Slashdot Mirror


User: PPalmgren

PPalmgren's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
849
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 849

  1. Re:And how is this any different... on A Look at the Koch Brothers Dark-Money Network · · Score: 1

    In theory, yes. But in practice, they tend to strangle the industry once they grow to an industry-wide monopoly. It becomes about bravado and 'getting more' because that's how the union leaders stay in power, so it creates a field of political waste. As an industry, it no longer becomes a race to progress and competing with your rivals, but who can slash costs enough to stay afloat when crushed with huge union costs. Yes, all the companies in the industry experience these, but it actually serves to cripple and centralize the industry, the exact opposite of what a union should theoretically do.

  2. Re:Pull an AMD on Intel's 14nm Broadwell Delayed Because of Low Yield · · Score: 1

    Problem with this logic is that power consumption is a factor. While the chips are underclocked, they are also undervolted by a proportional amount. Undervolting with underclocking was a rare pasttime by overclockers, some done as hobby and others done in a quest for performance/watt crown. The chips binned for the highest clocks and the chips that overclock the best run at higher clocks on the same voltage, or more efficient. The same chips can be undervolted and perform the highest clock at their lower respective voltage. Since the low power chips are sold on battery life, you can't just take an inefficient processor and undervolt it and call it a day.

  3. Re:Rose-tinted view indeed on British NHS May Soon No Longer Offer Free Care · · Score: 1

    Its a pervasive problem in Canada, primarily with specialists, even in populated areas. My girlfriend had to wait 6 months for a gastroscopy, is 3 months into a wait for a PH test, and about 4 months out from surgery for badly progressed Barret's syndrome.

    Canadian healthcare works fine for basic checkups and doctor visits, but fails miserably when it comes to spcialists. Finland, highly lauded as one of the best socialized healthcare systems as well, suffers the same problem: my Aunt died during the waiting period from Breast Cancer because of the nonsense, and had previously lost the 'doctor lottery' which is a way to describe how you get screwed if the doctor you're assigned to there is terrible. This is what the 'death panel' talk is really about, insane waiting lists that kill needing patients because they didn't get priority.

    The problem with US healthcare costs is mostly related to emergency care and major procedures, which tends to have problems in every socialized medicine implementation in the world as well. Yeah, I think costs could come down as well as basic preventive medicine be more practiced by standardizing basic visits and screenings, which hopefully the ACA will help with. However, I'm against making the other half of the pie public. There's a reason there's tons of doctors offices on the US side of the Canadian border...they scoot over the border to get immediate care needs and specialist services.

  4. Re:Moo on Gravity: Can Film Ever Get the Science Right? · · Score: 1

    At the same time, this is the downfall.

    If you attempt to make a scientifically accurate depiction, you're dabbling in pseudorealism, not science fiction. When you go that far, and work off of historical realistic depictions of real world things like the space shuttle, hubble, and the space station, you better get the facts right.

    What makes this type of movie enjoyable is the possibility of the improbable, not the impossibility of sci fi.

  5. Re:The solution is simple. on Google Cracks Down On Mugshot Blackmail Sites · · Score: 1

    And in some cases, arrested because someone is illegally abusing the legal system. For example, a revenge lawsuit after a breakup for stalking, fabricated by the mother and daughter. It didn't happen to me, but I've seen it happen. The mother has a history of abusing the legal system and is doing it for her daughter. Regardless of it getting dismissed as nonsense, the mug shot is plastered everywhere and the first google of the guy it happened to is about an arrest.

  6. Success hinges on the controller on Ask Slashdot: Can Valve's Steam Machines Compete Against the Xbox One and PS4? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    SteamOS has a unique problem that no other ecosystem has to deal with: In order to leverage steam's strength, the size of the community, they had to do two things. First, ensure that the catalog of games is playable on the TV, and second, that this userbase can interact with the steam community on PCs. If the system can't do this, it requires a huuuge shift of users in order to make it successful, which requires the kind of investment microsoft did with the XBox.

