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Comment Re:disposable tech (Score 1) 418

It comes and goes. Lately I've seen a lot more of it. Modding hardware, improving it, fixing things, build your own, etc. The hobby electronics/diy/maker thing is popular right now. As far as trends go, I'd say it's a pretty good one, and I hope it sticks around.

Submission + - Tesla Hits Back Against New York Times' John Broder (teslamotors.com)

SomePgmr writes: "After the notorious, scripted failure of a Tesla on the popular show Top Gear, Tesla Motors has made a practice of enabling all on-board logging for any vehicle given to the media for review. It appears this practice has paid off, as Tesla responds to New York Times' John Broder's review of a Tesla Model S. The summary of log data is pretty damning."
Businesses

Reasons You're Not Getting Interviews; Plus Some Crazy Real Resume Mistakes 246

Yvonne Lee, Community Manager at Dice.com writes, "Not using standard job titles, not tying your work to real business results and not using the right keywords can mean never getting called for an interview, even if you have the right skills to do the job. I once heard advice to use the exact wording found in the ad when placing your keywords. I think you're even more unlikely to get a job if you do some of the things on this list."

Comment Re:Can't Go Backwards (Score 1) 736

Some of these make sense. If you're downloading a torrent the bar tells you percentage of bytes received from total, so it never regresses. What changes is the "estimated time remaining". And that's fine... conditions change (peer count, transfer speeds, etc).

The file copy ones used to drive me nuts. If I'm moving files from one source to one destination, you'd think the transfer speeds would be pretty consistent and the time estimates pretty accurate. I can't pretend to know why they used to be so bad, but they do seem better now.

Comment Re:Existing non-electronic variant (Score 2) 145

That's fraudulent and potentially lawsuit worthy. Ain't gunna happen over a regular package.

Maybe a bigger problem is shockwatch patches can cost $3 each. It makes sense for expensive packages,but not your $10 amazon.com order with free shipping.

Though to be fair, now figure out what a bluetooth dongle is going to cost.

Comment Re:Nice Ad (Score 2, Informative) 113

And it's a fairly transparent slashvertisement.

Agreed. If they're going to do that, the, "New submitter markfeffer, Senior Editor at Dice, writes [...]" part was at least an honest way to handle it.

Maybe they should add the disclaimer at the bottom like we used to have for parent and sibling companies, too.

Comment Re:We need broadband meter readers (Score 3, Informative) 114

I'm sure these meters make mistakes both ways right? Occasionally under counting.

From the article:

"They are wrong by missing numbers by one way or another - sometimes it's over reporting, but more frequently the error is under reporting," he said. Under reporting should be a relief to those facing overage charges or service termination for going over their meters, but if the meters aren't counting the data properly, it is still a problem.

Comment Re:Ouya was more relevant, before. (Score 1) 196

If you know of any competing device that's anything like the Ouya but better spec'd, please do let me know.

I do see some bare boards matching your description at $250 without an enclosure, power, console style UI and curated store, or controller of any sort. I think we can agree that's not even close to what we're talking about, though.

And either way, there's no reason to get angry about it. If there's a compelling alternative I'd like to know about it.

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