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Comment Re:Self-serving philanthropy (Score 1) 90

And there is why so many educational programmes only ever give average results. They measure averaged data against averaged data and surprisingly normally come out around average. The result is an average level of education.

Understanding if the programme benefits students with higher or lower abilities is important not only statistically important but also for any educational programme to make sense. There is no point to the programme if while the overall class did better than average it was down to one or two super bright students doing really well while most of the class actually fell behind - especially when a program is intended to help students that may be struggling or to promote knowledge across a wide range of abilities.

Comment Re:Self-serving philanthropy (Score 1) 90

I started on a ZX81 then moved to a ZX Spectrum, and then to a +3. did some basic programming, played some games and was content with what I had. I was in effect vendor locked into Sinclair as it was the only system I had access to or knew how to use.
Then I got access to BBC Masters at school and I was even more content learning to program in Comal. It was the only system I had any programming teaching in until my Uni days.
Then I moved to an Amiga 500, Rexx, Amos, and others. All learned on the totally different environment of my Sinclair and BBC days and all was good for a while.
Shortly after my first PC (an old second-hand 386) which came with MS dos and windows 3.1. For about a year I used nothing but Dos, Windows, Turbo C and this matched what I had access to at Uni (not counting the VAX cluster).
I heard about this thing called Linux and I promptly repartitioned my flatmates 486DX and spent the next week downloading slackware one disk bundle at a time (I only owned 10 floppies.. I was a student and they were expensive!)
Today I switch between Windows, Linux, Android, Mac and others and program to varying extents in most, using several different languages as needed (cursing some, loving others).

Anyway my point is just because you start somewhere doesn't mean that's where you stay. If those backing code.org thing that the brightest students will stick to the products they were trained in they are deluded. Only the average and below students will never expand their knowledge beyond their training and I'm fine with that.

The good and best will still end up doing what they like, make their own choices, making a difference where they can and will have the intelligence to use the best tools for the job rather than the one their peers pressure them into using for whatever reason.

Comment Re:Self-serving philanthropy (Score 4, Interesting) 90

There's noting like a good conspiracy story to get a rise from /. regulars but hell I've got karma to burn so I'm going the other way...

Some achievement tracking is justified and useful (and even necessary) for the project itself. For code.org to justify its efforts (both to itself and to schools in general) it needs to prove that they made a difference and its hard to do that with no data on how well students improved compared to those not involved. Also since there seems to be some kind of grading/tests/qualifications involved and code.org is issuing them they need to be (as for any examining body) able to keep records of what student did what and that they achieved the required competency and how the difficulty of these achievements compare to other disciplines the students are involved with.

The power to veto teachers is also justified to some extent given how many bad teachers there are out there and bad teaching of the material will likely have the opposite effect than the project wants (that is put talented kids off coding for life). As there are 'small teacher stipends' involved this seems very reasonable to me as does training teachers... something that there isn't nearly enough of (especially in the sciences and technology given how fast things change) which just results in even more bad teaching.

Committing to teach for two years also makes sense given the first year the teachers are likely learning the material just in time to teach it, the second (and presumably subsequent) years the teacher will be able to teach it better due to familiarity. It also ensures at least some consistency for students from one year to the next.

There is two things that I would change from what I read and they are 1) Parents need to have the option to opt-out their sprogs from the achievement tracking but since it would seem that they need to give permission to participate in the first place this is a moot point and 2) the extended performance data needs to be anonymous.

Comment Re:Entirely Reasonable (Score 2) 371

There is a distinct difference between a test for a specific disease and a test that tells you if you have DNA that may make you susceptible to possibly, maybe getting a disease compared to someone else's.

Also it isn't Food or a Drug or Medicine that involves ingesting/injecting/inhaling and can't cause physical harm if misused. It is a non diagnostic test that as at no point will it say 'you have disease x' or 'you don't have disease y'.

Its only a super advanced version of taking blood pressure and pulse... If someone chooses not to consult a doctor because they think their own pulse is normal should the FDA ban everyone from putting a finger on an artery and counting the beats in 30 seconds?

