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Verizon

Submission + - Carriers plan to keep gouging consumers on voice plans despite LTE revenue boost (bgr.com)

redkemper writes: Although 4G LTE makes delivering data cheaper on a per-gigabyte basis, many wireless carriers are in no rush to give up their lucrative voice plans in favor of folding their voice services into their LTE data packages. The latest carrier survey from Infonetics Research shows that carriers are increasingly seeing average revenue per user (ARPU) go up as a result of deploying LTE as their data technology, as greater spectral efficiencies on LTE networks are sending data transmission costs downward. However, Infonetics says that roughly one-third of carriers surveyed said they “plan to use their 2G and 3G networks for voice services as long as possible.”...
Microsoft

Submission + - The Enterprise Datacenter OS War is Over: Linux, Microsoft at Stalemate (slashdot.org)

Nerval's Lobster writes: "Moor Insights & Strategy analyst Paul Teich argues that Linux will never gain significantly more share of enterprise datacenters; it’s at a market standoff with Windows, that is, until advances in cloud services make owning your own enterprise datacenter obsolete.

The Linux portion of public cloud installed infrastructure is today mostly a collection of proprietary and non-public modifications to public distributions, he argues, which means that current Linux enterprise distributions (like RHEL) are not selling much into this market."

United States

Submission + - The Nation is Losing its Toolbox 2

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Louis Uchitelle writes that in Aisle 34 of Home Depot is precut vinyl flooring, the glue already in place, in Aisle 26 are prefab windows, and if you don’t want to be your own handyman, head to Aisle 23 or Aisle 35, where a help desk will arrange for an installer as mastering tools and working with one’s hands recede as American cultural values. "At a time when the American factory seems to be a shrinking presence, and when good manufacturing jobs have vanished, perhaps never to return, there is something deeply troubling about this dilution of American craftsmanship," writes Uchitelle. "Craftsmanship is, if not a birthright, then a vital ingredient of the American self-image as a can-do, inventive, we-can-make-anything people." Mass layoffs and plant closings have drawn plenty of headlines and public debate over the years, and they still occasionally do. But the damage to skill and craftsmanship — what’s needed to build a complex airliner or a tractor, or for a worker to move up from assembler to machinist to supervisor — has gone largely unnoticed. “In an earlier generation, we lost our connection to the land, and now we are losing our connection to the machinery we depend on,” says Michael Hout. “People who work with their hands are doing things today that we call service jobs, in restaurants and laundries, or in medical technology and the like.” The damage to American craftsmanship seems to parallel the precipitous slide in manufacturing employment. and manufacturing’s shrinking presence helps explain the decline in craftsmanship, if only because many of the nation’s assembly line workers were skilled in craft work. “Young people grow up without developing the skills to fix things around the house,” says Richard T. Curtin. “They know about computers, of course, but they don’t know how to build them.”"
Crime

Submission + - Brazil is Turning Inmates into Power Plants

derekmead writes: Since the oil shocks of the ‘70s, Brazil has been home to a carnival of renewable energy initiatives that now generate a whopping 85 percent of the country’s power. At Santa Rita do Sapucaí prison, inmates are contributing to the effort by riding stationary bikes which charge batteries that fuel lights at a nearby park that previously didn’t have electricity. That makes the park safer and shaves a little off the city’s carbon footprint, while giving the inmates a chance to get buff – and reduce their sentences.

City judge José Henrique Mallmann was apparently inspired by other prisons that offer prisoners incentives for riding bikes. At Phoenix, Ariz.’s Tent City Jail, female prisoners who want to watch television are required to pedal stationary bikes that power TVs. The technology has been in use at some fitness clubs for years, and is gaining traction for use in everyday life by cycling enthusiasts.
Businesses

Submission + - Don't Bother Being Honest in Exit Interviews (hp.com)

Esther Schindler writes: "Say that you're leaving a job, either on your own volition or because they decided it was time for you to "pursue other opportunities." Before you leave, the HR department wants to chat with you about the employment experience, in an exit interview. "Oh goodie," you think. "Now I can really tell them what I really feel."

Don't do it. If your employer couldn't find the time to ask you what was good or bad about working at the company while you were still working there, writes Lisa Vaas, why bother with honesty and potentially burned bridges now? (If they did ask, give them constructive feedback before you leave this job; they deserve it).

Discuss."

