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I refer you to my response to MehGerbil above.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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IMO, every website (or more precise news site or blog) would be better off without comments. Seriously, most of the time you will see either trolls, or stubborn people sharing their opinion without the guts to take any critics which leads to rants etc. And then there are the fanboys vs. haters, smart alecs and spam-bots. It's very rare to find a portal where comments have a certain quality and where they work without serious moderation. Part of the reason is that people kind of "abuse" the comment section all the time in a forum-like way, IMO a comment should be a feedback to the author and not a place to start discussions (which is what happenes all the time). Therefore, the whole idea of commenting is flawed and better be dismissed, either run a forum where people can discuss your stuff or leave it off.
To come back to topic, I still don't get the reasoning why the operator of a website should be responsible for the mental outbursts of their commenters.
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FIorian Schneidereit wrote: To come back to topic, I still don't get the reasoning why the operator of a website should be responsible for the mental outbursts of their commenters.
I agree, but feel that authorities should be able to request certain posts be removed when the post breaks the law in the relevant country. Failure to comply can reasonably be penalised, maybe not as badly as the original poster could be if they could be located, but a fine seems perfectly reasonable step in this case.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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Rob Grainger wrote: I agree, but feel that authorities should be able to request certain posts be removed when the post breaks the law in the relevant country. Sure, that's a point and legitimate, but what is the definiton of a relevant country? The internet is a global thing, so it's hard to enforce legality under all possible circumstances. I mean, what if someone posts a comment with content that is illegal in the EU but not in the US (where the website is actually hosted)? It's perfectly fine in the US, but since the content is available world wide it will be visible in other countries as well where it might be illegal (unless some kind of censorship is involved, but I'm sure we don't want it to be like that). A perfect example is the Swastika - it's illegal in Germany but not in the U.S. AFAIK. The question is: Should it be possible for Germany to send a takedown request?
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they need to hire some CP'ers to do the job right - the first time.
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A DoS by anonymous. They are protesting this countries "Anti-Terrorism" laws, and I use the term loosely.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Jonathan Rothman, New Yorker magazine: [^].
"In the airport, for example, we listen to music through headphones to avoid listening to CNN. There’s a sense, he argues, in which personal-technology companies are in an arms race with advertising and marketing firms. If you go to the movies and turn off your phone prematurely, you may be stuck watching the pre-preview ads—but, if you have an Apple Watch, you can still assert your autonomy by scrolling through lists and checking your step count. Fundamentally, of course, the two sides are indistinguishable: they both speak in what Crawford calls “autonomy talk,” “the consumerist language of preference satisfaction,” in which consumer choice is identified with liberation and happiness. “Choice serves as the central totem of consumer capitalism, and those who present choices to us appear as handmaidens to our own freedom,” he writes."
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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I just open a tab to "The Lounge".
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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BillWoodruff wrote: if you have an Apple Watch, you can still assert your autonomy by scrolling through lists and checking your step count
I'm glad they finally found a constructive use for that gadget.
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Businesses struggling to align their IT projects with larger business goals and strategies are emphasizing agile project management skills over traditional project management certifications. No one has figured out how to create a brain dump site for them yet?
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The article says, "hire more project managers;" I don't necessarily agree with that. Most CIOs want to build a heavy PMO, but the problems I deal with are the PMs that don't have technical skills. technical experience, or know how to work with the business unit.
I would prefer to have more specialist, such as: BAs, QAs, and report writers; so everyone's can focus on one thing instead of the things they shouldn't.
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jgakenhe wrote: PMs that don't have technical skills. technical experience, or know how to work with the business unit. Oh dear dog, yes, that is
one of my (many) biggest pet peeves. It's also probably one of the biggest markers for "this project will fail unless magic happens."
Today's activities were definitely an example at one of my customers.
TTFN - Kent
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My experience has always been companies not getting things done enough so it's 'hire more PM's' despite the fact the problem was always there wasn't actually enough technical people to do the actual work.
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Wow, there are skills now in agile? I thought knowledge, coding and delivering are skills. Not telling people what to do without having the slightest idea on what's on the corner.
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The only agile skill I need is in lining up another job when the current Agile project disintegrates into chaos.
Marc
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+5
What ever happened to careful contemplation? Knowledge? Other such mundanes?
It's a new take on ounce of prevention vs. pound of cure:
A big pile of worthless sh*t gives them the feeling something is being accomplished, even if it's a permanent state of debugging.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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As CEO Satya Nadella nears the end of his first full fiscal year, Microsoft's transformation continues. The share of revenue from traditional software licensing has dropped, especially for Windows. But two new categories are growing fast. "The clouds prepare for battle In the dark and brooding silence."
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Due to pressures of the market to produce software as fast as possible and at a low cost, many programmers are not doing what even a few years ago would be normal: writing their own original source code. "You never call, you never write"
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Where'd you hear such nonsense?
TTFN - Kent
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“The advent of tools such as NPM, Composer, Grunt, and Nugget, as..."
Who makes that tool, McDonalds?
I program in Comic Sans.
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If you hang out with programmers enough, one of the first things you'll notice is their very, very closely-held belief that their favored programming language is the only correct one. Because of those fools using the wrong language
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I had morning coffee with a guy that I was meeting for musical reasons. It just so happened he is a coder too. He mentioned that he wrote in C#. I quipped that cliche' about C# being really VB with braces to wit he condemned my religion of C++ as something he wouldn't touch with a 10' pole. (or maybe a 10' dangling pointer).
I'll "lay hands" on him and see if I can turn him around.
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a. Knock Knock
b. Who's there?
a. Java
b. Java Who?
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