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Comment Re:Community college? (Score 4, Informative) 648

They are much less selective than 4-year schools and the programs tend to be more vocational in nature.

That said, taking some things like composition or entry-level mathematics tends to be the same regardless of whether you take it at a community college for $40/hour or at a university for $200/hour. Some of the stuff the kid took won't be worth anything anywhere, but he'll have a good chunk of his general education requirements knocked out at whatever university he gets into.

Comment University of Nebraska-Lincoln (Score 1) 699

The day you move in, they have you download a program that as far as I can see just checks your security status in Windows to verify that everything is green. After that you're granted access and you can throw the program away. This persists through OS reloads and moving between dorms (I did both last year) so I guess you're authenticated by your MAC address.

Having a Windows-only policy on campus is an insanely shortsighted thing to do, given the number of students using Macbooks and the presence of UNIX-type environments in computer science departments. I'd wager if you just told them you run Linux you'd get a pass.

Comment Re:More security? (Score 1) 236

Does it already (partially?) execute even when it is just sitting there in the development environment?

Visual Studio picks through whatever classes you write and adds support for them to Intellisense. Maybe they've observed security issues with that in the past?
Medicine

Hospital Turns Away Ambulances When Computers Go Down 406

CurtMonash writes "The Indianapolis Star reports that Tuesday Morning, Methodist Hospital turned away patients in ambulances, for the first time in its 100-plus history. Why? Because the electronic health records (EHR) system had gone down the prior afternoon — due to a power surge — and the backlog of paperwork was no longer tolerable. If you think about that story, it has a couple of disturbing aspects. Clearly the investment in or design of high availability, surge protection, etc. were sadly lacking. But even leaving that aside — why do problems with paperwork make it necessary to turn away patients? Maybe the latter is OK, since there obviously were other, more smoothly running hospitals to send the patient to. Still, the whole story should be held up as a cautionary tale for hospitals and IT suppliers everywhere."

Comment Re:Like Facebook in Iran During Elections (Score 4, Insightful) 151

There are plenty of proxies out there too, so what exactly is this going to do?

Keep the mainstream folks who don't know what a proxy is (let alone how to use one) in check. For the rest, if they become an issue they'll just be labeled enemies of the state or whatever and dealt with accordingly.

Comment Re:Placing children on the wrong bus? (Score 1) 1092

Ok, I'll fill in the blank because now when I look at it that does seem kind of strange -

My middle school and an elementary school were in the same two-story building. Grades 6-8 took up half of the second floor, and K-6 got the first floor and the other half of the second floor. This was also at a military installation in Germany so turnover was insanely high and long-term familiarity with the bus system servicing the school was a pipe dream. So when bus passes got handed out, they got handed out to everyone in the building. I didn't need a bus pass to remember I rode bus 6 (yes I still remember), but the school administration preferred to play it safe rather than have a dunce get on the wrong bus and be lost in a foreign country. ;)

Comment Placing children on the wrong bus? (Score 5, Insightful) 1092

When I was in middle school they gave all the kids a laminated bus pass with the bus number in big block type, and had the bus numbers spray painted on the sidewalk so everyone who had to ride the bus knew exactly where to line up. Nobody ever got on the wrong bus because nobody ever got in the wrong line. So why is this a recurring problem for your daughter's school district?

I say make them fix the problem instead of forcing you to shell out money to cover it up for them.

Comment Here's the problem (Score 4, Funny) 443

Bing goes 'beyond the traditional search engines to help you make faster, more informed decisions' by combining a 'great search engine' with organized results.

They change the search engine's name in an effort to draw a crowd, then they fuck it up by weighing it down with language that's awful damn close to the infinitely-scalable enterprise class web 2.0 productivity enhancement solution corporatespeak that makes people roll their eyes.

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