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Comment: Re:Apple and Foxconn (Score 1) 193

by flink (#38995301) Attached to: Hackers Hit Apple Supplier Foxconn

The problem isn't so much that workers in the US can't do it, but that they are spoiled and they don't want to.

If by spoiled you mean refusing to live in factory housing so they can be rousted at 2am to reconfigure the line and work a 16 hour shift due to a last minute change order, then they are spoiled.

But US workers think it's their "right" to earn $25/hour for labor jobs that don't require a college degree or any advanced vocational training - and they use Unions to enforce this. When it costs $25 per hour to get someone to run a wire, or $25 per hour to get someone with 2 month's training to operate a screwdriver to put car doors on, something's wrong.

When a production line goes down, it costs an astronomical amount of money every minute it is down. Because you don't want the line to go down, you want responsible adults working the line, not teenagers. Responsible adults need to put a roof over their heads and potentially feed a family. It'd also be nice if maybe there was enough left over so their kids can go to school or get the advanced vocational training their parents never got. So you need to pay a living wage.

Comment: Re:How tall are you? (Score 2) 160

by flink (#38918165) Attached to: Researchers Create Glass Just 3 Atoms Thick

I've dropped my iPhone 4 from 5' up and watched it bounce down half a flight of concrete steps to no ill effect. On the other hand, my girlfriend had hers fall 6" from her breast pocket while she was bending over to pick up her car keys and the screen complete shattered. They build these things out of some pretty amazing materials and they do their best to make them hardy, but when it comes down to it you are still rolling the dice when you drop one.

Comment: Re:legally demand (Score 1) 328

by flink (#38831353) Attached to: Foreign Data Unsafe From US Patriot Act, Says American Law Firm

If you cloak totalitarian government in the vestments of communism, you get Stalinist government.

If you mix totalitarianism with a conservative government you get fascism.

Liberal or conservative. Capitalist or socialist. It doesn't matter what the surface ideology is: there are people on either end of the spectrum that desire a government with absolute authority over its people.

One thing that Mussolini, Hitler, Franco, and Stalin have in common is: they would all love the PATRIOT Act.

Comment: Re:Maybe not so much with the warmth. (Score 2) 252

by flink (#38000288) Attached to: Gadget Allows You to Keep Bees In Your Apartment

Bees don't hibernate or anything. During the winter, they expend a huge amount of energy keeping their hive warm. They must maintain a hive temperature between 85 and 95 degrees to survive. They do this by clustering together and rapidly vibrating their wings. That's what honey is for: it's stored energy so they can perform this function when there is no food available during the winter.

So bees kept indoors might actually survive better due to not needing to expend as much energy. The only question I guess would be whether they would be smart enough to stay inside or if they would keep sending foragers out to freeze.

Comment: Re:Yes, because we need government in everything (Score 1) 142

by flink (#36867374) Attached to: FDA To Scrutinize Mobile Medical Apps

There's a lot more to a PACS than "just" a DB of images. For example, a lot of times radiology has their own registration system, so you have two different patient identities you have to correlate, possibly through an MPI. You also want to make sure that relevant medical history or notes are available to the doc reading the film. And then at the end of the day, you may want to package the film and the read up into a clinical document and ship it off to an XDS or some other document system.

If any of that goes wrong, you could potentially file a DX to the wrong patient. So yes, some regulatory oversight is warranted.

Having said that, the FDA exercises oversight of clinical information systems, but does not require approval like it does with actual medical devices. So you're supposed to stick to certain procedures and be able to prove traceability from requirements through design down to code. You can and occasionally will be audited, but you don't have to submit each and every software release for approval like a new drug or something.

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