languages involved in doing the actual work.

    The "gig" economy is great for situations where "probably" is good enough and the work is low-to-no-skill. If one Uber driver doesn't show up, it just means you wait two extra minutes for the next one. If one day-laborer is sick today, there's 20 others to pick from in the Home Depot parking lot. And even then, that doesn't always work - If the ship or railcar doesn't get unloaded, you're paying demurrage. If the checkout lines aren't adequately staffed, people start abandoning full carts and walking out.

    Not everything can be a "gig". If an employer needs either highly skilled labor, or a guaranteed minimum number of bodies present - Not a gig.

  3. Buy foreign. on Ask Slashdot: How Does One Freely Use Bitcoin In the Land of the Free? · · Score: 1

    I've had no problem spending BTC. Just buy from abroad and have it imported (and as long as they call it a "promotional" item - They all do - it doesn't even cost you any more anyway).

  4. All the responses to you so far have bragged about Androids... And make no mistake, I use both Android and iOS and am by *no* stretch of the imagination an Apple fanboy...

    But...

    I have owned my current iPhone for roughly 3 years. And in that time, I have rebooted it exactly once, for an OS upgrade. I force-shut it down one other time only because I was in the middle of nowhere, basically lost, and wanted to save the last 5% of battery for a 911 call if it became necessary.

    Put bluntly, it has never crashed. Ever. Period.

  5. Re:The commentary has a major flaw on Commentary On How To Make Novice Programmers More Professional (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    Engineering (used to be) a profession. MBAs destroyed it. Programming has no control over entry, standards, or base education requirements. It is not a profession.

    Again with these imaginary definitions! You need a dictionary, friend.

    A "profession" is however I make my living. Prostitution (whether it be to a pimp or an MBA) is still a profession, even if you like to pretend that the fact you grovelled to Uncle Sam for permission to work somehow makes you better than the plebes.

    I see you think highly of MBAs, though - So we at least agree on one point. ;)

  6. Re:The commentary has a major flaw on Commentary On How To Make Novice Programmers More Professional (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    You're splitting imaginary hairs here. A "consultancy" is just a company that provides consultants.

    And I never said anything about "easy". I said that experience matters. If it were easy, we wouldn't have a shortage of competent programmers, since it pays well and everyone and their brother that "knows computers" tries their hand at coding - And then they quickly learn they hate hate hate everything about it.

  7. Re:Tough shit -- welcome to the real world on It's About Time Astronauts Got Healthcare For Life (mashable.com) · · Score: 1

    So you are good with riding the subway surrounded by people who are coughing because they could not get treated for their tuberculosis?

    Here, let me offer you a hand getting off of that slippery slope....

  8. Re:Tough shit -- welcome to the real world on It's About Time Astronauts Got Healthcare For Life (mashable.com) · · Score: 1

    There is zero risk that someone not having health insurance could financially ruin me as a result of their lack of control over their body.

    There is, however, a substantial risk that someone without car insurance could financially ruin me as a result of their lack of control over their car.

  9. Re:The commentary has a major flaw on Commentary On How To Make Novice Programmers More Professional (slashdot.org) · · Score: 1

    Why don't all you old guys open a consultancy

    An awfully lot of programmers do exactly that, but working as a contractor isn't for everyone. Personally, I do a bit on the side, but enjoy the stability that a 9-to-5 gives me.

    I'm a EE, I have written hundreds of thousands of lines of code that are still in production

    Then you of all people should recognize the difference between good design vs throwing "young people willing to gut out horrible code" at the problem.

    but it isn't, and it never will be, until there is a force of law behind it.

    What does the law have to do with whether or not something is a profession?

  10. Re:The commentary has a major flaw on Commentary On How To Make Novice Programmers More Professional (slashdot.org) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe your amazingly robust website is not 2-3 times better, but only 1.2 times better and you should only be making a few dollars more than the 20 yo grad.

    In programming, experience is worth drastically more than the pay differential for the same. A seasoned coder can crank out in a few hours what a recent college grad would literally spend a few weeks on; and it will be far more stable and maintainable.

