Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Why make a new system... (Score 1) 386

"But if you want to box (like in Wii Sports or Punch-Out!!), can you find a sparring partner without the cops showing up?"

You can if you do the same thing you'd do for any other sport on this earth and find a suitable playing field. Boxing is a sport that many people enjoy participating in and gyms with practice rings are readily available if you know where to look.

Comment Re:Hawk-Eye, and done (Score 1) 141

Not exactly baseball fans here, are we? Anyone remember the big QuesTec dust up a few years back? The system to detect balls and strikes already exists and is already in place to evaluate how umpires are doing. QuesTec was a limited deployment that is now gone but Zone Evaluation is the replacement system that's now in place in every MLB ball park. It's making live evaluations alongside the umpires to make sure they're making decent calls. It would take exactly zero effort at this point to let Zone Eval be the final say in the matter.

Comment Re:I don't think your hangup is loyalty... (Score 1) 735

I don't think Soulskill's hangup is loyalty or fear of the unknown. I think the primary hangup here is arrogance. How arrogant do you have to be to think the company just can't survive without you? Sure, it's tough to replace a senior developer but the company isn't just going to roll over and go tits up over it. They'll move on just like you will.

Comment Re:No commute? (Score 1) 735

I was worried about work life encroachment when I took a job 3 miles from my home. Serious work life encroachment happened to me a few years earlier when I took a primarily telecommuting job. But it turns out I loved the close-office arrangement so much more than telecommuting. There was practically no commute and I was still able to leave my work life at the office. I was getting all of the benefits of telecommuting with none of the negatives.

Comment Re:Fucking Lame (Score 1) 184

No, it'll be great. It's a remake of Syndicate... except it's an FPS, and you won't control a team. As an added bonus, EA will send a member of the original Bullfrog team over to your house to punch you in the balls and urinate on your old copy of Syndicate.

Comment Re:So in other words... (Score 1) 184

I don't think I ever had to but there was one mission in particular I remember where we had to protect someone and it was the first time I encountered an enemy agent with a sniper rifle. He's up on a ledge and after several failures I split off one agent with a shotgun off to make hamburger out of him while everyone else protected the person they were sent to protect. There were other similar scenarios in the game where splitting up probably isn't mandatory to success, but made things a lot easier.

Comment Re:Syndicate (Score 1) 184

Come on, the storytelling was awesome. Remember when you took over Alaska and they put up that big blimp that said, "Welcome to the dawning of a new era!" Or that time you took over the Atlantic Accelerator and there was that big blimp that said, "Welcome to the dawning of a new era!" Or that level where you had to kill all those guys? Or that level where you had to persuade someone to join your side? Mind-blowing storytelling!

Comment Re:Is Slashdot really that tough on older posts? (Score 1) 582

"No, and how the heck do you expect me to if everyone keeps asking exactly that question."

When you do your internship at school, don't go for the fun one that has you goofing off and playing foosball all day. Get the one that offers the most experience. Once you're out in the workplace, do each job with the next one in mind. If the technology you're using is getting stale, find a way to use newer, more skills-marketable technology in your workplace. If your workplace won't let you do that, find a new one before your skills are completely out of date. If you fall off the treadmill, I'm not sure how you get back on, but those steps will at least help keep you from falling off in the first place.

Comment Re:Wouldn't say of old age, (Score 1) 317

x2 to the above poster. Apathy has killed more of my computers than anything else. At some point that 386SX, P60, dual processor PII 233MHz, or even Athlon 700MHz just isn't as useful as it once was. They still worked but got relegated to a history dustbin somewhere along the way.

Comment Re:SX is 100% compatible with DX (Score 3, Informative) 260

You're confusing the 386 with the 486. Neither the 386SX nor the 386DX had a built-in math coprocessor. The math coprocessor didn't even exist yet when the 386DX (originally just called the 386) was launched. The difference between 386SX and 386DX was that the former only had a 16-bit data bus while the latter had a 32-bit one. The difference between the 486SX and 486DX was the DX's inclusion of a math coprocessor. The SX of each was the lesser processor but for different reasons.

Slashdot Top Deals

We want to create puppets that pull their own strings. - Ann Marion

Working...