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Comment Wages of Laziness (Score 1) 145

When my biz ancient Deb 12 laptop died -- and, interestingly, took its SSD with it -- I had a Win 10 machine I used for scanning around and used it. 11? Not with all I'm hearing, so I'll probably do the modern "you are not on the machine you are supposed to be" dance with the biz sites. My own fault but worth it. Scanning? Got Vuescan v6 years ago but wanted a driver, not to read a literal book of features to use it effectively. Dug out my registration and updated to 9 the other day and I think after nearly a quarter century I might be an honest 100% linux at home.

Comment How it used to be (Score 1) 234

I was at a 4-year-and-offering-a-masters-in-ed level public college (before tech schools were renamed community colleges and colleges were renamed universities in the US -- so I can proudly state that college is now a "university") during '70-'72. This was when public tuition was about $7 a credit and my $1.50/hour summer job could handle a year's tuition and fees easily. That was in part because our society supported higher education with significant subsidies.

With major social investment comes individual responsibility. Spring of '71 the President of that college released a letter to be posted on bulletin boards campus wide that would be unimaginable today. He congratulated faculty on maintaining an overall freshman grade average of 2.1. PRAISED faculty for keeping A's to F's and B's to D's not far off statistical variance in a normal curve. I suspect part of the reason it was limited to freshman statistics was the use of so-called "weed out" courses. Within the rigueur of that normal distribution math majors, for example, better be able to handle their freshman year of calc -- with that shock awakening applied mutatis mutandis throughout academic areas. If they could not, time to look to a trade so the student didn't waste time and society didn't waste money.

I seem to remember it was Ronald Reagan explicitly stating that "higher education should be run like a business". You know, as part of the glorious long march to Neoliberal privatization that has made every other aspect of American life so wonderful. If higher education becomes a business, that makes students customers. Doesn't it? And isn't the customer always right? And aren't happy customers good business? So here we are. University football coaches are the highest paid public employees in many states, and we have happy customers with their A's.

And what of society?

Comment Re:Definnitely killed my motivation (Score 1) 184

I'm 50, in UI, and feeling similar.
I don't mind agile per se (but it's difficult to come in on a very established project - so many decisions were made, and you don't even have the full context to judge them properly. It's like learning a new language, basic fluency is hard won)

What I do mind is how much flavor of the month there has been - a lot of complexity and difficulty in following code path for very theoretical gains . Any redux project smells so much like 2019, it's sad.

Comment Re:FB is not like Seinfeld (Score 1) 8

So like 20+ years ago, Wired declared "free wins".
I think people - after being nickel and literally dimed by 10-cents-per-SMS - were rightfully shy of "pay per transaction", because thy weren't sure what their usage would look like and that shit adds up.

So two decades later we have this sad fork in the road, two main paths:
* "free", but shitty with ads or other ways they figured out how to commoditize your attention
* subscription, where they can keep collecting rent no matter how little you use it.
( with "pay per usage" the third way less traveled)

Comment Seemed obvious (Score 1) 172

Is it the year of the linux desktop? No, because there are Windows computers on every neighborhood street. Still the entropy of monopoly.
Is it the year of hydrogen? No, because there are power lines on every neighborhood street. Still the entropy of monopoly.
Charge against that windmill, Don...
I could _almost_ be tempted to believe hydrogen could become something for aircraft where it could be produced at the same airports where it is fueled without the need for a national infrastructure network.

You know, if it can be proved to pack enough energy for genuinely practical aircraft. Back to Zeppelins?

Comment During that Mad Men vs. Hippie transition.... (Score 1) 60

Which is the executive age market I assume they are aiming this corn at there were still people who actually had been formally taught how to type so I was amused to see what looked like the Microsoft "split hand" keyboard. It might, might not, have been a good idea -- if it hadn't broken training and forced people to relearn their muscle memory by putting three numbers on one index finger and one number on the other instead of 2 and 2. Had a guy try to pawn one off on me. "Only $5! Good deal!"

Comment Re:No way... (Score 4, Interesting) 147

Been there. Tried putting a couple senior households on linux. It is a trail of tears. It might _seem_ like a linux desktop is a small jump from a Windows desktop to those of us who have been using linux for perhaps decades at this point because "linux X works almost like Windows X with these small differences...". It is not. And you have volunteered yourself as their daily sysadmin answering questions you cannot believe are so trivial. You can save the technical discussion of OSes for when they download that free game and they want you to make it work. If they are successful at using email, Facebook or whatever they will probably ask their friends about how to do something on the computer and it will never really be the same as their friends and so begins descent down the path of frustration, giving up, and probably resentment toward you for talking them into it. I have taken a vow of abstinence from what would seems like this logical idea.

Comment Re:BS (Score 1) 134

Aw, cut him some slack. I'm of the era and had an internal Zip at home, a parallel Zip at work and a Jaz at home and I never remember a 750 meg Zip either. If anything, it probably shows the degree to which everybody had moved on by the time 750s came out, but, OK, search has a picture of when they were on Amazon so I guess somebody bought a couple and this wasn't a confusion with the Jaz.

Comment perpetual motion never dies (Score 1) 114

"Heirloom removes that CO2 by heating the limestone into a powder and stores the extracted CO2 underground. The remaining powder is then thirsty for more CO2." Unless the heating is "green"? In which case, why not just concentrate on expanding green energy that much faster instead of solving the problem that is continuing?

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