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Comment Re:Sounds Too Good to Be True ... (Score 1) 202

Things are changing, but a lot of it is probably what you remember.

Tourist is skateboarding across two provinces right now ... big highway used almost exclusively by construction trucks extending the highway ... then a rocky trail to get over to another highway, also used almost exclusively by construction trucks building THAT highway ... and that was the BEST option for getting from point A to point B.

Comment Re:now they can concentrate on ignoring mentally i (Score 3, Insightful) 350

Given that it is a major pain in the butt to get an assault rifle already ... you do realize this requires an expensive federal permit to even own one? They are effectively already banned.

The current bans being discussed are trying to go further and ban things that are not assault rifles, but merely "look scary".

Comment Re:Adrian Lamo: Poster Child for Power Patriotism (Score 1) 341

...

And when he does climax, Adrian thinks about the power he protects. He thinks about raping and murdering a prisoner and then helping cover it up without having to answer to any semblance of a court. He heaves his entire body into rapture as he pictures an innocent man being electrocuted to death by someone from the Agency while Bradley Manning is forced to watch from a prison cell, crying for mercy, as part of his "non-torture" permanent solitary confinement that Adrian bravely initiated because... why?

...

I really, really hope the parent poster is some type of forum robot (pseudo-AI) whose algorithm/database has run amok ...

Comment Re:can we mod summary as (Score 1) 243

Are these "tech" jobs though? "Excecutive compenstation analyst" doesn't sound technical (or a full time position to be honest).

Not particularly technical, but vaguely geeky in their own right.

The company I work for has an entire division devoted to executive compensation analysis. It largely consists of surveying executives to discover trends in various industries' compensation packages. We do the bulk of the work as a "disinterested third party" so companies can obtain an unbiased analysis of executive compensation trends (for a fee - which is one of my company's revenue streams).

Organizations then purchase the analyses of these trends to aid them in determining how they should set up compensation plans for their executives. Organizations with thousands of employees, dozens of executives, and hundreds of managers will usually have at least one FTE (and often several FTEs) of their own dedicated to participating in compensation surveys, analyzing results, and investigating whether the organization should be altering the executive compensation packages by going more heavy in, say, deferred compensation programs versus direct compensation, etc.

The standard practice for the people that do this is to send out both the data collection surveys and the results in spreadsheets, typically in Excel (a few decades ago it would been Lotus 1-2-3).

Analysis of the data is usually performed in SAS or SPSS.

Comment Re:I still don't get it... (Score 2) 306

How did real estate in Florida ever get so overpriced in the run up to 2008, if anyone out there is taking rising sea levels seriously?

Because people are stupid. Why else would they build where there are tornados regularly. Hey, this place gets plenty of earth quakes, what a great place to put a city...

One day San Francisco is going to bobbing about in the Pacific and everyone will be surprised it happened

Keep in mind ... there are NO places in the USA where tornadoes occur regularly. Take Kansas (where I grew up), it is in "Tornado Alley". Ooh, dangerous! Not really. There's dozens of tornadoes per year in the state, but tornadoes have a pretty small damage path, usually only a few square miles. Let's say it is an absolutely horrible year, though, and there are 100 tornadoes with an average damage path of 20 square miles, that would be 2000 square miles of damage. Kansas is ~82,000 square miles in size, though. So even in a year far worse than has happened in recorded history, as a Kansas resident for a worst case year you are 40 times more likely to be unaffected by a tornado than you are to be affected.

The downside is, damage from a tornado if you are directly in the damage path tends to be absolute. Grass and foundations tend to be the only items left intact.

Comment Re:Marketing Hurdle of the Century (Score 2) 82

The rebranding necessary for this to sound appealing will be a joy to watch.

I agree, but it didn't seem to be that difficult for silk garments:

"Fabric made from worm spit!"*

*Okay, not quite spit, not quite worms, but it would be the layperson's interpretation if they were to see the process of a silkworm spinning its cocoon.

Comment Re:so... (Score 1) 211

My concern over the smaller screen is that I can touch-type on an iPad on-screen keyboard (when in landscape orientation). I wouldn't be able to do that on a 7" display. I'd prefer to have one more inch of keyboard on the iPad for more comfort in touch-typing, but the current size is barely adequate.

Comment Re:It's been a cyclic fad. (Score 1) 211

I agree, my speed of typing is lower on a tablet than on a real keyboard. The level of noise from typing on a tablet is much less though. Instead of needing to taking notes on pen & paper during conference calls (because a real keyboard would be too noisy) and having somebody do data entry from my notes, now I can take my notes during the call directly on a tablet (that can run throughout a workday on its internal battery easily) and they are ready to be sent directly from the tablet as the call concludes. Faster notes to the developers and project manager, better accuracy (because nobody has to do data entry from my handwriting).

It may be a limited use case, but that use case is half of my work week.

Yes, I'm in too many meetings. I take most of the pain so our other developers with fewer social graces don't have to (it keeps us all employed).

Comment Re:Translation (Score 4, Informative) 866

You are wrong on numerous levels. I'm guessing that you forgot that Pi is not a real number, it's an estimation. You seem to have forgotten what a "Theorem" is as well and hell, you used the word!. Wtf? There are numerous types of "Math" that we simply can not prove true or untrue. We still use them, because to the best of our knowledge things work in a specific way.

Since the above is true, Math "is" science. Your second statement in bold is a fallacy so just plain old wrong. No wonder you posted anonymously.

I don't think you understand math ...

"Pi is not a real number" -

Wrong, Pi is a real number, it is an irrational number, but it is a real number. It is not an estimation, but there are many different approximations for Pi that are used for the sake of convenience.

"There are numerous types of 'Math' that we simply can not prove true or untrue. We still use them, because to the best of our knowledge things work in a specific way."

I'm not sure what you are talking about here. There are many mathematical statements that we know are proven, others that we know are provable (but have no known documented proofs) and likewise many that we know are false, many that we have shown to be unprovable, and many that we do not yet know if they are provable or not. But pretty much any mathematical statement that is used in any mundane fashion (typical engineering or simpler discipline) is rooted in proven theorems (meaning proofs exist - the fact that the word "theorem" is used does not mean "unproven").

Comment Re:Merry Christmas! (Score 1) 521

We'll see. Zune hardware was better than iPod, it was just too late. The Zune service / software is still better than iTunes but dedicated mp3 players were a hard sell once smartphones started taking off. Surface is very different. Tablets are going to be around a long time. There is plenty of room (particularly in the enterprise space) for MS to come in and gain share.

Can't tell if this is a troll, shill, or rabid fanboi ... ... whatever, it can't be serious. :-)

Comment When a student goes missing ... (Score -1) 540

Given that the system knows where in the building students are and were, I imagine the parents will likely change their minds and praise the system if a student goes missing. They'll know when and where the student was the last time they were on campus, and I would assume through which door the student left.

Keeping tabs of 1200 students you are responsible for is a daunting task, as an adult, I wouldn't want to be tracked in this way, but I don't have a problem with my kids school ID cards being tracked while on the school's campus.

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