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Comment 'Breakthrough'? (Score 1) 22

An xbox guy seems like a weird choice if you want 'breakthrough'. There is, absolutely, a lot of engineering that goes into a successful console; but it's heavily skewed toward the value engineering required to deliver consoles at prices below commodity PCs, and ideally console refreshes at lower prices or higher margins than launch consoles; with Microsoft perhaps the most orthodox and least successful at getting novelty to stick of any of the current players.

It's not like the original "we want a console, so we're going to get some aggressive quotes on PC parts and reuse NT and DirectX components" was a stupid plan or anything; worked just fine, minimized risks and wheel-reinventing(though at the cost of being harder to cost reduce); but was an exceptionally orthodox take on the problem.

The 360 was similarly very sensible; Microsoft basically snagged the 'normal' half of the weirder and more ambitious "Cell" processor project for a PPC CPU to pair with a lightly customized ATI GPU design; but, when it came to the only novel part of the setup it seems fair to say that customers were deeply uninterested in how MS thought 'Kinect' should be totally revolutionary; and MS was almost weirdly hostile, until fairly late, to the people who actually were excited about 'Kinect'; and then Apple bought the guys behind that one to go do facial recognition in cellphones. Nice that NT is still capable of moving between architectures; but largely a success in the areas that attempted to be unobtrusive and a failure in the ones where it attempted to be novel; with some, but not enough, deliberate avoidance of novelty.

The Xbox One followed in a somewhat similar vein; even more conservative CPU/GPU choice with a straight AMD x86; everyone was still indifferent or hostile to the kinect, except the enthusiasts of it that MS was indifferent or hostile to; and the HDMI input and 'will totally be the center of your connected living room' thing landed with a thud to the degree it was even clearly articulated and was more or less rapidly forgotten.

I'd absolutely see the value of console-type engineering expertise if you are hoping to do consumer hardware, since it's not going to matter how cool it is if it costs too much; but the history of 'xbox' as a brand and series of products seems like the opposite of 'breakthrough'. Whenever it was focused on doing straight transfer of MS game-related platform to a console context things went just fine; whenever somebody tried something cute or novel things went poorly.

Comment Luckily perverse incentives do not exist! (Score 2) 46

It sure is a good thing that the only reason we overload people is because we just don't know how to accurately measure load; and that nobody would be primarily interested in knowing which of the human resources the objective science machine says could use a bit more pressure.

Also, starting next pay period we're baselining compensation to full-load employees; with time below 100% paid at a correspondingly lower percentage. Any questions?

Comment Into rocks or sky, which is it? (Score 1) 7

Many insist most of Mars' atmosphere got absorbed into the ground, while others insist most ionized into space due to Mars' scant magnetic field.

Both sides have belittled me, so which is it? Let's have it out once and for all at the "Mars is Not OK Corral". Cue the Ennio Morricone music...

I'll pick the "roughly even" camp this time; the Evenists have been nicer to me.

Comment AI not to blame? (Score 2) 71

InfoWorld claims bad moderation, and not AI is killing SO.

I do agree SO's moderation is both condescending and frustrating. Any semi-viable alternative will quickly be explored to get away from SO. Their near monopoly has made them arrogant and complacent.

Low ranking questions and answers should be kept, but merely partially hidden by default, similar to Slashdot (assuming mostly on-topic). Sometimes good clues are in obscure replies.

Comment Re:Incentives, not regulation (Score 1) 96

Texas provide HUGE incentives through ERCOT's pricing structure -- they just make sure the buyers pay not the state. The batteries benefit from the fact that when they provide power during Texas' routine "power emergencies" they get to charge 30X the going rate for electricity. This is the same rate structure that allows Texas' crypto miners to turn off one hour a day and come out ahead on their electric bill for the day because they get a 30X credit for the hour they are off. Gouging the power consumers is a feature of the ERCOT grid for the power providers -- even the green providers.

Is "gouging" the right word? Residential consumers in TX pay half what those in CA do. And the massive price spikes generally only apply to wholesale buyers. I don't think most residential users even have the option of a variable-rate plan.

Comment Re:At some point (Score 1) 53

That was kind of the pattern that offshoring software took. It did initially save money, but the quality of the software was so bad that in the longer run it would have been cheaper to at least have part of it in-house.

I'm not saying outsourcing centers are inherently bad at coding, only that first, they don't have the necessary domain knowledge such that they don't find ways better align it with the domain; second, there's no incentive to make it long-term-friendly because they are paid to fix their own messes, whereas an in-house team mostly just gets a bigger workload and late nights if they make a mess. And third, hierarchical cultures are afraid to make helpful suggestions.

Penny-wise, pound foolish.

Comment Learn from music biz (Score 1) 87

They've had similar-song-matching and similar-style-preferences-matching algorithms for music for a few decades already. Can't video borrow such concepts from the music industry?

Or do intellectual-property issues screw that all up? Music has generally agreed to standardized compensation rules allowing almost any station/stream to play any song as long as compensation rules are followed. Video should get their act together and do the same. Stop thinking local and petty.

Comment Re:The real problem is college prices (Score 0) 209

Maybe the "lifestyle" aspect is a selling point for rich foreign families. If they wanted bargains they'd go to a middle-America State U. (Many do.)

Goddam xenophobic Orange Shit is ruining & embarrassing America. They very rarely eat cats, you putrid Tribble-haired hemorrhoid! STFU!

Thank You for letting me vent. I feel 15% better now.

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