I have watched a manager with a master's degree in computer science pull this BS. At an enterprise technology company. He would go as far as repeating a question over and over until he got an answer he liked.
The senior members of his team had a culture of eighty hour work weeks. Draw what conclusions you may.
I'm going to piggyback of your comment, since you're commenting on the website itself:
Is there any way to download this podcast for offline listening? I'm looking for podcasts I can listen to while driving without killing my mobile data quota.
Honestly, I could understand that line of thinking if he were talking about ordinary members of the public who are utterly unprepared for a life and death situation. (Not saying I agree with it, just that I understand it.)
But when we're talking about a crew of professionals who literally spend years training to deal with disasters, and who knew exactly what they signed up for when they got in that rocket, I have to squarely side with you. They at least deserved a chance to go down fighting.
Searching with regexes is more likely to be useful when trolling through log or data files than code.
Even then, the most common cases for me are searching for a string only at the beginning or ending of a line, or only searching for instances that are not part of a larger word.
I was as confused as the other commentators by this post until I realized that fixermark is thinking of analog thermometers with a physical dial, while we (and probably the author as well) are envisioning electronic thermometers with digital displays.
The nation-prefix suggestion could actually be reasonable if Amazon.com Inc. were also limited to its own prefix, say .inc.amazon. I assume that's not what was proposed.
Shouldn't preventing this be as easy as turning off autorun? In fact, I thought Windows had that off by default for USB devices.
(Of course, I'm assuming we're not dealing with a zero-day in the USB stack or filesystem drivers. But that probably is something that the Secret Service should be on top of, as well.)
On the "determine if anything suspicious is happening" front, you can configure Wireshark to capture USB packets and show you what is going over the wire.
I think it's an artifact of luxury cars being designed to optimize a handful of metrics (horsepower, an exterior that "looks good") at any cost.
I see something similar with high-end phones (particularly iPhones). Every reasonable practical concern takes a backseat to making the thing as thin as possible. The result is a phone with mediocre battery life, antenna problems, and a body about as impact-resistant as an egg.
If you are able to work on something else at the same time, it's free money.
More importantly, he probably has a vastly different opportunity cost than you. If all he was doing was watching the TV, why not make a little extra money for no additional effort?
If you look at the mass mailing options that the USPS markets on their website, they ask you to basically buy a whole delivery route at a time.
There's no routing and sorting they have to do. The carrier just picks up a stack of letters at the start of the shift, and drops one in every mailbox.
The labor cost that the USPS has to put in for a mass mailing is a fraction of what it has to do for normal mailing.
There's enough important applications for single use plastics (keeping medical equipment sterile before use, for example) that I'd hate to see an outright ban.
However, I think we should be seriously be considering a cap-and-trade approach to managing it.
This could also be a tool to get corporations to use recycled material effectively. Post-consumer recycled material could either not count against the quota, or could be counted at a different rate than "virgin" plastic.
I have no particular basis for saying this, but it feels like it was written as part of a larger attempt to discredit the environmental movement as a while.