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Comment Re:Chicken Little (Score 4, Informative) 118

There are a lot of ways to make your point on the internet, and one of them is to not talk about shit you don't know. It's Ad hominem. And yes,seriously, that's a wiki link. If you would deign to look at it you might learn something, like the fact that dakameleon didn't commit an ad hominem. Saying India won't develop nuclear weapons when they already have makes you look like an idiot, and I thought dakameleon let you off lightly.

Comment What a stupid plan... (Score 1) 773

Okay, so first, in order to make this work you'd have to outspend Google. I mean, for Microsoft and pals (you know, anybody who can afford to spend a billion+ dollars to topple Google), search is a nice business that they want; but for Google it's their core business (well, it's what powers their core business). You'd need someone else willing to bet their company (or someone who dwarfs Google, maybe GE or BP wants a search engine really bad?), because the stakes will be that high for Google. At the first sign of a strategy like this working, Google simply shows up with a bigger check. You think it would be easy for people to lure Google away with a million dollar check? How easy would it be to convince them to stay with a two million dollar check?

Second, Google has lobbying muscle now. Assuming this is legal, it might not be soon. They'll probably outlaw it in an amendment to the next Puppies for Orphanages Act that comes through. "It's not Evil, it's Democracy!"

This strategy would have worked great before the IPO.

Comment Re:Personally I'd rather you were honest with me (Score 1) 344

We see dishonesty from head hunters all the time. Personally I'd much rather if there was a mistake on your resume as we have it in front of us, that you point it out.

Absolutely. It's well known that most of these guys are human garbage, including the ones we work with. I would never fault you for correcting something a headhunter said about you, and if it was unflattering I would respect you more for being honest. I'm not going to lie, the best case scenario is that we never find out at all, but it will be much worse for you if it comes to light and you weren't honest about it, no matter what your recruiter did.

Best to just fess up, but some managers are idiots so play it by ear.

Comment Re:Wash your hands! (Score 1) 374

This is good advice, and gives me an opportunity to speak to the community at large: some of us who go to cons and are in a position to shake tons of hands politely decline. It's not because we're being dicks, it's because we know it's a good way to substantially decrease our chances of catching and spreading any germs.

Comment Oh, cruel irony (Score 2, Interesting) 374

I played the PAX Pandemic game, where the Enforcers handed out stickers to attendees that read [Carrier] [Infected] or [Immune] (There was also a [Patient Zero].

I got the [Immune] sticker, and by the time I got home on Monday, it was clear that I had the flu. I've had a fever between 100 and 104 all week that finally broke last night, but I'm going to the doctor today because I think whatever I had settled into my lungs. I'll tell him about the H1N1 outbreak and get tested if he wants to run the test, but at this point I think it's safe to assume that I was [Immune] to the Pig Plague, but definitely [Infected] with the damn PAX pox.

Even though it's been a week of misery, it was entirely worth it, and I don't regret going to PAX for a single second.

Comment "Phase". Not "Threat Level", not even "Level". (Score 1) 557

"Current level of influenza pandemic alert raised from phase 4 to 5"

http://www.who.int/en/
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic/phases.htm.

Obviously as it spreads more, the risk is greater, but it isn't some "terror alert level" they're raising, it's the phase in the progression of the outbreak that they're tracking.

Comment Re:Should have used PHP. (Score 1) 324

Twitter was going to have problems scaling no matter what they chose. Because of the highly personalized nature of the site, the low ratio of reads to writes, and the way the app encourages you to make small updates constantly, most of the strategies you'd use to increase throughput just don't work and you wind up at "how do we make the app just run faster?" Moving to a faster language is a great way to do that, and something they were probably going to do eventually on the back-end no matter what they started with.

Most sites don't have Twitter's problems. We serve millions of Ruby/Rails-backed pages every day, and we're overall relatively happy with our platform of choice. We even use it in a couple Twitter-esque apps that work just fine, but we don't see near the traffic they do. Rails has its problems, and there are a lot of things it could do better, but it's a good choice for a generic "getting things done quickly on the web" language+framework, and I'm certainly in no hurry to go back to Perl or PHP.

Comment Re:Linux loves critics (Score 1) 1127

You can pay a number of companies to politely listen to your problems, suggests ways to work around them, and maybe even fix them eventually if you give them enough money. Microsoft and Apple follow roughly the same model.

Because Linux exists for free in the wild, people seem to think that the customer service hug box does too. By and large, if you're not willing to make yourself useful, you still have to pay for that. This is not a significantly worse situation than non-"hobbyist" OSs.

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