Even in the calmest home environment (rare, but possible), noise is a big issue. Few people live in houses where sounds from one room cannot be heard in others. For example, Mrs IP can't tolerate headphones, so has important meetings/teaching sessions withe speakers on. Those can be heard in at least two other rooms. We haven't given the children headphones because of the potential damage to hearing, so their online use also gets heard in at least two rooms. The washing machine, especially on spin, can be heard in several rooms. At those times, I'd like to have my headphones on, even if nothing is playing, because my ASD means I don't deal well with multiple sound sources, especially if more than one is carrying some sort of information. However, I can't, because I need to be able to hear if any of the other three need anything, so I end up in the quietest(!) bit of the house, huddled up and achieving nothing.
Posts by Intractable Potsherd
4160 publicly visible posts • joined 10 Jun 2009
Page:
Tech widens the educational divide. And I should know – I'm a teacher in a pandemic
A developer built an AI chatbot using GPT-3 that helped a man speak again to his late fiancée. OpenAI shut it down
Re: Samantha skips the small talk, goes straight to breaking OpenAI's rules by talking about sex ...
"In a world of liars, it's hard work telling the truth."
So very true. It's one of the reasons I'm so perpetually stressed - ASD and lies don't go well together, and it seems that most of the people I come into contact with lie almost continually. (I have two or three friends that my wife would rather I don't congregate with, but that's because they speak honestly too!)
IBM sued again by its own sales staff: IT giant accused of going back on commission payments promise
EU to formally probe Nvidia's $54bn takeover over British chip designer Arm – report
Think you can solve the UK's electric vehicle charging point puzzle? The Ordnance Survey wants to hear about it
John - you are clearly very happy with your choice. Part of that happiness is due to the fact that you have made the choice yourself, and accepted what many of us see as compromises because they are acceptable to you. However, those compromises are being forced on those of us who don't or can't absorb them. There is a moral case to be made for fossil fuels see e.g. https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/08/27/the-moral-case-for-fossil-fuels/) that is being ignored in current policy-making. I'll admit that I'm very firmly a petrolhead - I like vehicles that can be kept for more than a decade without the guarantee that I'll need to spend thousands of pounds to replace the motive system (indeed, I'd avoid a car in which it was clear that the engine or gearbox was going to need replacing like the plague). I like being able to fill up the car with four or five people and all their kit for a two-week holiday and know that I can go more than four hundred miles, stopping in quiet places, not motorway services, because I don't need to get fuel. I like knowing that I can travel 200 miles to a rally stage in the forest somewhere, run the car to keep warm, power a two-way radio etc, and know that I can get out of the forest and most of the way home without even thinking of fuel. Any compromise on these is, quite frankly, unacceptable. I am currently thinKing of leasing a small electric car for my wife to get to the railway station for the days she goes to work, but there will still be an ICE (or two) on the driveway for real driving.
More than half of companies rethinking back-to-office plans amid variant uncertainty and vaccine mandates – survey
Re: Convenience
H.G. Wells, over a hundred years ago, put it quite concisely: Public transport is a way of getting from where you aren't to where you don't want to be" (or similar), and the problem hasn't gone away. Trains, in particular, go from very approximately where you live/work to somewhere else very approximately where you live/work. Only if you are very lucky can you practically walk from home > station > work and back. You are also limited in the times you can travel. An integrated public transport system that coordinates buses and trains would help, but the problem then adds another layer of potential failure. Whilst trains and, to a lesser extent, buses are quite pleasant if you don't have to be anywhere at a particular time, the system (at least in the UK outside London) is insufficiently robust or convenient to tempt me out of my car for most journeys.
Jury tells Apple to cough up two days of annual profit in 4G/LTE patent damages retrial
Limitation on jury usefulness
This is one example of where I agree* with the UK** dropping the use of juries in some sorts of trial. The issues are not easy to grasp, with a lot of technical concepts that usually take years to become familiar with. Also, the trials drag on for so long that the jury are unlikely to remember all the points, and just wish to bring the whole thing to an end quickly once they've retired to the jury room. Overall, these sorts trial need to be in the hands of qualified judges, not lay-people.
