Submission + - $10K Ethernet Cable Claims Audio Fidelity, If You're Stupid Enough To Buy It (hothardware.com)
Submission + - The 'Cool Brick' Can Cool Off an Entire Room Using Nothing But Water (3dprint.com) 1
Submission + - DEA Cameras Tracking Hundreds of Millions of Car Journeys Across the US (itworld.com)
Submission + - Single Pixel Camera Takes Images Through Breast Tissue 1
Submission + - Study Finds Link Between Artificial Sweeteners and Glucose Intolerance
Comment Re:Here you go... (Score 1) 115
Shameless plug..... http://robot-army.com/ A fun to build Dancing Delta Robot Kit
Submission + - Emails Show Feds Asking Florida Cops to Deceive Judges (wired.com) 1
Submission + - Age discrimination in the tech industry
It’s a widely accepted reality within the technology industry that youth rules. But at least part of the extreme age imbalance can be traced back to advertisements for open positions that government regulators say may illegally discriminate against older applicants. Many tech companies post openings exclusively for new or recent college graduates, a pool of candidates that is overwhelmingly in its early twenties.
...
“In our view, it’s illegal,” Raymond Peeler, senior attorney advisor at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency that enforces workplace discrimination laws said about the use of “new grad” and “recent grad” in job notices. “We think it deters older applicants from applying.”
Am I the only one who thinks that much of the quality control and failed projects in the tech industry can be attributed to age discrimination?
Submission + - Excel error causes austerity
The supporting website for the book "This time it is different" has lots of financial information if a reader might want to replicate some of the results.
Comment Same here.... (Score 1) 2
Just like when Digg went feral, I'm increasingly annoyed by Slashdot changes on the iPad. The new hovering advertisements are the last straw for me. I am starting to look for a new source for my nerd news or at least something that scrapes Slashdot and presents it to me in something more palatable.
Comment Homebrew Raid (Score 1) 371
I struggled with this problem too and ended up building a homebrew raid using OpenSolaris and a large CoolerMaster case full of drives. The ZFS filesystem has been bullet proof on this box since 2005. I ripped all my DVDs to ISO format so that I could preserve the DVD menus on those discs. The box sits on my network and is shared via NFS and Samba.
To play back all those movies on my TV, I put my older Mac Mini on it and have it boot up into a default user and start VLC right away. I use VLC Remote on the ipad to access the library that is NFS mounted on the Mac Mini.
The overall experience has been great! Using the iPad, I can browse hundreds of ISO images, select one and it plays within a few seconds.
The iPad remote solution was the final peice to this puzzle as I was previously using a mouse and keyboard to navigate the movies.
Comment Re:DeVry was no cake-walk. (Score 1) 580
As a DeVRY grad (EET) I have to agree. Some of the best engineers I ever met came from DeVRY. Next time you look at at a micro controller from Microchip or a SPARC processor from Sun/Oracle, you can be 100% sure that a DeVRY grad had something to do with the architecture.
Also, I've met my share of mediocre engineers from MIT, Brown, Carnegie-Mellon and the like. It's more about what you do with your degree than the degree itself.
Comment NetScape-on-a-stick! (Score 1) 120
We looked at doing this at Sun about 15 years ago. We called it "Netscape on a stick". Never really panned out but we had SunOS-on-a-stick that booted rather quickly off a 80MB PCMCIA drive in a tablet prototype we had developed. Yes, Sun had a working tablet in 1995.