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Comment phone+computer = remote (Score 1) 207

After 22 years fully remote, I've come to firmly "believe" (in the CEO's subjective language) that remote work is suited for any job where the work is done on the computer and phone. He has his experiences, and i have mine:

1. Remote worker retention is higher as it makes tolerable what would be in-office deal-breakers: frozen raises, working through off hours, unpleasant (or even abusive) co-workers, illness ranging from colds to children at home to cancer.

2. In computer-and-phone jobs--which I would wager is most of the workforce for these CEOs, as well as this audience--we *still* would meet on-screen, since the days of Netmeeting. The only people who can read the "big" monitor in the conference room are sitting at that end of the table.

3. In-person interaction is not what this CEO or any other is paying you for--unless it's to see them. Senior executives really, really don't like pontificating to an empty auditorium.

4. One dishonest VP caught remote "working" from the golf course can spoil the gig for hundreds of diligent remote workers.

5. If you're 300 miles away and paid accordingly, remote work is anathema. If you're halfway around the globe in a sweatshop call center, remote work is just fine.

Comment Re:how are these links broken in the first place? (Score 2) 40

Link rot is all to familiar to me. Local newspapers, such as nola.com in New Orleans, are impossible to search because of site updates that wiped out the entire history.

I had not realized there were nine million such links on Wikipedia, as they tend to mind such matters more closely than the commercial media companies. (An exception are the NYT and Washington Post, who in my experience do pretty well in keeping old links working or at least redirected to the same content).

I donate to archive.org partly because they're they only folks who seem to understand that web content with no archive is as ephemeral as a sand drawing on a beach. FIfteen years ago I put up some photos on angelfire that I forgot about but later wanted to see. Voila, here it is on the Wayback machine.

  In 10,000 years, our current era may be less well documented than the Bronze Age.

Comment how are these links broken in the first place? (Score 1) 40

How are these 9 million links broken in the first place?

Wikipedia has a useful and seemingly complete archive of every version and edit for every article. I'm curious how these broken links originate, and how they differ from those that are available in the WIkipedia Revision History.

Comment Interesting parallel to IoT inside my house (Score 1) 148

The problems faced by the farmers with closed access proprietary technology remind me of the brick wall I ran into trying to find a smart outlet to control a simple 115V hot water recirculation pump.

Every smart device seems to need to talk to to a central plant somewhere to gain authorization. I don't want to speak to Alexa or Google Assistant to control the pump. (I cannot bear the idea of Experian selling logs of my hot-water-recirculation habits to the highest bidder.) All I want is an internal web interface on my internal network similar to what my 15 year old Brother printer gives me, with SSH keys that I manage.

There are some limited open source options that require physically modding some existing smart plugs, but nothing that I could find off the shelf allowed me to be in total control of the smart plug in my environment as I manage it. I don't mind soldering up a fine mess on 5V logic circuits, but I draw the line at hand-soldering boards that carry line voltage. A failed connection could burn down the house. I gave up on the project.

That's not an option for a farmer who relies on a tractor to cash in a crop. In just trying to get a stupid smart plug to work within my infrastructure, I got a taste of what farmers must go through with tractors that go on strike unless they can call home or receive the services of a tech just to restart. What a nightmare.

Comment Touch capability (Score 2) 489

Part of the huge white-space and big button modern trend comes from the advent of touch screens. Remember Windows 8 and how it practically forced users into touch with gestures and "charm zones"?

I appreciate some of these new features. For example, in Siebel's database Open UI, buttons and selection targets are now easier to hit. The downside is less information in the same screen space. (Also, the new interface does not require IE and ActiveX, a positive but not related to the UI's functionality).

I suspect that the concept that touch would completely replace dedicated controls went a little far. Honda's bringing back the volume knob. I expect some of these design elements to be, ahem, "dialed back" as time passes.

Comment get rid of several top publications? (Score 1) 157

" will also get rid of several top publications, including the New York Times and CNN"

Great. The two organizations, flawed as they may be, that actually have reporters who work on location are the ones getting the boot? Who's left, Drudge, Red State, Michael Moore, Greenpeace?