Security

Submission + - NSA Chief To Address Hackers at DEF CON (securityweek.com)

wiredmikey writes: Later this week, the NSA’s organizational leader and head of the U.S. Cyber Command – General Keith Alexander — will address an audience of hackers at DEF CON.

News of General Alexander’s talk at Def Con broke on Friday. Up until that point, the 12:00 Track 1 slot was kept secret, leaving attendees to the world’s largest hacker conference to speculate. The buzz was that it would be something interesting – if only because this year is Def Con’s 20th anniversary.

General Alexander will be giving a talk titled "Shared Values, Shared Responsibility," which is outlined as a presentation that will focus on the shared core values between the hacker community and the government’s cyber community. Namely, the vision of the Internet as a positive force, the fact that information increases value by sharing, the respect and protection of privacy and civil liberties, and the opposition to malicious and criminal behavior.

Def Con runs July 26-29 at the Rio in Las Vegas, admission is $200 cash only at the door.

Comment Re:In reply to alot of the posters (Score 1) 338

I've worked for stupidly rich stupid people before. Generally it's all fun and games billing them for medium-business level IT for their homes for a year or 2, and ordering big-boy Cisco hardware when you aren't really qualified to do much more than patch their cables and set up a wireless network for them. Eventually (inevitably) they will ask for something retarded. In my case, he was worried that an ex was spying on him. He wanted the full counter-surveillance sweep, even after I priced him out something ridiculous (I was sub 6 figures, but just.) I contracted it out to the professionals, but that was just the start. Once you start to see some of the tinfoil hat levels of distrust most of the 1% have, you will quickly tire of billing them, and you will feel better when you are fired or when you get to hand them off to someone else. I am much happier 7 years later without the paranoid, entitled, out of touch with reality oligarch having my cell number on speed dial.

Comment Re:Memes (Score 2) 177

The president's specific travel itinerary has been considered a matter of secrecy for years. When the specific route of travel is generally known, bad things can happen (just ask Mr. Kennedy, oh, wait...) This is not odd at all. The tension in the middle east has been high for the last two thousand years, and does not dictate whether we know when our country's leader is flying or not. I actually find it reasonably comforting that this managed to stay "secret" for as long as it did.

Comment Standups and by definition Agile (Score 1) 445

We (private/public utility company) recently decided to implement a company wide application of the SCRUMM stuff our Dev department has been working with for the last 2 years. Mind you, this came down the pipe just before we decided that we were going to LEAN out our organization. So the top level guys are left trying to show off in director meetings as having met 2 sets of goals, the middle level guys are scheduling a crap-ton of meetings and have passed much of the PMO work down to the "foot troops" (most of us being Tier 4 or higher professionals) and we have to try to shoehorn our workflows (infrastructure, operations, even maintenance) into the SCRUMM mold. Seriously, I saw half a dozen engineers (the pipe laying kind, not the computer kind) in their standup last week, conforming to the expectations passed down from on top. Daily standups are awful for anyone outside of the traditional development group organization - they allow poor middle managers to micromanage and to offload large chunks of their responsibility. It's sad that in a reasonably sized organization (1200ish) there are people who can now justify their existence with a quarter's worth of daily meeting minutes and nothing else to show for it.
PlayStation (Games)

Gran Turismo 5 Delayed 122

RogueyWon writes "The Times is reporting that Polyphony Digital's Gran Turismo 5, likely to prove a key title for the PlayStation 3, has been delayed indefinitely, despite an expectation that it would be released relatively early in 2010. The delay seems likely to impact Sony's plans to bundle the game with the PlayStation 3 console in time for the important spring sales period in Japan."

Comment Re:Had a 454 Suburban (Score 1) 525

By 96, the 454 Towing Suburban upgraded. To leather and 11.5 MPG @ 5280 feet above sea level. And it just cracked 200k with no major engine or transmission service - and by that, I mean anything other than oil changes. Too bad the 2nd power steering rack is on it's way out. Big block gas engines are MUCH nicer tow vehicles in cities and suburbia. That, and they rarely belch black smoke from the 5 inch sewer exhaust the idiot driving them added (though, they will roll on 25" wheels more than I would like...)

Comment Re:And ditch that 8/16/32mb option (Score 1) 501

I spend a few hours a day with my phone connected to the internet, RDP to damn near everything on it, and LOVE Verizon's service (and their customer support has gotten orders of magnitude better in recent years.) If you can't hack your Verizon phone, you don't deserve the features for free. Everybody RAVES about the "customizability" of other phones without realizing that Verizon basically requires you to do so.

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