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Comment Re:First Shot (Score 1) 380

... culturally, violence is arguably more alien to the Chinese than it is to us Westerners....

Hmm, according to this link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_and_anthropogenic_disasters_by_death_toll#Wars_and_armed_conflicts, if I do a back-of-the-envelope calculation, the total death total (minimum) of inner-Chinese wars was about 100m people. On the max side, we are talking about over 210m people dead (sources vary).

This is not to say that Chinese Culture is per-se violent; it is more to say that it is not per se non-violent.

Let's be careful with generalizations...

Comment Re:First Shot (Score 4, Interesting) 380

I would say: "He who is without sin shall throw the first stone..."

In human history, there were many atrocities and every great empire/culture was built mostly on violence first and then became peaceful. That's what it is and that is our shared history as humans. Even China as of today is not a coherent culture.

There are a lot Mongol mixes, lots of Turc people (Uighurs), Tibetans, and may more. Many were conquered, some voluntarily joined the Middle Kingdom. So, what?

What counts is whether people are free today - wherever they are living. And in most places around the world, they are not, including, but not limited to, China. Our goal as humans should be to make sure that everybody on this planet can, at one point, have a decent, dignified and free life.

Comment Re:Not enough, (Score 4, Informative) 415

Actually, he is an OBE (Officer of the Order of Most Excellence of the British Empire - wow, what a title) - (or was it an MBE?)

As I understand, OBE is the fourth-level. The highest level is something like Knight Grand Cross of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (GBE). According to Wikipedia, this is the order:

1. Knight Grand Cross or Dame Grand Cross of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (GBE)
2. Knight Commander or Dame Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE or DBE)
3. Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE)
4. Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE)
5. Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE)

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_the_British_Empire

Once he reaches Level 2 or 1, we can then finally call him "Sir Alan Turing", which he more than deserves...

Comment Re:59 years too late (Score 1) 415

Actually, laws can be declared "illegal" retroactively. I don't know what are the circumstances in each country, but in Germany during the last 10-20 years, a lot of laws were declared "illegal" retroactively, including e.g. some tax laws. The government had to pay compensation to the effected people retroactively.

And no, I'm not talking about laws from the time of 1933-1945. These were new laws (e.g. one from 2003 that was declared illegal in, if I remember correctly, 2008 or so).

Now, admittedly, this was because these laws were declared "unconstitutional" and I don't know all the circumstances under which laws can be declared illegal retroactively, but it seems it is possible...

Comment Re:Not enough, (Score 1, Interesting) 415

He pleaded that he "did have an intimate relationship with a man" (to paraphrase). Whether that is guilt and/or criminal is decided by others not him.

The fact that laws at that time defined this action as criminal does not make it criminal per se. Laws are supposed to be as just as possible and not necessarily always reflect current morals. If we accept current morals as the benchmark for laws, we are doomed to never develop as a species... we should aspire to have ethics as the basis for laws, not current morals...

In Germany, e.g., any (even consensual) sexual relationship between a man (over 18) and a male person (under 18, even if it was over 16) was illegal under criminal law. But the same didn't apply for a man over 18 and a woman between 16-18 as long as it was consensual. This was the case until mid 1980's - it wasn't fair, it wasn't just - it was just a law. Laws are there to be changed and adapted to be more just. We learn. This doesn't mean mean that we should not condemn old laws that created so much injustice....

He was not guilty under a just law - he was guilt because the law was unjust... there are too many examples in our history to cite - without even calling on Godwin's Law - for which we should be ashamed as humanity and make sure that they never happen again.

Comment Re:Really? (Score 1) 415

According to Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing#Government_apology_and_pardon (and The Times of London), he will be pardoned tomorrow, Dec 24th, 2013, UK time...

An apology was expressed in 2009 by the British Government.

But, alas, that doesn't make a past wrong right - the only we can do now is to learn from the past mistakes and wrongs and do whatever we can that it doesn't happen again in the future...

Comment Re:Not Amazon's Fault (Score 2) 606

Actually there is kind of major difference between Germany and the rest of the EU.

In Germany, basically every company above a certain size (say 7 or 18 employees or so) can or must must have worker's council (the first size-level is for "can" and the second is for "must-have", but I'm not sure about the size anymore as it changes from time to time). This is the starting point.

For most of the industries, there is also one or more specific unions.

Also, for all large corporations, there needs to be a Supervisory Board (similar to Board of Directors in the USA), of which 50% must be filled-in by worker's council members or unions. In larger companies, there can be dedicated worker's council members, who are paid by the employer but do only worker's council work.

Also, in Germany, there is no such thing as an "HR-Department". There is a "Personalabteilung" (Personnel-Department), that actually represents the employer's interest and there is the worker's council that represents the employee's interest. Therefore, there is also no interest-of-conflict within those organizations such as in a hybrid HR-department.

Lastly, membership in a Union is purely voluntary, i.e. you can work for a corporation/company that is member of a Employer's Organization but that doesn't necessarily require you to be member of a Union.