    Yes, I am conservatively some 50x more productive than my junior peers. A big part of that comes from knowing what to ask the customer up front, knowing what won't work, and knowing when to just build the damned birdhouse the customer requested rather than a 400 unit Gehry-inspired avian housing complex "just in case" the customer wants to upgrade in the future.

  11. OTOH you could always ask why they don't just push the electricity down the line they are using anyway to transmit the power to a point where they DO have a hill and build it on land where it's much cheaper to build and easier to maintain

    Yeah, pretty much the first thing I thought of when half a dozen people all replied to me that ocean wind farms aren't near hills. :)

    Storage doesn't need to have any geographic connection to generation; quite the opposite, it's far more efficient (all else equal) to store excess electricity near the point of use, because you're "discounting" the amount you need to store by all the line losses between the turbines and the end user.

  12. In what ways is this better than simply pumping water uphill into a holding tank or artificial reservoir? It sounds a hell of a lot more complicated, so must have some offsetting feature that would shift the balance.

    Yes, I can see the obvious answer that the increased pressure means a higher energy density, but *so* much higher as to make it worth doing?

  13. The real question here, which shouldn't even need to be asked but does...

    Which of these plans is the least-limited version of "unlimited"? I've already discovered that Verizon won't offer their plan for 4G access points (even though I can buy a five year old sacrificial phone and tether to it 24/7). AT&T apparently doesn't allow tethering at all (which I thought the FCC had previously spanked them for, but, no surprise they went for a "Hail Mary" pass after this past January).

    So, which of these plans really will let you use it as close to unlimited as possible? I have no delusion any of them will actually give me the upper possible limit of a solid 42.8Mbps for 13TB/month, but will any even realistically let me use 3-5Mbps sustained for a few hours a day, with 50+GB/month total?

  14. Good luck with that. on Microsoft Research Developing An AI To Put Coders Out of a Job (mspoweruser.com) · · Score: 1

    "I want a program that shows what our competitors' pricing will be tomorrow. Sort it so both name and price are always in ascending order. Email the output as plain text to the following 27 people, but only Joe and I should have the ability to edit it. Make the keyboard give a mild electric shock to managers in stores more than 10% more expensive than their regional competitors. And it should run exclusively in The Cloud, but not require internet access for any of its functionality."

    I wish I was joking.

  15. Re:stay warm and safe in your bubble on Linus Torvalds: Talk of Tech Innovation is Bullshit. Shut Up and Get the Work Done (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Which is why they want kids to "learn computers" in Kindergarten.

    ...And keep failing miserably.

    No doubt, the earlier we expose kids to real programming (as opposed to the drag-and-drop programming equivalent of the old Radio Shack "hundred-in-one electronics projects" kits that Code.org keeps touting as some sort of mythical progress), the higher quality programmers we'll eventually turn out; but that doesn't mean you'll see a substantial increase in the number of people who can, and can stand to, code.

    Early exposure might mean a few more people realize they have what it takes to code, but programming is hard, despite all the rose-scented farts Google, Microsoft et al keep encouraging us to sniff. The vast majority or people have neither the aptitude nor the patience to ever master the relevant skills.

  16. How can he be absolutely correct that the figure is meaningless if you found a meaning to the figure?

    Well, I know this is Slashdot, but some of us can read beyond the subject line... He said, "45 years spread over a bunch of drives without a failure doesn't mean that we can expect any individual drive to last 45 years". That statement is entirely true.

    Going further, most people will, charitably, choose to infer a context that makes sense when reading something that could otherwise seem untrue. If you're in a theater that has "Cool Hand Luke" playing, and yell that title to your friend across the room at the ticket counter - Only a "special" few would choose to interpret that as complimenting the fingers of some guy named Luke.

  17. You are absolutely correct. The trivial counterexample is a device that contains a semi-consumable substance, such bearings with an oil that slowly dries out; 100% might last a year, even if 0% will last two (not saying that is the case here, but just as a possibility).

    These numbers do, however, suggest that you can expect a very low failure rate of those drives within the first year (less than 2.2%). And realistically, you'll probably get far more than that under similar conditions.