    The second bullet point above leads to an interesting problem if they go down the path of interoperability with PC clients: controllers and mice. PCs have several genres that are unplayable with a controller, and the mouse and keyboard combo offers a significant advantage in almost every kind of competitive gaming and multiplayer. I hope that their controller bridges the gap, and chances are it might.

    The touchpad-based movement is a huge change from a joystick. Precision movement on a touch-style pad like that is the only way a controller could handle snap turns and accuracy that muscle movement on a mouse pad offers. The way its set up, I'd expect it to work sort of like the Thinkpad nib. If it works and people adopt it, it will allow people to play things like RTSes, turn-based games like Civ, and a host of other options. Yeah, hotkeys are another important point, but one more easily overcome than the massive gulf that currently exists between the mouse and the analog joystick.

    There are other factors that will tie to its success, but I think the future of the system ties to its interoperability with the PC gamers. If it doesn't, its just going to be an also-ran.

  7. Re:If this was Apple... on Samsung Fudging Benchmarks Again On Galaxy Note 3 · · Score: 1

    Just some info, early adopters of blu-ray who went with Samsung got screwed. They pulled a Sony and the software updates required to play newer BD-movies removed the functionality to play DVDs. Why? I think because they skimped on the memory.

    Of course they didnt' compensate or replace all 3 I bought (Mom, Brother, Me). I was rightly pissed off and haven't bought a Samsung product since.

  8. Re:Fails on give a damn on Students Build Ship Inspecting Robot · · Score: 1

    This has nothing to do with labor costs, and everything to do with idle costs. In the port industry, berth productivity is king. If we can reduce the idle time of a ship by 6 hours, it can save the carrier millions on that trade route through route optimization taking a ship out of the loop or via fuel efficiency on slower speeds.

  9. Re:Solution on First Cases of Flesh-Eating Drug Emerge In the United States · · Score: 1

    I think we don't see how much damage these things can do to society in a long-term look at things. I think the best case study to look at would be China in the late 19th century, where the opioids grown in India were cheap and accessible in the country spurring a 10% addiction rate in the population. It caused very serious societal problems which eventually lead to a major clean-up phase involving the ban and blocking of imports.

    People arguing cheap and available are superimposing their rationality on addicts. Addicts, regardless of cost, will destroy every aspect of their life for more. This can be seen with fairly cheap alcohol, fathers spending their kids college savings and opening joint credit accounts with their family to steal their credit and burden them for life with their parent's debt, running up payday loans and not paying the mortgage, and so on. I've seen this first hand.

    I agree certain drugs shouldn't be treated this way like pot, but opioids are not one of them.

  10. Re:jerk on Georgia Cop Issues 800 Tickets To Drivers Texting At Red Lights · · Score: 1

    A lot of left turns in my town use sensors on the ground with a lower limit of 5 seconds. The sensors will turn the light yellow if it doesn't detect a car in 3 seconds. There is one big left turn near my house that I use to go to the grocery store that always has around 10-20 cars in it at any time before 8 PM, and its a 30 second left turn light that will only last 5 seconds with one car. The full cycle for the intersection is about 3 minutes. One person not accelerating and turning causes cars to back up onto the main road until the next transition. It is a common problem with lackidaiscal god-window-sticker soccer mom drivers not hitting the damn gas pedal, and the more recently added majority infringers, dipshits looking at their phones.

    Causing traffic congestion because you can't wait 10 minutes to read and type out a text is unnaceptable.

  11. Re:AMD multi-display problems on Multi-Display Gaming Artifacts Shown With AMD, 4K Affected Too · · Score: 1

    I can confirm this happens even on dual-monitor setups with the default driver. It is extremely common when playing a full screen game on one monitor and leaving the other up for your background stuff, even with the cursor stuck to the gaming monitor. This happens to me when playing Dota 2.