If it doesn't show a genetic tendency for say breast cancer someone who finds a lump will still likely go to their doctor and is unlikely to check less often than before.
If it does show a tendency then that same person may check more often or even go sooner to get a suspect lump checked.
If someone that shows a genetic tendency overreacts and decides they need their breasts removed now to prevent any possibility of cancer in the future they have to go to their doctor who should at the very least do more tests, arrange counselling and only proceed if in his professional opinion it is warranted.

Comment Re:Missing the point (Score 2) 198

The "clear option" is a greyed-out "Decline" button on the bottom left of the installer.

More or less the same reasons I stopped recommending Avast to friends who often ended up malware infected due to pre-installed Mcaffee not doing anything useful... Constant popups prompting to download a version 'upgrade' with the version that costs more button in bright yellow and the free or currently paid for version on a practically invisible 'greyed out' button. Even when I knew they were doing this I found it difficult to avoid ending up on a shop page...

Imagine if every time you got in your car and turned on the engine you had to decline an upgrade to a car that cost twice as much or every single bite of your burger at someone came up to you and tried to sell you another complete meal...

Comment Re:So. (Score 4, Informative) 526

Yeah its not as if petrol/diesel cars ever catch fire...

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/36467/FSGB_2011_to_12.pdf
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120919132719/http://www.communities.gov.uk/pub/894/FireStatisticsUnitedKingdom2003PDF1724Kb_id1124894.pdf

14,000 or so in the UK last year, which is a massive drop from the 28,800 in 1993 and those are just the accidental fires...

Newsflash: technology gets more reliable over time and the Tesla is still brand new compared to internal combustion that has had over 130 years of safety problems, development work and improvements. How often do you hear of mobile phones and laptops bursting into flames these days? For a while it seemed to be happening all the time...

Comment Re:Don't they have something better to do? (Score 1) 201

Still don't think that will apply given that to be a "typographical arrangements" case the songs would have to be published together as as single entity. The way the playlists on Spotify work is more like giving someone a piece of paper with the list of poems and access to the national library so they can read each poem on its own as it was originally published. Technically Spotify only gave access to the songs and the user arranged them in that way on their phone or computer.

Comment Re:Don't they have something better to do? (Score 2) 201

I disagree.

The mixing itself can be copyrighted and is part of the copyright covering the music track HOWEVER the list of mixed tracks that are on the CD are still just a list of tracks on that CD and is no different from the list being on the Amazon page for the CD or the list of tracks as part of that CD on iTunes. Its a fact about the CD contents and not a creative work.

If it was the case (and it's not in any way when listening to tracks on a CD) that the actual sound mixing was a functional output of the list (ie the player did the mixing given the list and as a result modified the individual tracks) AND the results of the Spotify playlist had the same mixing outcome then maybe there would be a case.

Next you will be telling me that its a copyright breach to listen to side one of a vinyl record and then listen to side two right after especially on music works like for instance Tubular Bells that have don't have 'tracks' as such.

Comment Re:No need for cameras. (Score 1) 732

But the speed limit signs really make no more sense, since they can trivially be 'hacked'; I've seen local kids in Britain turn speed limit signs around for grins, so you'd end up with a sixty mph limit in the town and a thirty on the road leading out of town.

It's worse than that... often speed limit signs going onto dual carriageway/motorway are either obstructed by trees etc or just don't exist. A driver can use his common sense and deduce the correct limit but imagine joining a 70mph road (where most vehicles are moving at 70mph) and being forced to do 30 or 40mph. Not only would it be frustrating but a danger to all road users.

Comment Re:EMT do a lot more then just driving (Score 1) 736

EMT do a lot more then just driving

True but with no drunks/phone users/distracted moms/teenagers driving their workload is bound to drop. At the very least you need less staff per Ambulance as it's driving itself, at best possible speed, using the least congested route, possibly even asking other vehicles in its way to move out of its path...

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