If the Employer (the company) is member of a specific collective-bargaining Employer's Organization, the salaries of all (or nearly all) rank-and-file employees is agreed-upon between the Union and the Employer's Organization. Technically, this also means that once the company leaves the Employer's-Organization, they do not need to abide by the rules of Collective Bargaining, meaning that they can either negotiate directly with the Unions or directly with each employee separately.

Usually, most companies (apart from the small ones) are members of such Employer's Organizations as that makes it really easy doing the yearly salary-negotiation-dance (as I call it). But unless you are a member, you do not need to, but you still can abide by the rules of Collective Bargaining in your industry.

For example: If you are a software company, you can abide by the rules of Collective Bargaining between Verdi (Services Union) and the Services Employer's Organization (or something like that) or you can negotiate directly with the Union or you can negotiate directly with each employee or group-of-employees directly (if you are not a member of such an organization). But if you are member of, let's say, the "Software Engineers' Service Employer Org" (just to make up an org) and they agreed to Collectively Bargain with Verdi, you must implement their agreement or leave the Org.

The employees who become members of Unions must pay a monthly fee to the Union (a small fraction of their salary). In exchange, they have the right to strike and be paid some amount during such a strike by the Union (I don't know all the details). The counter-tool the employers have against striking employees is "Lock Out", i.e. the employers can "strike" as well by locking out employees, in which case the Unions must pay the employees some part of their salaries.

Germany is extremely consensus-driven in this regard and usually you won't see strikes like in France. Since there is worker's council and/or supervisory-board membership, the worker's council-members as well as the employee-representations in the Supervisory Board have an equal interest in keeping the company healthy as well as achieving good terms for employees. The worker's council-members are elected (once a year, or once every two years, I don't know) by the employees, so they have an interest not only to make sure that the company is healthy but also that the employees are happy as well...

Rest of Europe is quite different insofar as they don't have these rules in this detail, and most of them don't have the Supervisory Board-Requirements...

Hope this helps.

Comment Re:Does the copyright need an owner? (Score 1) 178

As I understand, you can actually create something and immediately put it into Public Domain. You may need to use the right wording (ask a lawyer) such as "non-revocable", "unlimited", "unrestricted", etc., but your lawyer may be able to help.

Also, you could use something like this if you don't want to put it into Public Domain:

Copyight (c) 2013 by "KJDFOIQWEPOSODKFLKWE)(#I$KJLKDSFMNCVK" (GPG-Encrypted)

This could be use for situations where you might consider keeping certain rights (i.e. not putting into Public Domain) for future use. And the text in quotes above could be something like your name encrypted using your public key... (or such).

Just some thoughts...

Comment Re:In the SIMULATOR? (Score 4, Informative) 270

In fact, an Airline Transport Pilot (ATP) need at least 1,500 hours of practical, i.e. non-simulator flying experience before they can become one. A commercial airline pilot (level below ATP), needs at least 250 hours. And that's not to say "... in his lifetime ...", there are even more restrictions.

Yes, they usually do ALSO train in simulators, but the hours required here must be actual plane-flying.
The problem with long-distance flights is though that most of the time there is really nothing to do for pilot once the plane reaches the cruising altitude and auto-pilot is on (even on smaller planes). You have to watch the skies, the instruments, listen to radio - and that's it. Most of the work is done during take-off and landing (approach).

Comment Re:No shit? (Score 2) 161

I don't really get it: Software is just another tool and it seems that every OTHER tool-maker in this world works exactly as described above (observe what the user does and how he does and create a tool for him/her to do it even better) and only in software we seem to ignore this insight.

Tool-development is as old as humanity; only because software-dev is such a young industry doesn't mean we should be ignoring tens-of-thousands of years of tool-development techniques.

I know out of 25+-years of experience that (a) the user doesn't know exactly what he/she needs; (b) he/she cannot really articulate his needs; (c) even if they can, they don't actually know what is possible in software so they come up with a crappy request.

Best approach so far for me was this:
1) Ask the user what they need
2) Observe them while they work
3) Come up with a proposal to do the work even better
4) Get input on the proposal: now, this is crucial: during this step, the requirements will change significantly because if I did my job right, I not only showed him how to solve his problems but also what is possible at all. He/she will then start piling on and together we usually come up with a great requirement.

During the development phase, I usually work very, very closely with the users and get a lot of feedback for each and every feature - from functionality to usability - everything. And most of the time, my users were quite happy in the end...

Comment Re:640nm ought to be enough for anyone.... (Score 1) 96

I guess it is less for cost savings reasons (during production) and more about power savings (during operation) and probably also for performance reasons.

Caveat: I'm not a hardware specialist, not to mention a chip specialist, but I assume (from physics perspective) that shorter distances will reduce power consumption for same amount of transistors. Also, if the total die-size required for e.g. 1b transistors goes down from x to x-y, you could keep the die size but increase the transistor numbers.

Smaller chips as well as lower power consumption is a requirement especially in handheld devices, wearable computing, and also for "Internet of Things" (or whatever it is called today).

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