Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:One thing to consider... (Score 1) 82

It's a pretty weak citation to say a state requires it, when you can't even be bothered to look if they require it.

What you stated is that in Alaska, one may be refused emergency care if one does not provide a social security number. That is a pretty strong statement and requires a more rigorous citation than "Alaska law requires it". I'm not an expert in searching statutes, but I could find no such statute.

Comment Re:Since there's no downside, why not go all out? (Score 1) 1094

Since apparently there is no downside to raising the minimum wage some, why not raise it a bunch?

That does not logically follow.

If some is good, more is better, and much more is much more better, right?

No.

Why not a minimum wage of $500/hr, and make almost everyone rich? (Except for the people who are already pulling in a megabuck per year.)

Because that's not how it works?

Comment Re:Tolls? (Score 1) 837

Because roads still need to be maintained no matter what's driving on them. Those costs won't change.

Um, the type of traffic being carried by and the maintenance cost of roads are *not* independent. The more and the heavier the vehicles on the road, the more damage caused, the higher the cost of maintenance.

You're better off increasing the gas tax itself which then hurts less efficient (and presumably heavier) vehicles while reducing the impact on more fuel efficient (and lighter) vehicles.

Less fuel efficient vehicles need not be heavier and more fuel efficient vehicles need not be lighter. I recently retired my old car for a newer car and the newer car is twice as efficient and twice as heavy.

Comment Re:Arrogance about a job you don't understand (Score 1) 387

We cannot discount that Coca-Cola was standard ration for the US military during the last World War and the US government helped fund bottling plants all over the world near military deployments to supply troops economically. That certainly had a helping hand in growing their business.

Comment Re:How hard will this break Corp Intranet apps? (Score 1) 133

One where you express your concerns tactfully, then when your superiors make a decision you either accept it and adapt or don't accept it and find new superiors. In both cases, you take responsibility for the choice *you* made.

Either you agreed with them it was the right thing you do, in which case you don't blame Microsoft for changing their platform that you signed up to use, or you disagree with them and find a job that does things differently.

I'm not saying you made the wrong choice here. I'm saying that moaning about Microsoft's change to their platform after you and your superiors signed up for the Microsoft way of doing things is trying to deflect responsibility and gets little sympathy from me.

Comment Re:How hard will this break Corp Intranet apps? (Score 2) 133

In an earlier post, you blamed Microsoft, with your comment "You stupid Fuckers, Microsoft", for the headache they've caused you with their ecosystem. Your blame is misplaced, though. It is the fault of your authorities, who selected that ecosystem, and yourself, for agreeing to use that ecosystem. It's common knowledge that when you give control over your platform to another company, you accept the risk that the platform no longer suits your needs in the future.

Your options are to accept the change and rewrite your applications with the new Microsoft system, or if you are to rewrite it anyhow, to choose an ecosystem that has a wider support network than one vendor.

Comment Re:No, but your own choices are. (Score 1) 179

so maybe liberals have more conservative "friends" to de-"friend" than conservatives have liberal "friends" to de-"friend".

This is impossible as these are one-to-one relationships; for every liberal that has a conservative friend, that conservative has a liberal friend.

Can you explain what you mean by one-to-one? Most models of relationships are graphs, not functions. I am unsure what one-to-one means in this context. It does not appear that you mean each node may only have one mapping to another node, which would be, perhaps, the most sensible reading of a one-to-one relationship here.

In any case, node may be connected to any number of nodes, which means that a construct where you have six nodes, one self-identifies as "conservative" and five self-identify as "liberal". The "conservative" node may then be connected to each of the five "liberal" nodes. Is that one-to-one, by your usage?

It's more likely that liberals are the one's that initiate the un-friending.

Why?

Slashdot Top Deals

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

Working...