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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Commercial databases (Score 2) 509

(i.e.: select foo from table1 where id in (select id from table2 where criteria='something'))

Haver you tried using a join and if so how well does it work?

e.g. select table1.foo from table1 inner join table2 on table1.id=table2.id where table2.criteria='something''

Or this might be better, depending on the quality of the query optimizer:
select table1.foo from table1 inner join table2 on table1.id=table2.id AND table2.criteria='something''

Comment Re:Idiots Experimenting with the Food Supply (Score 1) 1229

1) Not patented.
2) Are marked.
3) Cannot contaminate the biosphere with naturally growing varieties with some of the interesting side effect proteins they produce as part of the GMO process.

So you're okay with GM crops as long as:
1) There's no inventive to research them.
2) They're singled out for no health-related reason.
3) They can't cross breed, but I'm also guessing you'd complain if they're sterile. (i.e. seeds need to be bought each year.)

But for some reason, the large GMO companies don't want you to know what corn you eat is GMO.
Why?
????

GMO companies don't want their products singled out by ignorant fearmongers? You're right, that is a mystery.

If it were up to some people the official GMO symbol would incorporate a skull and crossbones.

Comment Re:MPAA and Google (Score 1) 363

  The quote "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place" reminds me of the position people take regarding privacy and over-reaching government snooping that violates the 4th Amendment. "If you're not doing anything illegal, you should have nothing to hide." "

In that quote, Schmidt was referencing the government's ability to demand your information. Google had recently lost a court case about it, which is why he brought the subject up.

A lot of privacy crusaders seem to mix up private and public information, though. Whatever you do in Wal Mart is public, and you can't demand that they erase all footage of you from their security cameras and make every employee that saw you forget that you were there.

Similarly, if you freely give information to Google, like search terms and your IP address, should you be able to force them to forget it?

Sensitive personal data -- SSN, bank account numbers, etc. -- I can understand special provisions for. But your unhealthy Febreeze obsession? The only thing protecting you there is your obscurity and Wal Mart's desire not to drive you away .

Comment Re:Arrogant Ignorance? (Score 1) 2288

ask some of your friends or relatives how many yards are in a mile.

Nobody remembers because that's not relevant to anyone's day to day life. I mean, who says "880 yards" instead of "half a mile"? And if you ever do need to calculate it, you most likely have the ability to look up the answer at your fingertips.

I was taught metrics in 1st grade, that was back in the 70s, and it's so easy a 7 year old can master it.
This imperial crap almost everyone else in the US uses is rather incomprehensible.

You know what else is needlessly complex? The Japanese language. Why do they use such an over-elaborate system that nobody else in the world even uses? It's rather incomprehensible. /sarcasm

Comment Re:No shit! (Score 1) 235

Yawn, another fine morning at Valve! Shall we slog on with another episode of our popular game franchise for the fanboys, or shall we work a bit harder at our store front that takes 30% of EVERY PC GAME SALE ON THE PLANET?

I think they could hire more people and do both. I mean, I'm pretty sure the Half Life franchise is profitable in and of itself.

All this kinda reminds me of when the government does some trivial bullshit while some bigger problem is happening. People breathlessly complain about it, but I'm pretty sure the government can do more than one thing at a time.

Comment Kinda creepy (Score 0) 642

It makes me feel uneasy when I see people cheering "taxes" as a concept. I'm pretty sure taxes have existed independently of nice things like democracy, education, infrastructure, justice, etc. People have been paying taxes for thousands of years without it somehow causing Western democracy to spontaneously break out.

Taxes don't automatically create a nice society. Correlation != Causation.

A healthier view would be to see them as a necessary evil. Inherently dangerous due to their confiscatory and mandatory nature. One minute you have a nice functioning democracy, and the next you have all the political parties taxing people they don't like and funding people they do.

That's actually the best argument for a "flat" tax, come to think of it. Not man-hours saved or loopholes closed, but the reduced possibility of taxes being used as a weapon.

Comment Re:Damn! (Score 1) 150

This sounds rather good. Correct me if I'm wrong, but might this be the MMO that does away with mindless grinding?

No chance. People will always complain about grinding. If there's a leveling system, they'll say they have to "grind" to the level cap. If there's better equipment then they'll "grind" for that. This isn't the days of Everquest when grinding meant killing the same enemies over and over, or other simple and repetitive tasks.

Anything in between now and "endgame" (however it's defined) has been classified as grind by modern MMO players. Doesn't matter if you have fun and fast-paced combat, awesome quests, or a tightly integrated story where it feels like you made a difference. Some people will make an obstacle out of anything.

Now if you'll excuse me I'm going to grind through some coffee.

Comment Re:Just like the music industry (Score 1) 445

I'd say there's significant value in professional-level editing. One of the last "books" I read was self-published directly to the web, and while it was good fun and had an interesting premise, it was in dire need of editing/revision. Community input can only do so much.

Of course, just needing editing and maybe a little promotion cuts out a huge chunk of the existing book publishing business. Not to mention retailers.

(If anyone's curious, the novel I mentioned above is The Salvation War. The writer is a military geek, which can be interesting or a bit cheesy sometimes.)

Comment Re:Yawn (Score 1) 377

Are we sure those complaints are accurate? This person(s) could have been connected to some guy's personal wifi hotspot. Or just be tech illiterate.

I guess I'm asking for proof that people used the capitol's wifi to connect to that site before Friday.

It'd be also nice to know what whitelist package they use. Heck, for all we know it's not a whitelist at all. It could just auto-blacklist anything above X hits an hour, until said site is explicitly exempted.

Comment Talk about narrative... (Score 2) 377

With how much this story is getting passed around, you'd almost think this site was temporarily blocked as a publicity stunt.

But that's almost as crazy as the theory from the article: that this particular pro-union site, out of god knows how many, was purposefully blocked because they thought that'd make everyone go home. That it wouldn't just give the protesters another talking point.

Comment One Step Further (Score 1) 414

You have to ask, why do we resort to standardized tests to "bust" bad teachers? Because the better alternatives were shut off.

It's almost impossible to fire a bad teacher nowadays. School principals should have the power to discipline and dismiss bad teachers at their own discretion. Teachers may rant and rail that this will lead to favoritism and other bad -isms, but it's better than using a dry, standardized test designed by some committee thousands of miles away.

Slashdot Top Deals

Nothing is impossible for the man who doesn't have to do it himself. -- A.H. Weiler

Working...