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Comment Re:An Engineer can be sued. (Score 1) 258

Look into the history of licensing of engineers. There were good reasons. It is also noteworthy that it was fought against. I am told that when licensing of engineers came into impact with civil service employees for armed forces at bases in Texas, the opposition complained it would slow things down, increase overhead and increase the expense of hiring and employing people. That all sounds right, and yet, still necessary.

Most people writing software do not need the heavy 'E' engineering, and money will flow even with the crappy software and lack of due diligence. Other applications of the art should be under the heavy 'E' and yet, are not. What would that look like? Standards of testing for QA? I would like to see that, especially when testing engineering software written for engineers to use while doing (non-software) engineering.

It is interesting to note laws protecting lawyers from being employed by directors or VP's that do not have a law JD themselves. Do PE's have this protection? Last I checked the answer is 'no'. The requirement that 'software engineers' be licensed might start that. It could start limiting who should be a DoE, CTO or VPoE. Looking back on what I've been through, that would be mostly good. A standard to operate by is a burden and a shield.

It looks like Texas department has just about given up on licensing software engineers. There are times when I despair for my software industry as hopelessly undisciplined, lacking in self-imposed standards, unorganized and bullied by non-engineering disciplines. I look at other industries: are there licensing requirements for firing up CRISPR and slinging some genes around? I think so, though not on a technologist level, mainly on a clinical level around human treatment and experiments. I hope I am wrong.

Comment Replicon Web Timesheet (Score 2, Informative) 45

We use Replicon Web Timesheet. It's a web-based solution, the website is usable by Firefox, IE, and Opera. The server runs on the Windows platorm, and uses a Microsoft or Oracle database. Of course, if you're not a Windows shop, this probably isn't the answer for you.

It works great for us. We've been using it for 7 years now, with 40-ish users. No problems, it's a great product. Entering time is easy, the reports are powerful, and it can integrate with other software. We integrated it very easily with our in-house account-management system.

If you don't want to run the software yourself, I see they have a hosted offering.

Comment Get the runes on the map right this time (Score 1) 152

In the hobbit animation the animators mixed up the two blocks of runes on the map. They had the normal direction runes portrayed as the moon runes and the moon runes as the normal ones. May sound small thing to complain about, but it has bugged me for years.

I remember editing altchar.sys and changing the ascii chars to runes on the Z-100 so my folks couldn't read over my shoulder. Had to make up some characters that didn't match and I had my own numbers, but I got pretty good at reading them. Had to be in order to use WordStar, PeachTree, Condor rdms, etc. in green monochrome runes.

-s
Biotech

Journal Journal: [Onion]Frito-Lay Angrily Introduces Line Of Healthy Snacks 1

From the front page of the Austin edition of The Onion, so you know it's quality news:

November 7, 2006 | Issue 42•45

PLANO, TX--With the recent trend of wholesome snack foods reaching "truly ridiculous proportions," Frito-Lay announced Monday that it would, against its better judgment, roll out a new line of healthy fruit-and-vegetable-based chips next February.
Frito Lay R

Androids at China's Robot Expo 80

eldavojohn writes "China's 2006 Robot Expo has wrapped up. Even though there is little information on it online, there has been much attention given to Zou Renti's android. It seems that everyone cool is making androids of themselves these days. There's a decent article on the state of androids in Japan but unfortunately, the concentration isn't on functionality, it's on fooling the humans the robot interacts with: "The key to a successful android, according to Dr. Ishiguro, is both very humanlike appearance and behaviour. One of his early android creations was cast from his then four-year-old daughter. While it looked like her, it had few actuators and its dull facial expressions and jerky movements proved so uncanny that the girl later refused to go to her father's lab because her scary robot double was lurking there." The latest robot he's built has 42 actuators, allowing it to wow many spectators at the expo. I wonder how much longer it will be before we see Blade-Runner-like cases on the evening news?"

Element 118 Created 244

BuzzSkyline writes, "The heaviest element yet, Element 118, has been created in Dubna, Russia by a collaboration of researchers from Russia's Joint Institute for Nuclear Research and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US. They created the new element by fusing together Californium (element 98) and Calcium atoms. The achievement comes five years after the scandal-plagued retraction of an earlier claim, which was based on fabricated data, that three atoms of element 118 had been produced at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. The achievement was reported on October 9 in the journal Physical Review C (subscription needed to read more than the abstract)."

iPod Killers For the Holidays 344

An anonymous reader writes, "MP3 Newswire has an excellent rundown of 29 new digital portables for the upcoming season. From the article: 'We have run the iPod Killers for Christmas/Summer series since 2004. In that time we [have] reported on 149 portable players and NOT one iPod killer from the bunch. That said, [this time] we may actually have a couple of genuine challengers to Apple. This holiday season will see Microsoft pump tens-of-millions of dollars to hawk their new Zune portable, and SanDisk's 8GB e280 flash unit is compelling high-end users. Both can realistically grab double-digit market share from the iPod... Whether they do or not waits to be seen.' The article also makes a good case as to why the Sony PSP should be included in market figures for digital media portables."
User Journal

Journal Journal: accomplishment 8

And I was beginning to think I'd never accomplish anything again. The month is only half over, and I'm totally kicking ass.
User Journal

Journal Journal: [NYT] Pirates of the Mediterranean 2

Pirates of the Mediterranean

By ROBERT HARRIS
Published: September 30, 2006

IN the autumn of 68 B.C. the world's only military superpower was dealt a profound psychological blow by a daring terrorist attack on its very heart. Rome's port at Ostia was set on fire, the consular war fleet destroyed, and two prominent senators, together with their bodyguards and staff, kidnapped.
User Journal

Journal Journal: more maternal wisdom 3

1955

A crusty old Sergeant Major found himself at a gala event hosted by a local Liberal arts college. There was no shortage of extremely young, idealistic ladies in attendance, one of whom approached the Sergeant Major for conversation.

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