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Comment modular is often the opposite of more smaller (Score 2) 120

> How does having a larger number of small reactors

He didn't say that. He said modular. As in, each turbine module should be separable from each reactor module. Within the reactor itself, you'd have separate modules that you could inspect or replace, rather than bringing the whole facility down for eight weeks. If you're looking at cooling issue, you take one cooling module down at a time rather than taking apart the whole facility.

Often, larger things are more modular, while smaller versions are built in one piece, so "more modular" certainly does not mean "smaller" or "a larger quanity of".

You're right, mdsolar seems to have submitted something that isn't outright propaganda. It IS about precautions regarding a potential flaw with the UK's reactor design, so in that sense it is "anti-nuke" and by extension "pro (md)solar", but it's largely objective and factual.

Comment bad name. Kindergarten OS? (Score 2) 209

In the US at least, the word "elementary" means "elementary school" 95% of the time, so that's the association I have with the word "elementary". I'm sure I'm not the only one. It doesn't look like it's actually designed for children, so why in the world would they use that name. Might as well call it Kindergarten OS or Playskool OS.

Comment if it did, that would eliminate my bugs (Score 3, Insightful) 306

It doesn't do what the summary says.

If it did, that would take care of half of my bugs. Within a 30-minute period, I might well work in PHP, Perl, ActionScript, JavaScript, and some other language. A large portion of my errors are things like using empty() in JavaScript. Especially, ActionScript is almost the same as JavaScript, and a lot of Perl is also valid PHP, so when switching between these it's easy to absent-mindedly tap out a line in the wrong language.

Once upon a time, I used vim syntax highlighting, which doesn't typically catch using the right syntax, but the wrong function name, but does make missed braces and such obvious. Maybe I should right a vim plugin for "wrong language, dummy." It would look for echo (phph vs print (Perl), etc.

Comment they think they know what they're doing. Security (Score 1) 116

Many bugs are of course a simple "oops"or "l forgot that. I knew, and it slipped my mind".

Another very large portion are cases where they think they know exactly what they are doing, but in fact they are in way over their head. Many, many times I've pointed out a bug and had the developer argue with me, even after I showed them the problem. I have to actually crash/exploit their application before they change it, while still arguing "an attacker would never think of that." Dude, the attacker doesn't even have to THINK of it, that attack is automatically attempted by his web crawler because it's so obvious and so common.

Or:
Hmm, this page takes 40 seconds to load. Would it work better to do $long_operation OUTSIDThe loop?
No, no way that would make a difference.
10 minutes later ...
Here, I tried it outside the loop. It runs 400 times faster.

That one good thing is that each developer will only argue with me once or twice. When I make a suggestion, I politely ask about trying it a different way. When you argue, I prove clearly how incredibly wrong you are. It's easier to just accept that when I say something, I'm probably right. That's actually NOT because I'm necessarily right more often than anyone else. I've just learned to keep my mouth shut if I don't know. I only say something when I know it to be true.

It's kind of funny that I've gotten a reputation like I know everything, like I can solve any problem. In fact, 95% of the time I have nothing intelligent to say. So I don't say anything. It's a good way to avoid saying anything stupid.

Comment Two gurus with egos in check = awesomeness. APIs (Score 2) 116

I've been coding, and studying to improve my skills, for decades. People come to me for help and advice. With one open source project I work on, all code must be approved by at least three people. My counterpart for one module is also very experienced, and a perfectionist. Sometimes our egos collide, but when we get past that we come up with something much better than either of us started with. That's particularly good when we're working on an architecture or API that otter people will have to code to in the future.

Comment with you until this part, opposite of fact (Score 1) 268

> The owners/high-level executives have too much control over the process of wage/bonus distribution. It's like passing around a bag with money (profits), and the owners/executives get to pull as much out as they want first.

You know of course that companies frequently lose money in one quarter or one year, and make money another year. So owners may or may not get ANY money this year. Employees get paid every month, precisely the amount they expect. That's because the money bag goes in the opposite direction. First, production employees get paid (payroll). Executives get a portion of their pay. If there's money left, executives get their bonus, which is the other half of their pay. If there's still money left, investments are made to prepare the company for the future. If there's STILL money left, owners get some, in the form of dividends. Dividends (owner's) are, by law, the very last thing that gets paid.

Comment BCBS, S&W (Score 1) 268

Sounds like you need a better one. We've been very pleased with Blue Cross / Blue Shield of Texas for insurance and Scott and White for healthcare.
Obviously there are things that need to be improved with the entire systems of a) health insurance and especially b) health care. Given the available options (worldwide), this combination is hard to beat. If you happen to be in Texas and aren't happy with what you're getting, they are worth a look. If you aren't in Texas, and all of the options in your state suck, I'd be curious to know what causes the difference.

Comment Re: Has Mac EVER made an OSX app stop working? (Score 1) 99

For clarification, the system requirements for Windows 9 developer preview are already known, so the "next version of Windows" for which we don't know the minimum hardware requirements is Windows 10, correct?

  It would be funny if instead of "10" they used the Roman numeral X for the Windows OS, so Windows OS X.

Comment yeah I'm the CEO of Microsoft too, spammer (Score 1) 118

Yeah, sure I'm the CTO of Clickbank. I'm all 296 people on Linked In named Ray Morris.
https://www.linkedin.com/vsear...

Just like I'm also the CEO of Microsoft, and the president of the United States.

If you'd read half of my posts that you replied to, you'd know exactly who I am. I talk about my work all the damn time on Slashdot.

How about you. We know who you are. You post unwanted promotional messages. Unwanted promotional messages are spam. You are therefore a spammer. Advertisers are annoying, but pay for free sites like this one. Spammers are much, much, worse. Their (your) messages are neither wanted on the site nor have the redeeming value of paying for the site. Spammers, like you, are just parasitic scum.

Comment Re:many companies exist to hire people (Score 0) 268

As the sentence you quoted indicated, it's inexpensive enough in the US that we continue to provide it for employees who work less than three hours per week, so ....

At the price we pay, those employees can normally see a doctor the same day rather than waiting weeks for an appointment.

Comment You changed my mind, except government (Score 1) 216

You actually have a good point. If someone wants to hire me, they can pay my price, or I can choose not to work for them. If I don't want to pay for NFL tickets, or NFL Network, I can simply choose not to do so. I have no right to force them to work at a price I set.

That said, the FCC doesn't need to enforce this rule. The NFL can negotiate with the teams and the TV stations. The government doesn't need to do the NFL' s dirty work for them.

Comment "hobby" has made a million dollars. Mission statem (Score 4, Interesting) 268

Well you can make up your own definitions of words if you want to, I guess.
My "hobby", as you call it, has brought in over a million dollars. That million has been used according to the company's mission statement.

You know, people actually write down the purpose of the company when they create it. It's called a "mission statement". You might read some sometime. I've yet to see one that says "make money". I have seen a few companies where the people apparently FORGOT their mission, forgot the reason the company was started, and started focusing on money instead. That's why you put the mission statement in prominent places - posted on the wall, on banners, etc - to remind people of why you're there lest they forget.

Comment Re:Has Mac EVER made an OSX app stop working? (Score 1) 99

> I'd bet that any Intel version of Windows Microsoft releases in the next 10, possibly 15 years will still run on it.

I'll take that bet. With just 1-2 GB of RAM, the CURRENT version of Windows will install, but not really run, on it.
$10 says the next version won't even install?

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