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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Yay (Score 1) 416

I think you're missing his point. The temperature and weather patterns on this planet are not constant, they're constantly changing and have done so as long as the planet existed. There's nothing you and I can do about it, and adding stupid taxes and fees only make things even harder for people to cope with the inevitable climate changes that would still come if we all still lived in caves and only ate dead leaves. Earth does not care about cities, crops, religion or living things that try to survive on it because it's just a ball of molten iron with a thin crust of rock and carbon. We live on it but some day we won't.

Comment Re:Hope no one hacks our entire Air Force one day (Score 1) 622

This is incorrect. Most fighters since the 80's have had the thrust/weight ratio necessary for pulling 9G longer than any pilot would want. Beginning with the F16, the avionics are programmed to stop the aircraft from exceeding that limit, or the pilot would effectively kill himself by pulling too hard on the stick. During peace time, the F16 is usually limited to 6G to reduce wear and tear.

Comment Re:Hope no one hacks our entire Air Force one day (Score 2, Informative) 622

Have you ever been to Iran, or is your idea of Iran as a pile of sand populated with cave-dwelling camel-humping wife-beating fundamentalists purely based on other well-informed and unbiased sources such as Fox News? You might want to double check those facts of yours. Their president may be missing one or two important screws but that seems to be the rule rather than the exception with world leaders. Iran is just as technologically advanced as your typical "Western" country and they are not to be underestimated. They're hardly the first country to play games with mock-up aircraft either.

Comment Re:Increase the Yellow Light time by 1 second (Score 1) 330

1. If the problem is that speeders just don't notice he yellow light, perhaps slowing down would be a better idea. 2. The typical asshat driver already sees "yellow" as "green" and just floors it instead of stopping. Increasing the yellow light time would ofcourse just encourage this incorrect behaviour. Ofcourse, accelerating into a yellow light usually means by the time they acually reach the intersection the light will have changed to red, which is why you're supposed to stop on yellow. 3. The most effective solution would be to keep the red light sensors and just replace cameras with sentry guns.

Comment Re:Has anyone done an assessment... (Score 1) 242

I've been told that the power required to make enough aluminium for a windmill exceeds what that windmill can generate in its service life. Even if those things didn't kill wildlife and break down all the time they'd still be a pretty stupid idea. And now we want to use water pumps and turbines to use that overpriced electricity to try and empty a pool out in the north sea. Every time it rains you'd basically lose energy and most people who've worked in the north sea will tell you rain isn't really rare out there. Why not scrap the windmills altogether and /collect/ rainwater in that pool instead, then use conventional hydro power to generate electricity? Oh I know, because it doesn't generate nearly the same amount of meaningless jobs.

Comment It may be too late (Score 5, Insightful) 245

The article points out many obvious pitfalls on letting an underperforming employee go, but very few of these problems are unique to the particular situation of letting an obviously underperforming employee go. Most IT departments are pummeled to death with impossible deadlines and demands and management thinks that the complaints and warnings are just "the way it is with those lazy bastards". Truth is, anyone who's worked with IT knows that you have to test your backups and failover procedures, do security audits, tear down setups that are no longer used and keep documentation and automation up to date. BUT first we have to finish this project that was dreamed up by the top level management with absolutely no understanding of the technical hurdles involved. And it needs to be finished yesterday. If you want things to be neat and tidy, you're pretty much expected to take care of it on your own time.

Comment Re:nope (Score 2) 823

See, that's arrogance right there. I happen to be a computer nerd who has (for reasons too complicated to get into) also spent a good four years in the trenches (literally) with plumbers, and I can inform you that there's a little bit more to plumbing than you seem to think. That ground you're walking on is actually moving. All the time. Especially if you happen to live in a place where the temperature varies from -30 degrees C in the winter to +30 in the summer. Water leaks tend to occur just about one meter (or 3 ft) outside the point where it enters the house, do you know why? No, because you don't have that kind of training. That's why you don't have the slightest clue how to avoid it from happening either, so when your pipe starts to leak you have to pay for a professional to come and fix it. It looks just as easy as installing Linux but that's because the guy knows what he's doing. Hopefully.

Slashdot Top Deals

Air pollution is really making us pay through the nose.

Working...