Comment Re:Says the blog was shut down. (Score 1) 634
- I called out sick a couple of days just to avoid your son.
I'd consider that statement as justifying a firing.
- I called out sick a couple of days just to avoid your son.
I'd consider that statement as justifying a firing.
This is a great initiative to implement when facing massive, crippling budget deficits.
I think it's supposed to be classic Keynesian economics, that a government should run a deficit by cutting taxes and spending more when the economy is slow, then cut back on spending and raise taxes once the economy improves.
The only problem is that when the economy is doing well a "Less Government and Higher Taxes" platform is a pretty hard sell for a politician.
"Would you want to see a ban on the fan traditions in your country?"
Like a ban on thundersticks? Yes, yes I would. Those things are horrible.
Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.
The thing is, with near 10% unemployment and having just come out of the worst financial crisis since the great depression, Apple is doing well.
If a company that specializes in expensive, high-end computer products is doing well in a weak economy... what happens when the economy improves?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_exports
We are #3 behind China and Germany, who both produce 20% more than we do for exports.
As far as raw manufacturing goes, USA is far ahead in the #1 position.
http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2008/09/23/top-manufacturing-countries-in-2007/
The catch is, while manufacturing is actually increasing in America, employment in manufacturing has fallen because of increased productivity per worker.
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/02/us-manufacturing-is-not-dead.html
So while it's not true that the USA doesn't make stuff, it can seem like it because there are fewer jobs in manufacturing.
Did you play with sound enabled?
Actually that's a good question because the first day Portal came out there was a bug where the voice giving you instructions wasn't audible (for a few people). That happened to me, I played the first few levels and I never heard the voice, then the next day Valve patched the game and the game worked for me.
It was a subtle bug because all the other sounds were there, I never realized the best part of the game is missing. Luckily I hadn't gotten too far into the game.
That's the way it is - it's profitable for the company with no downside. The only option is for employees to show that it will cost them in the long run through turnover and training new employees. Alternately, unionization or government regulation are the only other options.
The problem isn't capitalism, it's just bad management at that specific develooper. Here's part of interview with someone from one of the most successful developers right, Infinity Ward (who did Call of Duty 4 and Modern Warfare 2).
we schedule our projects well so there is never a feeling of "oh crap, this whole project is going to hell"; we reward our employees for their hard work with significant royalties; we usually make games on a relatively fast (but not rushed) two-year dev cycle; we almost never have forced crunch - in fact I've worked one full Saturday plus a few scattered weekend hours in the entire six years I've been at Infinity Ward.
I'm not a executive, but I would think Rockstar would be better off by hiring the best, paying them well and not overworking them so they can have a low turnover. I keep reading the same articles about "crunch time" and underpayed employees then later I read about the same companies having financial problems (EA in particular but also Rockstar).
It so reminded me of that quote "So this is how liberty dies, with thunderous applause."
I googled that quote, expecting it came from someone like Solzhenitsyn or Orwell, only to find out you're quoting "Revenge of the Sith"... ugh.
Frankly an 80% piracy rate seems a little difficult to believe given how most iPhone users I know use their phones (most use stock firmware, since they're still on warranty, and people have spent up to £800 and don't want to 'brick' it).
An 80% piracy rate doesn't mean 80% of iPhone users are pirates.
Now my math might be little shakey, but let's say, hypothetically, for every 1000 iPhone users there are only 50 who pirate games. If only 5 out of 1000 buys a game, but 20 out of 50 pirates download the game... you would have an 80% piracy rate even though only less than 5% of users are pirates.
Wouldn't that suck? Spending 8 months in transit to Mars only to find a crowd waiting for you once you land: "yeah, we actually invented this really cool new engine like the week after you guys took off."
In case that sounds familiar, it's similar to the plot of a memorable short story from the 1940s, A.E. van Vogt's ‘Far Centaurus’.
As I vaguely remember it , Astronauts get frozen and go off for hundreds of years and find out that faster than light travel has been invented and the Alpha Centauri system had already been colonized.
What I wonder is why the designers of DNS put the name in reverse?
Berners-Lee regrets that as well, from back in 2000...
I have to say that now I regret that the syntax is so clumsy. I would like http://www.example.com/foo/bar/baz to be just written http:com/example/foo/bar/baz where the client would figure out that www.example.com existed and was the server to contact. But it is too late now. It turned out the shorthand "//www.example.com/foo/bar/baz" is rarely used and so we could dispense with the "//".
The Internet facilitates easy plagiarism. I assume papers for sale on the 'net generally have good grammar. Is it possible an increase in Internet plagiarism caused the increase in literary quality?
The Internet makes it a lot easier to "detect" plagiarism, all you have to do is quote a few words from an essay and Google it, or use services like Turnitin.
Personally I think plagiarism in schools may be declining, it just appears to be increasing because a higher proportion are getting caught.
Before long children will be asking to transfer to the schools that pay the best.
Or that have the dumbest students (easier competition).
"The chain which can be yanked is not the eternal chain." -- G. Fitch