Comment Re:Goodbye Slashdot! Been a nice run (Score 1) 552
I can see it now:
"Slashdot: Bad Hair for Billionaires; Stuff that still does not matter."
I can see it now:
"Slashdot: Bad Hair for Billionaires; Stuff that still does not matter."
How about over ISIS
mongodb? Use something that's been tried and true for at least 10 years. Go with MySql or PostGresql and screw the noSql toys until they mature and have decent docs.
Let pioneers take the arrows, the rest of us stay in proverbial Boston, which has infrastructure and seasoned specialists, and get shit done. And we have nice lawns to kick fanboys off of.
The problem with most software isn't that it can't be modelling and rely on basic physical principles, it's that many projects fail to take specs and testing seriously
Most requesters (users) don't really know what they want UNTIL they actually see something concrete, and then realize it didn't fit what they had in mind. We don't need engineering, we need mind-readers. If users had enough time to sit and be thoroughly interviewed about needs and preferences, they wouldn't need automation to begin with.
And further, how to make software maintainable in the longer run is highly disputed largely because it depends on "wetware" and unknowns, such as developer perception of code, and unknowable future domain changes.
It's more akin to writing technical documentation than to building a bridge: how do you write documentation that's clear to the audience, but flexible enough that it doesn't have to be largely reworked for every change.
There is no magic modularity formula: domain issues inherently intertwine (or can intertwine in the future even if not at original launch.) You can't hide intertwining, you have to find a way to manage it well.
Software development seems to be riddled with arrogant know nothings who think they can cut corners or reinvent the wheel...
That's a problem with human nature, not just devs. We are not Vulcans. Humans are impatient, egotistical, fixate on the wrong factors, and often just plain random; and most don't know it or care.
I know some well-educated people who are complete idiots outside of their narrow specialty. I'm probably an idiot also in ways I don't even realize (please don't educate me in replies). My head-model of the world is perfectly logical and consistent to me, but it's probably highly lossy against the real world.
Gee, it's almost as if we are merely upright apes who happen to be able to talk and write. (I would have said "hairless", but I'm hairier than the orangutans I see in the zoo.) They fling poo, we fling nukes.
Why not The Register? Sarcasm is their biz such that they may be able to tolerate being trashed by nerds....and enjoy shooting back.
and in most of the US, its borderline illegal to even MENTION JN in court. judges will kick you out, lock you up, threaten you, try to scare you. voire dire does all it can to try to reject jurors that even KNOW what JN is. and if you tell them during VD that you don't know what JN is and then later, they find out you do, you are in contempt.
its all neatly stacked up so that your CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS are not vocalized or listed or communicated to you.
"nice liberty you got there; would be a shame if something were to happen to it"
You just can't see the quality because it's in ultraviolet light. Feeble humans.
or worse, a Trump speech
We could've just engraved a URL onto the side of each Voyager.
A pop-up ad could offend them enough to annihilate us
is it, at least, good old amercian 60hz hum or that evil commie 50hz variety?
I'm a spherical cow. I say "roolllin' roolllin'", not "moo moo"
the cpu and radio on a drone are both tracable by cell towers. they probably scanned your id, at the store that sold it. this is not as simple as you are claiming it is.
Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky