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Comment Re:Volunteers?!? Fucking PAY them, you cheap fuck (Score 2) 185

Considering that I moved out from NJ, I happen to agree with your sentiment. But property taxes are used for municipal expenditures rather than state ones, there are other taxes that are used for state wide expenditures, for example, income tax (which are not cheap either).

But "blowing all the taxpayer cash on God knows what" it's rightly on point.

When I got laid off two years ago, I had to go through the unemployment benefits process. They were working on improving their front end system to consolidate their job search engine with their benefits one. The benefits one seemed like it was developed in the late 90's with a bunch of Perl CGI's. (I do not know the underlying technology, but the site was certainly dated). I could not also get anybody on the phone every single time I called, I was always answered by a cheerful voice recording. Their job centers are nice though, and people that staffed them were helpful and competent. But it seems that this was the case of not spending money in their computer and CRM systems being that "was good enough" for years.

There may be some folks that are bored to tears that are willing to look at the problem, but a problem that has been brewing for more than 40 years is not going to be fixed overnight, regardless of language and technology.

Comment Using Mint (Score 1) 89

Mint is not half bad if you only want to have a view of your finances, however they are always behind every time a bank changes their security measures, therefore Mint always has problems trying to synchronize the financial data, which is what it is supposed to do to begin with. Intuit also offers a similar service to banks, I know that my credit union has a financial aggregator that is provided by Intuit but not branded as Mint. Mint is competing with this other Intuit product used for banks that does the same. I would have assumed that both code bases are merged, but I doubt it. Flash is used for stock charts in Mint and in the bank aggregator, they have not bothered to upgrade to HTML5.

Comment Go for it, but be realistic. (Score 1) 834

I was requested to do a 1 year masters degree as a condition on my employment. The company paid me that year to do it, and I did finish a Masters in Computer Sciences and I do not regret it. However, the following has been true for me.
  • It got me a job and a nice salary bump when I started after completion, because of the conditions of my employment.
  • It did not help me to get promoted later on as a manager. That takes politics. You'll be better off getting the PMP rather than a Masters, if that's what you want in life.
  • It looks nice on the resume and your business card.
  • It's not as relevant after several years in the industry. Oddly enough, certification gets more wight, unless you're a PhD going to Academia. It also depends where you work. For instance, if I were going to work in Puerto Rico, an EIT or PE it's more useful than a Masters, but that's because the PR job market is license crazy.
  • If you do your masters mid-career does not equate a change in responsibility or salary. But, you can use it to find a new and better job being that you can create a relationship with the career center. (Sometimes, in retrospect, I should've considered that). I've known folks that the company paid for their MBA and continued performing the same job after graduation.
  • You get a better sense on Academia. You learn how to work in complex projects and prepares you for research and in some cases, dissertation. That'll help you when you have to defend your design or proposal against your peers or supervisors.

I did it when I had the chance, if you're in no rush to start working, have money to pay for it and you know which area of interest you're going to pursue, go ahead and do it. Later in life it'll be harder (but not impossible).

Comment Re:brilliant or dangerous? (Score 1) 1134

I do not know. My company have a good way to handle these guys.

Follow the Method of Operation.

or... find another job.

Follow the code of conduct.

or... fine another job.

These issues need to be solved straight away, nobody, and I mean nobody, is good enough for this kind of behavior. The reason why he managed to fixed the code in an hour is because he was the only one that understood his crappy code. The only reason he meet the deadlines, is because he writes crappy code.

There's no need for those losers in an organization.

Comment Re:Expected (Score 1) 1654

In your case, you might be stuck the VZ. I swapped from Verizon to Cablevision after dealing with some guy in Taiwan in a lousy VOIP line after spending 2 hours with a guy in India asking me to turn on or off my DSL modem. The problem was already documented from their tech that my line was too far from the central office and the DSL link was unreliable. It was clearly an SS7 problem, but those drones did not want to hear about it.

The day I disconnected from them there was a meek satisfaction hearing the sales rep. begging for me to stay.

Comment For what is worth... (Score 1) 1654

Although I understand the intention of the newscast to help this young lady, I feel that the overall reporting was overall biased. It's not the first time I've seen this kind of "behavior" on the local or smaller news outlets. One time while reading El Nuevo Dia, they were looking for "Linux" to refute a story they wrote. I guess that the silver lining is that at least its some publicity...

Comment Pssff... (Score 1) 172

I almost got mugged in Newark, near the train station, I managed to outsmart the guy by getting into the bus while the doors were closing (hey, they do the same to snag a chain before the subway closes door). I do not think that it will not work, and how people are extremely PO'ed with Corzine and all the spending all over the state, I think that this is helping who knows who's pocket rather than fighting crime. The city of Cayey, Puerto Rico put a lot of cameras all over town. Two weeks ago the FBI nabbed 70 people living in public housing that were selling drugs for the past 16 years. Did it help? No, people in Cayey do not feel any safer, and complain downtown has become a shooting gallery. I doubt that will help...
Robotics

Submission + - Student maps brain to image search (computerworld.com.au)

StonyandCher writes: "A Canadian computer science grad is mapping the way the human brain works to technology that will power a search engine for visual images to be launched mid next year. "The brain is very parallel. There's lots of things going on at once," he said. "Graphics processors are also very parallel, so it's a case of almost mapping the brain onto graphics processors, getting them to process visual information more effectively." The University of Ottawa said master's student Kris Woodbeck was working with the government's Technology Transfer and Business Enterprise (TTBE) office to secure a patent on his approach, which will form the intellectual property for a startup devoted to image search."
United States

Submission + - Robot aircraft crush worldwide enemies - from Nev. (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "The first unmanned attack squadron in aviation history will arrive in Iraq today looking to deliver 500-pound bombs and Hellfire missiles to the enemy — all from the comfort of a US Air Force base in Nevada. The General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper can be controlled via satellite link thousands of miles away from operational areas. The planes are launched locally, in this case Iraq and Afghanistan, but can be controlled by a pilot and sensor operator sitting at computer consoles in a ground station, or they can be "handed off" via satellite signals to pilots and sensor operators in Nevada's Creech Air Force Base or elsewhere. http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/1756 0"

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