Thanks, Facebook, but I'll personally be trending toward birthday parties and friends' gigs. Oh, and the cats, the never-ending supply of cats.

Comment Working on the External Tank, the big brown part (Score 1) 320

I watched live on NASA's internal tv network, surrounded by co-workers, all of us part of the Shuttle Program.

We built the tanks and shipped them by barge to the Cape for launch. I was recently graduated mechanical engineer working on robotic welding processes for the Shuttle External Tank. I watched as our pride and joy blew the Shuttle and its crew to pieces. (The External Tank is the piece that actually blew up. The starboard SRB caused the anomaly, and the two boosters continued off on their own rogue paths until the range safety officer destroyed them by command).

NASA had live TV monitors in the office corridors and on the plant floor at the Michoud Assembly Facility, where the tanks (and before that, the Saturn V) were manufactured. At launch time, employees were encouraged to watch their handiwork make the nine minute ascent before it was tossed away for destructive reentry over the Indian Ocean. We were on an ambitious plan to reach 60 tanks per year, corresponding to more than one Shuttle flight per week. After over twenty missions, launches were becoming routine and we were less compelled to see every one. I had already missed a few, but on this particular morning the skies that day over Michoud were crisp, cold, and crystal clear. I knew same air mass was over the Cape. That meant the television optics would be clearer than usual. With this unusual weather in mind, I planned to watch the launch.

General NASA and company policy encouraged employees to take a break and watch launches, but I unfortunately had a new boss who had come from some other non-NASA Martin division and he saw no point in the watching launch video. He kept us sitting around his office in a meeting as the launch started. When I asked if we could be excused to watch, he huffed and griped, but finally relented and agreed to pause our meeting.

I walked down the hall and could see that the launch vehicle had already lifted off and was well into its ascent. I came up upon the cluster fellow employees watching the monitor just as the vehicle trajectory was somewhere near or just after Max Q (maximum aerodynamic pressure, always a moment of concern for the External Tank team).

As I had expected, we had an unusually clear view of the vehicle. A flare of vapor emerged briefly--interesting, as I'd never seen that. Suddenly the image was all smoke and fire. I said "wow, what a spectacular SRB sep, it's not usually that clear." One of my co-workers said quietly "I think we're a little early on that". As he was speaking, the NASA camera pulled back. The SRBs were spiraling off on their own. Debris was raining down over the Atlantic. The audio was momentarily silent and then the announcer said "obviously a major malfunction". I can still hear that in my head as though it happened yesterday.

We stood there in shock for about ten minutes, watching the smoke trails with the cameras zooming in and out as the camera operator tried in vain to find the orbiter. Some employees began crying. A few minutes more and the screen cut to black abruptly, without comment. I walked back to my work area. My new boss said snarkily, "Once you're finished grieving, we can get back to work." To this day, that remains the coldest thing anyone ever said to me at a job. Many employees left at mid-day. In the afternoon, our division president appeared on the monitors looking forlorn. He cautioned about speculating or talking to the press. At day's end I passed out of the gate where local news crews were jockeying with microphones, hoping one of us would chat. I went home to flip between CNN and the big news channels, the 1986 equivalent of Google News and Twitter.

A "tiger team" was immediately convened and two train car loads of manufacturing records were brought in for forensics. A tank failure was the suspected culprit, so every weld x-ray and component flight certification would need to be reexamined. It seemed obvious the tank had exploded, and indeed the failure of the hydrogen tank and the collapse of the O2 forward ogive and intertank were the source of the combustion everyone saw on television. Within a couple of days, the blowtorch plume from the SRB leak was tentatively identified as the proximate cause of the tank's failure, and the investigation shifted its spotlight to Morton Thiokol. That still meant bad news for our operations, as fewer tanks meant less funding and fewer jobs. Ironically the maker of the bad part was awarded--by necessity--extra money to redesign and test the modified boosters.

