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Comment Re:Looking forward to it (Score 2) 173

Oh, good. IT departments are going away. Is this when users finally stop calling me because they hid their whatsit toolbar in Outlook and they don't know what they did and they need it back and they don't know how to get it back and why is it so technical??!?!!!?!

Good. Maybe I'll get some real work done instead of bouncing between Slashdot and walking users through basic functions of Microsoft Office for the billionth time. Glad that users don't need my help anymore.

Actually, I think this will be going away in the next 10-15 years. Sure, stupid users will still exist out there, but I see 3 year olds texting now. The idea that you "learn" computers is going away.

Kids are learning how to use computers, iPads, and random electronic interfaces before they can read. Just in the people we've hired in the past 5 years I see a huge difference. The "experienced" computer user from 5 years ago has a harder time learning new software than the "inexperienced" (right out of HS and no training) computer users today.

They might need help and have stupid questions, but I think the days of "I don't know how to do this because it looks different" are going away.

Comment Re:Hah (Score 1) 173

I cringe when I hear of small shops that host their own email. I've seen vets and dentists that run their own outdated, unpatched, backup-deficient exchange servers. Even for companies that have 50-100 people, outsourcing email can be a very good practice. It's cheap, relatively secure, and has a professional team behind it. Once you get above 100 people or so, have a real IT crew and budget, you have to really think about the cloud.

When it goes down, there's basically nobody to call, and if MS or Google decides that you are going to change platforms or security settings, there's really nothing you can do about it.

Comment Re:Problem? (Score 1) 644

While it's true that the fossil fuel companies have benefited from political largesse over the years, including special perks, they're hardly unique in that regard. It seems to me that most people who complain about subsidies to fossil fuel companies, especially those who don't complain about similar subsidies to industries which they favor, have an axe to grind and ought to be taken with a huge grain of salt.

I actually do complain about other companies receiving subsidies, but given the fact that this story was about solar and natural gas, that is what we are discussing here. However, they do benefit from a number of subsidies not available to other industries, but that's a very complicated issue to discuss in a comment (which is why I've given a range).

Corporate welfare is a bigger problem in this country than many other types of handouts, and giving them to the most profitable companies, that are granted exclusive rights to drill by the government, can easily be argued that it against the public interest.

Fossil fuel subsidies aren't just a problem in the US, but around the world subsidies are an issue. The IEA claims they are the biggest enemy to green energy.

Just because many companies have their hand out doesn't mean it's alright for fossil fuel companies to do it. We should stop where it makes sense (ie grossly profitable industries that don't compete in a free market) and support them where they do make sense (ie young technology that could eventually get us out of middle eastern interests and leave the planet easier for our children to live in).

I find people that don't complain about fossil fuel subsidies don't have an axe to grind; they tend to not care enough to be informed.

Comment Re:Problem? (Score 1) 644

You may not like all the subsidies given to fossil fuel companies but you and the rest of us consume fossil fuels to drive our vehicles and, until we stop that choice, it makes sense to subsidize the companies providing the energy product most Americans prefer to use.

We do all choose to consume those fossil fuels, but that is exactly why it doesn't make sense to subsidize them.

We are going to buy them anyway, and they are going to make billions in profits. Why should we all pay taxes to pay oil companies so they can sell us gas cheaper? It doesn't make sense at all.

It does make sense to subsidize investment in cleaner, newer tech. It is harder to sell, but better in the long run for us. You subsidize it until you can make something better and cheaper. You don't subsidize something everyone is going to buy anyway.

Why would I give you 50 cents to sell me something 40 cents cheaper?

Comment Re:Let's meet them half way (Score 1) 97

Lets meet them half way... they can have all the zeroes.

That's pretty much what Congress is made up of now.

I don't know why everyone is being so hard on them. They've been pretty bored lately, with all the healthcare, debt ceiling, spending, and military issues all being recently solved.

Comment Re:Sun, vs sunlight (Score 4, Funny) 644

This is not meant to nickpick

I know "US getting less sun than US" means "US getting less sunlight than US", but I still feel a little bit queasy when people substitute the word "Sun" for "Sunlight"

Maybe that's just me ...

So, when people use the phrase, "fun in the sun", do you correct them with, "fun in the warmth and light of the Sun"?

No, I think the the Fox commentator meant that Germans are brighter than the Americans when it comes to solar energy policy.

Comment Re:Oh give them a break (Score 2) 644

While she knows little about the science behind solar energy production, and proved it, she was there to talk about solar energy subsidies and economics; which she does know something about. Unfortunately she scuttled her very valid point about the US wasting money subsidizing solar energy production, to the detriment of natural gas, et al.

The statists, true to form, ridicule her stupid ad hoc comment, which in no way mitigates her arguments, and ignore their own vastly more stupid support for foolish and failed government policies.

I don't think she does understand the economics of the situation. Solar energy is an area that deserves research money (it does make economic sense). Getting rid of politicians that fund pork projects makes economic sense. It's unfortunate when those two collide, but it's bound to happen.

