Comment Re:Thailand? (Score 1) 466
They were combining the population of those countries. Poorly written but not that hard to figure out.
They were combining the population of those countries. Poorly written but not that hard to figure out.
The question misses my key factor: Reliability.
Yes, SSDs have a limited lifespan, but it is relatively predictable.
HDs on the other hand, especially with as much of a commodity (meaning nearly non-existent quality controls) as they have become, are completely UNpredictable on reliability.
The same HD from a different batch might fail nearly immediately whereas the very next production run might produce a drive that will last for many years.
I got VERY tired of it.
I run SSD for the majority of my apps. My data I stick on a separate large mirrored array.
The hybrid drives may be fairly cheap, but they are inherently as unpredictable as HDs (they use the HD less, which is a bonus, but they add a second layer of complexity, which is a detractor, so I end up considering them equivalent).
I had some problem with my first SSD due to firmware issues
3He will power the world!
And yet, from a UI perspective, Win7 and Vista were very nearly identical. A few tweaks here and there but really not MUCH different and definitely sharing all the major paradigms. And those paradigms were gradual evolutions based on prior Windows interfaces.
That's exactly the point that Cowboy Neal is trying to make
Perhaps she wanted to, I dunno, watch TV?
I wonder if some of this isn't really being caused by how popular it is to block ads via extensions. I use AdBlock Plus and Do Not Track Plus. I'd be willing to be I appear very much like the "no Javascript bot" to their analytics program.
Then again, since I never see the Facebook ad that they are worried about, maybe not.
I'll admit the MySpace to Facebook comparison was closer. However
I suppose the reason I find the concept of this article sad is that we're moving to a place where instead of an expectation of privacy
While I do use Facebook, I have a number of friends, neighbors and co-workers who do not. And I don't consider them suspect. Why would I? I don't go "oh, my neighbor is always frequenting that gaming site but refuses to use Facebook, he must have something to hide".
I also have a number of friends who either maintain multiple accounts (because they hate dealing with permissions) OR keep their account obscured so that you have to know that it is their account (different name, odd profile photo, different email account, etc). Purely because we ALL have people in our lives we don't want to know EVERYTHING. Is that the next step for being suspected?
Glass walls. You don't want them. At least not until everyone in power can give up their judgements about peoples' personal lives.
And in this case the chief didn't make law.
The chief clarified to her officers what the law already is. Seizure of recording equipment without the recorder actually causing some form of disturbance (the officer being disturbed) does not stand up in court. Officers tend to know this, too, but are used to being able to bully their way through the issue.
The policy from the chief was not a new thing in the sense of the law. It was a new thing in the sense of the policy acknowledging it.
You have non tech-savvy grandmothers talking to you about Windows 8? Well, I have non tech-savvy grandmothers talking to ME about sharks with lasers. It goes like this:
Me: Gramma, did you hear about Sharks with Lasers?
Gramma: Sharks with fucking LASERS?
In other words
Local search is actually one of the least useful things I've ever seen on a phone. I HATE the implementation on iOS. I don't use it on my Android devices. Pretty much ever. And have many many times wanted to be able to remove the way it worked from both.
It sucks in the sense that Samsung is pre-caving to Apple demands
At this point? Nearly anyone.
-> 2. Should I capitalize on the domain knowledge, and move onto business/managerial side? -
This. I'm in the same boat as you without some of the office politics. However my manager is changing positions (and probably companies) soon. I managed to convince him to put the other person, far less senior, under me on the org chart. Very little actual management should be needed but it gives a bump to the resume' and a little bit of protection should the new boss want to do some house-cleaning.
If you have someone where you are now who will do that with you, go for it. If not, then start quietly looking around for a place looking for a senior developer who can manage a team. At this point in your career (like mine) it is probably more important to move up than to stay loyal. It gets progressively harder to show management -initiative- (which is what most people want in a development manager) as you get past 40. It seems like under-40 being a direct contributor is fine
Also
Management isn't some wonderful panacea
apples != oranges
a) different topics, one was about my phone
b) I already funneled in a bunch of feedback from this thread. That's about all I can do in the short term. They are aware of the issues
PS. As part of my raising the issue, I also notified my exec chain of my UID here on
Thanks
No, I'm a systems engineer trying to get some facts and help out to my fellow
"Money is the root of all money." -- the moving finger