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Medicine

Submission + - Psychopaths have brain structure abnormality (examiner.com) 4

mmmscience writes: http://www.examiner.com/x-1242-Science-News-Examiner~y2009m8d4-Psychopaths-have-brain-structure-abnormality A group of scientists have identified a structure in the brain of psychopaths that is abnormal when compared to controls. The change is found in the uncinate fasciculus, a bridge of white matter that connects the amygdale (emotion/aggression brain region) and the orbitofrontal cortex (decision making region). Interestingly, the greater the abnormality in the region, the more severe the levels of sociopathy in a subject. A researcher on the team suggests the finding could have considerable implications in the world of criminal justice, where such scans could presumably be presented as evidence in a trial.
Education

Submission + - Teen dies in chinese gaming rehab camp

An anonymous reader writes: "A teen, who was sent to a rehabilitation camp in China to cure his internet addiction was beaten to death by his trainers. While this is considered a cure for Internet addiction, it was not what the parents of Deng Senshan, 16, had in mind when they sent him to the camp. The three supervisors who allegedly beat him to death have been arrested." Seen on: http://www.fudzilla.com/content/view/14916/1/

Comment Re:Depressing, but not uncommon (Score 3, Interesting) 1251

be noticed and promoted is one big fat illusion more often than not kept alive by manipulative managers wanting to get extra free hours from us (so that THEY get fat bonuses)

The resentment of management is so thick in this forum you could cut it with a knife.

The mid-level manager gains from promoting successful people up the corporate ladder. Managers are graded on their ability to build an effective team and recruit/develop high performing talent. An effective manager knows to provide the top people with the tools and environment they need to do their best. While it is true that the promotion carrot is often dangled to push someone harder, only a lousy manager believes they can dangle carrots without coming through on their end. We have an engineer on the team right now who was told he'd get a promotion if he took the role of lead engineer on a recent project and succeeded. He worked hard, impressed his teammates with his skill and ethic, and earned the promotion. That is no illusion. He was given an opportunity and he took it.

You've observed that outgoing type A's get noticed and are promoted more frequently than technical experts. I do agree with this (to some extent) having seen that the road to "Staff Engineer" is longer than the road to "Engineering Manager". There are basically two career paths for engineers: technical and management. The technical path is ascended by demonstrating technical expertise, the ability to guide large scale projects from the technical side, and the ability to mentor less experienced engineers. The quiet and reserved person can and will ascend through this path by demonstrating their technical ability, and accomplishing this takes years of good work. A quiet and reserved person who is also skilled at mentoring young engineers is perhaps more promotable due to the high demand and greater contribution a mentor can bring to the organization. On the management path, outgoing individuals tend to be noticed more for their management potential. A large part of a manager's job is working with other managers and reporting to executives, the majority of which are themselves open and outgoing. Likewise, a successful manager needs to be able to effectively work with people of varied personalities, some of which reserved people find reprehensible. On a similar note, negotiating for pay also demonstrates a skill a manager needs to have. The manager is graded on their ability to negotiate to get the best value for the company and not having the ability to negotiate will hurt their chances of being successful managers. For these reasons, outgoing people shining a light on their work are showing skills of a different sort, and may be promotable based partly on that display which you regard as purely superficial.

When a person earns a senior technical position, it is reasonably certain that they will succeed in this appointment. They can succeed in these positions for many years and have great careers all the way up to retirement, all the while mentoring the next batch of experts. On the other hand, when a person earns a management position, there is no guarantee that they will succeed, and most of them will probably fail (perhaps by committing the ills you've indicated in your post). Then they will either leave or be canned, opening positions for the next batch of potential managers. This is one driving reason for outgoing people to be more frequently promoted.

My advice would be for a person to examine what it is they want out of their career. "Success" doesn't equate to happiness, and if you've sacrificed your personality in efforts to gain pay, you have little chance at happiness in your career. If you aren't going to claim credit for everything based on your principles and your personality, then by all means stick with your principles a go about quietly getting the job done. In a well-functioning organization, real accomplishments do not go unnoticed, and there will always be a place for unassuming technical experts.

