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Comment Consistent with other Separatist movements (Score 1) 200

and they're full of old people asking "when we succeed will I still get my social security check?".

And of course there's the world famous "Keep Government Out of My Medicare" sign....

It's astonishing how little people understand our country. And there's a never ending supply of grifters willing to take advantage of that...

Well, we lived in Canada during the Quebec Separation Referendum of 1995 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_sovereignty_movement#History), and we saw similar ignorance during that event. Politicians were actively dishonest (on both sides), newspapers tended to be either pro- or anti- and talked only to their own side. It was hard to find credible factual analysis of the impacts if the referendum succeeded. (It was particularly galling for the premier of Quebec, who had a PhD in economics from London School of Economics, to spout blatant nonsense. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...)

And from the little bit I saw across the pond, a similar dynamic seemed to be in effect during the Scottish referendum in 2014 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_independence_referendum_2014)

Comment Re:you could argue... (Score 1) 155

Well, a large proportion of the developers I worked with over the last 40 years preferred and still use the Mac. In part that's because when they need to, they can pop up terminal.app and do something with the familiar Unix toolset, such as setting up a quick tool stream using pipes.

So I'm sure it makes some people here happy to toss insults at Mac users as all computer-illiterate hipsters. And I'm sure there are a lot of those using Macs. But that's not the reason why I use it, or my developer friends use it.

p.s. I stumbled across my "POSIX Pioneer" certificate, signed by Jim Isaak, when looking for something else.

Comment Re:Market definition is the critical decision (Score 1) 52

Google's market definition was set by the jury in trial court. Apple's was set by the judge and affirmed by the appeals court and implicitly by SCOTUS. So it's not clear to me how strong the Apple precedent is.

I was surprised the judge assigned the market definition to the jury in the Google case. I thought that would have been a 'ruling of law'.

Comment Market definition is the critical decision (Score 3, Insightful) 52

IANAL, but it seems to me SCOTUS has implicitly accepted the Appeals Court ruling accepting the trial court’s definition of the market. Now a judge’s ruling here could be considered as a matter of law (vs of fact, which is jury business.) So at a minimum, this could set up a basis for Google to appeal the ruling in its case, and if Google loses, that could then set up a potential for further SCOTUS ruling on ‘legal definition of a market.’

The ‘market definition’ is at the absolute core of these anti-trust cases. So if I were doing Apple’s legal strategy (or other big tech firm), I’d be looking for both certainty and favorable rulings-of-law on -my- preferred market definition.

Comment Re:Dumb People? (Score 4, Insightful) 316

My experience explicitly differs. A good checkout person is much faster than any self-checkout I've tried. That's because the self-checkout systems have to do a lot of extra work to make sure they're not over-billing and to guide the user through the process. And that includes the one time when the self-checkout clerk herself did the scanning while I watched to see if it was "just me."

It's clear stores did not do this for 'customer convenience,' but rather to save money on checkout clerks. Again anecdotally, what I've noticed is customers move to self-checkout only when they see lines at the registers with clerks. The 'magic number' seems to be 3 customers, more than that in a line and some people move to self-checkout. Less than 3 in the queue, and people join the line for human checkout. Some people do prefer self-checkout. But I bet if stores, particularly those that have substantially decreased their staffed registers, polled customers, they'd find substantial distaste for self-checkout.

I generally avoid stores (particularly Target and WalMart) that no longer adequately staff checkout lines. And acknowledgement to our local Market-Basket, which has NO self-checkout lines.

Comment Maybe Rust would be a Much Better Choice (Score 5, Insightful) 139

The problems with C++ are pretty well known. If the community is going to do wholesale change, moving to a language that offers much more support for formal verification, better type-checking, and overall better security, seems to be a better -return on investment-.

That being said, I generally don't like the idea of 'recoding working software', the likelihood of introducing new bugs outweighs the putative arguments for "easier to maintain."

Comment Re:Engineers Running Show is Wrong (Score 2) 155

Having observed Dennis Muilenberg for almost 10 years as the Boeing PM on Army FCS, it was clear that 'engineering' was not his interest. His primary interest was earning 100% of the award fee each year. Despite the well-documented problems with Boeing engineering, Muilenberg exercised no oversight to fix the engineering problems. "If the government pays full award fee, we don't have any real problems." I still remember watching him and the Army PM standing in front of the assembled "OneTeam" claiming FCS was running within 2% of perfection on both cost and schedule, to -3 significant digits-. This was not credible, major programs don't run that close to perfection, quarter to quarter, let alone knowing "perfection" to that much precision.

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