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Comment Re:stopped using it? (Score 1) 857

Pinning is a little bit different from Quick Launch, and is new to either Vista or 7. A pinned program icon resides in the task area of the taskbar, and when clicked, expands in place to form its taskbar entry once launched. This is handy for programs that I want at most one instance of at any given time (such as an email client). I also keep a Quick Launch toolbar where clicking on an icon simply starts a new copy of the program, better for programs I may want to run multiple copies of (such as a terminal window).
One downside of a pinned program is that there is no good way to customize the amount of space it uses. Even registry tweaks are of limited use. Pinned-but-not-running programs take up much more horizontal space than I'd like. Quick Launch icons are much more compact.
Neither is a replacement for the Start menu, which is good for the "long tail" of programs and configuration/administrative tasks--ones that individually I seldom use, but collectively have a frequent need for.

Comment Re:As an older male sys admin (Score 1) 715

Take my experiences for what they're worth, but almost everyone on the team I am part of--roughly evenly split between men and women--uses language that is not polite in mixed company, in mixed company. This includes development, QA, operations, customer support, management, and just about everyone else from middle management on down. We embrace what might be described as "delightfully inappropriate" behavior and other assorted silliness internally, as an outlet that helps keep morale and team spirit high. We're mature enough to know where the boundaries are; we just limit professionalism to where it actually matters: customer interaction and the quality of our work.
(We're in the US, and have been around for about 30 years.)

Comment Re:It’s not just about movies. (Score 2) 412

Then how do you explain, for example, Xera? (I don't follow Spanish music generally, but I discovered Xera by accident and happen to like them. For the curious, in a hyphenated word they could be described as "electro-folk".)
Since their primary language is Asturian rather than Spanish, I would be surprised if they had much of a following in Latin America. And even if they do, most of them probably haven't contributed monetarily, as the two albums they've released so far have been under a Creative Commons license. (Note the "download album" links right on their website...)
Yet they're busy working on a third album, performing concerts and participating in Spanish music festivals. Maybe music festivals in Spain pay their acts well? Or maybe the members of Xera all have day jobs and do this mainly for the love of music. The bottom line is that they're producing "high quality studio albums" despite any issues with lax IP laws.

Comment Re:Oversupply *and* higher wages? (Score 1) 266

It makes sense that companies would want to pay top dollar for stellar software developers, given that (I would assert that) the variance in developer quality is generally greater than the variance in developer pay. Presumably this extends to other positions and fields too.

It's all about bang for the buck, and if you can get someone three times as productive as an average developer (for some reasonable definition of "productive" and "average") by paying that person two average developers' salaries, it's the logical path to take, setting aside potential pitfalls such as putting all your eggs in one basket.
Not to mention this point: "The real trouble with using a lot of mediocre programmers instead of a couple of good ones is that no matter how long they work, they never produce something as good as what the great programmers can produce."
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/HighNotes.html

Comment Re:theodp (Score 1) 321

My dad worked for IBM on the sales and management side for over 30 years.
He told me on several occasions in the 80's and 90's how important it was that IBM was investing in fundamental research, even if the research didn't have an obvious, immediate application. They could afford to throw a lot of things at the wall and see what sticks, and things that did stick could become part of products IBM could introduce and/or license technology to (at their option, whichever is more profitable) some 10 to 20 years later.

Of course this was a lot easier to say in the 90's when the economy was healthier. It's good to see that this line of thinking hasn't been abandoned.

Comment Re:Which others? (Score 1) 119

This list may be biased toward Nintendo franchises, since that's what I have the most experience with. Or maybe Nintendo is just well known for having sequels/spinoffs to their Famicom/NES games.

Pac-Man: 1980 Pac-Man (arcade), 2010 Pac-Man Party (Wii)/Pac-Man Champion Edition DX (XBLA/PSN)
Donkey Kong: 1981 Donkey Kong (arcade), 2010 Donkey Kong Country Returns (Wii)
Mario: 1983 Mario Bros. (arcade)--origin in Donkey Kong series, 2010 Super Mario Galaxy 2 (Wii)
Bomberman: 1985 Bomberman (Famicom), 2010 Bomberman Live: Battlefest (PSN/XBLA/WiiWare)
Castlevania: 1986 Castlevania (Famicom), 2010 Castlevania: Lords of Shadow (PS3/XBox 360)
Dragon Quest: 1986 Dragon Quest (Famicom), 2009 Dragon Quest IX (DS)
Metroid: 1986 Metroid (Famicom), 2010 Metroid: Other M (Wii)
Zelda: 1986 Legend of Zelda (Famicom), 2009 Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks (DS)
Final Fantasy: 1987 Final Fantasy (Famicom), 2010 Final Fantasy XIV (PS3)
Mega Man: 1987 Mega Man (Famicom), 2010 Mega Man 10 (PSN/XBLA/WiiWare)
Street Fighter: 1987 Street Fighter (arcade), 2010 Super Street Fighter IV (PS3/XBox 360/arcade)
Ninja Gaiden: 1988 Ninja Gaiden (Famicom), 2009 Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 (PS3)

Mortal Kombat was released in 1992.

Comment Re:Don't worry big media, the fix is in (Score 2) 463

Palin has on multiple occasions demonstrated that she has a profound misunderstanding of the First Amendment. I can respect someone I disagree with, but I can't respect someone who would swear to uphold the Constitution (had she been elected Vice President) yet gets such a critical part of it so fundamentally wrong.

http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2008/10/31/palin/index.html

If [the media] convince enough voters that that is negative campaigning, for me to call Barack Obama out on his associations, then I don't know what the future of our country would be in terms of First Amendment rights and our ability to ask questions without fear of attacks by the mainstream media.

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2009/05/14/palin-backs-miss-calif-blasts-liberal-onslaught/

I applaud Donald Trump for standing with Carrie during this time. And I respect Carrie for standing strong and staying true to herself, and for not letting those who disagree with her deny her protection under the nation's First Amendment Rights,

https://twitter.com/sarahpalinusa/status/21534515854

Dr.Laura:don't retreat...reload! (Steps aside bc her 1st Amend.rights ceased 2exist thx 2activists trying 2silence"isn't American,not fair")

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