And ? (again)
and AirBnB is not a hotel. As you will discover very quickly if you expect any customer service.
3213 publicly visible posts • joined 5 Mar 2010
Not true.
The fact it's not more widely used suggests the powers that be aren't so keen on teh idea of data they can't slurp.
March 2020, management: You can *only* WFH or the company dies.
This is a classic case of the powers that be being caught in a lie, and using "can't" as a synonym for "won't".
I'm mildly surprised we haven't seen hysterical headlines about "WFH helps terrorists", or "only paedos would WFH"
Everything gets promoted above it's level of competence. Ay which point you have to rely on the unpromoted parts.
I give you ... the cloud.
We also need to bear in mind John Glenns famous observation about sitting atop a bomb build by a collective of lowest bidders.
You think your PHB were tight ? Imagine how much these "cloud corporations" are trying to get away with not spending.
or maybe they did ages ago, and we are only just realising.
"Olden days" - the OS was needed to manage the machines resources most effectively, efficiently and properly.
The future: the OS is merely a shim between the user and the AI cloud.
Looking at cars might help. Gone are the days the driver had to adjust the advance/retard themselves as well as tweaking the fuel/air mixture in flight. Now they just drive.
That being said, you can fuck off if you think I want any sort of AI in my OS. Especially MS AI.
I'm sure all of us have had a moment when an alert pops up and no one has any idea (a) where it's coming from and (b) what it does.
Little tip: if you ensure you do a grown-up test of your UPSs by actually shutting things down (because as long as the mains is connected the battery remaining is a guesstimate you really don't want to rely on) you can winkle out some dinosaur processes.
Also restarting your comms to flush out DHCP reservation issues.
How fucking difficult is it for programmers to wrap a tiny sanity check around the "To/CC/BCC" fields in their shitty email "apps" to pause for a second if there are more than (say) 10 people in the field ?
"Your email appears to be going to more than 10 people, and may include more people on the BCC list. Do you wish to check before sending ?"
for example. With an additional flag to enforce it for more paranoid organisations.
Or or we waiting for Apple to fucking patent it ?
(this is total kite flying)
While a little bit Heath Robinsonish, how about a UHD camera that points at a browser screen, with a hi-fi microphone rig connected to the speakers, and an AI program that simply cuts out areas of the screen based on it's own AI.
If I never post again it will be because this is exactly how GCHQ avoid the Chrome tracking and cruft without alerting Google.
For OSI fans, this is moving the war above the application layer.
If they actually
1) went to useful places
2) at useful times
3) on a regular basis
4) were reasonably priced
then you've fixed it. However every single one of those objectives breaks the "business model" of someone who has bought your government.
it's embarrassing.
If a car wants to drive by itself (or it's manufacturers) then it sits a bog standard UK driving test.
If it passes then - like us mean puppets - it has demonstrated a level of competence assumed to be "safe enough"
All of this hand wringing would make sense if human drivers never made mistakes or killed people.
We're pretty much exclusively browser based, so no real pain.
As I have banged on for over a decade, it's the lack of an Outlook replacement that previously stopped me. But now we don't really use email at all.
The only users I might have a problem with are accounts, who use a bluetooth-thingy with a card to access the bank. But it's easier to support 2 Win 11 machines (assuming the manufacturers update their software, as they haven't as of writing) than 200.
My only loss will be not running vagrant. But I can keep a spare PC for that too.
But it's not just meter reading is it.
You also get a physical independent check that:
- the property is there
- the meter is associated with that property
- there are no obvious signs of tampering
- the meter is in a safe position
That's the problem with letting bean counters run the place. Everything can be called a cost and eliminated with no thought as to where else it's an asset.
"Large tech companies wield an unprecedented level of influence over economies and societies. At the same time, they enjoy a remarkable degree of freedom from regulation and accountability for their activities and the content they carry," opined Singaporean minister Teo Chee Hean at Monday night's opening address.
That is almost the bumper sticker for Western capitalism. Power and money with naff all oversight, regulation or where possible competition
And for all their performance handwringing, all I can see from where I live is governments are aspiring to the same. Certainly here in the UK where it seems you are robbed with the threat of prison for your taxes, and yet discover that no one in government is actually responsible for anything.