Re: [EXTERNAL] Re: NTY: Buy Apple gadgets, use Google services, buy media from Amazon

Posted by Parks, Raymond on
URL: http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/NTY-Buy-Apple-gadgets-use-Google-services-buy-media-from-Amazon-tp7584915p7584994.html

Because I end up providing tech support, I suggest that they use what I use.  I use the cheapest technology, with the best future, that supports my existing activity (i.e. legacy/backwards compatibility).  By "best future", I mean both future-proofing (i.e. it won't transition to the backwards compatibility requirement for the longest time) and the likelihood that it will continue to gain capability and improvements.

Ray Parks
Consilient Heuristician/IDART Program Manager
V: 505-844-4024  M: 505-238-9359  P: 505-951-6084
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On Feb 21, 2014, at 8:50 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:

Given all this, ... what would you prescribe for your family members who are not particularly expert in these matters?

What computer/laptop, tablet, phone, email service, applications (assuming they need at least one of an office suite), hosting service for their new business, TV components, video services (NetFlix, Amazon, iTunes), sync service, ... I could go on.

But what?  They really want to know.

   -- Owen


On Fri, Feb 21, 2014 at 11:36 AM, glen e. p. ropella <[hidden email]> wrote:
On 02/21/2014 07:35 AM, Steve Smith wrote:
To make this relevant to the discussion...  I don't think I could ever
have come to recognize the value of such a data structure if I *hadn't*
felt obliged to re-invent (re-implement?) a number of algorithms that
had already been implemented by others... to differing degrees of quality.

The meat of the discussion lies in the person's (or organization's) agility to change paths once prior work, or a better way regardless of its source, is brought to light.  I recently had to characterize "agile" software development in comparison to ... what? ... "large-scale, entrenched process" to a CIO type who understands some of the economics, but not the technologies.  Me being largely agnostic, trying to explain the two to him in an informal setting proved more difficult than I would have thought.  (Shows how often I talk to those types these days.)

In microcosm, the contrast isn't between engineer-types and scientist-types, but between ... I don't know... authoritarian vs. egalitarian(?) types.  I've met plenty of authoritarian scientist-types and plenty of egalitarian engineer-types.  I've even met some certified PEs who showed remarkable agility when shown a better way.  Actually, "better" is loaded.  "More appropriate to the task at hand" is better than "better".

--
glen ep ropella -- <a href="tel:971-255-2847" value="+19712552847" target="_blank">971-255-2847


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