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Comment Re:*sigh* (Score 1) 256

They really freaking wouldn't be. There will *never* be a shortage of products that really freaking actually need proper UX experts, to fix actual UI issues, sometimes really freaking glaring ones. They do not have to resort to fixing not-broken things until they're broken to have job security. The world is *full* of crap UIs. The problem isn't job security, it's people who don't realize that their job as a UX expert is to actually make things more useable, not just "prettier".

Comment There are totally still racial inequalities... (Score 1) 397

But they happen *way* the crap earlier than with people trying to get jobs. You want to fix things? Fix things at like the elementary school level. People living in poverty will have kids that will also be living in poverty. Kids living in poverty are not nearly so likely to a. value getting a good education, or b. be able to get a good education even if they do value it. People who don't get a good education are less likely to get good jobs. People who don't value a good education are less likely to even *want* to aspire to have a good job, or even know where to look.

So, there are totally still racial inequalities... but it isn't really fair to blame Silicon Valley companies, who I can't imagine for the most part would really care what color your skin is, as long as you're the best at whatever job they're hiring for, and can at least like speak English more fluently than not.

Comment Re:Obvious Course: Take the Money, Steal the Film (Score 1) 243

In this case, I'd much rather steal the film, then send the appropriate amount of money directly to the content creators. Would be nice if there was a way to do that. (I didn't get in on the kickstarter; only started watching Veronica Mars a few months ago. Looking forward to watching the movie in a couple more months, when I've finished watching the show as much as exists.)

Comment Re:Lacking Parenting versus Corporate Greed (Score 1) 321

It's the big corporation's fault for not making it clear that that would happen, and in fact making it really look quite a lot like it wouldn't. Why would you make each app developers add an option to their app, when the obvious place for that option would be global?

That would not be a CYA, it would completely make sense.

Comment Re:How has the web affected my life? (Score 2) 80

Why? Why *should* he do things he doesn't enjoy as much, just because you think he *should* enjoy them more?

If I lost the internet, I don't even know what I would do with my time. (If I lost web access it would be *literally* like losing the tv, since I watch all my tv online. Also like losing all my gaming consoles, half my library, not to mention would seriously impact my ability to get any work done, since most documentation is online these days.)

And yes, I also found my wife online - technically we met in real-life first, but then reconnected a couple years later online. If that hadn't happened, we would never have gotten together.

Comment Good! (Score 1) 162

More sites should fail to protect me from using a "stupid" 30-letter-or-whatever-long passphrase just because its algorithm thinks that it's "weak" because it doesn't have 2 numbers and two special characters (but only choose from these 3 specific special characters, because we don't know how to protect against sql injection otherwise!) Let me pick my own frelling password.

Ok, so it probably makes sense to specifically bar users from using completely butt-tarded passwords like "123" and "password", but only those specifically.

Comment Re:Hard drives have no future. (Score 1) 82

> Witness how quickly SSD are replacing conventional hard drives.

So... not very quickly? SSDs are way better, yes. They're also way tinier and way more expensive. Maybe eventually SSD will replace mechanical storage, but not until you can go to a store and get a 3TB external for like a hundred bucks. Yeah, that'll probably happen sometime, but I'm not seeing any of those right now.

Comment Re:The Song of Their People (Score 1) 479

Actually, I've always considered that by far the best hacking(/cracking) anthem is Iris. I know it's not *supposed* to be about hacking, but seriously:

And I don't want the world to see me
'Cause I don't think that they'd understand
When everything's made to be broken
I just want you to know who I am

How is that *not* about a hacker who feels a drive to break into things, and wants to simultaneously take credit for his hacks while also remaining anonymous (because you wouldn't understand)?

Comment The majors think they have no competition (Score 1) 273

That is because they have their fingers in their ears. I've been gradually getting everyone I know to switch to Ting like I did. Or at least, if they really do need an unlimited plan, telling them to stop using freaking overpriced Verizon or AT&T, because seriously why would you do that? Pay twice as much for worse service than one of the 50-bucks-or-so unlimited plans? I rarely use more than the smallest tier, though, so I definitely do *not* need an unlimited plan. As such, I generally pay Ting about 15 bucks a month, and enjoy customer service that's almost unheard of these days (i.e. if you have a problem, they'll actually fix it, instead of passing you around a dozen times and then hanging up on you.)

Comment Re:Choice vs. non-choice factors (Score 1) 427

Because some crazy people want enforced absolute gender equality in all things, and screw what the people doing the work actually want.

It is well known that, biologically, men are, on average, more interested in high-risk/high-reward careers. That doesn't mean that all males are, or that no females are, but on average, that sort of career is going to have a lot more guys interested, just by the nature of it, and that is not primarily a social difference. That category includes "risk of physical danger" jobs like firefighting and police work, yes, but it also includes "risk of no free time and stress burnout" jobs like high finance and certain types of programming work, where you're making mad bank, but good luck finding time to enjoy it.

Thus, it would make perfect sense to me that if you separate out hours worked, men and women would be making roughly equal pay, but if you didn't, men would make more. Not because they're being paid per hour, nor because they're being "offered" longer hours, but mostly because they're working more jobs where longer hours are just *expected*.

I'm male, and working at a software company. I've been told I could probably make a lot more with the same experience if I worked at a different company, but I *like* working at a company where flexible hours are the norm, and working a standard 40 hours a week is expected. I know people who make a lot more, but working upwards of 50-100% more hours a week. No thanks. Girls (again, on average) have the right of it.

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