brertech
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Samsung tries to steal Apple's iPhone X thunder by teasing foldable Galaxy Note in 2018
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How to add and play podcasts using Overcast for the iPhone
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French company sues Apple over incomplete HTML5 support on iOS, macOS Safari
mr o said:This is significant.
This is not simply about HTML5, is it? It is about progressive web apps: They look and act exactly the same as a native app on your iDevice.
...
Progressive web apps are the future of the web on mobile.
Web apps do not look and act exactly like native apps, and they never integrate as well with the rest of the system. They will always move slower and perform slower as they attempt to emulate native code and create generic APIs years after the originals are available.
I won't even get into how horrible they are from a security perspective.
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Genius Bar doesn't hire retired Apple engineer, fires up age discrimination debate
Rocket_Man said:It's depressing to see how many commenters just assume that J.K. Scheinberg must have been less qualified or technically adept than younger hires, or that he was over-qualified, or that he must have given a "worse interview, or that he "just didn't 'fit'." One commenter, probably emboldened by anonymity, even had the audacity to libel Mr. Scheinberg, suggesting that he was not "looking to WORK" and was, instead, just "looking for a paycheck to coast on til retirement." Did any of you who posted those comments meet Mr. Scheinberg? Did you sit in on his interview? Did you check out his references? Did you read his resume and those of the younger people who were hired? Did you talk to the people who made the hiring decisions for the store? I bet that most of didn't even click the link to the NY Time article, much less read it before posting your comments. What motivates some people to claim that every lawsuit for employment bias, be it based on age, gender, race, religion, or sexuality, simply *must* be without merit -- despite all of the statistical and peer reviewed research that prove such biases exist and harm so many people?
The problem with the premise of the article is that his work on processor transitions is somehow supposed to be proof of discrimination. "He's really smart and has in-depth Apple experience, therefore it is discriminatory that he wasn't hired."
Not necessarily true. The required skill sets of these positions, one in engineering and one in customer service, are vastly different. Just because he was a good fit for one does not mean he would be good for the other. Having managed many engineers, I have rarely found one that would be adept at a position that required dealing with unruly and unhappy customers all day long. -
Apple, Google workers among top donors to Bernie Sanders campaign
Ok, this is a very disingenuous article.
Check the two links for Hillary and Bernie's donations.
Now, look at the "Select Source of Funds" link at the top. Notice how Bernie's link is for "Candidate Committee only", while Hillary's is set to "Campaign + Outside Groups". Change Hillary's to also be "Candidate Committee only". Surprise! A completely different list, and much more in line with Bernie's but with more law firms than tech firms. The different between Alphabet's contribution to Bernie and Hillary is only $30k, for example.
Now, consider the claim that "Clinton, in contrast, is backed mainly by donors linked to the finance industry and labor unions, at the top being Soros Fund Management with more than $7 million. The Sanders campaign has often prided itself on staying distant from the finance industry." I have to laugh that you would single out George Soros, the most famous liberal philanthropist and boogeyman of the conservative movement as "finance industry". Yes, he made his money in finance, but he's also one of the biggest philanthropists in the world, including to organizations like MoveOn. The only other three groups listed which could be claimed as finance industry -- Euclidean, Pritzerk, and Renaissance -- have similar track records for donating to liberal causes.
Also...
"OpenSecrets didn't suggest why Sanders would have strong tech support, but Apple as an institution has adopted many left-leaning stances, at least on social and environmental issues."
Once you set Hillary's list to be "Candidate Committee only", it stops at donors as high as $148,645. How much did Apple employees give to Bernie Sanders? $85,576.
So for all you know Apple gave more to Clinton than Sanders, it just doesn't show in the limited chart.
Shame, shame, AppleInsider.