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Comment Re:Phew. (Score 2) 179

Yup, back when I did the patches for about a thousand computers, I'd always roll them out sloooooowly. First my test system, then my system, then the rest of my office (we know not to panic), then our smallest clients, and then snowballing up to a final massive push to 500 or so systems at our biggest client just before the next round of patches came out. If there was ever a problem anywhere along the line, we could halt before too much damage happened.

Comment Re:Now this is funny. (Score 1) 109

A friend of mine wrote a little tutorial thing called 2K to 10K about increasing your word count as a writer. It's about properly planning what you intend to write, maximizing the output during your prime writing time, and getting excited about your writing. ("Drunk on writing" is a phrase in there that makes me giggle every time.)

Nowhere in the entire thing does she mention typing speed, at least not that I remember.

Comment Re:Time for a professional organization in IT (Score 1) 108

Some of them are trying to get booted up. Atlanta Web Design Group recently organized a bit more strongly and even considered filing as a 501(c) group. (Didn't quite raise enough money in their last Kickstarter for that.)

I think that IT as an umbrella is too broad, but an American Association of Developers might be a great start.

Comment Re:If only we had a union (Score 1) 108

There is also a quality guarantee depending on the industry. I know that plumbing unions, for example, hold their members to a higher standard of work and require more thorough training than just "took a class at a comprehensive high school." Hiring a union member isn't an automatic guarantee of quality, but the odds of getting quality work are higher than you would have hiring Random Guy Off Craigslist.

Comment Re:Is Jackson arguing against diversity? (Score 1) 514

Chances are if someone is from an impoverished country and is trying to get a job in the American tech sector, they were either educated in America or another first world country at some point. India and China's tech education sectors are no joke, but part of the core of the HB1 visa problem is that they complete their education at home, head to the US to get some experience, then head back and take all that experience with them. Hiring American workers first would ensure all that industry experience stays here.

Comment Re:perspective from one of the victims (Score 1) 100

So if they gave you the software that can be used on any computer, why force people to travel? And if you are going to be forced to travel, why not use one of the hundreds of existing test centers around the country? I took every major test since I started college at the same Prometric test center on campus, because they were licensed to handle almost anything.

Comment Re:Lockdown (Score 3, Informative) 100

Last time I took a test (CAPM), the testing place gave me a temporary locker to put my stuff, and also requested that I turn my pockets inside out to show I didn't have a tiny cell phone or something hidden in them. They take it pretty seriously.

I noticed that the exam software we used was running on XP and appeared to have been originally programmed for Windows 98. I wonder if they ever upgraded those boxes to Win7...?

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