Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
It's funny.  Laugh.

"War On Terror" Board Game Confiscated In UK 598

An anonymous reader writes "The board game The War On Terror is a satirical game in which George Bush's 'Axis of Evil' is reduced to a spinner in the middle of the board, which determines which player is designated a terrorist state. That person then has to wear a balaclava (included in the box set) with the word 'Evil' stitched onto it. Kent police said they had confiscated the game because the balaclava 'could be used to conceal someone's identity or could be used in the course of a criminal act.' Balaclavas are freely sold all over the place in the area." Schneier has blogged this stupidity, of course.
Operating Systems

Submission + - How do I break the curse of helpdesk jobs? 1

An anonymous reader writes: I have server experience building and repairing them including Dell, IBM and HP servers. I've completed the Microsoft Windows 2000 MSCA Exam and currently hold that certification. I have spent time studying VMware, Altiris, Linux, Backup and recovery applications, and even programmed a few Cisco routers but even with all this experience no matter how much I try to highlight all my non helpdesk experience my name never comes up to companies or recruiting firms other then to fill some pointless and dead end desktop support job. It has been four years since I started in the IT field and I cannot take working in help desk or desktop support jobs any longer.

I'm willing to relocate anywhere in the United States to get out of desktop support, but what is the best way of taking a job in another state if I can actually find one? I ask this because the job market in Cleveland Ohio is completely dead and I feel I'd have a better chance moving out of Ohio in general.

What tips for my resume should I take to downplay the desktop support as much as possible and highlight what little administration tasks I have had during the 4 years I have had in desktop support?

Any suggestions I'd greatly appreciate.
Programming

How To Encourage a Young Teen To Learn Programming? 1095

Anonymous Hacker writes "I'm in a bit of a bind. My young teenage son is starting to get curious about computers, and in particular, programming. Now, I'm a long time kernel hacker (Linux, BSD and UNIX). I have no trouble handling some of the more obscure things in the kernel. But teaching is not something that I'm good at, by any means. Heck, I can't even write useful documentation for non-techies. So my question is: what's the best way to encourage his curiosity and enable him to learn? Now, I know there are folks out there with far better experience in this area than myself. I'd really appreciate any wisdom you can offer. I'd also be especially interested in what younger people think, in particular those who are currently in college or high school. I've shown my son some of the basics of the shell, the filesystem, and even how to do a 'Hello World' program in C. Yet, I have to wonder if this is the really the right approach. This was great when I was first learning things. And it still is for kernel hacking, and other things. But I'm concerned whether this will bore him, now that there's so much more available and much of this world is oriented towards point-n-click. What's the best way to for a young teen to get started in exploring this wonderful world of computers and learning how to program? In a *NIX environment, preferably." Whether or not you have suggestions for generating interest or teaching methods, there was probably something that first piqued your curiosity. It seems like a lot of people get into programming by just wondering how something works or what they can make it do. So, what caught your eye?
Mozilla

Submission + - What I love in Firefox3 (blogspot.com)

the100rabh writes: "There has been much said about Firefox3, good and bad. People have stayed away from the beta and RC builds because the real power of Firefox, the extensions is not there yet. But still I got hooked to it since its Beta 3 release, which I found was more or less stable. So heres my fav feature list in no particular order. I actually love all of them. .....Overall a cool experience and am sure it is leaving IE a long way behind and I am loving it. For MS or Apple to make me a convert from Firefox to them would be a task for sure."
AMD

Submission + - AMD forces Intel to turn over more documents (arstechnica.com)

joshtheitguy writes: It appears that Intel might be in even more hot water in the AMD Anti-trust lawsuit pending against them:

Intel has been ordered to release more documentation due to the fact that there were several company policies about information retention that were not followed either by failure of individuals to enforce the policies or lack of notification to employees to retain the information in question during AMD's discovery process.
Regardless of the motives Intel, they are forced to hand over even more information that might relate, show evidence or refer to the failure of Intel to comply with a Litigation Hold Notice or retention instruction.The requested information could possibly show that there was a intentional sabotage of AMD's discovery or that it was only a few to blame within the organization. Intel has a deadline of midnight tonight to release the information to AMD.

Slashdot Top Deals

PURGE COMPLETE.

Working...