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Comment Re:Wrong Subsection (Score 1) 704

Except in this case, the subject matter is inclusion along racial, gender, and orientation lines, and this was (projection) insisted that it's a removal of free speech / reduction of freedom.

Of course the REALITY is that this is a wake-up call for designers to consider issues of inclusion, so pretty much EXACTLY THE OPPOSITE of what is attempted to be claimed by our little knee-jerker.

So if you think that the response "you are knee-jerking by proxy defending a lack of inclusion" is somehow.. inaccurate. Well, it's not. That's what's happening.

Comment Re:The whole "retraining" attitude is BS. (Score 1) 323

I've worked for companies where doing the work involved lots of learning from coworkers. Those places were full of competence and excellence.

I've also worked for companies where doing the work involved no help and no learning. Those places were full of waste and idiocy.

If you want your company to be inefficient and shitty, by all means don't create a culture where people are being trained all the time.

Comment Re:Further: (Score -1, Flamebait) 704

Observe the behavior of the modern homophobe. You see, he or she accepts that there are "lesbian catering developers", thus making the idea of inclusion somehow an abnormality, while pretending that he or she doesn't mind this abnormality. He or she can continue expressing that inclusion is perverse while attempting to maintain the illusion that he or she is not wallowing in privilege.

Comment Re:where's the fun in that? (Score 1) 704

Well, the summary was misleading. The article was about the game content and design, not player behavior so much.

That said, the concerns here are not about racist, or misogynist games, but are about games that might have characters who are racist or misogynist. That this poster can't tell the difference suggests a problem.

Comment Re: Ridiculous. (Score 4, Insightful) 914

To expand here. I've been mugged. The kids who did it certainly need help, and that help can't just be someone giving them some money or other soft response, but longterm incarceration won't do anyone any favors. It won't help them, it won't help me, it won't help our criminal system costs, and it won't make the neighborhood safer.

What they need is a system that requires them to accept responsibility for their actions and to make restitutions for them so they don't feel guilty for life. That's called restorative justice.

Comment Re: Ridiculous. (Score 1) 914

Well, the ORIGIN of the US prison system was around the idea of reform. You were giving people time away from society where they could be "penitent" about their actions, and via reflection, come to more clearly consider where they had gone wrong. It's where we got "penitentiary".

Obviously I agree this is not how things played out, and everyone should be well aware that modern prisons serve only two possible uses. 1 - removal from regular society 2 - punishment.

Personally I find 1 to be a legitimate thing for some classes of crime, while i feel that most forms of 2, punishment, don't work to reduce crime.

Comment Re:Stealing? (Score 1) 197

"Theft of trade secret" is a thing.

It's kind of an odd concept. When you accept that exclusive ownership of something is a intellectual property thing, then someone who shares it while under a contract to not do so is depriving you of that exclusion. Your trade secret is no longer secret and your advantage is taken away from you.

This stuff stems from guild laws, like the secrets of making good parmigiano-reggiano or whatever that were supposed to be kept within the organization and were only shared with you if you agreed to abide by these terms.

Personally, it seems quite awkward to use the verb "theft" in this context, and I would not choose to do so, but it is established usage. Additionally, I find the whole protected trade secret concept sort of awkward, but I might not fully grasp what it is needed to protect in a modern context.

Comment Re:In my experience (Score 1) 384

Being able to quickly execute arithmetic is a basic skill that everyone should be pushed to master.

However it has jack all to do with algebra II.

You're mistaking correlation with causation. Inability to quickly add and subtract doesn't really prevent one from understanding algebra. It's just that your students who never truly mastered basic arithmetic are not really truly mastering any of the math they're encountering.

Speed has little to do with it. It's a red herring for most areas of math. Better grasp does typically result in faster execution for the individual, but that does not imply that the slower individuals you encounter do not have a good grasp.

Comment Re:Charity vs Taxation (Score 1) 362

This is kind of a miss.

There's a pretty able transit system that goes from San Francisco to Mountain View. It's called Caltrain. It's not perfect, and at off-hours it has more headway between trains than is highly desirable but it's extremely energy efficient and quite affordable as far as rail systems go.

The real reason that the existing transport systems don't serve Google workers well is that Google HQ is over 3 miles away from the nearest train station.

The inefficiency is all down in the suburb, not in the city.

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