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Comment: You want the best of both worlds? (Score 2) 522

by RobinH (#43792125) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: Moving From Contract Developers To Hiring One In-House?
So you're paying these developers some kind of contract rate "by the hour" but you then want to impose a fixed scope and hold them to it later? I mean if you're providing them with a complete (perfect) functional spec, then ask them to bid on it as a fixed price, make sure they include a 1 year warranty for any software defects, and then by contract they have to fix the bugs. Sounds like you just want the benefits of paying by the hour without any of the negatives.

Comment: Re:Define "working" (Score 4, Interesting) 515

by RobinH (#43782871) Attached to: Working Handgun Printed On a Sub-$2,000 3D Printer
This story isn't about 3D printing weapons at home, it's about people doing things that make all people with hobbyist 3D printers at home (myself included) look like gun-nut-freaks to the general public (before that it was just pretty nerdy). The first time I mentioned my printer to my mother, she told me about some cop show (CSI, Criminal Minds?) episode she'd seen the previous night where the killer had 3D printed his handgun to get it through security. This has now become the primary thing that the general public associates with 3D printers. It's sad.

Comment: Re:Basically a Zip gun (Score 1) 717

by RobinH (#43643791) Attached to: The First Fully 3D-Printed Gun Has Been Successfully Test-Fired
As someone who has a 3D printer, you glossed over the part on how to actually get it to work nicely for you, which is a pain in the butt and takes a long time, with lots and lots of frustrating trial and error. But since it's called "printing" it must just be as simple as clicking a mouse, right?

Comment: The PC isn't dying (Score 5, Insightful) 737

by RobinH (#43497043) Attached to: Windows: Not Doomed Yet
Anyone who thinks the PC is in any sense dying hasn't worked in an office that does business with other companies. There is a *huge* amount of work that consists of physically typing stuff into databases (purchase orders anyone?) and retrieving stuff from databases, and all of this work is done with a keyboard and mouse. Spreadsheets. Forms. Stuff still gets printed out and filed! Nobody wants a tablet to do this. I think there might be room for tablets out in the warehouse, but even those are likely to be Windows based. Mac? Sorry, businesses look at the price difference and can't stomach paying nearly twice as much for the hardware. I'm certain that home PC sales are diving, and that's probably a good thing, but in our office we're expanding the number of PCs because we want access to information everywhere, and more data entry everywhere, and they're cheap! PCs are the work-horse of enterprise data. So what if we're buying them with Windows 7 Pro on them instead of Windows 8? MS still makes money.

Comment: Depends on the subject (Score 3, Interesting) 489

by RobinH (#43369327) Attached to: Getting a Literature Ph.D. Will Make You Into a Horrible Person
As a psychologist in a lot of jurisdictions you *need* a Ph.D. to get licensed and get a job. Lots of people take undergrad psychology and then say, "now what?" That's not a good plan either. I think it pays to research this stuff ahead of time. BTW, you have a degree in literature? Why not become an author? Or, I dunno, get a job at a factory and read books on your lunch break like the rest of us?

Comment: Re:I agree with Upton (Score 2) 79

by RobinH (#43106347) Attached to: Raspberry Pi's Eben Upton: "Programming Will Make You a Better Doctor"
Yeah, but nobody was buying cheap Android phones to do that, but they are buying RPi's to do it. So either there's something different about the device (unlikely) or there's something different about the way it's being presented. It's simply better marketing. That doesn't mean there wasn't a need for better marketing. Sometimes you need to present it as a completely different product to get people to accept it (think Windows 7 vs. Vista).

Comment: It's the same as bio-warfare (Score 4, Interesting) 275

by RobinH (#43002239) Attached to: Human Rights Watch: Petition Against Robots On the Battle Field
If you think about a virus for a second, it's the same thing. You can't reason with a virus. It doesn't make moral decisions. It just does what its DNA programs it to do, and it's even more dangerous because it's self-replicating. We need to deal with autonomous robots the same way we deal with bio-warfare.

Comment: It means you have to treat different people... (Score 1) 455

by RobinH (#42999037) Attached to: Why Working Remotely Needs To Make a Comeback

Here's the thing about allowing employees to work remotely. It works for some jobs and *some people*. Clearly there are people who can work remotely and get lots done, usually even more done. These people have motivation and self-discipline. However, I don't know if you've looked around, but self-discipline isn't something that *most* people have. Given the chance they over-indulge in everything from junk food to credit to addictive forms of entertainment even while abstaining from all of these things would be in their own long term best interest. As a manager you certainly wouldn't want *those* people working from home.

So... a company that allows workers to work from home has to be able to say "no" to someone with no self-discipline. This is the *right* thing to do, but it's a potential mess for management. "Sue can work from home and I have the same job, same responsibilities, and same glowing employee evaluations as her, so why can't I work from home?" "Well, I don't think you'd actually function well in that environment." "Why?"

I'm not saying it can't work, but do you see how, as a manager, it's easier to just make everyone come to the office?

Comment: Re:bullet in the head (Score 4, Interesting) 524

by RobinH (#42990383) Attached to: Mayer Terminates Yahoo's Remote Employee Policy
This is exactly true. I actually went into the office this morning (Saturday) which is extremely rare for me, but there was an interesting project to work on, and we were limited with equipment time. At any rate, during the morning I said to my co-worker, "coming in on Saturdays is addictive because nobody bothers you so you get so much more done!" He agreed 100%.

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