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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re: Wonder if this is just (Score 1) 224

Human produced what? Will everyone become a skilled craftsman capable of making handicrafts that are better than those churned out by machines? There's a homemade, rustic charm, but there's a line between rustic and primitive. Particularly when you add the "individualized rustic look" filter to your just-in-time manufacturing processes. Literary and auditory arts will have similar pressures.

Comment Re: Wonder if this is just (Score 1) 224

That's an argumentum ad consequentiam. I think there is a substantial fraction of people that won't be competitive with automated solutions in the future. Training can help people learn new things, but I doubt that it make everyone work on the creative level necessary to exceed emerging AI technologies.

Comment Re: Wonder if this is just (Score 1) 224

No, but what's the alternative? Just what should low-skill workers be doing? Automation won't stop feeding at the bottom of the barrel. There fortunately aren't that many people that actually top out between ditch digger and backhoe operator, so that transition went OK, without too many people being knocked out of useful existence. But there are plenty between "basic procedure following job" (line cooks, packers, etc.) and genuinely creative ones (research, engineering, art). And a lot of people are going to find their capabilities insufficient for what the world needs from humans.

Comment Overabundance of corporate tie-ins (Score 3, Insightful) 369

Why is it that these tight corporate tie-ins are permitted for education? I certainly would hope that the schools wouldn't allow "Luke Skywalker and Belle teach American History", so why is the equivalent permitted for CS? Is it the fact that this is a "new" educational subject, where they're seizing the uncharted void of curriculum to get us warmed up to the idea?

Comment Re:I'm interested in this sort of thing for my hou (Score 1) 107

Smashing with a rock looks suspicious, and almost anyone that sees you do it will call the police. If you've got a fully-wired home, and an attacker compromises it, they can find out exactly when you're not home (from automated lights and climate control settings), unlock the door, and walk out with whatever high-value items they think they can get away with.

Comment Re:How do you make a lego character female? (Score 1) 208

I'm not sure I understand your first point. Lego sells interesting models, and the pieces necessary to build them. For castles, this means a lot of blocks that are rectangular, and some special ones for things like gargoyles and drawbridge winches. For spaceships, this means a lot of angles and greebly-bits that you can make look like engines and weapons and exhaust ports. There's not some sort of "trick" where Lego is forcing you to buy high-margin specialty pieces; people want those pieces because they let you make things that look better. And, sure, if you try to take the pieces from a castle and make a spaceship, you'll end up with a blocky-looking spaceship. But I fail to see how providing the option of sleek pieces (which you could also use to make a sleek, elven-looking castle?) somehow degrades the experience. There are very few pieces in modern Lego sets that are genuinely single-purpose; a spaceship control surface could easily be an angel wing, a ship's rudder, or the fairing of a racecar.

Minecraft supplements, not replaces, Lego in the minds of creative kids. Minecraft is neat, and it lets you do a lot, but there's something special about being physically engaged with what you're building. You can't take your Minecraft creation out back to play by the stream (unless you recreate it with Legos?).

Comment Re:How do you make a lego character female? (Score 1) 208

There was a time when this was true, but not so much within the past ~5 years. Can you give me a definition of what you'd call an "ordinary" brick, and what percentage of a set needs to be ordinary bricks (it's easier by piece count, but I suppose a by-volume comparison could be made) before you can classify it as general purpose? Or is there some other definition you'd prefer? Whatever it is, please make it quantitative; there are plenty of meticulously-maintained online resources we can use to determine exactly how many bricks of what types are in pretty much every Lego set ever made.

Comment Re:Better answer (Score 5, Insightful) 572

Five years from now, just two categories of game will be made: Multi-player for consoles, solo (with multi-player functionality) for mobile devices.

I wouldn't be surprised if some of the "gaming by the numbers" studios and publishers move that way. But I can guarantee that the people pouring millions of dollars into independent Kickstarter and greenlight games, and getting DRM-free software written by devs who care in return, will still be doing it in five years.

Slashdot Top Deals

Life would be so much easier if we could just look at the source code. -- Dave Olson

Working...