BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Former 'No Nukes' Protester: Stop Worrying and Love Nuclear Power
BitGeek's comments
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
You quickly throw out the market, (and claim to understand economics? LOL!) but the reality is- if people preferred it, the restaurants were non-smoking.
Most people, however, don't feel the need to force others to comply with their whims, using violence. Unfortunately, those who do join the government.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
Just modding down.
The cowardly way of those who know they cant' defend their position.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Google disables Steve Yegge's site
Amazon is a very employee hostile place- all advancement is due to politics. Unless you have a good manager (and there are a few, mostly engineer who have been there a very long time) you can't advance unless you play really vicious politics-- and I mean, sabotaging others work kind of vicious. The people they bring in as managers (because they claim engineers don't want to be managers) are people who have no management skill.
I may have had one of the worst- his only training was in "criminal justice" and he clearly thought he was a prison guard... he'd regularly chew out the whole team for failing to do things that he didn't even understand weren't our responsibility (or in once case something we had actually done, but some other manager had told him we hadn't and of course he knew absolutely nothing about software so he had no way of knowing whether we'd done it or not.)
Maybe microsoft is that bad now- it was heading in this direction when I worked there...but Amazon was the worst place I ever worked. (And I worked for an educational startup where all of management was gradeschool teachers who also didn't understand technology and treated us like grade schoolers... and this company had trouble making payroll... but being belittled is much better than being verbally abused in my book.)
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
Economics is a science. ITs not uncommon for those who will not make a scientific argument to instead knock down strawmen, as you just have.
Of course, you threw out enough buzzwords that those who don't look too close will believe you made a counter argument.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
they are not getting some buro-cratic power-- they have been exercising the scyth arm for over a century.
Nobody complained when the nazis took over germany or publicly under soviet rule, but eventually both of these tyrannies were overthrown.
This is not a reason to support tyranny!
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
What we lack is people who understand economics, or have any sense of history-- the "progressive" tax system is what is keeping people poor. A flat tax and no social security would have eliminated poverty in the US 50 years ago, and probably we'd have most of our manufacturing jobs still too...though environmentalist inspired regulation and rampant union violence might have been enough alone to drive it overseas.
The amazing thing to me is how much liberals talk about helping the poor (And conservatives talk about "freedom") while advocating policies that do the opposite, and attacking anyone who actually advocates what they claim to support....
I've long wondered if this was simply because these people have been so deluded that they thinkg up is down and left is right... or if they really actually have another agenda and these causes (poverty and freedom) are just excuses to advocate policies that they know make the problems worse.
The 19th century should have taught you all that socialism and communism will not decrease poverty and will ultimately result in the slaughter of millions of people... and yet you can't turn around without hearing some liberal talk about "global warming" and "externalities" without understanding the first bit of economics... and advocating totalitarian laws to bring about their "dictatorship of the proletariat".
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
The bottom line is, your attempt to internalize externalities is proof that you don't know what you're talking about because externalities by definition cannot be internalized.
All this liberal economics is just like that last wave of liberal economics that resulted in 100 million deaths over the period from 1900-2000, only it isn't united under a common term like "socialism" or "communism" but it amounts to the same-- totalitarianism sold as being "good for you".
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
It never ceases to amaze me how people are so willing to put guns and violence behind their political ideologies. This is probably because they don't realize that is what they are doing-- but every law is backed up by a guy holding a gun and pointing it at someone who breaks it.
ARe you willing to go to someone's house, and take his incandescent light bulbs and shoot him if he resists? You think that's Moral?
Cause that's what this law does, and it is no more moral if you advocate someone else doing it even if you are unwilling to do it yourself.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: ErlyWeb vs. Ruby on Rails EC2 Performance Showdown
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ireland becomes the first country in the world to ban the incandescent lightbulb
Government is a disease masquerading as its own cure.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Google disables Steve Yegge's site
There are a few decent engineers who make it thru the incompetance filter (amazon calls this "Raising the bar") and become managers, and obviously steve wored for one. But the vast majority of people managing engineers at Amazon are non-engineers. And the managers managers are even worse- paper pushers whose primary goal is their own personal advancement-- not the product, not the quality of the work and certainly not hte profitability of the company.