There is no "detriment" to natural gas because of the solar industry. Natural gas is crazy profitable, as are most fossil fuels. They don't need or deserve subsidies, but rake in billions each year. We pay those subsidies, they profit, our politicians get money from them. That doesn't make economic sense.

Comment Re:Problem? (Score 5, Insightful) 644

"Back to the video, the REAL point that was being made was that billions of YOUR tax dollars have been flushed down failed companies who have far more talent in kicking back their government investments rather than actually producing energy."

I might believe that Fox cared about that if they had been as vigorously opposed to the multi-billion dollar fiasco that was the Iraq war, which included just as much corruption via-a-vis Hallibuton, et. al.

I'd believe it if they rallied against the 10-54 billion (depending on how you count) subsidies we give to fossil fuel companies, who rake in trillions in profits. Half-billion to a failed solar company is bad, but not as bad as 10+ billion to already established, ridiculously-profitable industries.

Comment Re:No paradox (Score 1) 266

WikiLeaks is a private organization. They can be as secretive as they want. They're not governments. Or do all you people who demand government transparency broadcast every little aspect of your private lives?

I think too many people miss this point. Corporations are not people and can be regulated, and there's a lot of credibility in the idea that both corporations and people have different, but substantial, rights to privacy.

Governments might have a need to keep secrets in order to function well, but they don't have the right to keep secrets. (I mean, they have given themselves the right, but that doesn't make it "right".)

Governments must be accountable to the people they serve, and to the greater world. When government information is leaked to someone who is not represented by that government, how would you want it handled? Would you want them to keep and hold it, sell it to the greatest bidder, or release it to the whole world? Don't you want to know the secrets your government is keeping when they have been leaked? Did not everyone in the US have a pretty decent opinion of Wikileaks when they were mostly exposing secrets of other governments and worldwide organizations before they were given a large number of US documents?

If the tables were turned, and a Russian military officer downloaded volumes of information on current Russian operations, leaked it to a third party, and it contained information the US would want to know, wouldn't everyone in the US praise them for releasing information vital to the US that the Russians were keeping secret?

You don't have to like what wikileaks is doing, but they are generally accountable to their employees and supporters. When they aren't breaking the law of the country they operate in, what more do you want? Either believe them, or call BS and move on.

Comment Re:Memo to investors: (Score 1) 217

You still sound like a shill.

He might sound like it, but I have no reason to either, and I've generally had pretty darn good experiences, both with consumer and with enterprise support. I've only dealt with enterprise support once, but it was super easy.

Sure, you might have to go through the effort and it might take you an hour with support, but you can't expect them to send out someone to replace a motherboard without asking questions. I've found, if you answer the questions correctly, act very cooperative, and try just a couple things they suggest without complaining, you can usually get what you want in 20 minutes or less.

You must realize, that for everyone that calls and actually knows what they are talking about, there are 10 that call and say their "hard drive box" is bad, get upset, and ended up not having the thing plugged in - or worse, someone of that level of intelligence that demands ram chips or something be fixed because their very knowledgeable nephew said so.

.

Comment Same Here (Score 3, Informative) 203

I live in a rural community that limited DSL through Verizon and cable through TWC. A company called Cinergy Metronet, now just Metronet, came in and started offering fiber-to-the-home. The day they went live, TWC doubled their advertised speeds and dropped their prices to match Metronet.

Comment Re:It was just $6.37 for the actual infringement (Score 1) 102

That's the idea behind a deterrent. If the fine is so low that people are willing to pay it and go on their merry way if they get caught, there's no point in it. The deterrent needs to be high enough to make people think twice before doing it and $120 per infringement, plus covering reasonable overhead costs is right about what it should be, otherwise why bother having copyright law at all?

I think the argument is what you define as "per infringement".

It is just as easy to share a whole library as it is to share a single song. Does that mean each sharing of a song is a single act of infringement? If so, someone's kid could still create a life-destroying event quite quickly. (5,000 songs x $120, plus other fees.)

However, if that is a single act of infringement, it's $120 plus other fees, which would still be double the cost of all the songs according to this panel.

One is a stiff fee and one is life-destroying amount for most people. Both results can come from a kid messing around on my computer for 10 minutes.

Maybe if you don't think $120 is enough of a deterrent, you could raise it to $500 or something, but I have a hard time believing each shared song should be considered a separate act. They certainly don't need a separate physical action to do, and if I steal a CD from the store it's a single act of shoplifting and not a separate act for each song on the CD. Even if I steal 2 boxed sets and 6 video games it's still one act, just one of higher value.

Comment Re:negatory, cut them back, hard (Score 1) 605

I like that idea, hey there must be a shortage of "C" level executives since they make so much, lets H-1B a bunch of them in from 3rd world companies. We should be able to drop the median CEO salary from ~500 times the average employee to ~50 times the average employee.

I don't know where you work, but in my experience C level management is continuously expanding, but it's not related to supply and demand. For the supply and demand system to work, you have to assume a level of intelligence - that these people are paid based upon the value they bring to the company. Once you reach a level where you "are" the company, I can't believe that's true.

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