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Comment Re:Worried about the results of your actions? (Score 1) 730

Moreover, if you aren't capable of administering your own network, standing behind them and watching them is pointless because you won't understand what you're looking at, and they could rob you blind right under your nose.

If you ARE capable of administering your own network, standing behind them and watching them is a waste of your time, because you could just be doing the administration work yourself and not have to waste the time to explain it to them and watch them.

Comment Must be nice... (Score 5, Insightful) 582

Must be nice to be able to do that.

Here in the Boston area, any computer job that pays enough to survive is exempt. And when I say "enough to survive" I mean "enough money to live indoors, have heat, hot water, electricity, and food".

If you insist on being paid hourly instead of salaried, most employers will refuse, and the few that will oblige will then put it in writing that you're not allowed to work any overtime without being authorized in writing in advance, and then they'll use that to screw you - if you try to put in for overtime, they'll insist that it wasn't authorized, and if you insist they pay you for it, they'll terminate you for violating the overtime policy. Of course, if you refuse to work the overtime they ask for (which you know you won't be paid for because there's no written authorization) then in your next review they'll say you have a bad work ethic, and refuse to give you a raise.

Personally, I'd like to see salary exemptions be eliminated.

Comment Re:HIPAA compliance is no joke. (Score 3, Interesting) 480

HIPPA non-compliance can not only be expensive, it can lead to jail time.

This is my understanding based on training I received from a lawyer while working as a secondary IT director for a medical school:

The IT director for a medical organization is required to certify that the organization is HIPPA compliant. If they are not, the IT director must make them compliant, and that may have to mean simply cutting off everyone's access to computer resources until a plan is in place to allow access in a compliant manner. (Not allowing anyone to access anything is compliant.) If the IT director certifies them to be compliant when they are actually not, the IT director can go to jail, as can anyone who may have coerced them to sign the certification. Medical professionals can also be subject to fines and/or jail time for handling data in a non-compliant manner (such as entering data into a non-compliant system such as google docs), especially if they did so knowingly.

Were I in anonymous reader's shoes, I would tell my medical clients that I am convinced that because of HIPPA they must not use Google Docs for any medical information. If they press the issue I would tell them that I am so convinced that they must not use Google Docs to handle any medical information that if I find they have done so, I will drop them as a client and report them to relevant authorities at once. No job is worth going to jail for.

Comment Re:Because its a useles skill (Score 1) 921

I would say, as long as they can still read it, there's nothing to be concerned about. I thought we should have stopped teaching cursive a long time ago.

I'm nearly 40, which makes me definitely old enough that my schools placed heavy emphasis on cursive when I was a kid. Even at the time, I realized some things about it:
* Just as I was getting comfortable with writing at all, the school made me switch to cursive and made it far more uncomfortable again, leading me to passionately hate writing anything for years.
* Everything they told me about why it's important to write in cursive (faster, easier) turned out to be 100% false. It's harder and slower. And while my teachers claimed that all adults write exclusively in cursive, I noticed that neither of my parents did... and in fact, the teachers themselves didn't either.
* I went away to a private school for two years, where I switched back to printing, and was far faster and more comfortable. At that time I also started using a word processor at home, and felt much better about writing.
* Upon returning to public school, they forced me to switch back to cursive for six years, which I hated and was very uncomfortable with to the bitter end. They wouldn't let me use a word processor, for various reasons including the claim that it was important to practice my cursive. I got so upset about it that I finally just started word processing my papers, and told my teachers that if they refused to accept it they could take it up with my father.

As an adult, I have stopped using cursive for anything except my signature. I only do that in cursive because I discovered that some banks don't like it if you print your name. (They'll reject your checks.) Now my signature has become an illegible cursive scrawl that even I can't read, and I have forgotten how to write in cursive any letter that isn't in my name. This is all my schools' fault. My printing is fast and highly legible.

I think it's time we recognize that cursive handwriting is BS and that computers are here to stay. Teach the kids to print, teach them to be able to read cursive if they have to, teach them to type using a computer, and ignore the complaining of the fossilized, cursive-is-important set.

Comment Re:Just quit (Score 1) 223

I will hire people who worked on obviously doomed projects or for obviously doomed companies, and I don't mind if they stayed for the final meltdown. Heck, my dad turned off the lights and locked the door for the last time at a largeish corporation a few years ago after its meltdown. But, I will ask for and expect an explanation. If what I get is "oh it was so wonderful I don't understand how it could have gone wrong", I will be dubious about hiring the person, because it demonstrates that they are unrealistic or oblivious. If, on the other hand, I get a simple "I hadn't found a new job yet and I needed the money," I have no problem with that and would consider hiring the person.

Comment Not buying Kindle books for my Kindle... (Score 5, Informative) 156

I have a Kindle. I love it. But I'm not buying books from the Kindle store for my Kindle, because they're DRM-encrusted. I'm buying my ebooks from another legitimate source which sells them to me in formats I can convert, and I convert them into Mobi and put them on my Kindle using Calibre.

So, buying a Kindle does not automatically signal a desire to buy Kindle books. Some of us just like the hardware.

Comment Baaaaaaad. Shockingly bad. (Score 1) 699

One of my previous jobs was director of software systems for a university.

The policy that DML describes is unwarranted and irresponsible in the extreme. If any of my people had proposed it to me, I would have forbidden it and would most likely have fired them for incompetence. The idea is shocking. To force students to install essentially unknown software provided to them by the university? Horrible.

If I were a student there and installed their "security" software and anything went wrong with my computer, I would likely talk to a lawyer about suing the university for damages; after all, if their security software caused the problem it's their fault, and if their security software failed to prevent the problem then I could allege that they fraudulently gained access to my computer by claiming their software would secure my computer, and if the problem is indeterminate I could blame it on their indeterminate software. So, by demanding I install the stuff, the college is creating a huge liability for themselves.

Moreover, Central Michigan University is a *public* university, so the idea of them forcing students to install software on their laptops to use the network raises questions of government violation of privacy.

A more realistic practice would be to have a policy stating to students that they are expected to maintain their computer free of viruses, malware, or unauthorized external access, and that in doing so they should use such security software as is normally necessary and appropriate for their operating system. Then let the student maintain their own system, and if you find it's being a problem, kick them off the network. Anyway, the student network should be isolated from the administration network in the first place, so if a student's computer is misbehaving, it shouldn't be able to cause problems for the university beyond that it would annoy other students.

Comment Re:Boring! (Score 1) 378

Yeah, I'm with you! Cars should be designed to be pretty and interesting to look at instead of aerodynamic, functional, non-polluting, and efficient! It's far more important that we enjoy looking at our cars than that we be able to afford the fuel for them or that we have clean air to breathe!

Comment Ellison is an angry, angry man (Score 5, Interesting) 483

A few years ago at Worldcon, a famous SF author told a story about Harlan Ellison. It seems that Ellison once asked a friend and fellow SF author what he thought about his (Ellison's) latest book, and the friend told him, in polite terms, that he didn't feel it was Ellison's best work. Ellison never spoke to the man again.

But that's not the end of it. Years later, Ellison had a heart attack, and the former friend sent him a note to express that he was sad to hear it had happened and wish him a swift recovery.

Ellison wrote him a nine page letter to reject his get-well note.

I'm fascinated to see what's in Ellison's books, what comes from the mind of such an angry man that could fascinate people for generations, but I'm waiting for him to die before I buy any of them, I don't want to give him any of my money.

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