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Submission + - Recession, Tech Kill Middle-Class Jobs (manufacturing.net)

Un pobre guey writes: "To understand the impact technology is having on middle-class jobs in developed countries, the AP analyzed employment data from 20 countries; tracked changes in hiring by industry, pay and task; compared job losses and gains during recessions and expansions over the past four decades; and interviewed economists, technology experts, robot manufacturers, software developers, entrepreneurs and people in the labor force who ranged from CEOs to the unemployed." In the comments, the usual bad-government-is-at-fault and don't-worry-it's-like-the-Industrial-Revolution memes are dutifully repeated. But what if this time it's different? What if delegating everything to machines is a radical and fundamental new change in the course of human history?
Media

1928 Time Traveler Caught On Film? 685

Many of you have submitted a story about Irish filmmaker George Clarke, who claims to have found a person using a cellphone in the "unused footage" section of the DVD The Circus, a Charlie Chaplin movie filmed in 1928. To me the bigger mystery is how someone who appears to be the offspring of Ram-Man and The Penguin got into a movie in the first place, especially if they were talking to a little metal box on set. Watch the video and decide for yourself.

Comment A foolish defense (Score 5, Insightful) 517

Disproportionate statutory damages is the only reasonable defense; as others have pointed out, the RIAA gains ridiculous leverage because merely leaving a song upon eMule subjects you to thousands of dollars in phantom damages. Even if you ARE innocent, the risk/reward ratio allows the record mafia to shake you down simply because no one can risk the damages from losing.

Of course, the other obvious approach is to have Congress rewrite the statute to properly differentiate between a bootlegging operation with thousands of dollars in profit with counterfeit DVDs and some poor schmuck trying to get a few Mp3s.

Comment Re:The right to work. (Score 1) 248

I'd counter with the right to protect your business. Non-competes arise out of a number of valid reasons. They can be used to protect trade secrets. They can be used to protect customer relationships. Both of these cost a lot of money to create and maintain and there has to be some method of keeping your direct competitors from poaching them by bribing your employees.

That said, the law usually finds a balance and will usually strike down a non-compete that is too broad -- or in other words, defines "competitor" so expansively that it's impossible to find another job the utilizes your actual skills (rather than your former employer's trade secrets or customer relationships.)

Comment Re:Go Obama (Score 1) 1505

Um, you forgot a couple of other possibilities:

5. Cut obscene executive pay, bonuses, and perks.

6. Fire bloated middle management (and bloated middle managers)

And most shareholders hardly count as "consumers", although I suppose you're right, there might be less consumption of luxury cars and second homes. Somehow I think that's a reduction in consumption we can live with.

Desktops (Apple)

Apple Store Reopens With Many New Products 519

An anonymous reader writes "After being down for a couple of hours, the Apple store reopened this morning. All of the speculation has turned out to be a reality with Apple dishing out many new products and among them are; iMac 20", three iMac 24" models, two Mac Mini models, and two Mac Pro models — with one including an ATI Radeon HD 4570 graphics card. Also as rumored, there was the new Airport Extreme, and Time Capsule in 1TB. The Mac Pro is the granddaddy of them all. The lower-end Quad Core system includes a 2.66Ghz Quad-Core Intel Xeon processor, 3GB of memory, 640GB hard drive, 18x double-layer Superdrive, and a NVIDIA Geforce GT 120 with 512MB of memory priced at $2,499. Finally, we have the 8-core system which includes two 2.26Ghz Quad-Core Intel Xeon processors, 6GB of memory, 640GB hard drive, the 18x double-layer Superdrive, and of course the NVIDIA Geforce GT 120 with 512MB of memory priced at $3,299."

Comment That's a relief (Score 1) 407

So it's not my firefox/windows/router/isp dns cache being poisoned and directing me to a government controlled evil Google clone?

The other possibility was the evil overlords were stopping me from to figuring out how to mount my pirated copy of F.E.A.R. (Yeah, someone lost disk 5/5 of the legitimate copy.)

Comment Re:Riiiight . . . (Score 1) 221

I don't consider refinancing a house (and I presume you have excellent credit and some actual equity) the same as finding financing for purchasing a struggling business. Circuit City is liquidating in large part because it could not find financing on any terms. Also look at Etoys and any number of recent collapses. One venture capital firm making one investment doesn't mean there's significant credit available out there.

And as I said, I have personal knowledge of the layoffs at Sun, and they are part of a pattern that began long before the current economic crisis because they have nothing to sell. In the quarter ending in September, Sun lost $1.677 BILLION on revenues of just under half that. That is simply unsustainable.

If they have technology that I haven't heard of because they aren't selling it, I'd say that's pretty good evidence it's not worth anything. And we have several Sun workstations where I work, and a couple of servers -- sitting unplugged on the shelf because Linux is cheaper, easier to maintain, and has more software that we actually use available.

Fortunately the winner of this debate will be pretty obvious in a year or two. If I'm so blind, it's view shared by Wall Street that's now valuing Sun at $3.61 a share, down from a 52 week high of $18.

And yes, I think the economy is far worse than your rosy claims.

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