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Comment "quite good drivers"? (Score 1) 554

"quite good"! You've got be kidding. Shouldn't the drivers be rock solid golden? Isn't this how the whole Vista mess started with "quite good" drivers. I don't hate Microsoft, but it's painful watching them shoot themselves in the foot time and time again.

Comment Slow news day? (Score 1) 255

Tiny possibility of me winning the lottery as well.

Amazingly tiny probability that all airline pilots everywhere will simultaneously suffer heart attacks, causing all planes to crash. Here's a cool looking animation of them crashing, and just to emphasize the point, here's an animation of them not crashing.

I miss the BBC, where did it go?

Businesses

Best Practices For Process Documentation? 370

jollyreaper writes "I have a nice new IT job with a non-profit. They are a growing organization and management has realized that they need to bring their way of doing business up to a professional level. Several years back, their IT department was still operated like it was in a home office — fine when you're dealing with three people, not so good when there's over a hundred users. IT got its act together and is now running professionally and efficiently. The rest of the organization is a bit more chaotic and management wants to change that. One of the worst problems is a lack of process documentation. All knowledge is passed down via an oral tradition. Someone gets hit by a bus and that knowledge is lost forevermore. Now I know what I've seen in the past. There's the big-binder-of-crap-no-one-reads method, usually used in conjunction with nobody-updates-this-crap-so-it's-useless-anyway approach. I've been hearing good things about company wikis, and mixed reviews about Sharepoint and its intranet capabilities. And yes, I know that this is all a waste of time if there's no follow-through from management. But assuming that the required support is there, how do you guys do process documentation?"
Science

Tool Use Is Just a Trick of the Mind 326

TwistedOne151 writes to recommend a ScienceNOW article describing the work of a team of Italian neurobiologists who have found the roots of the capacity for tool use in the primate brain: the brain treats the tool as part of the body. The experiment as described is passing clever.
Google

Submission + - Why Can Google Not Eat Its Dogfood

An anonymous reader writes: Google seems to have serious problem with its AJAX product's line, and started GWT to help making a robust development platform. GWT, which moved to open source recently, seems to be not used at all inside Google applications, exception for Google Base and Checkout ?! Today article on AJAX Magazine explores why can Google not eat its Dogfood, while Yahoo and Microsoft do. From the article "If Google does not get GWT (or something else) to work for it, it is in a production trap, it cannot respond to changes fast enough and the web is all about change. In conclusion, it's clear that GWT as it stands is not enough, so what should Google do to save the situation? Go open source and hope somebody comes to its rescue..."

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