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Comment WTF? (Score 5, Funny) 575

Windows 8.0 was installed on this machine, and it sucked immensely. Then a couple of months ago I got an upgrade to Windows 8.1 courtesy of Windows update, and it hardly sucked at all. Then, a couple of days ago I got my old Windows 8.1 upgraded to new Windows 8.1, and I know it is different because now apps have the big red "X" back in the right hand corner of the window and you can terminate them while they are running. Awesome! At this rate Windows 8.1 will turn into Windows XP around Labor Day. Maybe the boys will rediscover POP3 email at some point.

Comment Re:Java Scala (Score 3, Interesting) 109

I've been programming in Java since it first came out, and I never had any particular problems with it, other than the fact that it's rather verbose. I've been thinking there must be a way to accomplish the same thing without so much boilerplate code. Then I discovered Scala (which runs on the JVM and can easily integrate with existing Java libraries). Mind you there are some things about Scala that are kinda weird, like so much optional syntax and type inferencing makes it sometimes hard to read. But I've been finding it a joy for new code I write, almost Java-like but much less verbose, plus you get the functional programming capabilities that Java lacks. Some of the library code that's out there is hard to understand because of the nature of the syntax, but after you study it a bit, it's not too bad.

For those of us old enough to remember, Java is, in fact, the new COBOL. COBOL, like Java, was the language of choice for software engineers of a bygone era (the 1970's), and suffered from a similar verbosity, clumsy syntax, and prevalence of boiler-plate code (substitute copylibs for jars and you are halfway there). I wrote COBOL for a living for decades and never, ever, coded most of the mandatory code sections.

When I was engaged in my first enterprise level Java project (a JBoss app), I was amazed at the similarities between the two languages. Despite the fact that the syntax and structure are completely different we have the same slavish devotion to form and "correctness". Of course, most people alive and writing code now are completely unaware of this, having never encountered COBOL in an enterprise environment.

Not saying this is a bad thing. Just saying. COBOL was also more or less controlled by one company, and that company was IBM due to the IBM's complete dominance of the mainframe market.

Comment Re:Accenture? (Score 2) 284

I have never known Accenture to do anything successfully. I worked for a company a few years ago that brought Accenture in to take over running their IT. It was supposed to speed up issue resolution, make experts available, and be less expensive. No, no, and NO! Plus they used getting this as a way to get their foot in the door, and then got their people into everything they could. The company is slowly failing. I went out and celebrated the day I got my layoff.

Same here in spades. I was a contractor working at a client site which had entirely outsourced IT operations to Accenture. I found myself reporting to an Accenture PM who revealed one day that her previous experience had been at Hooters, as a waitress. We had meetings at which we discussed novel means of gouging the client. The entire workplace atmosphere was poisoned in a way I had never even dreamed to be possible. They failed to renew my contract and mentioned it as an aside the day before. I did the happy dance for about a week and got a real job.

Comment Re:Age or remote? (Score 1) 629

I second that exception. I graduated from a nothing university in 1974 with a major in "partying down". There was no computer science department. There were two math classes which were, in fact, Fortran and Cobol. I got into programming via a now non-existent profession called computer operations, which involved a lot of watching antique computers do stuff in the middle of the night. And I got into it because it paid well and was dead easy. Fast forward 37 years and I am still writing code. I can do a creditable job because I have constantly taken outrageous chances with my career and upgraded my skills by taking classes. Plus coding is one of those peculiar mental abilities which can be strengthened with constant use. I can outshine my younger, smarter, and much better looking colleagues with such arcane skills as Oracle SQL, ETL, Cognos, intimate knowledge of outdated technology, work ethic etc. etc. That being said, I have encountered another species of old guy at various contract sites. This is the guy who refers to SQL errors as ABENDS, who refuses to even look at any SQL statement which is not a simple join of two tables, who thinks the "gang of four" has something to do with China in the 60's, has not seen the inside of a classroom in decades and on and on like that. Employers are often not willing to take a chance on getting stuck with the latter sort, no matter how good they look on paper. And nobody will hire you to work exclusively from home. Period.

Comment Re:McAfee is for noobs (Score 1) 192

another little trick mcaffee has up it's sleeve is to periodically mine their credit card database and ding random people for bogus charges. i had this happen to me a few years ago after i had foolishly subscribed to their on-line virus checker. After it quit working and i could get no support for it, I unsubscribed. About 2 years later i got a charge on my credit card from the friendly folks at mcaffee. The credit card company would not remove the charge and advised me to contact mcaffee which, of course, is impossible. mcaffee has an inferior product which they market very aggressively to the endless supply of uninformed and unsuspecting windows users. windows will die eventually and so will mcaffee.
Image

Slashdot's Disagree Mail 100

Ernest Hemingway's micro-story, "For sale: baby shoes, never worn," is one of my favorite examples of how less is sometimes more. Sometimes a few sentences say it all; you don't always need a hundred pages to convey an idea. Most of the mail I get is brief and to the point. Others are just brief. To be honest, I appreciate the short, crazy email more than the long rants, and they can be just as funny. Read below for this week's mail snippets.
Sun Microsystems

Mainframe OpenSolaris Now Available 135

BBCWatcher writes "When Sun released Solaris to the open source community in the form of OpenSolaris, would anyone have guessed that it would soon wind up running on IBM System z mainframes? Amazingly, that milestone has now been achieved. Sine Nomine Associates is making its first release of OpenSolaris for System z available for free and public download. Source code is also available. OpenSolaris for System z requires a System z9 or z10 mainframe and z/VM, the hypervisor that's nearly universal to mainframe Linux installations. (The free, limited term z/VM Evaluation Edition is available for z10 machines.) Like Linux, OpenSolaris will run on reduced price IFL processors."
Encryption

New State Laws Could Make Encryption Widespread 155

New laws that took effect in Nevada on Oct. 1 and will kick in on Jan. 1 in Massachusetts may effectively mandate encryption for companies' hard drives, portable devices, and data transmissions. The laws will be binding on any organization that maintains personal information about residents of the two states. (Washington and Michigan are considering similar legislation.) Nevada's law deals mostly with transmitted information and Massachusetts's emphasizes stored information. Between them the two laws should put more of a dent into lax security practices than widespread laws requiring customer notification of data breaches have done. (Such laws are on the books in 40 states and by one estimate have reduced identity theft by 2%.) Here are a couple of legal takes on the impact of the new laws.
Transportation

Tesla Motors Shaken Up, Laying Off 491

tjstork writes "Tesla Motors, the darling of technorati for its high performance electric car, may be about to go belly up. Venture capital is cut off, layoffs are under way, and construction plans are being stretched out. Elon Musk has ousted the CEO and taken the reins, blaming the global credit crunch."

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