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Comment Re:Ultima VII: look long and hard at that! (Score 2) 337

As someone who has completed all Ultimas from IV to VIII (including Serpent Isle and Ultima Underworlds), that's just nostalgy filter shining.

I don't count "believeable world" to be one where I have to guess keyword, and talk with "Name?", "Job?".

Granted, since U5 the NPCs started to actually have daily routines, but...well, ten years after U7, you had a RPG renaissance that started with Baldur's Gate. Have you tried it (with all the fan-made upgrades for todays computers)?

For more recent stuff, well, Skyrim actually is pretty damn good. I'll grant you that earlier Elder scrolls games (I played even Daggerfall) suffered exactly from that lack of immersion, but Skyrim finally feels good.

Then theres pretty much everything Bioware has made since Baldur days, Dragon Age I + Awakening (Dragon Age II suffers from sequelitis), Mass Effect being the recent entries.

And that doesn't even count all the stuff available from indie developers (Magicka!).

Comment Re:Desk phone stays on the desk when you go home (Score 1) 445

They can call. I don't need to answer. If I see someone from work calling, it's my discretion if I answer. If I'm just goofing off, I might as well answer. If I'm having a moment with family or especially if I'm on vacation, they can call all they want - I'm not responding.

I get paid extra when I'm booked for on-call duty outside of office hours. When that happens, sure, call away.

Comment Home office and videophone (Score 2) 445

Might be a rather specific use-case, but since there are so many telecommuters...I work from home, and I have a Cisco/Tandberg videophone (one of their "personal systems") on my desk. Although I'm practically never at the office, having the video there gives me that much more "presence" at the office than just being a voice (or writing off emails). The quality is much better than just having a webcam and a laptop + being a dedicated device, I never have to fight with whatever video conferencing software there might be. And of course, it has much better speakerphone capabilities than my cellphone.

I have been very happy with it for the last 2 years. Recently, there has been a bit of pressure to start using MS Lync - but the truth is, Lync is mostly still used as a corporate messenger and not for calls. Lync 2013 does provide for more standards-based approach - instead of MS's RTVideo codec, they are actually going to use H.264, so maybe that'll change things. Then again, you can get one of those Lync-aware phones from Polycom and keep using a dedicated phone.

Comment It's just FEC (Score 5, Interesting) 357

Forward error correction - there are different algorithms that are dime a dozen.

The one thing that *does* surprise me is that no such thing is built-in to the link layer of 802.11 spec. Physical layer does whatever it can to garner signal from the noise, but there is no redundant data at higher layers at all.

All this has of course resulted in a gazillion papers on that very topic, hoping to see practical application soon.

Comment Not for iPhone, but I use old phone as a navigator (Score 3, Interesting) 301

My old S60 series Nokia - it has offline maps, with driving instructions (and voice guidance) and a working GPS. I got a car-window mount and a recharger for that (cost about â 10) and now it serves as a navigator in my car. I connect it via USB every few months to load in the latest map data, but other than that, it now lives in the glove compartment when not in use.

Comment Re:Depends on where you want to go (Score 1) 260

I got my MSc 10 years ago. Anyway, I'm not sure how these would apply to your situation (wanting both MSc and PhD), but basically I immediately enrolled for post-graduate studies afterwards. I didn't pick any topic for dissertation or anything like that - for the next 7 years I basically did all the required coursework. Typically it was like 1 or 2 seminar courses each semester, so it was typically one afternoon a week. I didn't really have a study plan as such - seminar courses were interesting for their own sake because the courses were structured around stuff that people were really doing.

For example, one course was about P2P networking, DHT algorithms and so on, and a group came in with a variant of Bittorrent that organised the chunks so that BT could be used for streaming. (This was like 2005-2006). At the time, it was a very good way to keep oneself informed on the latest developments without sacrificing too much time.

Anyway, in 2009, I had basically done all the courses, and partially by chance I got laid off with a rather nice severance package, at which point the professor who's going to oversee my defense on Friday called me and asked if I'd like to come and work in his team as a researcher and create the actual thesis. At the same time an ex-colleague (who had been at the same company) got in touch and basically told me that the academia is going to do squat with the CCIE - they have this little network shop going on and if I like, I could work for them as much as my time would permit. The arrangement worked out rather beautifully....for example, I could incorporate real-world problems from our customers to my research work as well.

So the only real advice I can give - unless you are really going for full-steam career in academia and a tenured professor option - stay in touch with industry somehow (part time, consultancies, even participate in trade shows if nothing else). In academia, it is really easy to seal yourself to that ivory tower that has no bearing on real-world issues and lives from one grant money to the next. Even in completely academic circles, it's possible to maintain that touch - besides everything else, for me it meant regular trips to IETF, which is not something you can exactly classify as a conference. (And at least I got my name as an author on a single RFC to show for it).

