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Comment Re:it is part of your job (Score 1) 848

I always look to the "not in my job description" work as an opportunity to grow, either by acquiring new skills for use within the organization or to use on my resume for my next organization. With "lots of down time" I would question how many of the agreed upon hours were actually performed each week and if what you call off the clock time is actually off the clock. In organizations I've run we don't do 9-5, in fact I don't really care when most people work as long as they actually __work__ and get their projects accomplished. The stars in my teams are the people who take it upon themselves to go out and find ways to improve the product, present them in a clear well stated proposal and then can work to implement them. The people who wait for work to be handed down from above aren't headed anywhere. Think of the IT system as your product, you may work mainly in 1 area but you're clearly smart enough to think of ways to improve others. Its all about attitude, and this attitude that you're entitled to extra cash for working in other areas even though you already have "lots of down time" would cause me to run not walk you to the door. Now with the attitude of pitching in and working to make the whole thing better, I would look at you as someone who "gets it" and probably look to help you move up in your career track provided you had done other impressive work. If you're looking to be an IT director some day this is the kind of work you'll be needing to do day in day out not just what you're asked to.

Comment Far more complicated (Score 1) 264

After 6 landings and 1 missed approach my last flight taxied to the ramp. It was on time in that it arrived at the time I intended it to, it also departed on time for the same reason. The best thing was my trip through the security checkpoint since they don't exist for General Aviation.

Comment Re:Reasons unknown?? (Score 1) 156

Actually most GA aircraft have a secondary static system which while less accurate because the input is in the cockpit instead of outside the plane is fully functional. For pressurized aircraft there are redundant ports on the outside of the craft. The difficulty is in determining the instrumentation failure and responding to it correctly. The private pilot training material is very specific about the kinds of issues that arrive from clogged pitot static ports.

Comment Re:Loaner Car and bad Interface Design (Score 1) 930

So where is the responsibility to familiarise one's self with the vehicle you're driving? For years there were at least 2 common ways of engaging the high-beams in a passenger car one by pulling on the directional stick until it clicked the other by pushing it forward. HID changes are not uncommon and I would fault the driver for a lack of familiarity with the vehicle.

Comment Re:People, people everywhere (Score 1) 386

If you ask me... Intel, Bottling companies, and others like them, are creating the bulk of the scarcity problem, and they should foot the bill for the additional delivery infrastructure their presence is causing to be required.

I'm not sure how it works where you live but where I am water is metered as it exits the house or industrial facility. This discharge is billed at some rate determined by the local water delivery company. I assume (without any evidence) that China does the same thing. Which means that Intel and CocaCola DO pay for this use. In addition it is China both as a society and the reigning party that gain something from the existence of Intel and CocaCola. It would be up them to determine if the gains outweigh the costs and ensuring that profit (as defined by them) is achieved from the relationship.

Comment Re:Wow... (Score 1) 295

I'm also very very pro-nuclear and as I see it the NRC has 2 choices here: 1) get out in front of this, shut down the plant and show they're committed to safe nuclear power 2) keep Vermont Yankee operating despite being in violation of numerous EPA requirements and call all the doubters silly I can't see #2 working as it will only fuel the anti-nuke crowd since they will be showing they're not even committed to safety with the plants we have now what happens when there are hundreds more. #1 I suspect is overly simplistic and you can't simply shut down a nuke plant by turning a light switch, sure you can drop the control rods and shut down the reactor but draining the plant is a non-trivial task.

Comment Re:Well no shit, Sherlock (Score 1) 456

That's great that you have that cache memory but it ends up being entirely unused for writes as you run in writethrough mode. Writes are the slow ops reads are significantly faster so by running in write through mode you're unnceessarily compromising the performance of your array. Most RAID controllers with battery backup are good for 3+ days of backup if you're so concerned about being power free for longer than that I suggest you need a generator my friend.
The Internet

Submission + - AT&T swears it's not out to silence critics

netbuzz writes: "Replying to a torrent of criticism over language in its terms of use contract that appears to give the company license to silence critics, AT&T has responded: "AT&T respects its subscribers' rights to voice their opinions and concerns over any matter they wish." The company says the language is not new and is needed in order to deal with purveyors of child porn and those who advocate violence.

http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/20136"
Security

Submission + - Senators Cell Phone Numbers Leaked in Data Breach

BillyBurrito writes: "It seems that the Democratic Party of Arkansas leaked a bunch of really useful data when a hard drive was sold on eBay. The State that brought Former Governor Bill Clinton to the White House and is trying to get former Governor Mike Huckabee to Washington, now has a data breach connected to the current Governor, Mike Beebe. The Breach is the result of a hard drive containing the information being sold on eBay, reportedly as a new drive, but apparently, recently image as part of a laptop repair. The drive was imaged from one in the laptop used by the current Party director after it was dropped. There was, it seems, no encryption on the drive. On it were cell phone numbers for the Democratic members of Arkansas' congressional delegation and well-heeled party contributors, documents for Mike Beebe's successful campaign for governor last year, other stuff. "
Portables

Submission + - Sony debuts music players/closes online musicstore (yahoo.com)

bhalter80 writes: Sony today unveiled 2 new music players, the NWZ-A810 and NWZ-S610 which will support MP3, AAC and WMA. The new players will also support video and photos. In the same announcement they said that their Connect music store, which sold ATRAC encoded music, would be closed. Could the closing of Connect and the inclusion of MP3, WMA and AAC into a Sony digital music product be a sign that they've seen the light?
The Internet

Submission + - Semantic Search: An Antidote for Poor Relevancy

ReadWriteWeb writes: "Dr. Riza C. Berkan, Founder and CEO of hakia.com, writes on Read/WriteWeb about semantic search:

"How satisfied search engine users are today is an on-going debate. However, there is wide consensus, from a scientific viewpoint on the competency of the current search engines: They are half-way to the target and there is huge room for improvement. Semantic search is now under the magnifying glass and the question is 'can semantic search be an antidote for poor relevancy?'""
Handhelds

Submission + - Qualcom found to have infringed Broadcom patents

bhalter80 writes: A federal jury found Qualcom to have infringed upon 3 of Broadcom's patents relating the their cellular baseband hardware and software. The patents include the participation in multiple networks with only 1 transciever, using an ASIC to do video processing, and push-to-talk. Is this the beginning of the big boys starting to feel the pain of tech patents which outlive their novelty?

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