    It is common to the point where there's threads about it spattered around the internet.

  12. Re:They dumped the waste water yet no misconduct on Exxon Charged With Illegally Dumping Waste In Pennsylvania · · Score: 1

    Even if what you said was true, you assume that the reward outweighs the risk. You are flat out wrong. Intent matters. In our industry, we get a serious investigation from OSHA even if a union worker dies of a heart attack, or if someone ran a stop sign and caused an accident at the facility. We do everything we can to make it safe, even as far as changing traffic patterns, and it is the number one commitment in my company. See, the fines START at the massive numbers and are reduced if you can prove that it was not willful negligence. Basically, you ahve to have policies in place that control against bad behavior in a reasonable manner or you have no oomph to your requests to reduce fines when accidents occur. It is more expensive to hide than it is to implement properly, and even if you are focusing solely on the money, it is more expensive to anyone worth their salt who can map out all the real costs associated with bad behavior.

    The companies that can't look beyond step 2 are the ones that fail. Safety pays, as does reducing emissions and power consumption.

  13. Re:Vote Jeff Johnson... on Australia Elects Libertarian-Leaning Senator (By Accident) · · Score: 1

    For a minute, I was thinking that I was the only one who had seen this movie. Bravo for sharing it.

    Sometimes I wonder if John Stewart got his formula from Eddie Murphy's comedies.

  14. Re:Unintended positive consequences - fewer sequel on Biggest Headache For Game Developers: Abusive Fans · · Score: 2

    As an extension of this, see if there's correlation between this entitlement and the increased ubiquity of pre-purchase offers in the industry. I can understand the demands given you paid $60 for the game 3 months ago.

  15. Re:Sure it's a loopy idea on Transport Expert Insists 'Don't Dismiss Wacky Hyperloop' · · Score: 1

    As an additonal note, freight trains between SF and LA shouldn' be a point of discussion. Both locations have large deepwater ports and are served as transport hubs for inland cargo. The amount of freight that moves between the two cities is miniscule because a large percentage of the ships that dock in LA also dock at Oakland. Both ports have nearby or on dock rail depots. A rail connection for freight connecting west coast cities offers very little value.

  16. Controls for exhaustion and boredom? on Camping Helps Set Circadian Clocks Straight · · Score: 2

    While I think there's likely some truth in the studies' conclusion, I don't think it controls for the environmental changes and attributes it all to avoiding unnatural light, and I don't think this is necessarily an accurate assessment.

    One of the things that happens when you camp and hike is that you eat less and burn more calories. One of the things that keeps us up is our high calorie diets coupled with our sedentary lifestyles, causing our bodies to burn off excess calories through stupid things like nervous twitches. You can see the same circadian fix as the one the study proposes by working out for an hour and a half a day or doing heavy physical labor.

    Couple that with how much easier it is to sleep when you're bored, and the fact that there's not much you can do in the woods at night compared to day, and you get a natural gravitation towards sleeping during the dark hours of the day. Hiking may regulate our sleep, but I think there's more factors here at play.

  17. Re:Metric please ! on Norwegian Town Using Sun-Tracking Mirrors To Light Up Dark Winter Days · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A scientist or engineer that can't handle common unit conversions is an unemployed scientist or engineer.

    The article is from a US website intended for a US audience, and uses US measurements. I don't expect a news aggregator to do extra work because you're lazy.

  18. Re:You are not qualified to comment. on US Air Force Reporting Pilot Shortage · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but you are wrong. I used to think the same way, then I managed to pry some stories out of my calculus teacher during a key club convention, who was a former USAF pilot. One of my friends was looking to follow that path so he discussed the dark side of being a pilot. I was always wondering why the guy looked so beat up given that he was only 60, and its because of the intense strain on your body by the profession. He was telling us about how when you're taking sharp turns, you basically have to flex your entire body and breathe in tiny spurts. It can stress every blood vessel in your body so badly that a single flight can force you into days of physical pain.