Comment Depends on where you want to go (Score 1) 260

I'm going to defend my PhD dissertation on Friday, actually. Anyway, the problem is that in academia, there's sometimes a big disconnect between what's happening in "the real world".

Anyway, the way I've handled it is that I've basically kept my feet in both camps. Throughout the research work I also worked part-time for a consultancy (now full time since I'm done). I'm also a CCIE. PhD alone might mean "an absent-minded professor" to a recruiter, but combined with credentials from industry side I've at least so far gotten the feeling that it's a big selling point. Which might mean more $$$$.

Comment Re:Field Engineers & Specialists (Score 1) 220

Most clients will NOT be happy if a hot sweaty engineer turns up on a bike (even if he did then do an excellent job because he wasn't scared of climbing through a few ducts to find issues).

Depends, if the hot sweaty engineer knows what he is doing. A bit off topic, but kind of fits...

My colleague in sales told of an engineer he used to work with in his previous company - the engineer took a vacation - went basically off the grid for 5 days, surviving by hunting and fishing in the wilderness. Afterwards, he was driving home on the early hours of Monday morning, intending to shower, change and go to work. However, he got a call stating that he'd be immediately needed at customer site to give out technical details on implementation - no time to freshen up.

So a guy who has been better part of a week in a forest, basically with one set of changes in clothing shows up, unshaven, hair in tangles, and reeks of gutted fish...and completely unprepared gave such a presentation that the customer was sold on the solution. Afterwards the sales guy heard comments that the technical presentation was clearly the most convincing of the ones seen so far...and only presentation tool he used was a whiteboard.

So, sometimes, it's the substance that matters. Same sales guy has told me to preferably show up to meetings with technical or geeky T-shirts, or the customer wouldn't get the impression that we actually have the skills (his view is that if I'd show up in a suit, the customer would get the impression that we are just some sleazy people in suits who are all glitter and no competence). I have no objections...He actually told me the previous anecode as his reasoning why.

Comment I telecommute, and use lots of different tools (Score 1) 221

Have to answer with a mix.

I telecommute from home, and for such purposes I have a Cisco/Tandberg E20 videophone on my desk, and I use that to make both regular and video phone calls. I use e-mail a lot, including mailing lists. I use Lync, Jabber and Skype for instant messaging and desktop sharing. I use my cellphone when I'm not at my desk. And I visit office like once a week for face-to-face meetings (and customers whenever they need, of course, but the travel expenses are of course reimbursed).

The only problem with such multifaceted reachability is that it's hard to disconnect completely from work during vacation season. If someone at work insists on bothering me during holidays, even for 5 minutes, it still brings the work-related matters to the front and essentially bringing me back from vacation-mode.

Comment The Hobbit (Score 1) 726

Since you included fantasy. Works perfectly. My friend is currently reading it one chapter a night for her 7-year-old - and he just loves it.

On the sci-fi-side, others have mentioned lots of examples - but you could try giving him book versions of Star Wars and Empire Strikes Back - and then the Timothy Zahn's Thrawn trilogy. Not so serious but the stories flow smoothly. And they have space battles with lots of turbolasers.

Comment Maemo - Nokia N900 (Score 4, Interesting) 400

Still have my N900. It has it's flaws, but unfortunately there is no real replacement. The repositories are full of interesting software, I can run even stuff like Wireshark and the like (which is kind of nice when you are a network engineer and occasionally need to debug stuff over mobile network).

N9 has no keyboard, and is pretty much a dead end since Meego is pretty much dead with Nokia going the way of Windows Mobile.

Anyway, one day the hardware is probably going to die - is there *any* phone that would come even close? With Android I need to pretty much tie myself to a google account - sure, I can root Android phone but then I pretty much have to start scaveging the net for software. It's been pointed to me that there are several alternates to Android market, but no one bothers to list examples.

From what I've seen on my wife's phone about software for Android - it looks like *everything* is adware. For Maemo everything seems to be based on common open source software. I can run stuff like Stellarium, Ur-Quan Masters, ScummVM, AbiWord, Gnumeric and stuff like that...Heck, N900 was the first phone where I could get IPSec VPN to work properly - I can just get the normal openVPN up and running. Oh, and sharing your 3G net connection over WLAN works too - there's of course Joikuspot, but for other systems it costs money, with N900 I could just set up ethernet bridging + ad-hoc WLAN like with a common Linux box.

It looks like I could get most of these functionalities on an Android phone, but I'd have to find ad-loaded alternatives, tie the phone to a Google account - including having to sync phonebook and calendar with Google...kinda feels like step backwards.

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