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Comment lower monitors (Score 1) 235

One thing I didn't see recommended elsewhere was to keep monitors low. This keeps your eyes form drying out (by looking upward) and reduces eye strain. I'm practically the only dev in my shop with my monitors still on pedestals - everyone else is using swing-arms. Although, I'm switching to swing-arms myself just to keep the dust bunnies down, I'm still going to keep them low.

FYI, I had eye surgery (surface ablation, similar to lasik) a year or two ago. I don't have a problem with dry eyes, even though I am at a computer most of the day.

J

Comment prevailing winds (Score 1) 319

When I left college (note the absence of the phrase "graduated from"), I needed an income. I made it writing VB/VBA/ASP apps tied to SQL Server databases. And I made a very fine income. Then when .NET came out, I "upgraded" to C#, and was very happy with it. I have to be reminded once in a while that we're in a recession. I've spent the better part of the last 20 years on Windows because that's where I felt I was in the most stable business environment.

Last week, I bought a PHP/PostgreSQL book for my current project on Linux/Apache2.

Comment no box is best box (Score 1) 223

We dropped our cable subscription a few months ago when they forced set-top boxes on us. We were already paying for something we hardly used, and the idea of adding even more electronics to our setup was distasteful. Our main home theater unit already has too many devices to list here, and two of the three other TV's are wall-mount with no reasonable place for a set-top box. I actually shopped around for satellite before realizing that every one of those providers force you to use their equipment as well. So now we have just basic OTA HDTV, yet get a lot of video from Netflix and a lot of other online sources.

My only regret is live sports. I'm a fan of one particular sport that is carried on a cable sports channel, and has virtually no online availability.

Comment this is how (Score 1) 496

Smaller class sizes, more carrots and sticks to spur parental involvement, less time spent on mandatory testing, more money spent on teachers than stuff, and more empowerment and accountability given to teachers as opposed to administrators, school boards, and politicians. Cash or check is fine, Bill.

Being a teacher was on my short list at school, but life got in the way. I've been told several times that I would've made a good one - once from a retired teacher who happened to overhear my conversation with two of my kids in a doctor's waiting room. I'd still like to be one. But making the switch now would take two years of college and a 50% pay cut. That's a tough pill to swallow.

Comment Re:Gibson... (Score 1) 388

I used to be in the manufacturing world. I wrote software that made production more efficient. The work itself was infinitely more satisfying than what I do now. But the working environment was just the opposite. And I'm not talking about the physical environment (though I've probably written plenty of code under some pretty strange conditions), but the business environment. I saw the best in the business struggling to make ends meet, and saw outfits that had no business being there getting the best contracts (which really weren't all that good).

Nowadays, I write code that helps marketers. The reward is purely financial. And it is very rewarding, in that sense. And I don't care - usually. Every once in a while, I do have that moment like Billy Crystal in City Slickers... "I sell air?!" And then I remember that I haven't worked in a shop that was at risk of closing its doors since 2005, and life returns to normal again.

Comment Gibson... (Score 1) 388

...wrote in Pattern Recognition in 2002 that "far more creativity these days goes into the marketing of products than the products themselves." I'm a software developer for what is basically a marketing company, and I heartily agree.

Comment My Pattern (Score 1) 655

I stumbled upon "The Girl in the Fireplace" - a second-season episode of the 2005 reboot - on SyFy and loved it. That got me to watch the whole reboot. When my wife and I had finally "caught up", we actually went back and watched it again, this time incorporating Torchwood into it at the points that the two cross. We had actually tried watching Torchwood once before, and didn't quite make it through the first season. It didn't have quite the appeal. On the second go-around, though, I found that the second season was better than the first, and that the third - short as it was - was probably the best.

It's also worth noting that the reboot does have some replay value. We caught stuff the second time around that we missed the first time. So, as I've seen others advise here, one method is to start with the reboot, and watch those in order. With or without Torchwood (I can't speak for Sarah Jane).

Somewhere along the way, I watched the very first episode (felt really Twilight Zone-ish) and was mildly impressed with it. But I also managed to see several clips throughout the years, and had trouble getting past the very low-budget effects. But I've heard plenty of people talk about Tom Baker, so I suppose that option (starting with Tom Baker) is probably not a bad one. By the way, if you go back before Tom Baker, you'll actually find that a few episodes don't even exist anymore. That kind of thing tends to irritate the Sheldon Cooper in all of us.

So there's my history - take it or leave it.

Comment Opponents (Score 1) 1277

FTA: "Opponents of the bill argued that the concepts within it are already being taught and that the Legislature shouldn’t get involved in curriculum matters."

Every time I wish I would've become a teacher, an article like this comes along to remind me just what a messed up profession it is. Add me to the list of opponents.

Comment PhpGedView (Score 1) 292

I deployed PhpGedView to a LAMP server, and have been extremely pleased with it. I'm an old MS admin, who has to Google a lot to get anything running in Linux, yet I was able to get it up and running fairly quickly.

Pros: A lot of features, not terribly buggy, easy install, and - most importantly - since it's a site, it's multi-user.
Cons: There are a few quirks to the interface, but once you get a feel for it, I think it's fine.

Comment cars (Score 1) 465

I already don't like a lot of the automated features of newer vehicles. I'm one of the few Americans who actually still purchase manual transmission cars. For all the shiny benefits of letting robots do our work, I would miss the act of driving.

On the other hand, voting a robot into office sounds like a viable alternative to the cattle that represent us now.

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