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Comment Re:+1 for this Post (Score 1) 427

I hear ya. I've got a 3rg gen Airport Extreme; I bought it after a botched firmware upgrade attempt on my old Linksys router (the firmware updater said "You Update Fail" -nice Chingrish message) that bricked it.

The 5.6 software's good, and I use "AirPort Utility 5.6.1 Launcher" which allows it to run on Mavericks, which it otherwise wouldn't due to Apple's attempt to force users to the crappy, ball-sucking 6.x version.

What really pissed me off about Apple though was that they crippled the router's firmware; I used to run the DHCP and BIND services on my Mac Mini with all my computers and devices set up in my own local DNS and the DHCP service pointed to the Mini for DNS. Worked great, until a firmware update disabled DCHP routing from ethernet to wireless! Lots of complaints about that in the forums, which Apple ignored. Now I'm forced to use the ISP's DNS, or configure static addresses on the clients, which is annoying because they're mobile.

I hope that over time this dumbing-down, "appliance" approach to their products fades now that Steve Jobs is gone, because I think the attitude started with him.

Comment Re:Scale matters (Score 4, Interesting) 204

A few years ago I read of research being done by General Motors (I think) about using a gasoline-powered fuel cell, a process that although still using gasoline, would be far more efficient and clean compared to burning it, and of course there would be no problem refueling.

I wonder whatever happened to that project?

Comment Windows 7??? (Score 1) 229

It's really weird to say this, but Windows 7 seems to be friendlier to older hardware now; I've certainly run into less trouble putting Windows 7 on older machines; that includes an old PIII Dell C610 I used to have, albeit without Aero support but with general 3D. I wonder how a modern Linux distro would have treated it?

The kids use an ancient Dell P4 with Nvidia 5200 AGP card and 2GB RAM which runs Win7 just fine, perfectly well for the kids schoolwork (incl MS Office) and simpler games (including Flash web games). That machine used to run Linux quite well long ago, but I suspect it'd have problems with a modern distro without a bit of tweaking.

I have a Thinkpad T42 that Ubuntu will no longer even install on (without a hacked installer anyway), though I did get Fedora to work on it. Its Radeon mobility 9600 used to be great, but now it's sluggish. Win7 runs noticeably faster on it, at least graphics-wise.

A big reason for using Linux USED to be keeping older hardware alive, or using older hardware to play around with it; that's why it sucks that you often have to jump through a few hoops to get it to run. Not that I have anything against window managers such as XFCE, but it's no longer as convenient to simply give someone a disc to try Ubuntu out on their older computer.

Comment Raised by wolves or something? (Score 1) 713

Seriously, who the f**k doesn't know about wrenches, binoculars, cameras, microphones, magnifying glasses, handset phones, bookmarks, clipboards, and TVs?
Anybody who lives in the real world, and especially has ever been in an office (include manilla folders here) has seen all of these things still very much in common use.

Every office I've ever been in has handset desk phones, even if they are VOIP, and manilla folders are quite common there, and in the home for those who need to keep paperwork around (any grownup living in this world).

Binoculars - Really?????? Who thinks those aren't used anymore? What do you think is replacing them?
Cameras - Seriously?? Photography is more popular now than ever, with REAL SLRs. Just look around. Envelopes - can't avoid those even if you try; even if you do all your banking and bill-paying online (and some services still aren't there yet) everyone gets greeting cards and junk mail.

Talk to anyone who ever has to fix anything ever about how wrenches are obsolete. Please do so at a construction site or mechanic shop. Watch hilarity ensue.

You could make a point about floppies, carbons, MAYBE blueprints (though I still see those used in Facility departments), but the other items? Whose the clueless hipster douchebag who wrote this drivel?

(I know a guy like that who says watches are obsolete - he just looks at his cell phone. Rather than take my phone out, I simply glance at my wrist, taking a tiny fraction of the time/effort he takes. Yeah, he's smart.)

Comment Re:Sucks to be you! (Score 1) 516

Oh, I'm sure we're doing it way wrong:
1. No Scrum Master
2. You have to do your own task estimates by yourself, and then they're pretty much set in stone.
3. Tasks randomly assigned regardless of developer familiarity with task, so estimates are often a wild guess
4. 1-week sprint
5. Code ends up being rushed
6. If you can't meet the sprint deadline (see #2) your pay gets docked; leads to #5.

Waterfall's not looking too bad...

Comment Re:Sucks to be you! (Score 1) 516

At least here in San Diego all they want someone whose experience is an EXACT match for the position, doesn't matter if you can learn it in a week. You need to have multiple years experience working on that exact technology (though not too many years because that means you're old.)

$30K (junior) - $60K (senior) is typical around here, $75K at the high end. Really sucks given how expensive it is to live in San Diego. I'm doing a bit better money wise in my current position, but I HATE HATE HATE Scrum. I'll probably have to move out of town to find better opportunities, sucks with a family and mortgage.

Comment Wasted opportunity for Sony (Score 5, Insightful) 191

When Minidisc was announced I thought it would be a perfect removable storage solution; at the time people were using Syquest drives for "large" (44 and 88 MB) removable storage, and they were pricy; there was a market waiting for something cheaper yet still reasonably fast. I think a Minidisc could hold 250MB or something like that - good storage at the time, relatively cheap, and would probably have been pretty reliable.

However, Sony's anti-piracy worries made Minidisc inaccessible digitally - there were no Minidisc readers/writers and you could only use it for recording/playback of ANALOG audio!

Soon Iomega came out with the very popular 100MB ZIP drives and Sony's window of opportunity closed - and we got to enjoy crappy Iomega quality and the infamous "Click-of Death".

Sony does come out with cool tech sometimes, but their entertainment division screws it up every time. I guess Sony made their money from Minidisc, but they could have done so much more with it.

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