Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:The Quote of the Article (Score 1) 705

There is no professional license for network engineering, or any other computer related engineering, unless you are a mechanical/electrical/industrial engineer. Though I see the EIT qualifying exam now has computers on it, so maybe all engineers get some of it? I know the ACM and IEEE talk about licensing software engineers, and there are plenty of certifications for networking jockeys, but nothing yet.

Comment Re:Really? (Score 1) 175

If you diagrammed the sentence, you would find out that the "that had never been released to the world" refers back to "a flavor of the old Lisa" which many would take to mean a variant. It's easy to believe that not all Lisa variants were released to the world.

Comment Re:Wot? (Score 1) 515

Citation? I still see a number of people who do carry hundreds, because they've been brought up/trained themselves to believe that it makes them (wealthy|important|happy). Other people do because they're much less likely to spend it - it's harder to let go of a $100 than a $20 or smaller. Personally, I'm not one of those, so it'd be a curiosity.

Comment Re:Coins? (Score 1) 322

Yeah, I don't remember the last time I used real coins. I carry a grocery-store branded "quarter" in my car to unlock grocery carts. I use cash to buy coffee, since I buy from a micro-roaster who isn't big enough to bother with accepting plastic, but he prices things so that it's an even $10/lb, so I never have change from that. For just about everything else, I use a credit card (or debit). I pay for our parking meters via cell-phone, and I don't use vending machines (partially due to the fact that I never have change on me). To pay friends for things, I usually just round up or pay with a cheque.

The advantages are having a much lighter wallet. I'm not worried about losing a lot of cash if I ever get mugged, or more likely forget my wallet somewhere. My credit card gives me 1.5% cash back on every purchase I make, plus all the other benefits of using a credit card (warranty, contesting charges, insurance, etc..).

Comment Look for a local provider to non-profits (Score 1) 366

Where I live, there is a provider for non-profits - cheap access, connecting them with cheap hardware and software licensing, etc. Every so often they ahve an IT day of service you can sign up for to wire a space, or configure a bunch of servers/workstations for a youth center, etc.

Look for names like community computing, communitynet, net, etc.

R

Slashdot Top Deals

Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer

Working...