* I don't usually think that eroding the use of juries is a good thing
** Term used correctly in this instance.
Google staff who work from home might see pay cut under corporate policy – reports
Re: Childcare
"London weighting" isn't the same thing. It is based on where the workplace is (i.e. London), not where the person lives. The employee can live in London, Leeds or Leith* and still get the weighting. What Google are proposing is focus g on where the employee is based - a, wholly different thing.
*I know two people who live within an hour of Edinburgh Airport, and are employed in London universities. Apparently, the improvement in living standards combined with the weighting is worth it. I wouldn't be surprised to see more people doing it now that we know so much can be done from home.
Without a trace: Baroness Dido Harding to step down as chair of NHS Improvement
Right to repair shouldn't exist – not because it's wrong but because it's so obviously right
Troll jailed for 5 years after swatting of Twitter handle owner ends in death
Everyone cites that 'bugs are 100x more expensive to fix in production' research, but the study might not even exist
Re: Example
If a bug is discovered once it is in production, the cost is largely borne by the user/customer. It becomes very close to an externality for the producer of the code. If software producers were liable for bugs discovered, they would ship with far more robust code. I know that there is no such thing as perfect code, but some of it is terrible.
Happy 'Freedom Day': Stats suggest many in England don't want it or think it's a terrible idea
Re: Odd...
As a quick look at my past posts will confirm, I am largely against the very concept of masks, for a number of reasons. Indeed, I have a condition fir which I have an exemption from wearing one. However, I have persevered and practiced until I can wear one for about 30 minutes at a time - long enough to go shopping. This is because the evidence does show some benefit *to others*, and, whether I like it or not, it is the new polite - like not wearing pyjamas to the supermarket. However, the outdoor venues that insist on masked really annoy me (not football grounds full of shouting, screaming people - definitely shown to be a risk), but, for example, the boat-trip I took to Staffa last week, or the outside spaces on the very large ferry from Mull to the mainland. There is absolutely no need for these to have such a requirement.
Won't someone think of the kids? China's Cyberspace Admin steps up, orders massive cleanup to make the net safe for minors
Re: East versus West
I sort of agree with you, but nothing else in society revolves entirely around children. Adults should be allowed to to do adult things - the alternative is continuous infantilisation. Rites of passage are important, and we certainly need more if those in Western society, but keeping everything at a "think of the children" level prevents people becoming adult.
I no longer have a burning hatred for Jewish people, says Googler now suddenly no longer at Google
If the current attitudes had been prevalent circa 2000 years ago, how different would the world be now? Saul's conversion on the road to Damascus would have resulted in him being punished by everyone, and one of the major characters in the formation of Christianity would never have been heard of*.
I really detest this current attitude that people can't change. For what it is worth, he has my support and best wishes for the future.
* I make no comment on my opinions on that.
NASA fixes Hubble Space Telescope using backup power supply unit, payload computer
Re: YAY NASA!
I was just thinking how wonderful it would be if we had a system - say, a reusable spacecraft designed to repair things. It could have a large area for things to be taken up or to provide a base for repairs, and maybe a powered arm to hold things or provide a platform for astronauts to work from. Specialists could be selected for each mission, flown up by dedicated flight-crew. At the end of the mission, the craft could reenter the atmosphere and land on a runway. Of course, that's just science fiction, isn't it?
This page has been deliberately left blank
Re: Collusion with Nazis
"He was interviewed in a BBC radio documentary a few years ago - and was apparently unrepentant."
If he thought he was right, and could justify it, why should he be repentant (assuming, of course, that he didn't advocate the wholesale murder of people who didn't fit a certain mould)?
" It is interesting that after the war the local Salvation Army always requested for him to drive the hired coach for their annual Sunday School seaside trip."
Political views don't make people untouchable (or shouldn't, in a free society). He might have been a very nice man who drove carefully.
Try placing a pot plant directly above your CRT monitor – it really ties the desk together
Re: Your headline reminds me...
I personally know a couple of people who have lived/are living lives such as @jake describes, so I'm more than happy to believe. They do what they enjoy, and every day is a pleasure for them. They are usually really nice people, too - unless you pretend to be something you aren't.
