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Comment Re:Scary side of US (Score 1) 649

You're getting yourself confused. You think we're living in an enlighteend society. Reality is, we're not that much more advanced than the apes and monkeys that we evolved out of. Humans are still animals, and just because we're a little more resourceful than every other animal doesn't make us terribly more enlightened as a species.

You also mistake thinking the U.S. is a first world country. We're not. Taking all things into consideration, we're at best, on the border between the first and third worlds. The only reason we're even included among our more civilized peers is because we have a really powerful military and a lot of natural resources that remain untapped. Europe and Asia have had a 25,000-year head start in resource use over North America, and that is the only reason why the U.S. is as influential in the world stage as it currently is.

We're a young country, barely in our adolescence. We had a great start (freedoms, rights, equality, etc.) but we need to mature into those ideals. Give it another thousand years and things will start to get better (if we don't self-destruct first).

Comment Re:Ability to multitask (Score 1) 109

The thing with walking is that you're going at such slow speeds that your field of view gives your brain plenty of time to context switch when necessary. I've seen plenty of people (and done it myself) walking and eating or texting or whatnot, and responding to obstacles (other pedestrians, street crossings, etc.) at the very last second.

So walking is usually a bad example, because there's so much time to do the context switch it fools people into thinking they're multi-tasking Driving is a better example. Writing code and holding a coherent verbal conversation or holding multiple verbal conversations at the same time is even more pertinent. IM doesn't count because switching between IM windows is context switching. And I suspect that's where most people get the idea that they're so good at multi-tasking; they mistake multi-tasking for (assisted) rapid context switching.

Comment Re:Not sure (Score 1) 361

I find not only that music can influence your state of mind, but that it goes the other way around too, that your present state of mind is drawn towards certain music. When I say state of mind, I mean your mental and emotional depth and maturity, among other things.

There's no specific music or genre older people are "expected to" enjoy. But you'll definitely find your interests changing with age. Personally, I can now see (hear?) structure where I couldn't before (it's like seeing the branches and leaves on a tree rather than just seeing a tree), so my tastes have gravitated towards things that have more complex structures.

Comment Re:Controversial because? (Score 1) 284

It's also more dangerous teaching in inner city schools. Dealing with gangs, drugs, weapons, etc. are all a part of the daily routine of both teachers and students. That's why a lot of inner city teachers were originally from the inner city. They go back to give other inner city kids a chance to get out and lead better lives, despite the increases in risk to their own safety and well-being.

Comment Re:Controversial because? (Score 1) 284

Pearson subcontracts their test-writing out to other companies who hire people on what's barely above minimum wage to write their tests questions.

What I don't understand is, if Common Core is a federal thing, why doesn't the Federal Government put together a panel of educators to write the curriculum and test questions? Why leave it to a contractor and subcontractors? How are they more qualified?

Actually, I do understand, though I don't understand why Gates thinks it's a good idea and is backing it if he's serious about philanthropy. The answer, obviously, is money. Common Core isn't about teaching or standardizing education. It's about giving Pearson and other test-writing and test-prep businesses their handouts. The car companies got theirs. Airlines get it all the time. Testing companies want their cut of the taxpayer jackpot too.

But a Federal panel would fail. The reasons why is simple: to be put on the panel is an increased burden on the educators who partake in the panel, with no reward. So nobody will want to be a part of it except people who have something else to gain. Mainly, those who cannot actually effectively teach would want to bolster their career by being a part of this. Or those who want an in into industry or perhaps even politics. And the reason there's no reward is because teachers have no prestige in this country. Teaching, education, these are not highly-valued professions and activities. Most adults (save for certain cultures and levels of affluence) don't value education, and pass this onto their children. They'd rather have that fancy 60" TV or new car than send their kids to afterschool test prep. They treat teachers as government-paid babysitters or worse, substitute parents, expecting teachers to do things that they themselves are supposed to be doing for their children.

