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Comment Atomic Games re-traumatizes every survivor (Score 1) 644

I am angry. Any sane person who has lived with the horror of deadly violence knows that it cannot become entertainment. The fact that it is based on real events makes it intolerable as a game. Peter Tamte's boasts about it have re-traumatized hundreds of thousands of survivors, at a time when violence is on the rise in our nation.

Nick Arnett, grief counselor with the Bay Area Critical Incident Stress Management Team and extended family of a Marine killed in action in Fallujah 11/10/2004.

Privacy

Should Job Seekers Tell Employers To Quit Snooping? 681

onehitwonder writes in with a CIO opinion piece arguing that potential employees need to stand up to employers who snoop the Web for insights into their after-work activities, often disqualifying them as a result. "Employers are increasingly trolling the web for information about prospective employees that they can use in their hiring decisions. Consequently, career experts advise job seekers to not post any photos, opinions or information on blogs and social networking websites (like Slashdot) that a potential employer might find remotely off-putting. Instead of cautioning job seekers to censor their activity online, we job seekers and defenders of our civil liberties should tell employers to stop snooping and to stop judging our behavior outside of work, writes CIO.com Senior Online Editor Meridith Levinson. By basing professional hiring decisions on candidates' personal lives and beliefs, employers are effectively legislating people's behavior, and they're creating an online environment where people can't express their true beliefs, state their unvarnished opinions, be themselves, and that runs contrary to the free, communal ethos of the Web. Employers that exploit the Web to snoop into and judge people's personal lives infringe on everyone's privacy, and their actions verge on discrimination."

Comment Owned or operated? (Score 1) 1485

I *think* the first computer I owned was an NEC PC-8201A... and I still have two of them. I mentioned something about it once at a lunch with Bill Gates, who was all smiles talking about how it had the best implementation of BASIC ever. Later, I asked one of the original MS employees what the deal was about that. He said it was probably the last piece of code that Bill actually worked directly on. I haven't seen Bill for years, but if our paths cross again and I want to make him smile, I guess I know how.

The first computer I ever used was on the top floor of Scaife Hall at Carnegie Tech -- now CMU. It was a mainframe, IBM, if I recall correctly. It was one of the university's five computers at that original center. I was part of a research project to see if kids could use computers, a mystery back then (I was 11). We learned some interactive system and later Algol on it.

Comment Where'd you get the bike? (Score 1, Redundant) 449

Two engineering students were walking across campus when one said, "Where did you get such a great bike?"

The second engineer replied, "Well, I was walking along yesterday minding my own business when a beautiful woman rode up on this bike. She threw the bike to the ground, took off all her clothes and said, 'Take what you want.'."

The first engineer nodded approvingly, "Good choice; the clothes probably wouldn't have fit."

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