Worst environment for engineers, ever.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Cybersquatter email
They aren't holding intellectual property hostage. And by the way, when is personal gain evil? Do you go to work each day primarily to benefit other people, rather than yourself:?
They are providing added value, they registered a domain that someone else didn't think of.
The problem here is, that you regret not registering it, and so you, rather than accepting blame for your own failure, are blaming the person who was smarter or faster than you.
Back in the 1990s, I looked up USWeb.com. I almost registered it, but was on the fence, then went back three days later to register it and found that it had been taken the day after I thought of it-- and that company became a big company eventually before the bust.
Were they holding my intellectual property hostage? No.
Where does this sense of entitlement come from? IT reminds me of people who build a house in a neighborhood and then complain because a walmart gets built nearby... as if they think they somehow have property rights in the land that walmart bought. LOL.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Cybersquatter email
One of the domains I own is a combination of a word that means "software" and another word that means "place you like to go". I got it for a developers site... and then after I got it I discovered that there was an italian maker of luxury goods whose trademark is that word - apparently the combination of these two english words makes another word completely in italian.
Am I cybersquatting? I've considered selling this domain to them because its much better than the one that they are currently using. If I sell it to them, then they will be getting a better domain at a price that they think is fair (or they wouldn't be buying it).
Some may say I'm being opportunistic and this is wrong- well, I say that my intent was elsewhere and this was a surprise coincidence... but that my intent isnt' really relevant. If I'd registered the name then I have perfect rights to it-- after all if they'd wanted it, why didn't they register it? If I register it and several years later they decide they want it-- what gives them the right to demand that I give it to them for free?
Finally, the truth is that I didn't register this domain, I bought it at auction. so, what's to say what a fair price is?
The idea that these people are "cybersquatters" is an idea of entitlement-- its based on the false notion that you somehow have a right to domain names, even though you didn't register them when they were free.
This is false. Domain names are an open territory- if you think of it and register it, its yours. If you later realize you should have registered it, then its you're error, not the error of the preson who did register it.
They arent' scamming you, they are asking for compensation for the risk they took in registering it. If hte price they ask is higher than the value of the domain (and if you have foo.com then foo.cn isn't really that valuable, is it?) then just don't buy it and let the owner of foo.cn use it for whatever they want.... why should you care?
If they are using a domain to pretend to be you-- then that would be one thing, and that's what cybersquatting really means.
But domain speculation, like real estate speculation, is a perfectly legitimate activity. Where does one get the idea that all names of a certain category should belong to them even though they couldn't be bothered to register them?
(Speaking in general here, not to the original poster since he didn't express much of an opinion, other than to misuse the word cybersquatter)
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Cybersquatter email
But it seems like you're offended that they offered them to you and that's a waste of energy.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: My laptop was stolen.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: My laptop was stolen.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: My laptop was stolen.
It helps that the Mac has HFS+ and Journaling.
BitGeek | 18 years ago | on: Ask YC: Who is building a startup/product and making money by charging customers?
There is a much larger universe of "wouldn't it be neat..." ideas than there are "this would really ad value and people will be begging to pay us..." ideas. Even things that people will pay for because they add value but that are so small a morsel of functionality don't work either- eg: little tiny utilities where people would gladly pay you $1/month to use, and where you could make big money at $1/month given the size of the audience, but are simply not worth the effort to renew on an annual basis for people because $1 a month isn't significant enough in the customers mind to get them to sign up. (EG: a spam filtering service is borderline here, anything less featurful or significant is not going to get many customers, I expect.)
The 70s they were predicting eminant ice age, now they're predicting global warming, in another 20 years it will be back to ice age.
Its always been about political ideology and controlling people- bending them to their will- and never about science. Even in the 1970s nuclear power was known to be safe.
Hell, a coal plant spreads more radioactivity than a nuclear plant. (Cause coal contains radioactive substances naturally.)