    I suggest you go to youtube and look up airforce centrifuge training, click on one of the longer videos, showing you the strain level of different prolonged G-forces and what they have to do to stay consious. It gave me a new respect for how difficult it can be.

  19. Re:Bromma has a solution on Container Ship Breaks In Two, Sinks · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't as prevalent in Western ports, its mainly an issue on Chinese imports. The US or European cranes don't get to weigh anything until it lands as an import, and it could have been mis-declared from start to LA. Given the location of the incident, this was an Asia-Europe route going through the Suez Canal, so this is a very possible scenario.

  20. Re:Declared underweight? on Container Ship Breaks In Two, Sinks · · Score: 1

    they do, and if containers are overweight in a lot of locations they get refused and the owner gets fined for mis-reporting the weight. A lot of time and money goes into vessel cargo planning because of the weight issues, but it operates on an honor system where the cargo owner provides the weight because you can't plan the ship on the fly. The obvious solution is to use a weight measured at the gate and take out an average for truck and chassis, and this implementation is in the works or in place in a lot of locations. Not all ports are created equal, and not all vessel planners are created equal, and not all shipbuilding products are created equal since there's true way to test the max. This is either the perfect storm or mismanagement or a serious flaw in construction. You can bet all the ships from the same order batch are on high alert or even suspended.

  21. Re:Declared underweight? on Container Ship Breaks In Two, Sinks · · Score: 1

    nope, that wouldn't work at all. I do work in the shipping industry, and most container shipping companies are megacorporations because of the vast cost involved. The insurance rates would be astronomical if you did that.

    Keep in mind each ship costs on the order of $100m to build and the profit margins are long term and slim. It is in the industries best interest to be safe and fuel efficient and it shows in the main focuses at my company and others.

  22. Re:Most don't notice the difference on Android Co-Founder: Fragmentation "an Overblown Issue" · · Score: 2

    On your comment about Iphone buyers being less knowledgeable than Android buyers, I think you're right but for the wrong reasons. People who get sucked into the apple garden have a different approach when buying a device. It becomes "which Apple product should I buy?" The distinction becomes clear if you ever read the comments in an Apple review. Its purely brand loyalty. I find it dissapointing to see intelligent people get stuck in the stockholm syndrome that is Apple, but think the reason is more behavioral than intelligence related.

  23. Re:Waste of money on TSA Finishes Removing "Virtual Nude" X-Ray Devices From US Airports · · Score: 1

    The unions threw themselves under the bus. The backlash is a direct result of the corruption among many union administrations as well as the exorbetent demands among the larger unions that have/had strangleholds on their industries such as the UAW, ILA, and ILWU, and teacher's unions. The bigger ones grow to the point where they cannibalize their industry by using cartel-like labor monopoly manipulation. They can prevent any sort of technological advancement and preserve 1970's style list-checking jobs and data-entry jobs because they're the only guy in town, and if you go somewhere else, they'll put you out of business by striking at all your locations.

    This is the perception the middle class white collar gets when having to work with unions, and its pretty close to accurate. Deal with the problems the 'union monopoly' and the effective and trustworthy union will return. Not until then will it happen.

  24. Re:Parasites on UN Says: Why Not Eat More Insects? · · Score: 1

    A couple people getting sick every year out of 400 million isn't an outbreak, it just looks that way because the news is capable of reporting every single incident now.

  25. Re:It's to bad on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 3, Informative

    There might actually be a biological reason. I was watching a documentary on the brain on NatGeo, and they brought up a study on chimps while discussing the general differences between the male and female brain. They gave chimps who had lived without human interaction some human toys. Even among chimps without our cultural influence, the males predominantly chose the trucks and the females predominantly chose the dolls.

    This was like a decade ago so I don't know the significance of that study or if it has been debunked, but I always found it interesting.