BT to phase out 3G in UK by 2023 for EE, Plusnet, BT Mobile subscribers
Boffins find an 'actionable clock' hiding in your blood, ticking away to your death
Audacity fork maintainer quits after alleged harassment by 4chan losers who took issue with 'Tenacity' name
Shouting into the void
It's probably a waste of time to say this, but why don't we all step back and wait for further information? This is a weird story that is apparently being investigated by the police. It may be true in full, in part, or not at all. The original article simply states what has been alleged with no corroborating evidence at the moment. Sit back, keep an eye on the headlines, and wait for more to come.
I was fired for telling ICO of Serco track and trace data breach, claims sacked worker
What's this about a lawyer looking for an heir? City of London Police seek IT crew to help crack down on fraud
Now everyone can take in the sights and smells of a London tram station shut for 70 years
Not for children: Audacity fans drop the f-bomb after privacy agreement changes
NASA's InSight lander expected to survive most of summer before choking to death on Martian dust
Hubble memory errors persist despite NASA booting long-idle backup payload computer
Ouch! When the IT equipment is sound, but the setup is hole-y inappropriate
Hungover Brits declare full English breakfast the solution to all their ills
What you need to know about Microsoft Windows 11: It will run Android apps
Euro court rules YouTube not automatically liable for users illegally uploading copyright-protected material
Sarah Brightman?
I have to confess that I didn't think Sarah Brightman was still performing after about the mud-1990s, if not earlier ("I fell in love with a starship trooper" and something with an opera singer being all I was aware of, other than her marriage to Andrew Lloyd Webber). I was astounded to find that she is a really successful singer (that "something with an opera singer" was one of best selling singles ever, the opera singer being Andrea Bocelli, who even I have heard of). It seems that she also began training to go to the ISS less than 10 years ago! (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah Brightman)
I may not like her style of music (I hate operatic sopranos with a passion), but I've learned something today.
Mind the gap(ing mouth): London's Underground to get ubiquitous mobile phone coverage
Hubble Space Telescope sails serenely on in safe mode after efforts to switch to backup memory modules fail
Gov.UK taskforce publishes post-Brexit wish-list: 'TIGRR' pounces on GDPR, metric measures
Re: The UK political sphere has been so overtaken by Brexit
"Why on earth would anyone want to [use] something that is alien to most of the population?"
That was a commonly stated opinion when metric measurements were really introduced in the UK. I was taught in both Imperial and metric at school in the late 60s through the 70s, at least in part because some of teachers did not want to teach metric. I still know e.g. the speed of light in both miles per second and metres per second, because my physics classes taught both.
As mentioned previously, we have a hybrid system in the UK anyway - pints and miles are still the measurements used every day.
Japan assembles superteam of aircraft component manufacturers to build supersonic passenger plane
Playmobil crosses the final frontier with enormous, metre-long Enterprise playset
Toyota reveals its work on an honest-to-goodness cloak of invisibility
Re: Interesting
"For some reason -- thinner doorposts? bigger interiors? -- There was much less problem prior to about 2010."
For at least some cars, it is the addition of airbags in the A-pillar that has worsened the problem. Our two cars are the same manufacturer but different models. One has no A-pillar airbag, and I never have any trouble with vision*. The other can hide an entire Transit-sized van coming up to roundabouts.**
* Just like every other car I've driven in the last 40+ years.
** I am tall enough that I need to have the seat as far back as possible. This seems to make a difference because of the relative angles.
Space Force turtle expert uncovers $1.2m Cape Canaveral cocaine haul
Your spacesuit ran into a problem and needs to restart
They think it's all over. It's not now: US judge rejects HPE motion to have Oracle's Solaris sueball dismissed
Re: Or don't
I know one happy corporate lawyer (used to be a student of mine), but, in general, once any lawyer gets into the big cases (public, criminal or private law, it makes no difference), the effect on personal life is huge, and leads to all sorts of unhappiness and ill-health. The happiest lawyers I know are those that stay in small, local firms.