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Comment Re:Remote Desktop (Score 1) 386

If he remotes out to code random stuff during work hours, using work resources, for not work activities, he's going to get fired.

There's almost always some manager around who's short of resources and needs to get some stuff done. Find him and offer up some time.

This is also why many employees wind up with tricked out spreadsheets and word macros. They aren't allowed to script in regular languages, can't run websites, can't run databases. So they make do.

Comment Re:Web based or SSH ... (Score 1) 386

If your company doesn't want you to install unauthorized software, they probably don't want you to run unauthorized software either.

Good call. In companies where you can only run approved software, you frequently can't program in those environments, either. You've now written code that's unapproved.

I'd be careful about ssh'ing out or using other outside environments on the company time, though. If they're paying you to be in your chair, they aren't going to like you writing code for people who aren't them at the same time. Get some buy in from your boss on what you want to do.

Comment $2,000 for Colorado laws (Score 1) 223

It costs $2,000 for a copy of all of the Colorado Revised Statues (http://www.state.co.us/gov_dir/leg_dir/olls/colorado_revised_statutes_republish.htm). Colorado keeps the state constitution online through Michie's Legal Resources (http://www.michie.com/colorado/), which is a pretty awful website. Unless you like URLs that are buried in calls to DLLs...

Comment Re:Traitorous administration (Score 1) 897

Sure. It was this line:

'It almost makes you wonder if the automakers may have exaggerated the costs of compliance, the way they always do.

It's over-enthusiastic editorializing.

I'm glad you mentioned the economic trade-offs. Too often proponents of one or the other forget there are consequences to decisions.

Comment Traitorous administration (Score 1, Troll) 897

I can't believe the Obama administration think there remains some economic trade off with CAFE standards. They should just mandate a 100 MPG CAFE standard for 2013. Heck, that gives car manufacturers over a year to invent new technology and implement it, or just stop selling gasoline cars and sell electrical ones, and overload the electrical grid. (And if you think I'm trolling, you didn't read the post summary.)

Comment Re:So then. (Score 1) 452

You've just begged the question of the economics of the issue. Load and supply management is the problem I outlined, and it's freakin' hard with solar and wind.

Hydro is great if you happen to be somewhere where a hydro plant already exists. Dams are very hard to build now (at least in the U.S.) because of environmental restrictions. Dams have a tendency to drown things upstream.

Comment Re:Highly recommended! (Score 1) 129

I do like opera's email (aka M2), but I still have thunderbird installed, mostly because Opera has never included S/MIME or GPG/PGP support. Nor smart card authentication, for that matter. I've been using Opera since version 3, and even paid for versions back when that was their model. I just wish they'd let me digitally sign emails and login to websites with my smart card.

Comment Re:superior value (Score 1) 333

Which is why forcing net neutrality is, at best, worthless.

It's Comcast's network, so they should not be forced to put a Netflix server there. And, when they don't, Comcast's customers will punish them. Many will leave -- I did.

If net neutrality is involved the federal government will study the problem, take both sides into account, determine that the market is over-saturated on video anyway, change their opinion based on the new high-bandwidth streaming video PACs, and force in a Netflix server right in time for the IPv6 rollout.

Comment Re:So was Obama right? (Score 1) 271

Politically, I think it was more of an exchange of space science / engineering dollars disappearing to placate the entitlement spending crowd. Space is frequently a whipping boy "we need to take care of [X] down here on earth before we go to [the moon|Mars]".

SpaceX had already launched before the 2008 elections, and the shuttle program has been a dead man walking for years. Granted, I prefer commercial space exploitation than government, but in Mr. Obama's case I think it was a happy coincidence of interests, not a core philosophy change.

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