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Comment: Re:I use "AC" always (Score 1) 315

by Manfre (#39729513) Attached to: How Many Online Aliases Do You Use?

I think you missed my point. The person behind an ID or username does not matter and is not necessary for a conversation. It makes no difference whether slashdot user 2618207 is male, female, Canadian, felon, or bill gates. As long as posts are properly attributed to the same user ID, then a conversation can happen. If every post is shown with "Anonymous Coward" as the author, then a reader cannot reliably tell whether each AC post is the same AC.

Comment: Re:I use "AC" always (Score 4, Insightful) 315

by Manfre (#39719531) Attached to: How Many Online Aliases Do You Use?

It's not so much about selling yourself or reputation pumping. The reason to post with a consistent name, either real or fake, is to allow for a conversation, instead of just an anonymous post. Having a conversation with an anonymous poster always raises the question about whether it is the same anonymous poster with each reply.

Comment: Passengers are more distracting (Score 1) 516

by Manfre (#39465707) Attached to: NHTSA Suggestion Would Cripple In-Car GPS Displays

If the goal is to remove distractions, all vehicles should have the driver in an isolated compartment. No fussing kids or conversations with the passengers to take their focus off the road.

While a GPS can be distracting, it also has that great benefit of allowing people to pay more attention to the road and other vehicles, instead of scanning for street signs and building numbers.

Comment: Re:My answer is "I don't use facebook" (Score 1) 504

Declining to provide information is the only real way to go. Lying to an employer is a good way to get fired (assuming you get hired). For certain government jobs, it's also a crime.

Employer: May I access your facebook account?
You: I'd really like to, but the Facebook terms of service say "You will not solicit login information or access an account belonging to someone else.". *as sarcastically as possible* Sorry!

Crime

NYPD Developing Portable Body Scanner For Detecting Guns 575

Posted by Soulskill
from the law-and-order-special-irradiative-unit dept.
Zothecula writes "You have to feel sorry for the police officers who are required to frisk people for guns or knives — after all, if someone who doesn't want to be arrested is carrying a lethal weapon, the last thing most of us would want to do is get close enough to that person to touch them. That's why the New York Police Department teamed up with the United States Department of Defense three years ago, and began developing a portable scanner that can remotely detect the presence of a gun on a person's body. The NYPD announced the project this week."

Comment: Re:linked lists still common (Score 1) 672

by Manfre (#38611882) Attached to: Are Brain Teasers Good Hiring Criteria?

Knowledge of algorithms, data structures, and when to use them is a difference between a software engineer and a person who knows a programming language. Your answer of "Why would I ever use a linked list? ..." tells the interviewer, in a snarky, condescending way, that you are the latter.

FYI, when dealing with lists of information, it's not always efficient or possible to use an array. Many languages and libraries implement their functionality using linked lists, so you use them often without even realizing it.

Short people get rained on last.

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