At Michoud, we did get back to work, but on different projects. Instead of increasing our manufacturing capacity, we had to figure out how to store these tanks for months or years before launch. Would they need to be purged with nitrogen? Would the welds corrode over time? Who had capacity to house spare tanks, or could they sit out in the weather for years? None of that had been tested. The tanks were intended to be consumed within months of launch, and it was obvious there would be no more launches for at least that long. As far as robotic welding, that and all the other projects aimed at increased capacity ended. The workforce shrank from 4000+ to less than 2000.

Incidentally, in the 1970s Thiokol won the contract to build the SRBs over a bid from Aerojet. Aerojet had proposed to build boosters on the Mississippi coast near the NSTL (the propulsion test lab, now the Stennis Space Center). They would ship the boosters to Florida via barge, the same way the Saturn V and External Tanks were delivered. Because they would be built in Utah, Thiokol's design would require segmenting the SRBs into smaller pieces suitable for rail or truck shipment. That in turn would require using joints, and it was at one of these joints that a faulty (or just brittle from cold) O-ring would eventually down the Challenger. NASA had reservations about the segmented design for this very reason, but with the help of the Utah Congressional delegation, Thiokol ultimately won, O-rings and all.

Michoud is part of the Marshall Space Flight Center, which was responsible for the Shuttle's propulsion elements. I was in Huntsville a few weeks after the disaster when a friend who worked at Thiokol told me that quiet pressure had been on to get the bird in orbit with the teacher on board in time for Reagan's State of the Union speech, scheduled that same night. I thought this was interesting but gave it little thought until similar reports emerged in the news. Thiokol senior leadership must have been torn between angering senior White House leadership, possibly even Ronald Reagan himself, and heeding the maybe-it's-too-cold cautionary holds coming from rank-and-file engineers with first-hand knowledge of the systems. Mahogany Row always seems to win in these situations. During the investigation that followed, Richard Feynman put forward the definitive last word on this using only a section of O-ring and a glass of ice water.

On an earlier stint in Huntsville, I met Christa McAuliffe when she came through as part of a group of teacher-in-space candidates on a NASA tour. I don't remember Ms. McAuliffe specifically, but I can say that the whole group of candidates were among the sharpest, brightest, and most attentive people I have ever met. I gave a demo and the Q and A afterward was as fascinating for me as it seemed to be for them.

And that's where I was--personally, in my career, and in relation to the Shuttle--on this day thirty years ago.

Submission + - Breaking: ITER fusion project to take at least 6 years longer than planned (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: The multibillion dollar ITER fusion project under construction in France will take at least an additional 6 years to complete, compared with the current schedule, a meeting of the governing council was told this week. ITER management has also asked the seven international partners which are backing the project for additional funding to finish the job.
Under recent estimates, ITER was expected to cost some $13 billion and not begin operations until 2019. The new start date would be 2025.

Submission + - NASA selects universities to develop humanoid robot astronauts (examiner.com)

MarkWhittington writes: NASA announced that it is sending copies of its R5 Valkyrie humanoid robot to two universities for software upgrades and other research and development. The effort is part of a continuing project to develop cybernetic astronauts that will assist human astronauts in exploring other worlds. The idea is that robot astronauts would initially scout potentially hazardous environments, say on Mars, and then actively collaborate with their human counterparts in exploration. NASA is paying each university chosen $250,000 per year for two years to perform the R&D. The university researchers will have access to NASA expertise and facilities to perform the upgrades.
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Man Takes Up Internal Farming 136

RockDoctor writes "'A Massachusetts man who was rushed to hospital with a collapsed lung came home with an unusual diagnosis: a pea plant was growing in his lung.' Just that summary should tell you enough to work out most of the rest of the details, but it does raise a number of questions unaddressed by the article: How did the pea roots deal with the patient's immune system? What would have happened if the situation had continued un-treated? I bet the guy has a career awaiting him in PR for a pea-growing company."

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