Comment Re:Indeed lack of imagination (Score 2, Interesting) 849

4) How difficult is it to create a script that takes screenshots - how difficult is it to create a script that captures keyboard entry as well. Answer: the first can be done in userspace (and in the hands of an experienced script kiddie would be unnoticed), the latter usually has to go as a request to a driver, kernel or other layer that requires admin rights. This is true for Windows, Mac and (depending on your GUI) Linux

hmm...

SetWindowsHookEx()

...I don't believe this requires admin rights. Windows is designed for usability! I could write an Internet Explorer browser add-on that superimposes over password editboxes and displays your password so you (and I) can see it!

Comment Old habits die hard (Score 1) 677

Excellent argument on the frustrating habits of culture... and well written too.

You could substitute nearly any area of study into this analysis, and find a great deal of truth in the result, and in this, The Lamenting Mathematician has uncovered a very subtle and elegant habit of culture. The fact is that there are a great many musical technicians, incapable of creating the art of music, just as there are a great many mathematical technicians, who will never contribute to The Masterpiece. Software, Politics, History, Leadership... All have their share of artists and technicians alike. The key element is that the cultural perception of mathematics is that there is no art; that it is but a technical discipline.

The truth is that all disciplines are both artistic and technical in nature, and that society would do well to discover this and promote this duality through education.

The first advanced math course I took in college consisted entirely of proofs and abstract discoveries such as described in the article, and it was eye-opening. The clever approaches and solutions discussed gave that intuitive appreciation... no less artful than capturing a feeling with a photograph or instilling instant familiarity with a speech.

Comment Before you apply metrics... (Score 1) 321

Before you apply metrics you need to define the problem you are trying to solve.
  1. Determine what it is that needs improving
  2. Determine the symptoms/indications that either contribute to or result from the thing that needs improving
  3. Determine the metrics which can quantify the symptoms/indications
  4. Create a plan to improve the thing that needs improving
  5. Execute the plan to improve the thing that needs improving
  6. Measure if plan execution is having any affect on the symptoms/indications using the metrics
  7. Evaluate if you have the proper execution
  8. Evaluate if you have the proper plan
  9. Evaluate if you have the proper metrics
  10. Evaluate if you have the proper symptoms/indications
  11. Evaluate if you have the proper thing to improve
  12. Rinse and Repeat

It is madness to measure for the sake of measuring.

Comment Re:I laugh ... (Score 1) 163

The likelihood of breaking it is genuinely 1 in 2^n and can only be broken by brute force attack.

That's not strictly true. Although the discrete log problem is hard it is still a computational assumption. Proving that 2^n is a lower bound would be a significant achievement. This scheme is only "unbreakable" in the sense that RSA is - breaking it requires solving a problem that we suspect, but are unable to prove, is very hard.

Unless I am mistaken...

  1. MIN(A,B) <= SQRT(C)
  2. SQRT(C) < 2^n for all cases where n>1

...that can still leave a huge brute force search space of course.

Comment Re:Ummm .. Vote? (Score 1) 950

Apathy doesn't always indicate laziness. It can also indicate that the individual does not find the campaign issues relevant to their interests. Though this is an ego-centric view of politics, it is something that many people feel about the political system, particularly young voters who historically turnout in low numbers. The catch-22 is that for an issue to enter the main political debate, it needs to have a critical mass of voters or interests on both sides of it. So, for those that stay home and relinquish their vote, they've given up the interests of their demographic, and will either fall further into apathy, or they'll grow up.

That said, it makes perfect sense that the politically charged recruit the apathetic to their cause and get them to vote. The formation of factions in this manner is bedrock to representative government.

Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft "Mojave Project" Videos Posted

SloppyElvis writes: Microsoft's "Mojave Experiment" (as you may recall from this Slashdot post) now includes videos showing the not-so-surprisingly positive results of this "scientific experiment". Beware, the site uses Flash (Gasp! no Silverlight!?) and takes longer to load than Vista takes to recover from hibernation. A truly hilarious example of egregious marketing, you can even hear the "WOW" features being validated by unsuspecting "misinformed" users with "preconceived notions of Vista".

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