Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment $0.02 worth from a woman in the IT field... (Score 3, Insightful) 697

Female software engineer, been in the industry past 13+ years. I can definitely vouch that sexism, while not frequent, does indeed still exist in the workforce. I have been blatantly discriminated against and to my face in regards to my gender, one company made me telemarket for them as a developer because "women sound better over the phone". The other developers initially were forced to telemarket as well but were allowed to stop. I wasn't, and when I asked why was given that response. Hm. I think it comes down to perceived attitudes more than anything else. If you want more women in IT, stop selling Barbies to little girls telling them that "math is hard". I was raised around computers, taught myself to program at aged seven. No one ever gave me the impression growing up that "only boys" are interested in computers. I was the only female to graduate with a Computer Science degree, and nineteen times out of twenty am the only female developer at my workplace. I hope that this is a generational thing and will go away with the younger folk. My advice: raise your daughters on this stuff, and don't cop out by buying that pink Barbie software crap like they need "special things" because of their gender. Let them use it and run with it like anyone else. My $0.02 worth.

Submission + - Inventor of the TV remote control dies (chicagotribune.com)

futuristic writes: "A spokesman for Zenith Electronics says Eugene Polley, the inventor of the first wireless TV remote control, has died.....Couch potatoes everywhere have Polley to thank for hours of feet-up, channel surfing. His invention began as a luxury, but has become a necessity in an era of hundreds of TV channels and home theaters. Just ask anyone who's lost a remote."
Facebook

Submission + - Fake Facebook Accounts Cost As Little As $0.06 (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: "Are you interested in buying a the kind of Facebook account a scammer dreams of — one with a of a pretty young woman as the profile pic? You can get them for as little as six cents apiece, if you buy in bulk. Of course, you pay for quality — to get a phone-verified account that an actual human has signed off on, you'd pay up to $1.50. The fact that anyone would be buying so many at a time points to the emergence of Facebook botnets. (And lest you think we're picking on Facebook, there are bots for sale for Google+, Craigslist, and other sites as well.)"
Android

Submission + - Another Rasberry Pi? $49 ARM SBC with Android (apc.io) 1

n7ytd writes: Announced today with an 800 MHz VIA core, the 170 x 85mm board is expected to ship this July. With a "Neo ITX" form factor, VIA touts the single-board computer as a "bicycle for your mind".
Piracy

Submission + - Hollywood loves sequels: MPAA to push SOPA follow-up in 2013 (bgr.com)

zacharye writes: The first version was hardly a hit, but Hollywood is already planning a sequel to the Stop Online Piracy Act that it will push in 2013, reports claim. Comments made by Motion Picture Association of America chief executive Chris Dodd suggest that the MPAA will work to get a new anti-piracy billed passed next year, and it plans to take a more cunning approach...
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Launches 'so.cl' Network (theregister.co.uk)

benfrog writes: "Microsoft just quietly launched so.cl, its own sort-of-clone of Facebook, Google+, and the like. It also pretty much sponges off of them, in that you can log in with your Facebook ID and it will contact your Facebook friends if you want it to. They've also (wisely?) put Bing Search at the center of the (currently invitation-only) site."
AT&T

Submission + - Less than 2% 'Like' mobile carriers despite millions spent on Facebook campaigns (bgr.com)

zacharye writes: Less than 2% of mobile carriers’ subscribers “Like” them on Facebook despite the millions of dollars they collectively spend in an effort to promote their services on the world’s most popular social network. Facebook made its initial public offering on Friday and while the company’s stock price dipped below the IPO price of $38 on Monday and continued to slide on Tuesday, Facebook’s offering was the biggest Internet IPO of all time by nearly 10 times. There is no denying that Facebook and the 900 million people who use the social network are of tremendous value to businesses looking to promote their services, but mobile carriers have seemingly not found success thus far as they attempt to bolster Facebook fan counts...

Submission + - Bruce Schneier on Airport Security (cnn.com)

the4thdimension writes: Bruce Schneier has an opinion piece on CNN this morning that illustrates his view on airport security. Given that he has several books on security, his opinion carries some weight. In the article, Bruce discusses the rarity of terrorism, the pitfalls of security theater, and the actual difficulty surrounding improving security. What are your thoughts? Do you think that we can actually make air travel (and any other kind of travel, for that matter) truly secure?
Technology

Submission + - Harry McCracken Rounds up The Year in Tech (foxnews.com)

Velcroman1 writes: Windows got less annoying. Smartphones became smarter. The Internet continued to change entertainment for the better. All in all, it was a good year for technology and the folks who use it. Harry McCracken, the brains behind Technologizer and the former editor-in-chief of PC World, reveals his picks and pans for the most interesting tech stories of the year.

