Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment not meant to displace programmers (Score 1) 154

I am one of the these "citizen developers" who use no-code / low-code tools. I think you are missing the point if you believe these tools are meant to replace proper developers. These tools are to supplement what developers do. It also takes some of the knucklehead stuff off the plate of the developers so they can focus on more mission critical projects. In the past year, I have created about 8 of these "apps." They have all replaced paper, Excel, and e-mail. I think any programmer would be happy to see the reliance on those things to get business done go down. The tools all come with some basic, even if you would consider the bar low, functionality for security, logging, UI, and error handling - none of which exist in the Excel, Access, or other shadow "systems" in use today. There is room for everyone at the table.

Comment Re: Important, niche positions (Score 2) 181

The H-1B is in the hands of the foreign national today. They can move to any company that is willing to transfer the visa. Transferring a visa is actually the easiest action one can take. Granted, as you get to certain phases or near certain deadlines, you may not want to such as during the PERM process. Another one is you would want to stay put in the first 180 days after the green card process has started. Other than that though, foreign nationals are free to move to other employers.

Comment It isn't cheaper (Score 1) 181

I see a lot of comments from you saying that having H-1Bs is cheaper. I know from first hand experience that it isn't. We have to pay the same wages as non-foreign nationals in the same position. In addition, we have the shoulder the legal fees which can not be passed on to our recouped from the employee. The base wage is determined by a federal survey of the job classification that ensures the wages are fair. If as a business owner, I mess up any of that, all of my foreign nationals can be sent out of the country immediately. It is incredibly expensive to have a H-1Bs on staff, but they often bring something I cannot get in my geographic area - a Master's degree in Computer Science. Now, if you want to go after firms that abuse the L-1 visa, a supposed intra-company "short-term" visa, then please do. I would also be happy to see law firms that help file fraudulent paperwork be investigated. For those of us who are trying to deliver high quality software, increase the processing capacity and stop saddling me with 10+ years of legal and "premium processing" fees.

Comment Re:Windows users? (Score 3, Informative) 421

Windows Live Mesh
https://www.mesh.com/

"With Live Mesh, you can synchronize files with all of your devices, so you always have the latest versions handy. Access your files from any device or from the web, easily share them with others, and get notified whenever someone changes a file.

Working on one computer, but need a program from another? No problem. Use Live Mesh to connect to your other computer and access its desktop as if you were sitting right in front of it. "

Comment Re:Pavement (Score 1) 712

I live in one of those high traffic areas is the reason I mentioned the rubber.

You are correct though, a lot of the color does come from the aggregate rock used. Aggregate can be anywhere from pure white to black. Obviously, it is cheaper to use what is close by.

Here is some research on the topic that might be of interest.

http://www.graniterock.com/pdf/technical_reports/cool1_technical_report.pdf

Comment Re:White asphalt? (Score 2, Informative) 712

Sort of. It's called "whitetopping." You add about a layer of concrete on top of the asphalt during a maintenance or repair project. Advances in the 1990s improved the ultra-thin whitetopping (UTW) where the layer isn't required to be so thick.

http://www.whitetopping.com/faq.asp

Alternatively, you can put additives such as limestone into the asphalt mix to help lighten the color.

Comment Re:Pavement (Score 5, Informative) 712

Believe it or not, there is a lot of research going into creating lighter colored surfaces for roads. One of the advantages is that it takes less light (and thus energy) to light up the surface at night. This also decreases the amount of "light pollution" you would have around town. There are other advantages to improving water quality and decreasing noise.

http://www.eoearth.org/article/Cool_paving

However, one of the current hangups is how to keep them light? Unless we can also change the rubber in the tires to be lighter color as well, the road surfaces just end up black again in high traffic areas like California.

Comment Re:Am I missing something? (Score 1) 407

Yes, you are missing something, but it isn't your fault. The was the wrong article to point to from the Washington Post. The better story was here:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/21/AR2009012104249.html

Their point was that the technology that staffers encountered when they arrived at the White House was really antiquated compared to what they were used to on the campaign trail. No laptops, desktops had software that was several versions behind, limited phone lines and lines that were pointing to the wrong extension, etc.

"If the Obama campaign represented a sleek, new iPhone kind of future, the first day of the Obama administration looked more like the rotary-dial past.

Two years after launching the most technologically savvy presidential campaign in history, Obama officials ran smack into the constraints of the federal bureaucracy yesterday, encountering a jumble of disconnected phone lines, old computer software, and security regulations forbidding outside e-mail accounts.

What does that mean in 21st-century terms? No Facebook to communicate with supporters. No outside e-mail log-ins. No instant messaging. Hard adjustments for a staff that helped sweep Obama to power through, among other things, relentless online social networking.

"It is kind of like going from an Xbox to an Atari," Obama spokesman Bill Burton said of his new digs.

In many ways, the move into the White House resembled a first day at school: Advisers wandered the halls, looking for their offices. Aides spent hours in orientation, learning such things as government ethics rules as well as how their paychecks will be delivered. And everyone filled out a seemingly endless pile of paperwork.

There were plenty of first-day glitches, too, as calls to many lines in the West Wing were met with a busy signal all morning and those to the main White House switchboard were greeted by a recording, redirecting callers to the presidential Web site. A number of reporters were also shut out of the White House because of lost security clearance lists.

By late evening, the vaunted new White House Web site did not offer any updated posts about President Obama's busy first day on the job, which included an inaugural prayer service, an open house with the public, and meetings with his economic and national security teams.

Nor did the site reflect the transparency Obama promised to deliver. "The President has not yet issued any executive orders," it stated hours after Obama issued executive orders to tighten ethics rules, enhance Freedom of Information Act rules and freeze the salaries of White House officials who earn more than $100,000.

The site was updated for the first time last night, when information on the executive orders was added. But there were still no pool reports or blog entries.

No one could quite explain the problem -- but they swore it would be fixed.

One member of the White House new-media team came to work on Tuesday, right after the swearing-in ceremony, only to discover that it was impossible to know which programs could be updated, or even which computers could be used for which purposes. The team members, accustomed to working on Macintoshes, found computers outfitted with six-year-old versions of Microsoft software. Laptops were scarce, assigned to only a few people in the West Wing. The team was left struggling to put closed captions on online videos.

Senior advisers chafed at the new arrangements, which severely limit mobility -- partly by tradition but also for security reasons and to ensure that all official work is preserved under the Presidential Records Act.

"It is what it is," said a White House staff member, speaking on the condition of anonymity. "Nobody is being a blockade right now. It's just the system we need to go through."

The system has daunted past White House employees. David Almacy, who became President George W. Bush's Internet director in 2005, recalled having a week-long delay between his arrival at the White House and getting set up with a computer and a BlackBerry.

"The White House itself is an institution that transitions regardless of who the president is," he said. "The White House is not starting from scratch. Processes are already in place."

One White House official, who arrived breathless yesterday after being held up at the exterior gate, found he had no computer or telephone number. Recently called back from overseas duty, he ended up using his foreign cellphone.

Another White House official whose transition cellphone was disconnected left a message temporarily referring callers to his wife's phone.

Several people tried to route their e-mails through personal accounts.

But there were no missing letters from the computer keyboards, as Bush officials had complained of during their transition in 2001.

And officials in the press office were prepared: In addition to having their own cellphones, they set up Gmail accounts, with approval from the White House counsel, so they could send information in more than one way."

Slashdot Top Deals

The trouble with money is it costs too much!

Working...