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Comment Re:Hey well... (Score 1) 132

There's NOTHING I hate worse than a noisy oven.

The Frigidaire slide-in oven has a fan to cool the controls; it's noisy. The Kitchen Aid (as of a couple of years ago) has no such fan. It's quiet. Unfortunately the controls tend to overheat and fail. Also the door glass explodes spontaneously. Still want the quiet one?

Comment Re:What is different? (Score 1) 119

The guy running the roofing business, though? He'll have to wait a couple of years or become a pilot and an expert on navigating section 333's paperwork mill

Or he'll just do it. The FAA doesn't have the manpower to catch him... and even if they do catch him once, the fine is $10,000 and thus lots cheaper than doing it legally.

Comment Re:First Post (Score 1) 267

Personally I think the solution is to speak up even when you don't care that much. You can't convince the fringe players that they're wrong, but you can demonstrate to them (and others) that the fringe viewpoint is a minority one.

Well, we know one thing that DOESN'T work -- censoring the "fringe" players, and make agreements with all the other forums you can find to also censor them. All that does is convince them that there's a conspiracy to silence them. (why this should convince them so is left as an exercise)

Comment Re:Unfortunately.... (Score 4, Insightful) 164

Probably living in a forest, breathing fresh air, eating natural food and drinking source water is less carcinogenic?

Trees pump out all sorts of carcinogenic crap. The Great Smokey Mountains aren't smokey from man-made pollution or fire, after all. If the canopy isn't too heavy, living outdoors means susceptibility to skin cancer. Natural food, especially plants also contains all sorts of toxins. And water in nature can contain lead and arsenic and kill you too. But if you live like that, your chance of cancer might be cut down by getting bitten by a snake or attacked by a wolf or a bear or something, or just hypothermia.

Comment They used Public Service Announcements (Score 1) 267

Everyone over the age of 5 knows a Public Service Announcement is propaganda. Of course the comments were more influential; they didn't have to clear a high bar. Give it a few years and everyone will know the comments are mostly from shills, trolls, and know-nothings, and we'll be back to the healthy status quo of no one with any sense believing anything they read without triple-checking it.

Comment Re:What it means: (Score 1) 254

Tell me again how many people in leadership positions aren't cishet white men?

  • Satya Nadella, CEO, Microsoft Corporation.
  • Kathleen Hogan, Executive Vice President, Human Resources, Microsoft Corporation
  • Amy Hood, Executive Vice President and CFO, Microsoft Corporation
  • Peggy Johnson, Executive Vice President, Business Development, Microsoft Corporation
  • Qi Lu, Executive Vice President, Applications and Services, Microsoft Corporation
  • Harry Shum, Executive Vice President, Technology and Research, Microsoft Corporation

That's 6 out of 15 on Microsoft's Senior Leader page.

  • Tim Cook, CEO, Apple
  • Angela Ahrendts, Senior Vice President, Retail and Online Stores, Apple
  • Lisa Jackson, Vice President, Environmental Initiatives, Apple
  • Denise Young Smith, Vice President, Human Resources, Apple

4 out of 15 for Apple (and no Asians), but still not all cishet white male.
(Additionally, Eddy Cue, SVP of Internet Software and Services might qualify as Hispanic)

For Google, we've got

  • David C. Drummond, Senior Vice President of Corporate Developmenr and Chief Legal Officer, Google
  • Amit Singhal, Senior Vice President, Search, Google
  • Lorraine Twohill, Senior Vice President, Global Marketing, Google
  • Rachel Whetstone, Senior Vice President, Communications and Policy, Google
  • Sanjay Ghemawat, Senior Fellow, Google
  • Sridhar Ramaswamy, Senior Vice President, Ads and Comemrce, Google
  • Sundar Pichai, Senior Vice President, Android, Chrome, and Apps, Google
  • Susan Wojcicki, Senior Vice President, YouTube

    • That's 8 out of 20. (Also two Iranians)

      Facebook has 1 out of 5 (Sheryl Sandberg, COO)

      Shut your mouth with your "model minority" bullwark.

      Your term, not mine.

Comment Re:Somethig wrong with that (Score 1) 254

The only people campaigning to keep women out of STEM (CS and Engineering anyway in particular) are your allies. You know, the ones who say the guys in the field are so horrible that women have to be on constant guard, that the level of sexism and misogyny is so high that it's nearly intolerable. The ones who talk about "microaggressions" as if life is free of difficulty for cishet white males and we are making it difficult for others. The ones who claim women have few opportunities for advancement in the field, and will just end up leaving. You want to know who is keeping women out of CS and engineering? Look in the mirror.

Comment Re:Somethig wrong with that (Score 1) 254

You just have to understand what "diversity" means. You'd think it would mean that across employees, you had a varied set of genders, races, nationalities, etc, right? Nope. Diversity applies to an individual person. If you're a white male or an asian male, you're non-diverse. If you're anything else, you're diverse. A company made of 100% black women has perfect diversity; a company with 20% white American men, 20% white European men, 20% Korean men, 20% Japanese men, and 20% Chinese men has no diversity at all.

Comment Re:What it means: (Score 1) 254

A group of people rigs the game to the where where they have a stranglehold, to the detriment of ALL others. That same group (or their progeny) then cries that those not-so-fairly won advantages shouldn't be taken away for the sake of the industry ...and themselves.

Yes, tell me again how those Indian, Chinese, Korean, and Japanese people have had the game rigged against them by that bogeyman of bogeymen, the cis-white-hetero-male.

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