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Comment Re:Obligatory Fight Club (Score 1) 357

It looks like it should be a fairly simple matter.

... which demonstrates that you don't understand the problem. See, people die and will die in every production car ever made. Accidents happen, and with enough money spent, virtually every single death could be prevented, with enough additional shielding, crumple zones, and whatnot. But the result would be a car that nobody could afford, not even by a long shot.

So, in a very literal sense, every single car you've ever driven is a balance between the amount you're willing to pay and the amount of risk you're willing to assume. At what point does a death become a death due to a design flaw? Well, guess what: there is no obvious, intuitive "line" that would be easy to sue over.

An ignition switch occasionally dies? Would you *want* a car company that didn't improve its designs as it learns more about them? But on the balancing side, you literally cannot afford to pay for a car getting a recall every time an improvement is made.

There are a ton of shades of grey, and it's not callous, it's just sensible business to balance costs with safety. Doing it any other way would be the foolish way to do things.

Comment Re:Passengers (Score 2) 367

Actually, I remember reading a study a while back covering this very subject. In fact, having passengers in the car engaged in conversation actually improved driver alertness because the passengers would pause talking, stiffen, make a sharp breathing noise, or other indications of tension causing the driver to be on alert even when otherwise oblivious to the driving risk.

In practice, it's like having "more eyes on the road" even when they aren't driving.

Comment Re:Trial by fire... (Score 5, Informative) 115

Realistically, it would be nice to see the native (not FUSE based) code from OpenZFS be included as an alternative, but the CDDL/GPL conflicts likely will make this a no-go.

Well, isn't this your lucky day, then? ZFS on Linux works now, today, without the use of FUSE. Nothing about the license conflicts prohibits use or distribution, just distribution together. I have ZFS/Linux servers in production right now, and they are quite stable. Starting with a vanilla install of CentOS, the instructions are roughly:

1) Install the yum repo file.
2) yum Install kernel-devel zfs
3) Start the ZFS service.
4) Start creating ZFS volumes....

A reboot isn't typically necessary... (though not a bad idea)

Comment Re:Ellis Island Syndrome (Score 4, Insightful) 275

Heck, my Father in law spent most of his childhood writing his name wrong when his parents forgot how they'd spelled it on the birth certificate! He found out about it when he got his driver's license as a teen...

I mean, if a kid's parents can't be trusted to spell a guy's name right, how do you figure a secretary is going to get it right 100% of the time?

Comment Re:Um. WRONG. (Score 2) 323

All true. These aren't present. We end up watching Hulu/Comcast most of the time, and every week or so rent or use "noncommercial distribution" for a prime movie or show. (Often, you can't even rent/buy a particular movie online, thus the noncommercial options)

Today, we watched "The day the Earth stood still"... a wickedly good movie, even if in black & white. Yeah, 100% satisfying...

Truly, I don't understand them making episodes otherwise streamed not available for viewing historically. Don't more eyeballs translate into more revenue?

Comment Re:fight back already you pussies. (Score 1) 405

While I generally agree with your sentiment, it might be nice to learn how to capitalize sentences and form paragraphs so that you you at least appear to be educated, whatever the reality. Based on your post, I'm guessing that there was really no part of this technology that you personally made up. Also, avoid profanity, it makes you sound like you are 15.

Comment Re: Links (Score 1) 392

I think its completely laughable that you mentioned healthcare as something beneficially monopolized by unions.

In the US, that monopoly has resulted in the government intervening to stabilize costs repeatedly for the past twenty years. The only reason it continues is because its necessary - people die without healthcare. With STEM, you'd just see employers close up shop domestically.

In the UK where such things have fallen out of style and costs have tried to be cut, healthcare has gone to shit. Similar things are starting to occur in Canada, and places in the US like CA where similar state level practices are common. (Scheduling a doctors appointment, weeks ahead for a simple checkup, is unheard of in some parts of the US still, and you don't have to go to ER for cold meds.)

Comment Re: Links (Score 1) 392

Absolutely. I've been saying it too. The only thing shortage numbers demonstrate is which, and by how much, employers want to pay talent less.

When I say talent, I mean just that. For instance, in information systems as they mention, its usually incredibly difficult to break into the field after college - even with experience and a good cv. I've experienced it and I know many others who have too.

And then, once a person is in, its usually quickly apparent where someone is going: nowhere, earning entry level wages for some time, or straight to to the top.

  I will grant that there is a shortage of desirable candidates (worldwide, not just in the US), but its because STEM is hard, and to thrive as a STEM company you do need a competitive edge. Without that edge - gotten by hiring as much top talent as possible - you will stagnate. And that's why there remains a shortage: when the top people you need are 200k a year or more, and then you need a dozen people at 100-150k to back them up, you would love to reduce labor costs and reduce the supply. Unfortunately it doesn't work that way; decreasing the job supply and desirability pushes employee demand to other fields.

Comment Re:Antiseptic Mouthwash Raises Heart Attack Risk (Score 1) 63

To be fair, probiotics and alternative medicine people have said all kinds of ridiculous things for decades as well. I remember all too well the "ruby infused sun water" that was said to be a sure cure for my ear infections as a kid. That's just one of many similarly silly claims, as by recent protests against scam medical practices by actual doctors purposely trying to "overdose" on homeopathics...

The value isn't in having the "right answer" - it's in knowing which answers are are, in fact, right. "Alternative medicine" types tend to babble incoherently, a practice which does, occasional, manage to burble a right answer.

Comment Re:1993 (Score 1) 100

Remember that old hardware is subject to a selection bias: the stuff that was crap died long ago; only the good stuff remains!

I have a ancient Pentium 3 with 512 MB of RAM that I use as a network monitor. It's done that job continuously for 10+ years and I haven't replaced it because it has literally never given me a problem. If it was doing "real work" I'd have replaced it long ago, but it does what it does fine, and uses so little power (18 watts) that I feel no need to replace it.

I was a bit relieved when CentOS 6 came out with a 32 bit version, letting me coax another 7 or so years out of it...

Comment Re:Nothing about shelf-life. (Score 2) 250

Not only that, but the size advantage of optical media is simply gone.

When CDs first came out, they easily held several times the capacity of a standard HDD. DVDs were much the same way. Then, a few decades go by, and little changes. BlueRay holds much less than a stock HDD, and was that way when it finally won the format wars.

Now, they have a format that doesn't even come close to a stock HD. (My laptop has a 250 GB SSD, my desktop computer has twin 2 TB drives) This new format would just *barely* cover my laptop, and would be a pain to archive my desktop on.

Comment Passwords are terrible for security (Score 1) 479

To be fair, passwords are dramatically better security than not even using passwords. But for the reason you gave (as well as numerous others) passwords are a terrible idea.

1) You can't (safely) use the same password in more than one context.

2) If a password is leaked, all protection the password provides is lost.

3) It's easy to forget a password.

4) You can't "lend" somebody your password. ... etc...

Comment Re:Maybe... stop growing food in a desert? (Score 1) 545

I'm pretty suspicious of your numbers. I sincerely doubt that it costs anything like $6 to produce a gallon of milk.

In any event, projects like the Greening the Desert Permaculture project have shown that applying a bit of intelligence to agriculture can produce miraculous results in the very worst of circumstances.

It requires a pretty significant re-think of what agriculture should look like. But it's worth it. TL;DR: Seriously, just watch the video linked above.

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