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300bps commented on Ask HN: Any felons successfully found IT work post-release?    · Posted by u/publicprivacy
phpisthebest · 2 years ago
Based on your response you most likely are not using Assault in the legal sense but in the Common Sense, but given the topic is legal in nature we should be using legal definitions.

Assault act of causing someone to reasonably fear imminent harm, what most people think of Assault they actually mean what the law calls battery which is actually causing physical harm.

Further I am not sure why we are focusing on Assault or battery, the OP said that was not the charge they were convicted of, and a Felony by definition is any crime punishable by more than 1 year of imprisonment which given the "Tough on crime" provision starting in the 90 makes a HUGE number if non-violent offenses felonies, as something a simple a playing your music too loud could be in some circumstances classified as a felony (often charged as " Nuisances" which is many states is a low level felony)

Most people have "felon" associated with violent crime, or serious crime, but unfortunately in our over criminalized society most people commit as many as 3 felonies a day not even knowing it.

300bps · 2 years ago
Legal definition of both assault as well as battery is state dependent.
300bps commented on Ask HN: Any felons successfully found IT work post-release?    · Posted by u/publicprivacy
kypro · 2 years ago
I know this is a controversial view, but I think employers should not be allowed to run background checks unless important for the role (government work, access to children, etc) and where it is important for the role it should only return the criminal convictions that might be relevant to the role.

If you were arrested for robbery when you were younger perhaps because you had a drug addiction then that person should have a right to serve their time and change their ways later in life without the state holding and distributing that to any potential employer, practically ensuring that individual is unemployable for a mistake they made in their youth.

The reason I think this is not a good assumption to assume that someone will be a bad employee simply because they did something criminal in their past. There are terrible employees out there who don't break the law. If we're so concerned about employers hiring bad employees then state should instead build a centralised database of bad employees and their reason for termination at previous places of work. I'd argue this would be more effective if we're concerned an employer might hire a bad employee.

Secondly, making it difficult for those who have committed crimes to get back into the workforce increases their risk of reoffending. Having a good job and a nice life to lose is a great reason to not commit crimes while having nothing to live for is a great excuse to do whatever feels right in the moment.

Best of luck op. If I was an employer I'd consider you if you had the skills and seemed like you could do the job. I have no idea why your past would be relevant to your ability to work outside of select roles.

300bps · 2 years ago
An assault charge is likely relevant for most positions.

If I hire a convicted felon with a track record of assault and they end up assaulting another employee or customer, I’d feel responsible.

The victim would probably hold me legally responsible.

I’d feel more comfortable hiring someone with a 100% track record of never having been convicted of assault.

If you disagree, is there any number of assault convictions that would change your mind? Or do you mentally wipe the slate clean no matter what?

300bps commented on Physical attractiveness and intergenerational social mobility   onlinelibrary.wiley.com/d... · Posted by u/PaulHoule
300bps · 2 years ago
I can't believe anyone would do a study about this for two reasons.

First, well, duh. Don't need a study to tell you this.

Second, was this done for someone to explain why they're not successful? A lot of people want to justify a lack of effort because the chips are stacked against them. All any of us are supposed to do though is be the best version of ourselves we can be.

There will always be someone smarter, taller, better looking. Who cares? Do your best.

300bps commented on Z80 vs. 8088 Speed   groups.google.com/g/comp.... · Posted by u/CTOSian
wk_end · 2 years ago
This comment is misleading. Z80 also has an 8-bit external bus. And, FWIW, so does the 6502. The reason zero page is fast on the 6502 is because of more concise encoding, not because that memory is somehow faster.

I'm broadly skeptical that a 6502 outperforms an 8088 at 5x clock speed in practice. Would love to see benchmarks. Certainly I'd expect it to be highly task dependent.

300bps · 2 years ago
I've programmed in 6502 Assembly for decades and your skepticism is right on.

These comparisons have so many variables that they are extremely hard to make accurately.

FTA - I would have guessed that the 8088 is much faster at about the same clock speed, because it has more 16-bit operations and does multiplication and division in hardware.

Does the compiler of the compiler make use of these extra 16-bit operations? How many layers of abstraction does it go through for each of the environments? Does it use DOS interrupts when running on DOS and optimized machine code on CP/M?

These comparisons are strange thought experiments.

300bps commented on Unity announces layoffs despite increased revenue and reduced losses   gamesindustry.biz/unity-a... · Posted by u/myth_drannon
OskarS · 2 years ago
According to the article, they have half a billion dollars in revenue (with currently $154 millon in losses), and that seems plenty to run a company like Unity. Lay-offs are rough, but looking at the numbers, they make sense in a cold-hearted capitalist sort-of way if the goal is to reach profitability. Certainly much more so than the runtime fee thing.
300bps · 2 years ago
OK imagine you have $500 million in revenue and $154 million in losses.

That means you've been selling $1.00 for 70 cents.

Not sustainable. If their customers don't like what they're doing, it's not surprising. Because anyone buying $1.00 for 70 cents is going to be angry when it ends.

If their developers don't like what they're doing, it's not surprising. Anyone benefiting from a company paying them more than they can afford is going to be angry when it ends.

300bps commented on AI companies have all kinds of arguments against paying for copyrighted content   theverge.com/2023/11/4/23... · Posted by u/rntn
TaylorAlexander · 2 years ago
Right. I believe IP restrictions are harmful, don’t actually do what we commonly believe they do, and are a significant net negative to society. I am in favor of either slowly or quickly abolishing IP restrictions. Tho I think it would need to be done slowly to avoid shocks to an economy which has become dependent on these restrictions.
300bps · 2 years ago
Who will pay for Stack Overflow servers and maintenance if OpenAI is just going to scrape their content and stop people from going to Stack Overflow?
300bps commented on The Pictorial C64 Fault Guide   pictorial64.com/... · Posted by u/Luc
wkjagt · 2 years ago
Oh wow, seems like you encountered all the possible problems! Good thing you had two C64 so you could swap components. Do you have an idea why so many things had failed? Bad power supply blowing up chips maybe?
300bps · 2 years ago
There is a voltage regulator in the standard Commodore 64 power supply that fails catastrophically. Specifically, it sends > 5 volts down the 5 volt line.

When this happens, depending on how long it's on it can fry every chip on that line.

That's why everyone advises not to use the original power supplies even for a quick test. Even if it tests 5 volts before you plug it into the computer it can fail at any moment.

300bps commented on Sam Bankman-Fried Convicted   nytimes.com/live/2023/11/... · Posted by u/donohoe
nytesky · 2 years ago
300bps · 2 years ago
I knew the embarrassment level was going to be turned up to 11 when your link was to archive.org.
300bps commented on The Pictorial C64 Fault Guide   pictorial64.com/... · Posted by u/Luc
300bps · 2 years ago
One of the most rewarding things I have done in the past few years is learned component-level repair on Commodore 64s.

Take a dead 64 showing nothing but a black screen, try the dead test cartridge, follow its lead or start desoldering, socketing and replacing chips.

And suddenly you have a working forty year old Commodore 64.

300bps commented on The Pictorial C64 Fault Guide   pictorial64.com/... · Posted by u/Luc
rzzzt · 2 years ago
It's the PLA, what did I win?
300bps · 2 years ago
Easily 90%+ of the faults on Commodore 64s, especially the early models.

My Christmas 1982 model died with a faulty PLA well within the warranty period.

u/300bps

KarmaCake day6961May 6, 2013View Original