Comment Re:Penalty for obvious false claims (Score 1) 97
I'm still partial to that tactical nuclear strike.
I'm still partial to that tactical nuclear strike.
But
That's twice the reason to throw sense and logic out the window!
Where's terrorists when you need them?
Seriously, people. Am I the only one who can see how they can instantly score a lot of sympathy and good PR if they chose the right targets for their planes?
In case you're wondering, I know why you don't get invited to parties...
We get a new barrage of online anti-bullying laws. While at the same time, nobody gives half a shit about real life bullying.
Ya know what I'm talking about. The kind where REAL people REALLY hurt you and your feelings. Starts in school, doesn't even end in the workplace. And? Zilch. Nada.
Could it be that the ones making the laws ARE the offline bullies? And just unable to retaliate otherwise when their targets fight back with weapons that require more brain cells to employ?
And, like, everyone else in the arena?
I don't question it being competitive. Or requires training and skill. Hell, I even don't question that it's a sport. Or rather, I don't want to get into a discussion about it because, well, it's useless. There still is a reason why your playing of DOTA or whatever else the game du jour is will replace Superbowl Sunday any time soon: It's boring to watch.
And sadly that's true for ALL so called eSports. It simply isn't interesting to watch someone play a computer game. Yes, maybe due to novelty some people will wanna know what the hubub is about, but as soon as the novelty factor wears off, it's back to "meh". It's simply no fun to watch people play a computer game when you can play it yourself instead.
Soon to be the official SI unit describing the minimum distance between two blunders.
And this is how copyright caused thousands of deaths because the life saving checks could not be implemented.
I feel like a story coming to me...
My guess is that it's one of those "while we're at it..." things. I'm pretty sure that by the time that standard gets finally heeded by the majority, SHA1 can safely be considered "too weak for human consumption"...
It is the DE FACTO standard if you at least care a tiny little bit about security.
RFC or not.
Micromanaging manboys with brains clogged with hubris? That's basically the dictionary description of manager.
Management, and even more so management theories, need to take the human factor into consideration. Every time you get to hear some bullshit "how to manage" story, you can't help but sit back and wonder whether they ever heard of something called human nature.
Generally management and management theories treat humans like some kind of fungible mass. Like any human is identical to anyone else. Sadly, humans are not. By no means. What's worse is that managers think that everyone under their "control" thinks the same and has the same preferences and aversions, and, wht's worse, the same preferences and aversions THEY have themselves. This leads to such bullshit experiences like a manager who enjoys mountain climbing taking his team on a mountain climbing team building event and considers it some great treat while the office talk during the week before is "how do I shoot myself in the foot so it doesn't cause lasting damage but ensures I don't have to go".
And rest assured, it will build team. It will unite the team against management.
Of course the week after productivity will slump and the manager will wonder why, after all he took them on a great experience that invigorates him.
You know, I know, but managers don't. Personally I think it's a bit of the good old "people think as they are" mentality, and hence they consider everyone a trained monkey whose experience is worthless, so they can be replaced by someone cheaper any time.
With the only reason they themselves can't being that they'd have to be the ones doing it.
Some skills (actually, most of the ones worth having) take time to practice to actually be useful. Something that can't be done when the skill is needed NOW.
For reference, see Cobol programmers and their salaries in the years before y2k.
With your bare hands?!?