iharris | 11 years ago
iharris's comments
iharris | 11 years ago
With that said, most of the SEO companies that cold-call them are quite shady. Other clinics in the city have had their search rankings drop after hiring SEO services who use scummy tactics. The new "snake oil" perhaps?
iharris | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: An SEO startup is impersonating a physician. What should I do?
My wife is in contact with the College of Physicians and Surgeons to keep them abreast of the situation. We'll see if she can engage their lawyers. She's also documenting everything as it has happened.
I did a little bit of snooping through WHOIS records. I think the SEO company is based in Montreal so we might be able to do something domestically about it.
iharris | 11 years ago
iharris | 12 years ago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeKMS62GrTI
Edit: It's clear that someone in NASA is a Portal fan - they sent a laser-etched image of Wheatley up with an HTV-3 resupply craft:
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/118637-NASA-Sends-...
iharris | 12 years ago
With that said, I don't think that there exists a 'one size fits all' solution. For small and medium retailers without their own IT staff, a service contract makes a lot of sense (consider hardware failure or a corrupted database, or re-training on the system's admin functionality for example). These guys often have a very large inventory and I doubt that a lightweight product (eg Square Register) can manage it elegantly. Unfortunately the needs of these retailers often result in a huge, enterprise-y solution that is both cumbersome and expensive to maintain.
Large retail franchises generally hire firms to tailor a POS product for them, service it, and integrate it into their existing ecosystem (SAP, PeopleSoft etc.).
I think the small retailer market is really interesting and some newcomers like Square Register are shaking things up. Small retailers are often family-owned and really need a product that works out of the box, is easy to configure and use, accepts credit cards, and is very inexpensive. If the POS is designed intelligently then there retailer can probably run the entire thing themselves as long as they don't need special features (think gas stations, loyalty programs, and other markets like hospitality).
I think the OP's project looks awesome and it seems to be targeted at small businesses with low- to medium throughput and where the manager is reasonably technical (see the reviews from the SourceForge page where people dont know how to set it up - these folks probably need a ready-made solution or a consultant). I could also see consultants taking this and extending it to compete with a lot of the existing products out there, which I would be really excited to see!
iharris | 12 years ago
iharris | 12 years ago
[1] http://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Firearms_Registry#Cost...
iharris | 12 years ago
In all seriousness, though, I can't imagine how they are going to be any more productive at those resolutions than they would be with traditional input methods, not to mention the sore arms that these will cause.
iharris | 12 years ago
iharris | 12 years ago
iharris | 12 years ago
http://www.gq.com/news-politics/newsmakers/201303/urban-expl...
iharris | 12 years ago
iharris | 12 years ago
Don't get me wrong - I use my iPhone's camera frequently and I think it's great. But as a photojournalist where your story (and your livelihood) depends on "getting the shot", you need to be knowledgeable and prepared to shoot in the worst conditions possible. The iPhone can do some awesome things, but you just can't fake good glass with software.
Full disclosure: I sell event photos to my local newspaper that I could not have gotten at all if I had used my smartphone.
iharris | 12 years ago
Edit: it's also worth noting that Mayor Ford's relationship with the media has been... colorful. Some funny cases include him calling 80% of journalists "maggots" (1) and lying about a drunken outburst back in 2006 (2).
(1) http://read.thestar.com/#!/article/51a27b477b1eacc589c3f4ae-...
(2) http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2006/05/03/tor-f...
iharris | 13 years ago
Folks with weight problems or diabetes tend to have foot issues as well - exaggerated pronation/supination, plantar fasciitis, and swelling to name a few. There are solutions for nearly all of these problems and are highly recommended for general use, not just for standing desks.
iharris | 13 years ago
iharris | 13 years ago
iharris | 13 years ago
One of the things that I found really interesting is how the car inches forward at a stop sign in order to show the "driver's" intent to other drivers. Lots of actions that seem to be second-nature for human drivers have to be carefully emulated here.
iharris | 13 years ago