Forgot your password?

typodupeerror

Comment: Re:Bound to work... (Score 2) 145

by turgid (#43796741) Attached to: Immigration Reform May Spur Software Robotics

It's not racism, it's just a sad fact and here's my experience.

For several years I worked as a Software Engineer at Xerox in the UK and we survived for 3 years after the global economic crisis hit in 2008. But management, always looking to save a few percent on the Engineering budget every year (despite always breaking even and returning to profit), finally cut it to below a level where they could continue to fund us as a cohesive unit, so they did a deal with HCL where we were all transferred to HCL who could do the work for the price (allegedly) and provide more engineers!

So HCL's plan was to take as many of us as possible off the Xerox work and to replace us with Indians, sending us newly-acquired, expensive staff to do contract work for better-paying customers (many miles from home for months at a time).

The HCL CEO sold the story that Westerner engineers are spoilt, lazy and ignorant, compared with intelligent, diligent and self-motivated Indians.

What HCL provided was very young, inexperienced and very poorly-paid Indians, perhaps straight out of university, to acquire knowledge, pick up work and to train off-shore teams of similarly-inexperienced staff.

Nothing was impossible. They were instructed to say "yes" to everything.

They were posted here for 3 months at a time, often expected to assimilated decades-worth of institutional knowledge in that time and to work all the hours god sends.

You see, they were brainwashed that everything is possible if you just try hard enough and that success is entirely down to the individual. Managers wielded metaphorical sticks, and let me tell you, they had the pointiest hair I've ever seen.

This is "empowerment."

If you don't succeed, it's because you didn't try hard enough. Not that projects were completely mismanaged...

So these poor young men and women, being paid a pittance and with no living expenses for being in a much more expensive foreign country, were apart from their families for several months at a time and living in tiny rooms, expected to work night and day, to do the work of entire teams of people who'd taken a decade or more to learn their craft and getting shouted at and lied to by their management.

That's the reality, so cut these poor guys a bit of slack. It's not their fault. It's the fault of The System.

Comment: Outsource to HCL (Score 1) 292

They'll bring in fresh Indian graduates for no more than 3 months at a time at 20% each of what you're paying your local developers. When one guy finishes, he'll go back to India and his replacement will arrive. The only fly in the ointment is that he'll have to be trained from zero. And the cycle repeats.

Comment: Re:Royalty? Just say no. (Score 2) 214

by turgid (#43678877) Attached to: Did the Queen Just Resurrect the Snooper's Charter?

Phil the Greek is ace. He produces a never-ending torrent of politically-incorrect and quite amusing quips. LIke the one he asked the local driving instructor on a remote Scottish island: "How do keep the locals sober long enough to get them through the driving test?"

Money and/or votes can't buy that. It's priceless.

Comment: Re:The best reason for DRM (Score 1) 684

by turgid (#43584281) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: Are There <em>Any</em> Good Reasons For DRM?

none of those links do anything but prove my point - rock is tedious and repetitive.

Aha, Mr Hipster, your irony does not escape me! For you obviously saw the link to the "rock" music that does not involve any guitars and was done entirely on synthesizers (and electronic drums played by a human) on scales that contain no conventional octaves.

don't you ever get bored of manufactured teen angst and synthetic teen rebellion?

Yes, I don't listen to BBC Radio 1, Scuzz or Kerrang! The music's better on Radio 4.

Or even just the sound of rock guitar and drums?

Occasionally, but I always miss my electric guitar adrenaline fix.

I am interested to hear what your definition of "not boring and repetitive" is.

Comment: Re:Well.. (Score 1) 91

by turgid (#43529679) Attached to: Privacy Groups Attack UK ISPs 'Collusion' With Government Snooping

They can already lock you up for 2 years for failing to divulge encryption keys or passwords.

The thing is, if you are using good encryption, and they really want to see what you're up to, they will ask you to divulge your passwords/keys etc. so at least you will know you are being watched.

I can foresee a time where everyone will have to register their passwords etc. with the authorities (in some sort of official, "secure" database) just in case they want to check on what you get up to. I'm sure the Inland Revenue, for example, would be delighted to see all of our financial transactions as and when they like.

Comment: Re:2004 (Score 1) 91

by turgid (#43529587) Attached to: Privacy Groups Attack UK ISPs 'Collusion' With Government Snooping

who branded himself as socialist

Ha ha, that's a good one!

Tony and his cronies devised New Labour, which was very much a continuation of Conservative Thatcherism but with a slightly less right-wing attitude to the Welfare State.

The real problem is that no-one is undoing the damage he did.

Quite. They're adding a whole lot of damage of their own and ensuring that the rich get to keep their money while the poor and middle are squeezed to pay for it.

Comment: Re:slackware (Score 1) 573

by turgid (#43265557) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: New To Linux; Which Distro?

You may jest, but Slackware is stable, simple, current and user-friendly.

For end-users it comes with KDE and XFce, Firefox and Thunderbird. All you need to add is LibreOffice, and off you go. You don't even have to do any configuration to use the X server nowadays, it all "just works" out of the box. It's also trivial to make it dual boot Windows 7 (wife's laptop has manky Microsoft garbage on it).

It also has Window Maker which saves me a compile.

Comment: A Million Protesters in London - No Chance (Score 4, Interesting) 456

by turgid (#43227431) Attached to: Could Twitter Have Stopped the Media's Rush To War In Iraq Ten Years Ago?

Over a million people took to the streets of London to protest against the Iraq War. It still went ahead. Britain still got involved.

I was one of the idiots that believed that there were WMD and that the politicians knew more than we did (national security and all that). But I was young and naive. I was also stupid enough to believe that we were going there as Liberators, not Occupiers, and then I was shocked to see the way we (the Coalition) treated the Iraqis.

I am also disgusted at the mess we've left the country in. There is rampant sectarian violence, suicide bombings and Islamofascism. It makes the Northern Ireland Troubles look like a village fete.

If the ends don't justify the means, then what does? -- Robert Moses

Working...