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Comment Re:How ironic (Score 0) 238

Or are they currently the most abusive monopoly Canucks have to live with?

No - that would be Telus. The area of Alberta where I lived - a new landline waiting list was over 2 years. Well, that was when a time was quoted or you weren't told unequivocally "no." Customer service is a joke.

Now, after moving to Toronto, my experience is vastly different. Rogers is giving me 10mbs at home for prices comparable to what I paid in the US, respectable speed and 6gb tethering with mobile... 50 mbps available (if you want to pay). Plus, a healthy bit of competition has the major companies (Rogers, Telus, and Bell) competing for subscribers with phone, mobile, TV, and internet packages - and a corresponding increase in quality of customer service here.

It all comes down to location when dealing with these corps in Canada.

Comment Re:Tell it to the plastic clown (Score 0) 837

To elaborate further - It comes down to whether you are perceived as "business professionals" or technicians.

Increasingly IT is being seen as less of a strategic resource and more or a cost of doing business. Nowhere is this better demonstrated than by the disappearance of the CIO from the executive board. More and more often, this role is being relegated to reporting to the CFO.

If the helpdesk consists of technical school types or computer science trained with a career track that leads towards system administration or development, then uniforms are not unreasonable.

If, however the helpdesk workers are business-college grads that are looking to be moved into corporate or IT management, then I would strongly resist the change. The uniform shirts are more likely to create the perception of "techie guy" that might hurt when applying for non-technical promotion.

Comment The good news... (Score -1, Redundant) 299

The good news is that GSM encryption lasted 21 years (more or less).

And in truth, the effort was probably really exceptional. There is really little chance that criminals could reproduce his work, because they are all uneducated and stupid. Plus it is illegal in Britain and the US, so that should discourage potential snoopers.

Whew - catastrophe narrowly avoided!

Comment Re:Don't bash AT&T (Score 2, Informative) 420

Again, it's not any different than a restaurant declining to take a reservation because they're full. Respectable businesses do this all the time. It's perfectly reasonable.

Well, if the the restaurant is required to find some place for you to sit or stand quietly while ordering what you want and eating it, then this is an accurate analogy. In the US, cell phone providers are not allowed to refuse service - even for creditworthiness - unless you already owe them money. Since the iPhone is the biggest reason for AT&T subscriber growth over the past year or so, this is simply their way to cope with a drastically overloaded network and limit the number of new subscribers in NYC.

Comment Re:"Where do you live?" (Score 1) 920

I've seen supposedly good pizza places in France serve what was basically an inch-thick slice of bread with a thin layer of tomato sauce, a sprinkling of cheese and slices of tomato plant as "pizza"

And yet the French are so proud of their pizza! My first weekend their and my hosts proudly and flamboyantly served a greasy egg-topped mess to "make me feel at home." It made me feel something, alright.

Submission + - The perfect way to slice a pizza (newscientist.com)

iamapizza writes: New Scientist reports on the quest of two math boffins for the perfect way to slice a pizza. It's an interesting and in-depth article;

"The problem that bothered them was this. Suppose the harried waiter cuts the pizza off-centre, but with all the edge-to-edge cuts crossing at a single point, and with the same angle between adjacent cuts. The off-centre cuts mean the slices will not all be the same size, so if two people take turns to take neighbouring slices, will they get equal shares by the time they have gone right round the pizza — and if not, who will get more?"

This is useful, of course, if you're familiar with the concept of "sharing" a pizza.

Comment Re:Don't be evil? (Score 1) 671

Bentham's panopticon is all about deterrence - stopping unwanted "user" (prisoners) actions. Google, however, makes money based on users continuing to behave normally while they watch, and then taking additional (purchasing) actions based on what Google knows.

The evil governments of conspiracy theories also aren't interested in deterring individual behavior - but instead want to identify the way users think. They can then identify those users and make interventions to stop them from infecting others.

Google's experience with the Patriot act and Yahoo's (and Google's) run-ins with China should have taught him a lesson about the need for privacy.

Comment Re:It probably won't protect more children (Score 1) 596

but this Canadian case seems to be about "the evil scum didn't commit an offence! We must create one so that in future similar evil scum can be charged with something!"

Did you read TFA? The man had cybersex and phone sex with a 12 year old girl. He was acquitted because he said he hadn't made plans to meet her (yet?). That definitely does not qualify as not committing an offence - the question at hand was "which offence."
The original judge took a narrow view of the law, which I'm a fan of. Upon review, the appeals court clarified the need for concrete plans to meet.

The discussion on conversations not needing to be sexual in nature is taken from one of the Justice's comments that non-sexual conversations are often the precursor to trust and a physical meeting. Justice Fish specifically stated that an "intent to meet" must also exist in these situations.

Comment Re:So Wait... (Score 1) 596

From one of the video links in TFA:
It doesn't matter what age the child actually is, but instead on what age is claimed. This was a direct request from the police - it ensures the continued ability to run sting operations.
So, no - you can't get hauled in for not knowing, unless you are trolling the age specific (ie. 10-13) chat rooms.

Comment Re:So... (Score 1) 596

Of course, the best solution would still be parents actually doing their job - parenting their kids instead of placing them in front of nanny PC unsupervised and training them in the fine art of bullshit detection. But that's way too much of a hassle...

Indeed - because sitting at the family computer is the only place that kids chat online, these days.

Cell phones, laptops, media players, game consoles, kindle... Not to mention the abundance of public access available at schools and libraries.

Young teens (that seem to be the target, here) would not be able to function socially or educationally in the US or Canada with only supervised internet access.

Comment Re:Science (Score 1) 874

Science is not done by consensus.

Having gone through the research/submission/revision/publication process of science multiple times, I can vouch for the fact that Science is indeed done by consensus. Research will be conducted on a topic until the same conclusion has been reached by multiple authors, likely using multiple methods. The later verifications most likely will try to give some sort of "value added" by integrating complementary theories, but those previous conclusions will be tested often.

Science is done by showing your work so that others can see it and confirm that your data and methods make sense...

That aspect of your argument is definitely true. That is one of the ways that consensus is built - repeated analysis and conclusions that verify the validity of the initial findings. One thing that is often lost in the CRU scandal is that there have been many independent researchers that are coming to the same conclusion using different methods. Mann and Jones' behavior is the result of the politicized environment and partisanship that exists around climate change science - an environment they definitely helped create (chicken or the egg?). Given the number of climate change proponents that jumped to justify the leaked emails as perfectly innocent and refused to see anything damning in them, it makes it difficult to give the rest of the (nearly uniformly) honest scientists the benefit of doubt.

Comment Forget Novels - go for shorts (Score 1, Interesting) 1021

I'll agree that Ender's Game and the subsequent books are great, but for the purpose of a class you should look at Card's "Maps in a Mirror." It is an anthology of short stories that cover most of his writing career. The biggest benefit for this particular edition is that includes forwards for each story about what he was thinking, going through, and aiming for when he wrote the stories. This offers an awesome insight into what the author intended, and can be a great introduction to the desired analytic skills.

Comment Re:it is too late (Score -1, Flamebait) 331

100%? Hardly. Have you actually read the "privacy" policies for Google products? It amounts to "your data is ours, and we can share it." Couple that with the fact that Google toolbar and even Google Desktop now comes on most consumer laptops and you have now have an uninformed public sharing all of their information with a corporate Big Brother. Google has been getting a bit of a free ride so far, and it is about time a few more people noticed.

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