How do we change this attitude? Birth control is a start. That eliminates a whole class of would-be parents who are both unqualified and ambivalent on parenting. But popular media is the real key, the goal to this. Only they can affect people's perception of education, both fictional media (yes, we know it's all fake Hollywood B.S., but there are subconscious effects) and non-fiction like the news. And popular media is not going to do anything about this because there's no money in it (Look at the latest Muppet series and compare with the original, which funny enough, media considers a "children's show"; Jim Henson is rolling in his grave right now).

If Bill Gates is serious about fixing education, he needs to first fix culture. Maybe buy Disney, whose holding the keys to American culture right now (which is sitting both in and outside their vault). Good luck with that one.

/rant

Comment Re:rather expected (Score 1) 284

It's an ignorance thing, you wouldn't understand.

FTFY.

And I'm sure most people do understand, even if they purport to decry these occurrences and would never acknowledge that they'd do the same when they're in the same state of ignorance, especially if they thought their lives or the lives of their families were in danger.

It's a normal distribution, with enlightenment at one end and depravity at the other. Most of us exist somewhere in the center, no matter what we'd like to think about ourselves.

Comment Re:Bummer (Score 2) 160

See, the airlines base their regional rates around Amtrak rates. So without Amtrak (or one with fewer hooks into local transportation), the airlines can screw over their customers that much more. The airlines aren't the only ones who'd love to see Amtrak disappear either. Big oil and their lackeys the car manufacturers all would love to see rail transportation disappear completely. They can't touch freight because that's private, but Amtrak is Federal which means it's easier to neuter.

I haven't seen any indication Obama's done anything to reverse the trend of ripping up rails and replacing them with roads. I could be wrong. Now, interesting thing is that Amtrak doesn't own most of the rights of ways that it operates its trains on. The NE corridor (Washington-Boston) is one of the few where they do own the rail. And it's one of the few profitable lines. This derailment may be a symptom of insufficient funding to maintain their infrastructure (quick check of Wikipedia says this is the case). In which case, I'd say no, politics is holding Amtrak by the neck and we're not going to see much improvement if any at all to the nation's rail infrastructure.

Hell, the bike movement is stronger than the streetcar/light rail movement, even in places where you can realistically ride bikes only around five to six months out of the year, so that tells you just where public sentiment is.

Comment Re:Pretty weak (Score 1) 386

Yup. Those arguments seem pretty weak to me. Both inheritance and exceptions are a total crapshoot in C++ (among other so-called features). Any change to those parts of C++ can only be a positive, including completely removing them from the language spec.

Just from TFS, it sounds like somebody who's only dabbled with C++ or maybe even Java and not C++ at all. Like somebody else posted above, whoever says C/C++ most likely knows neither language well, if at all.

I haven't looked at Rust at all, but if it's strictly C with classes and better memory management, it's worth looking into. It doesn't even need templates (which is often another big no-no in production engineering shops along with exceptions). All that's missing from C is good class syntax and maybe a better way to do function pointers, and it's about as good a language for both high and low level programming as you're gonna get. Though if anything, the biggest (fundamental) problem with C is the assignment operator. They should've gone with the Ada := instead of =. If Rust (or whatever other C-derived language) fixes those three things, the rest of the C family of languages would be made completely obsolete.

Comment Re:Ah ... AOL .. so overrated ... (Score 1) 153

The AOL/TW merger was too little, too erly. It was too little in that AOL didn't take enough control of TW. It was too early in that traditional media didn't start dying until long after Case left. Once traditional media began its slow but inevitable decline, Case could've finally taken the reins over and mandated the switch to internet-based media distribution. But by then, it was too late. The TW folks had taken back control of the board and it was all downhill from there. Specifically, I should say the Warner folks (like Ted Turner), because both HBO and TWC were Time Inc subsidiaries prior to the Time Inc/Warner Communications merger, and they were the most tech-oriented of all the divisions outside of AOL in the 00's.

Of course, Case wasn't the first person to make the mistake of trying to leverage the content of Warner Communications (now Time Warner). When it comes to regressive thinking and implementation, you just can't beat Hollywood executives.

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