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Comment missing the point (Score 1) 108

As a growth mindset person with an MBA...looks like they hired an MBA with a fixed mindset. Probably a management consultant.

Synology has so many opportunities to build a subscription product people would just love. Like: create a two-sided marketplace for us nerds to do the stuff we love and make our lives better. Move stuff from prem to non prem. People would pay a lot for that. Could disrupt AWS!

I don't really want to work for Synology, but now kinda do just to make you happy.

Comment Re:Object lesson from the stock market (Score 1) 198

Cancer is a tough disease and, sometimes, the treatments are rougher on the patient than the cure. Chemotherapy impairs your ability to think coherently. You're like the dog in the movie "Up!" ('Next quarter we'll release the Uber Widget to prepare out markets for... SQUIRREL!!!'), I don't know if Steve Jobs availed himself of chemotherapy toward the end, but you can rest assured that he laid out his vision for the management team before he shuffled off this mortal coil; he was too much of a control freak (in the great sense) not to.

Comment Some Simple Rules (Score 1) 1127

I worked at Apple as a contractor and as an employee for thirteen years, and it was--hands-down--THE BEST at administering diversity. And I say that as one of the few black people who worked there. The top-to-bottom attitude that over-arched everything was that if you're not thinking about our customers, you aren't doing your job. Management decided that it wanted a diverse, welcoming, vibrant workplace and put policies in place that made the goal attainable. If you were there, it was because you had something to contribute and sexuality, gender, race, religion, and physical or emotional challenges were secondary to your ability to get the job done the way Apple's customers expected it to be done. The policy was enforced strictly. Orientation and performance review targets reinforced the culture. As with the secrecy policy after Steve Jobs's return, all an employee had to do was stick with the guidelines, and they could expect an exciting, fulfilling experience.

That's not to say that things at Apple were perfect. One manager decided to release a pictorial chart of his organization. His diversity problems were apparent to everyone but him. Workplace romances are not unheard of. Still, the things I learned from the experience of working at Apple have stood me in good stead.

  Your co-worker as a fellow human being ALWAYS comes first;
  If you're thinking about anything other than doing your job while you're at work, you might be setting yourself up for a fall;
  Don't do anything that might distract your co-workers from achieving their goals and objectives.

Comment Re:33,500 rows? 70x (Score 1) 168

Being the one that wrote the code: I'm with you too (in a way...)
The thing is that prior to this release, applications that were using SQL joins (involving more than 2 tables) where ruled OUT:
Now a lot of more applications *can* use MySQL Cluster.

That is the new feature...but 70x is what's in the press release.

(NOTE: mysql cluster is a different prodcut from mysql server)

Comment Re:33,500 rows? (Score 1) 168

ok...so here is confusion....the press release mentions 2 distictly different things.
1) upto 70x faster joins
        this did not use the 100 byte records,
        this did use ordinary ethernet
2) 1B QPM
        this used 100 bytes records
        this used infiniband
        this use single row transactions (NoSQL type benchmark)

Comment Re:observing a lack is not proof (Score 5, Informative) 645

I grew up in Silicon Valley. I will be 59 at the end of this month. I'm an African-American male who has worked his way up in the tech industry from a computer operator to the owner/operator of his own tech consulting firm and "beyond"...

The industry here is the closest thing to a meritocracy I've ever experienced. If you're an entrepreneur worth exploiting here, you will be exploited. Anyone with a good idea can get a hearing as long as they know how to present it to the right people in the right way. I can honestly say that the stakes here are too high for racism to interfere.

My experience was that I was competing against kids whose parents were among the pioneers in the industry. Most black kids were excluded from college by economic circumstance as well as bias when I was growing up. Kids whose parents worked for nascent enterprises like Intel and HP and Fairchild and Apple had--and still have--a leg up on everyone else. The children of BSEE's have more of a chance to become BSEE's than the children of carpenters or dock workers. That's just the way of the world. But I had a knack for the industry, and I got in on merit... and luck.

My son is one of the few kids in our area--black or white--who had an internet connection in his home by the late-eighties. He was one of the few kids in our neighborhood who had a personal computer at his disposal. He didn't nerd out, but he had the opportunity if he'd wanted to pursue it. That's the biggest factor in this; if your parents are nerdy, it's likely you'll be nerdy, too. The lack of access to college among Black Americans before the Civil Rights Movement was probably the single most formidable impediment to the fostering of significant numbers of Black Tech Entrepreneurs. If your parents don't know Avogadro from an avocado, it's unlikely you will either--no matter what color you are.

The current political attitude toward funding education makes it likely that things will stay that way unless people demand change.

Comment Re:They're not the only ones... (Score 1) 272

Your experience with the AirPort base station is unique, AFAIK. However, your charge that the "only times Apple admit(ted) something outright" is flat-out false. The iBook G3 logic board, certain iMac power supplies, and iMac/eMac problems directly analogous to the Dell situation were all acknowledged and addressed aggressively by Apple.

I've been an Apple Authorized Service provider since 2005. Apple had the "capacitor plague" problem with certain iMac and eMac models. Apple acknowledged the problem, and customers were authorized to come to me for a free repair for as long as three years after date-of-purchase if the warranty had run out. Those repairs constituted a good part of my work from 2005 through the middle of 2008. Every customer--especially the ones out-of-warranty, were grateful. I made a point of telling them that the problem wasn't restricted to Apple machines, and I directed them to the Wikipedia entry on "capacitor plague."

I was on the AirPort team from 1999-2001. I heard not one word about thermal problems with graphite base stations. I did the build acceptance and functional testing on AirPort in the first version of Mac OS X. I also performed automated and manual usability testing with dial-up, my own Earthlink account, and a Graphite base station. That base station worked constantly--day and night--for over a year. It was still working when I left.

Comment The new designs use the old waste (Score 5, Interesting) 415

Now, if we could only reprocess the damn fuel we'd have a clean method of power generation with very little overall waste for a couple hundred years at least.

The beauty of some of the new reactor designs is that they use old radioactive waste as their fuel source. By some people's estimates we have about two centuries worth of fuel for the energy needs of the entire United States just in our existing stockpiles of nuclear waste. Not only would we not have to mine additional fuel, we would be significantly reducing the amount of waste that we need to store.

Here's a TED talk that covers the subject:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaF-fq2Zn7I

By the end of life of these new reactors, solar should be cheap, efficient and plentiful.

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