Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Other Peoples' Money (Score 1) 195

Actually, it wasn't city money that Salinas gave to the company, it was Federal and State money. The city was merely the bad decision maker and transfer agent for unrestrained spending by the Feds and State of CA.

"Green Vehicles received $300,000 in federal Community Development Block Grant funding in 2009 and about $234,000 in city General Fund money last fall in advance of the company's planned receipt of a $2.05 million grant from the California Energy Commission.

Donohue added that he intends to ask the California Energy Commission to reimburse the city the $234,000 it advanced Green Vehicles in anticipation of the $2.05 million CEC award." http://www.thecalifornian.com/article/20110719/NEWS01/107190308/Green-Vehicles-experiment-crashes?odyssey=nav|head

Comment Re:The pictured Sun Conure (Score 1) 104

Our Sun Conure is 20 years old, and may outlive us. The one in the picture is not dancing, but rather stretching its wing. I thought this might be a habit of flightless birds (flight feathers clipped), until I saw a raven at the Grand Canyon do exactly the same thing.
Businesses

PC Sales Slump Over Economic Crisis 232

nandemoari writes "The damage isn't just limited to the United States. Shipments of PCs in Europe, the Mid-East, and Africa dipped to records posted around the turn of the century. It was even worse in Asia, which according to Gartner, posted its worst growth rate ever — just 1.8 per cent. Within the industry, desktops took the hardest hit, as was expected. Sales of non-portable computers were down about 16 per cent as consumers opted instead for the rising 'netbook' and similar hybrids. That fact alone is troubling for PC makers, given that $300-$500 netbooks offer a far lower profit margin than more expensive and more powerful laptops and desktops."

Comment I Still Remember (Score 3, Interesting) 407

I remember in March 1980 when a colleague took me to an Apple computer store in San Francisco, opened VisiCalc, put 100 in one cell, 200 in another, a sum below it, and 300 magically appeared.

My life as an accountant changed forever that day. It took me three months, and many meeting to get the local division of the major oil company I worked for to buy the first Apple in the company. I seem to recall it was $3,000 or so.

After that it was models and spreadsheets galore - well, whatever was 64k or smaller. ("Oh, you want that calculation? Well, I'll have to remove this one.)

Then on to IBM and Lotus 123 and the rest is history.

Were spreadsheets abused, full of errors, and assumed gospel when they weren't? Sure, but they also made clear, in a very short time, important data used to make good decisions.

Now long retired, that moment in SF remains with me as one of those "ah yes" moments in life.

Comment Re:Done this before (Score 1) 823

When I finally got the 80+ in-laws to get off dial-up and on to cable high speed, I installed LogMeIn, a great free program and service that allows me to access their computer from 160 miles away and fix most problems that crop up. It would be helpful if Windows had a "disable right mouse clicks" switch, as random right-clicking gets them into a lot of trouble. Oh, and a "simple menu" switch for outlook express would also save "my icons disappeared" calls.

Slashdot Top Deals

"One Architecture, One OS" also translates as "One Egg, One Basket".

Working...