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Comment Re:Cheaper option (Score 1) 142

And as you could read in the source I spoke about, flight crew other than the aircraft commander have no special arrest authority. That means flight attendants don't have the power to arrest someone just because they are flight attendants. And I don't recall the statement about them being able to arrest someone was specific to felonies. But that's moot.

No you did not. I said "they do have the power to arrest", to which you replied "No, they don't".

I then listed multiple sources pointing out that your statement is wrong. I never said the FAs rights are derived from their employment. I merely said: they do have the right to arrest". As a citizen, and as flight crew based on the delegated authority of their captain.

Comment Re:Cheaper option (Score 1) 142

You should have read the link from google that you provided concerning the "Tokyo Convention". It says the aircraft commander has the power of arrest but then continues to say that his power is to turn someone over to the ground authorities. It makes no special provisions for flight attendants, and does not say that they can arrest anyone.

Yes, you are right, but this is also true for any other non-law enforcement arrest. In this case, the captain's ultimate authority ends the moment the plane hits the gate and the flight has ended so he has to hand them over. Furthermore, a captain can delegate his ultimate authority to other flight crew, or even passengers should he deem that necessary. But as you could read in the other sources, a citizen's arrest is legally recognized in most of the world in cases of a felony. Interference with the flight crew also happens to be a felony in most countries as well. And remember, on a plane, the law of the country it is registered in applies as well.

Comment Re:Cheaper option (Score 1) 142

That's only cheaper if you think flight attendants work for free (and that they have the power to arrest anyone).

They don't work for free but they do have the power to arrest. Not following the directions of the captain of an air vessel is a felony. Once the plane is moving by itself (even taxiing on the ground), the flight has started and the captain is the ultimate authority.

So yes, the can, and if needed they will, arrest and restrain you if you interfere with the safety of the flight or fail to follow any legal directions. That includes telling you to turn off your phone.

Comment Re:Big Goverment no backup (Score 1) 223

Reroute the data to a cloud service have the PCs remote into virtual workstations and have the radio fed through the same system.

Imagine making the call to your HOA: "do you mind if I install a primary and secondary radar system on the rooftop of the apartment building? Yeah, I need that for work. Ok, thanks, bye"

Comment Re:I can't quite decide (Score 1) 83

Licensing technology developed on the public dime seems like a rather responsible thing to do, just like negotiating for maximum compensation for oil on public land is the smart thing to do.

You're conveniently omitting the fact that oil on the public land has not already been paid by the taxpayer.

In your world, the taxpayer pays twice for procuring the technology. First for the development, then for the licensing.

Comment Re:I can't quite decide (Score 5, Insightful) 83

The NSA has done a lot of things over the years, most of them

Funded by the taxpayer already.

Now if companies are paying the NSA to get access to their research, they're paying twice: once as a taxpayer, and now as a "customer".

If the technology can be declassified, the information should be public property, as its research was funded by the taxpayer.

Comment Re:Broadcast rights (Score 4, Insightful) 109

Dithering about whether or not streaming is a form of broadcasting for the purposes of canadian content rules is just splitting hairs

No it is not. When looking a a law, you also have to look at the historic reasoning behind it. Until very recently, broadcasting meant that once you put it on a radiowave or a cable TV system, the broadcaster had very little control on who would receive it. A radio or TV system could receive any content that was broadcast by the sender (hence the term broad-cast).

The laws that were setup under that system, are meant for that system as well. It provides a clear definition on what a broadcaster is, so that the law would not be used for other purposes.

Technological advances have changed the landscape, and if the CRTC (an executive branch of government), wants to broaden its authority to 1-on-1 content rather than 1-on-255.255.255.255 content, it should consult with the people first, in the form of the democratically elected lawmakers.

This is not nitpicking, this is respecting the law as it was written.

Comment Re: Read Slashdot (Score 1) 479

you committed to being a world expert in one particular realm of knowledge

Yes, a theoretical expert. I've worked with PhDs in a hands-on environment. They were completely and utterly useless to get things done.

Great thinkers, and excellent in solving complex theoretical problems. But nothing usable in a hands-on world of coding, linux administration or network configuration.

Comment Re:Read Slashdot (Score 4, Interesting) 479

Also, hide the PhD.

As weird as it may sound, this may help. You write yourself:

get rejected after an overly technical question

Advertising a PhD may come across as advertising that you think you're good. You may not mean it that way, but it will most certainly be received like that. I've performed many technical interviews and when I prepare myself for a candidate, I go over their resume (their ad). If the candidate advertises knowledge of a specific topic, he or she better know it.

The rejections you got may not have been because you didn't know a specific answer to a very technical question. Nobody knows everything. You may have been rejected because of the answer that you gave, and let me explain.

When I interview, I will make sure there is one topic with a couple of questions that I don't expect you to know from the top of your head. I will get online and get the answers if needed. I will ask the question (if we get to it) and see the response. If you get the answer right: well done, you will have my vote. If you don't then this is where the psychology comes in. I'll be looking for you to be honest. Don't make up answers, don't come up with a bullshit reply. If I get bullshit, no matter how good you were, you will fail the interview. If you bullshit me, you'll bullshit a customer, manager or anyone else when you're in the hot seat.

Don't underestimate the importance of attitude and honesty in an interview.

Comment Re:Funny how this works ... (Score 0) 184

We're more like european countries with Free School for all, Free Healthcare for all, lots of social services and support for our vulnerable population.

I fled one of those countries. If you'r old enough to know what TANSTAAFL means, this is your classic example. Your "Free" education, "Free" healthcare and the Social Security State are being funded by who? An anonymous philanthropist? No they're not. They're being funded by you, the taxpayer.

Which (in my former home country) was achieved by a 52% income tax and a 21% sales tax. So that's 73% in total, going straight to Mother Russia^H^H^H^H^H^H State, who will make sure it gets spent on Revolutionary things like bailing out Greece, redistributing my hard-earned cash to people who refuse to work, Eastern European thugs coming to pickpocket and pay the master thieves of the EU.

An aspect of this, is the government spending a LOT of money developing artists, book/movie production houses, etc. This conflict between Netflix and the CRTC is tied to that. Other broadcaster have to chip money into the pot for, yes, our socialist approach to fostering local arts. Many Canadians *support* this idea

See, you even agree with me. Basically Canada should be returned to the Russians to be part of the new Soviet Ukrain Canadian Union. American companies are NOT socialist. So get your commie ass back to Russia or stop whining.

Comment Re:Dissolution of the middle class!. YES! (Score 1) 261

YOU are a member of an elite

No I'm not. I was forced out of San Jose because of the high housing prices. I'm not even going to try Palo Alto, Menlo Park or San Francisco. I'm way south of the Bay. Definitely not elite, even though I'd like to think of myself as someone skilled in network engineering.

you work in an ivory tower with the great unwashed baying at the gate

You could not be further from the truth. I encourage anyone, from the janitor to the security guards, to take an interest in computer science and network engineering. I remind them that I never took any classes that are relevant to my job. If I can do it, they can do it. So can everyone else who is interested. I got to where I am today because I threw Windows 95 from my PC and installed Linux. That led me down a path of systems administrator, network administrator to the JNCIE that I am today. My formal education did nothing whatsoever to get me here. Nothing 31337 about that.

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