  18. Re:Yeah, Apple is so happy that Ireland didn't IRE on 'It's Tricky': Apple Misses the Deadline To Pay $13.9 Bn To Ireland in Illegal Tax Benefit (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    All fair points - But if the EU hadn't gone off in a huff about the UK leaving, all the things you describe could be tidily wrapped up into a single trade deal that says little more than "we'll comply with all applicable EU standards on goods and services"; and with the exception of some minor quibbles about trivialities such as who can make Feta, Cheddar, and Champagne, I think the UK would find that compromise entirely palatable (no pun intended).

    That has nothing to do with taxes and nothing to do with immigration; and if the EU hadn't tried to force those issues on the UK, the UK almost certainly wouldn't have voted to take their ball and go home in the first place.

    IMO, the UK made the right choice, and Ireland would do well to follow suit. Trade deals shouldn't affect their respective partners' self-sovereignty.

  19. Re:Yeah, Apple is so happy that Ireland didn't IRE on 'It's Tricky': Apple Misses the Deadline To Pay $13.9 Bn To Ireland in Illegal Tax Benefit (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    What do trade deals have to do with this?

    Well, the quote to which I responded said "We're leaving the EU, but we still need you to give us free trade".

  20. Re:Yeah, Apple is so happy that Ireland didn't IRE on 'It's Tricky': Apple Misses the Deadline To Pay $13.9 Bn To Ireland in Illegal Tax Benefit (cnbc.com) · · Score: 2

    It would seem a bit odd to say "We're leaving the EU, but we still need you to give us free trade

    I keep hearing variations on that line with regards to Brexit (though the same would apply for any EU country sick of the EU's games, Ireland included), and just don't "get" it...

    The US has free trade agreements with plenty of countries, despite not having given those countries the slightest hint of power to dictate what US law can or cannot do domestically. Why would a (former) EU country not have the ability to negotiate similar trade deals, totally in isolation from the immigration bullshit the EU seems intent to ram down its members' unwilling throats?

  21. Re:Buzz off with your pseudo-money on Former Fed Employee Fined $5,000 For Installing Bitcoin Software On Server (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Those "bullshit bitsy shekels" have a market cap over USD$15B, which would put it at roughly the 96th largest company listed on the NASDAQ if it were a company. So I'd have to say that yeah, a whole hell of a lot of people would seriously buy those bullshit bitsy shekels.

  22. Slashdot has been screaming for exactly this for literally decades now. So, I fully expect this particular conversation to get ugly

    That said - So far, Trump has done exactly what he said he would do. The first two or three days, okay, I'll admit it took us by surprise that a politician (new to it or not) didn't lie. At this point, anyone not expecting exactly this either wasn't paying attention during the election, or is just plain delusional.

    "May you live in exciting times"...

  23. Re:Firefox cookie management, too on Google Removes Plugin Controls From Chrome, Reports Claim (ghacks.net) · · Score: 1

    I agree with you in spirit (quit taking control away from the user!), but...

    We already won the cookie war via private browsing / incognito mode. Let sites set whatever the hell they want, because no one but the originating site will ever see it, and as soon as the browser closes, *poof*, all nice and clean.

  24. Re:Have they added DRM yet? on Vinyl Record Production Gets a Much-Needed Tech Upgrade (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    He's not talking about the raw individual instrument/mic tracks, he's talking about the final digital mix that gets used to produce the record, which is an entirely different (and I would have to agree better) mix than goes to CD/MP3 and radio.

    I have no love for vinyl, but its hard to argue that not every second of a song (aside from the intro and outro) should be equally loud as every other second.

  25. Re:Works both way... on Ask Slashdot: Should You Tell Future Employers Your Salary History? · · Score: 1

    people may be in dire need of a job and are quite willing to downgrade the pay just to stay working.

    Right - And as soon as things get better, they'll be out the door. That's pretty much the GP's point.

    in a bad econ (ie, this one!)

    We currently have the most employee-friendly economy and job market so far this millennium. Yes, the current low unemployment rate might drive up pay a bit over the next few years, but overall, it doesn't get much better than this.

    even good people get fired

    Good people get laid off. Even complete wastes of flesh are usually forced to quit rather than outright fired. Actually being terminated for cause isn't just "bad luck", it means you screwed up royally - You got busted stealing, or nailing the boss' daughter on his desk, or are so incompetent that you didn't just contribute nothing, you outright cost the company many times your salary due to gross negligence.