Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Gender discrimination is cool now? (Score 1) 333

I felt calling him a douchebag was worthwhile because he was making one of those "I called your argument a fallacy therefor I win" internet debate styles that's just the worst, especially when they're wrong about it being a fallacy. I hate those guys, and feel no remorse about insulting them.

I couldn't agree more. I ran across this the other day, you may find it interesting as well.

Sorry to derail the discussion, I was just having a bit of fun.

Comment Re:Girls, girls, girls... (Score 1) 333

I don't see a benefit.

Like I said, take your time. Maybe do a bit of reading.

What I see is suggesting that they're inferior to men, and need to be separated into their own groups.

What a ridiculous notion. Groups are divided out for many reasons. In this case, the reason is clear: girls are underrepresented in computing. This in no way implies that girls are inferior to boys.

Now, I have a question for you: what do you think of making beauty pageants exclusive to boys?

I no know nothing about beauty pageants. I would assume, however, that they're already separated along those lines as the purpose is to be named the best representative of your gender, yes? This doesn't bother me in any way. Why do you think I should find that disturbing?

Comment Re:Which is why girls dominate game making... (Score 1) 312

There's a serious flaw in your reasoning: I never claimed that sexism was the most credible answer. That was an inference on the part of the parent. I made no claim, and thus have no obligation to defend one.

The parent, on the other hand, did make a claim. I merely asked him to defend it.

Now go and sin no more.

Comment Re:Which is why girls dominate game making... (Score 1) 312

The reality is that women have chosen NOT to be in this field... statistically. And as to why they have chosen not to do that... sexism is the least credible answer.

This should be fun.

Why do you believe sexism to be the least credible answer? Please include relevant citations.

Do you have an alternative explanation, which also explains the demographic shift we've seen since the early 1980's? Again, show your work.

Comment Re: Which is why girls dominate game making... (Score 2) 312

Women have been making video games since the beginning! As I noted earlier, River Raid (of the the top games on the 2600) was written by Carol Shaw, a women. I also mentioned Dona Bailey, who co-developed the hit arcade classic Centipede.

But let's let your limited knowledge and experience dictate reality. That way, we don't have to let those icky girls in to our clubhouse.

Comment Re:Which is why girls dominate game making... (Score 3, Informative) 312

Wrong. Women and men gravitate to certain career paths. Women choose NOT to sit for hours in front of computers learning to code.

Anecdote: When I introduced RPG Maker in an after-school program at the urging of one boy, more girls than boys asked if they could also participate. The girls also stuck with it longer than every boy, save the original. (The girls averaged about three weeks vs the boys four days, not counting the first boy, who spent 4 months on his creation.)

Children, regardless of gender, enjoy creative activities. Moving on...

The only female writers in games I can name off the top of my head

You'd be amazed at how many games were written and designed by women, even in the old days. Sticking with just well-known titles: River Raid (Carol Shaw), Centipede (Dona Bailey, later driven from the industry by male co-workers), Archon (Anne Westfall), [bunch of Sierra games] (Jane Jensen), Laser Surgeon [okay, not as well known, but the name you'll recognize] (Brenda Laurel), Plundered Hearts, Zork Zero (Amy Briggs), I could go on all day, it seems.

That doesn't even begin to touch on the countless influential women in game design, who bring talents aside from programming to the table like Lucy Bradshaw, Robin Hunicke (who you dismissed without naming earlier), Brenda Brathwaite, Alyssa Finley, Linda Currie ... like the earlier list, this just doesn't end.

The point of all this? That you're not aware of many famous women in games does not mean that there aren't many famous women in games.

Do you know what keeps women out of game development? Attitudes like yours, as illustrated by the aforementioned Dona Bailey.

And before you give me some presto intellectual argument about how they're just conditioned to not want to do these things... Wrong. Women and men gravitate to certain career paths. Women choose NOT to sit for hours in front of computers learning to code.

Back in the early 80's something like 40% of CS graduates were women. Why do you think they seem to have collectively chosen to avoid it and related fields? It clearly wasn't a problem earlier, after all.

I think that you know why. You just don't like the answer.

Comment Re:Money how? (Score 2) 120

Their product was only "better" because their competitors at the time only had crap products.

That's kind of how it works in general. Some products are superior to other, inferior, products.

Why not just say "they wouldn't have had a product that was 'better' than the competition if the competition had a superior product". So silly...

The global sales of smartphones during that time was about 1/20th of what they are now. It's easy to be the biggest fish when the pond is small.

Good effort. Now, ask yourself: 'why did the market grow?' Because the smartphone market expanded in to the consumer space. Companies started to offer their inferior products (read: ill-suited to the enterprise) with features attractive to consumers. BlackBerry faltered in the consumer market because consumers aren't interested in the features that enterprise users demanded. As the market grew, it was no surprise to see their market-share fall -- they weren't competing in the same space. (Ignoring their less-than-successful entries in to the consumer market, that is.)

Anyhow, now that the smartphone hype as all died down, I don't see any reason that BlackBerry couldn't make a strong come-back, at least in the enterprise. Someone else linked to this review which indicates that BB can still build a workhorse for the serious business user. (I'll even offer the same quote: " It was unexpectedly the best smartphone we've ever used from the perspective of taking care of business.")

Time will tell, but they've clearly started to play to their strengths. The new BlackBerry Classic has caught my eye. My battered old 8820 never let me down. A 2014 version of that just might cure my mobile woes. I doubt that I'm the only one who feels that way.

Comment Re:Armchair cognitive scientist (Score 1) 455

you think Javascript and PHP are good well designed languages with no flaws.

No where will you find a post where I make that claim. Quite the opposite, in fact, as you'll find many of my posts where I criticize various aspects of JS as well as acknowledge specific issues with PHP. I've spoken in defense of both, sure, but only when the criticisms being offered were objectively incorrect. See, your problem is that you mistake your uninformed and subjective opinions for objective fact.

This isn't a my first website discussion, there's no room for your pre-Comp. Sci. 101 understanding of computing here

You'll note that this is NOT a discussion about computing, but about philosophy. You'll also note that bsdasym's comment is painfully incompetent. There is nothing even remotely defensible in, at least, the portion of his comment I quoted.

If you have something to ACTUALLY contribute, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. Go ahead, defend bsdasym's comment. It will be interesting to watch you, with no background in philosophy, make a fool of yourself.

Slashdot Top Deals

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

Working...