Submission + - Amazon: Kindle Is Most Gifted Item Ever (pcworld.com)

Suki I writes: Ian Paul of PC World Reports:

Amazon's Kindle e-book reader hit a watershed moment on Christmas Day, when, for the first time ever, customers purchased more Kindle books than physical books. The company also claims the Kindle is the most gifted item in Amazon's history. These two facts were part of the online retailer's recently announced holiday sales activity.

But in typical Amazon style, the company did not provide any sales figures to back up its claims. Although Amazon did say that if you placed side by side all the Blu-ray disc players the company sold this season, the line would stretch for more than 27 miles. A mile has 63,360 inches, so I'll leave you to make your best guess.


Submission + - Ascent of Dinosaurs Linked to Asteroid Impact, Too (sciencemag.org)

thomst writes: The latest results of a study led by Paul E. Olsen of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University of elevated iridium levels at the 200-million-year-old Triassic-Jurassic boundary will be published in the May 17, 2010 issue of Science. (An earlier, more preliminary study of elevated iridium levels, tetrapod dinosaur footprints and skeletal fossils, and elevated fern spore levels — which Olsen, et al, characterize as a marker for recovery from mass extinction — was published in Science in May 2002. The abstract is free, and does not require registration to view. The full text requires a free registration on the Science website.) The forthcoming study will focus on the slight elevation of iridium levels in sedimentary deposits from the Triassic-Jurassic boundary (the increase in iridium density is only 2-3 times normal background levels, and it required the development of iridium coincidence nuclear spectroscopy to properly quantify). Predictably enough in a field where the theory that a meteor impact killed the dinosaurs, first proposed by Luis W. Alvarez in 1980 has yet to convince the intrinsic gradualist camp of its validity, the proposal is bound to have its detractors.

Space.com has a story explaining the major points of the forthcoming study in layman's terms.

Science

Submission + - A weighty comic: xkcd on gravity wells (xkcd.com) 2

Will.Woodhull writes: "xkcd's comic for today is a wonderful description of the solar system in terms of gravity wells. Don't miss it!

It does raise a couple of questions: how accurate are the numbers (can we trust our comics in this day and age)? should this be incorporated into K-12 schooling? And what's with those Titanics: it seems like like they are singing a Frank Sinatra lyric with their lungs full of helium?"

Linux

Submission + - Happy Birthday, Linus (linuxjournal.com)

Glyn Moody writes: Today is the birthday of Linus. Just under 19 years ago, on the first day the shops in Helsinki were open after the holidays, Linus rushed out and spent all his Christmas and birthday money on his first PC: a DX33 80386, with 4 Megs of RAM, no co-processor, and a 40 Megabyte hard disc. Today, the kernel he wrote on that system powers 90% of the fastest supercomputers, and is starting to find its way into more and more smartphones — not to mention everything in between. What would the world look like had he spent his money on something else?
United States

Submission + - Xmas-Day terrorist used PETN to destroy airplane. (wsj.com)

reporter writes: A report just issued by the "Wall Street Journal" provides new information about the failed attempt by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, an African terrorist, to destroy an in-flight passenger jet. The most disturbing detail is that the explosive device was not a firecracker (which several news organizations erroneously reported). The explosive device is PETN. It is an extremely powerful explosive; according to an investigative report by guardian.co.uk, "[a] little more than 100g of PETN could destroy a car. The device allegedly used by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab involved a syringe and a soft plastic container filled, reportedly, with 80g of PETN. The remnants of the bomb are being analysed in an FBI laboratory."

The implication is profound. If Abdulmutallab had succeeded in detonating the explosive at high altitude and, hence, creating a hole in the fuselage of the aircraft, "the decompression would tear the aircraft apart", and all 300 passengers on that jet would have died.

Apple

Submission + - The speculative prehistory of the iPhone (technologizer.com)

harrymcc writes: The blogosphere is abuzz with rumors about "iSlate," Apple's supposed upcoming tablet. It's constructive to look back at coverage of the first iPhone in the months before it was announced. A high percentage of what was reported turned out to be hooey--as I remembered as I reviewed stories that said the iPhone would have a click wheel, a slide-out keyboard, and two batteries, and would run on an Apple-branded wireless network. I'm guessing that much of what we "know" about iSlate is similarly off-base.

Slashdot Top Deals

Today is a good day for information-gathering. Read someone else's mail file.

Working...