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Comment Re:True Amish Lifestyle (Score 1) 367

Not all get Rumspringa (one of the most fun words to say, by the way). The community of >500 Amish individuals in my area does not allow Rumspringa. They do not speak English with outsiders as a rule - allowing only two individuals to interact with the English on a regular basis. BUT, they're almost always begging for rides and other modern conveniences.

Comment OCD leaves me (Score 3, Interesting) 89

with a super awesome facial tic. I am constantly lining the bridge of my nose up with opposite corners of squares when I'm walking around (OR MY FAMILY WILL DIE). So it constantly looks like I'm winking.

It's been mildly inconvenient so far in life, but apparently now it will be SUPER useful to unlock my phone constantly! Thank you science and technology for making me feel less like a social outcast!

Comment Re:Renting software (Score 1) 658

OpenOffice or LibreOffice for those users who only need computers to browse, do e-mail, and produce documents and spread sheets if Microsoft did this with Windows?

Incidentally, I use OpenOffice on my Macs to produce documents and it's marvelous. It's got a couple very minor document painting glitches but on the whole it's a solid piece of software and I find it easier to use than Word.

The issue is that if you are working with both time and content sensitive documents/spreadsheets any glitch may be a deal breaker. The fact of the matter is that people use products from companies that they may despise (think MS and Adobe) because they're clean, orderly, and get the job done correctly the first time with no necessary tweaking to fix a minor error. Until opensource projects can do these things, they really are just a novelty for most businesses large, small or otherwise.

Comment Re:Well, crap (Score 2, Insightful) 1105

I don't believe that we've ever done things because they were right. I honestly believe that our propensity to knee-jerk reactions is just a stem of the evolutionary tree that started with loud noises = excited monkeys. Name me one thing we've done because it was RIGHT, not because we were scared of something, or lack of something, or because it would profit us as a country. Just one.

Comment Re:Disconcerting? (Score 1) 348

I would argue that it does. I have been accused of several things in my on-line persona: being a female, being a male, having bias against females, having bias against males, being gay, being straight, being asexual (that was a weird day). I would argue that gender neutral, on-line, generally becomes masculine, simply because of the stereotype of on-line nerdy kids that still exists today.

My 'political correctness disease' in that post is a conscious choice to show that both females and males tend to overvalue their own skills where I teach.

Comment Re:Disconcerting? (Score 2) 348

Why would parents hold an adult accountable?

I assume that you mean parents hold me accountable? I get calls on a semi-regular basis from parents. They want to know why Jonny/Jill isn't doing well. It happens. In my class, I publicly berate the student WHO IS AN ADULT for having their Mommy and Daddy call me. It's a matter of time before this gets me fired.

Does your Mommy make sure you go to work everyday?

Nope - she doesn't support my lifestyle at all.

This attitude that these are children to be coddled is not helping.

Why are you not failing these folks?

I think you missed my point. My point is that the attitude that students are there to be GIVEN information, not to earn it, and that EVERYONE is a genius is pervasive. I said nothing about how I do business (I fail the ones that earn it). I really don't think you understood what I said.

If a student could test out and get the credit hours, you and your 2 students who don't need it would be much happier.

At my school, we have CLEP tests. The two intro classes I teach are eligible for CLEP. SO. . . . The people taking this class have already failed those exams, and yet still, despite actual, concrete evidence to the contrary, believe that they are smarter than this class and don't need it. It's like there is no logic in a self-important, hand-held student these days.

Comment Re:Disconcerting? (Score 4, Insightful) 348

I teach in college, and I see this attitude every fucking day.

I have students who will tell me that they already know the subject, that this class isn't giving them anything (entry-level/mid level English), and that they shouldn't have to take it at all. Throughout the course of the semester, almost every student will tell me this.

In the 6 sections I teach, of ~30 students, I would say 2 actually don't need this class. A VAST majority just see stuff like what you say spouted constantly on-line and by there ignorant ass friends. A VAST majority simply over-value their skills and abilities.

I'm not saying that you aren't different, I'm just saying that in a majority of cases where 'the student knows the subject already' it really is 'the student believes that s/he knows the subject already, but really doesn't know his/her ass from a hole in the ground, but because s/he is such an entitled, self-important precious little snowflake, s/he can't make wise decisions'. Believe me when I tell you this - in most cases where the student is acting out because "he is bored with the coursework," in all actuality, "he just has piss-poor self-control and his parents don't hold him accountable." The little geniuses that parents see are really just average kids who are supremely lazy in most cases. (Keep in mind that I acted out in school because I was an advanced learner, they do exist, just not as often as you would be led to believe by parents.)

Somewhere along the way, the attitude in college shifted from the very collegiate ---I'm here to learn--- to the very secondary school ---you have to teach me, good luck---. What you see with this - where instructors can track the number of pages read, is just the simplest form of teacher-student coercion to do actual God Damned work that happens every day in various forms.

Comment Re:nope. it starts with accuracy (Score 5, Insightful) 366

Like it or not, you are simply denying the fact that most people, if they even know what linux is, assume that it's only for someone who is very tech savvy and technical minded. Most people see Linux as a neat hobby for hardcore nerds. Most people believe it is damned near impossible to use unless you have countless hours to devote to fixing compatibility/other sundry issues. For many, many years, Linux was only spoken about on-line, and if you actually ran across a conversation in real life, it was in some sort of deep-tech/troubleshooting capacity.

Denying that there isn't a stigma attached to Linux doesn't make it go away. And, waving away the very real stigma attached to this product, while simultaneously calling the end-users stupid (which you essentially do by saying that the only reason people don't run linux is because they don't understand it) just makes you come across as an arrogant fan-boy. Which, by the way is about 99% of the image problem here. You want people to use it, don't be an ass.

Comment Re:It's obvious (Score 1) 422

There doesn't seem to be much of a middle ground for some reason.

Because you base your opinion on television and media in general. For fuck's sake, how have you not figured out that people are generally the same, regardless of arbitrary country designation. We're mostly just people trying to get by, worrying about family and the weather and work and the same kinds of things.

The fact that you can't find a middle ground tells me that you've never traveled in the states, and that you're as ignorant as the stereotype you're touting. Educate yourself. Travel. Talk to people. Or, remain ignorant and smug - you know, whatever works.

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