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Comment I love Python, but... (Score 1) 214

If you're teaching them programming, and they might not all use it, maybe you should think about using MS Excel. It seems everyone uses Excel in some form, but the people who can really get into the nitty-gritty of it can do some really useful stuff. Excel is on just about every computer these days, or some similar spreadsheet, and while it's not a traditional programming language, it does require the use of logic to figure out how to set up a series of cells with different commands to give you the answer you want.

Python on the other hand, is much more traditional, and might be a bit more straightforward to teach, but I still think more students would find useful skills they can use everyday in Excel rather than in Python. If they were all going towards engineering or comp-sci, Python would be good, but for the future business people in your class, knowing how to use Excel, and use it very efficiently is a huge plus in the "real world".

Comment It's not a bad idea. (Score 1) 585

I have an EZPass (the east coast automated tag thing on my car). I go to school in Washington, DC, and I live in South Jersey. When I drive, I don't notice the total cost of the tolls, and I think it's because of tag. I asked a friend to pick me up at a train station near the end of the MARC (Maryland's train system) line, and I ended up costing him $13 that he paid out of his wallet, and that's just on the way back from the train. I paid him back, but I didn't realize how many tolls there are on I95.

As far as the idea of turning roads into toll systems, I'd prefer the tags. They're a bit more anonymous than a license plate, which could easily be traced by DMV records. I know many people who own one or two tags and just put it in whatever car they're taking for a long trip. My big worry is the day that the politicians realize you can use these things to track how fast people are driving by comparing the time into the system to the time out with the distance driven. I did read an interesting article the other day about an economist proposing we solve our traffic congestion and road funding problems by implementing a dynamic tolls system on all the major highways. A busy road would have a higher toll than a less crowded road, encouraging people to take the cheaper route, and at the same time, providing funds for the highway system. Usually in my travels between DC and home, or between home and my friends in Delaware, I take either 295, a bit longer of a drive, but less crowded, or the New Jersey Turnpike, which has an exit that is a few miles closer to home, which is more direct but seems to be more crowded when I drive it. With some well placed electronic signs, I could tell which route will have more traffic, and the state would make money on both routes, not just the turnpike.

Comment Not to be negative... (Score 2, Insightful) 497

But if you're not in a position to know how much your university spends on software and be able to compare it to how much revenue the university has, you're not in a position to really make a change to open source. Second, thinking of my dealings with fellow university students (I'm an OSS using university student as well), I know many of them would rather use the MS/proprietary version that just works than deal with often buggy open source software that's not always compatible or has bugs left and right. Your university has to deal with the outside world, which is still deeply entrenched in MS Office, unless you're going to show all your students how to export from Open Office to an MS Office format, expect a lot of complaints. Granted, Open Office isn't as buggy as some things, but if you have engineering students who need a good CAD program, don't count on finding a good open source program for them. I wish you luck, but you're really fighting the tide here.

Comment Historical Figures (Score 1) 1397

My systems are named after famous places, and the hard drives named by the first names of people who made that place famous. My MacBook Pro, and related drives: Los Alamos Robert (Oppenheimer) - internal drive Albert (Einstein, ... Okay, somewhat related, this was my original internal drive, now an external) John (Von Neumann) Leo (Szilard, again, only slightly related) My PC / media system: Kitty Hawk Wilbur Orville I used to have my PC drives partitioned and named after the five Space Shuttles, and the system was called Canaveral.

Comment It's great for interns... (Score 1) 1055

I worked it once as an intern. 9 hour days, 8 hours the first friday, off on the next. It was nice because it gave me a chance to take every other weekend off to go do things with friends, like roadtrips, either back home or to the beach. What I didn't like was that I had an hour and a half commute each way, so the 9 hours, plus commute time made for a really long day. Up at 6, and not usually back until 6 or 7, depending on the traffic through DC. As an intern I was never asked to come in on that day, and the job wasn't one where I had urgent deadlines to meet. In the future, I'm not sure if I would do it. It'd really depend on having a shorter commute and knowing that I had something to do on that Friday.

Comment Re:Hope one ends up close by (Score 1) 197

Actually, at their museum extension out in Dulles, Va, about an hour from downtown DC, they already have the Enterprise. I'd expect if they were to buy a new one, the Enterprise might go somewhere else, or they'll put it at an affiliated museum. And since NASM is probably one of the best funded air and space museum in the country, they might consider picking one up. Who knows, it might end up out in Kansas.
User Journal

Journal Journal: Linux Pocket Protector

I think pocket protectors are back in! I just got my Linux pocket protector from a guy in Australia, (He has a homepage where you can buy them), and it is very useful! Cheap, too. you can check out the page here.
Education

Submission + - Good Teaching Tools for the Kids

jdramer writes: I was recently asked by someone who home-schools her kids what kind of programs are available for teaching kids about what you can do with computers. She was thinking things like computer animation, drawing programs; basically anything that encourages creativity. So I'm wondering what programs are out there that would be good for young children in primary school?
Amiga

Submission + - Why Linux is the new Amiga

An anonymous reader writes: James Cornelius has noticed an uncanny similarity between the old Amiga scene, and the current Linux scene.

He contends that the angst and smugness that made up the Amiga scene in the 80s and 90s has found a new outlet in the Linux scene, and to prove his point, he analyses comments from Linux users on his web site.
Portables (Apple)

Submission + - iPods, Google-Earth at War in Iraq

Boulainvilliers writes: "Policy Review reports that the U.S. Army started to use iPods and Google-Earth in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Army first created its internal version of MySpace, with personal profiles, photos, bios, and information on soldiers' professional backgrounds, open only to U.S. Army commanders. CompanyCommand.com, privately founded by four officers in 2000, grew to 6,200 members by the end of 2006, when the site was viewed about a million times per year. "It's not just information; it's a personal story, and commanders are able to connect with their peers who share their knowledge." the report, "War 2.0", quotes one of the site's founders. The operators now "equip commanders on their way to Afghanistan with new iPods, fully loaded with video-podcasted interviews with fellow commanders on their way out." The journal also reports that U.S. officers started to use Google-Earth to map and document conversations with civilians and local leaders, to create "a spatially and temporally mapped track-record of trusted or problematic relationships that can be shared with other soldiers.""
Windows

Submission + - Gates: Vista so secure it could run life support

een625 writes: "Journalist: Let's imagine a hospital where life support systems are running Vista. Would you trust it with your life? Bill Gates: Security has been the top priority for Microsoft for quite some time ... The answer to your question is that, absolutely, Vista is the most secure operating system we've ever done, and if it's administered properly, absolutely, it can be used to run a hospital or any kind of mission crytical thing. Full interview here"
Patents

Submission + - Blackboard Promises They'll Back Off

mrfantasy writes: "In what is clearly a response to the massive backlash against the granting of Blackboard's patent covering all aspects of online learning software, the company today announced they are not going to assert the patent against any open source or home-grown learning management system. However, the company will pursue projects (such as Sakai) if they attempt to bundle their software with any commercial vendor and with any commercial hardware or software. EDUCAUSE and the Sakai Project have released a joint statement expressing some satisfaction with Blackboard's decision, but clearly stating that they will continue to pursue Blackboard to abandon the patent ahead of what they hope is the USPTO's reversal of the patent decision."

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