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User: mshannon78660

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Comments · 87

  1. Re:V2V Developer on Government To Require Vehicle-to-vehicle Communication · · Score: 1

    Since this is designed to be broadcast to any cars around you (and therefore to receive from any cars around you), why would anyone need to hack the encryption? All they need to do is appear as another car, and you'll negotiate the encryption with them, and pass along all the data, meanwhile accepting whatever they tell you. As far as the government spying issue goes, again, all they have to do is appear as another car, and your car will happily give up all the data. I could easily envision a device that simply masquerades as a car 100 feet behind you - when they attach it to your car, your car will keep it updated with all the information about your speed and position, and since it's always behind you and never closing, your car won't need to issue any alerts to you. Even without that, if you have positional information, with the increasing prevalence of toll roads in this country (particularly EZ-Pass and video tolling style), and of license plate scanners, means that it would be trivial to tie a positional data stream to a license plate number unless the owner is trying very hard to fly under the radar (and probably has the assistance of someone inside the PD). Not saying that this will be misused, just that I don't see that there's any way to prevent its misuse. The reduction in vehicle fatalities MIGHT be worth it, but that discussion still needs to happen.

  2. A friend's Apple II+ on How Did You Learn How To Program? · · Score: 1

    Basic and Assembler there (modifying programs out of Byte magazine). Later got a C64 at home, and my friend's dad got us in to use the Harris 4 mini at his office. Loved writing JCL on that machine - I wrote a routine that gave a quick status of who was logged in to what terminals, and what they were running on the machine - heard that the company was still using that utility about 10 years later!

  3. Spaceship Under the Apple Tree on Ask Slashdot: Best Science-Fiction/Fantasy For Kids? · · Score: 1

    A lot of good recommendations on here already. One I haven't seen is the 'Spaceship Under the Apple Tree' series by Louis Slobodkin. Perfect for that age (the main character is an 8-9 year old boy.

  4. Re:hey, don't knock it on Indian Launch Vehicle Explodes After Lift-Off · · Score: 1
    Delta III - predecessor to the current Delta IV - two out of three failures, and the one success only carried a dummy payload.

    Delta III

  5. Re:Fragility still a concern? on Casio Unveils New Color Screen Graphing Calculator · · Score: 1
    I actually just recently replaced the Casio programmable (not graphing, they weren't available then) calculator that I originally bought in about 1979 or 1980. I did replace the battery once or twice, but the last time was at least 10 years ago (not that it gets a lot of use anymore). The only reason I replaced it is that I thought I had lost it - it was still working just fine, despite the crimp in the case from being dropped, and the fact that it lived in an outside pocket of my backpack for probably 5-6 years (high school and college).

    Of course, after I bought the new one, I found it again, so now I have both...

  6. Re:Corrected Headline on NCsoft Sued For Making Lineage II 'Too Addictive' · · Score: 2, Informative
    Agreed - and now, having read the judge's decision (OK, to be honest, I skimmed sections of it) - he actually tossed out about half of the complaint. This motion to dismiss from NC-Soft was strictly on procedural grounds (alleging that the plaintiff hadn't properly worded things, etc.).

    The plaintiff was originally representing himself (and may still be, that was unclear) - and the judge points out that federal courts give a certain amount of leeway to people who represent themselves, as it is assumed that they are at a disadvantage against a legal team (I didn't realize that, I had assumed somewhat the opposite, that courts would be a little harder on someone representing themselves, to make the practice less appealing). But a lawyer helped him amend his complaint (the judge had thrown it out twice, but given the plaintiff an option to amend (because he was representing himself) - after the second time, he apparently had a lawyer help him with it, and she was hauled into court to answer for herself (lawyers are generally not permitted to write documents for the court unless they sign them).

    My guess is that the next thing to happen in this case is that NC-Soft will submit a motion for summary judgement, which will likely be granted, and returned in their favor. Reading between the lines, the judge doesn't seem to think too much of the plaintiff's claims.

  7. Re:how did we manage on Experts Say Wiretap Law Needs Digital Era Update · · Score: 2, Informative

    We called from landlines, and emergency services used the database of location information provided to them by the phone companies that installed the landlines. And yes, if someone was injured in a location without telephones, they did often die.

  8. Re:Kudos on Video Games Linked To Reckless Driving · · Score: 1

    I had the same experience once. Spent a couple of hours with a friend at an arcade (back when we still had those) playing a racing game. Driving home afterward, I suddenly realized I was driving way too fast and aggressively. Since then, I just try to be aware of effects like that, and have not had it happen again.

  9. Re:Juries? on Guess My Speed and Give Me a Ticket, In Ohio · · Score: 1

    In the few jurisdictions that I have direct experience in, you are essentially agreeing to waive your right to a jury trial in exchange for lower court costs. You can request a jury trial, and you will be required to post a bond equal to some percentage of the expected court costs (which are usually at least as much as the speeding ticket, and are non-recoverable). It used to be that you could go in front of the judge and plead no contest, and he would generally knock the fine down just because you showed up in court. These days, they don't want you to even do that - they basically have office personnel that are certified as some type of magistrate, and you fill out the paperwork with them to get the lowest fee - but it will be what the ticket was written for. Contesting in front of a judge now means additional fees, so it's generally not worth it.

  10. Re:Indeed, but... on Doctors Seeing a Rise In "Google-itis" · · Score: 1

    Yes to this and to the GP, but it depends a lot on the doctor. My former doctor really didn't listen to me at all, and tended to brush off any symptoms I brought to him (the only reason I ended up getting the knee surgery I desperately needed was that he felt, as a GP, that he wasn't completely qualified to evaluate joints. His exact words were "it's probably nothing, but I'll give you a referral to an orthopedic surgeon just in case."). My current doctor, on the other hand (and a big part of the reason why she is the current doctor for my whole family) is very much willing to listen to, and consider anything I bring up. But she knows that I am quite knowledgable for a layperson, and I only bring up possible diagnoses that are plausible, and worth exploring.

  11. Re:Useful to whom? The racists who care about skin on Will Your Answers To the Census Stay Private? · · Score: 1
    Better fire up your webcam then, because the Commerce Dept. (who conduct the census) have announced that they are only using the short form this time around...

    2010 Census will be short form only--just 10 easy questions.

  12. Re:Well done, Spirit! on NASA Concedes Defeat In Effort To Free Spirit Rover · · Score: 4, Informative

    I wouldn't call it 'cutting corners', but actually, they did make some design decisions with the assumption that it only needed to last for 90 days. One example, off the top of my head: there was discussion about a mechanism to clear dust off the solar panels, but it was felt that the extra weight was not a good tradeoff, since NASA expected that the solar panels would not become completely dust-covered within the 90 days. Of course, we got lucky, and the winds turned out to be strong enough (and at least occasionally dust-free) to clear off the solar panels. Had that not been the case, the actual lifespan might well have been much closer to 90 days.

  13. Re:Movies based on R.A. Lafferty short stories on What SciFi Should Get the Reboot Treatment Next? · · Score: 1

    Lafferty has always been one of my favorite authors. That said, it would be really hard to translate most of his stuff into movies that didn't suck really badly - they're just not written with visual action in mind. Maybe the Barnaby Sheen stories could work, but I'm drawing a blank on any others...

  14. Re:Misleading title on INTERPOL Granted Diplomatic Immunity In the US · · Score: 2, Informative
    Did you read the law you linked to? Section 8(c):

    (c) No person shall, by reason of the provisions of this title, be considered as receiving diplomatic status or as receiving any of the privileges incident thereto other than such as are specifically set forth herein.

    Seems like that pretty explicity states that this is not diplomatic immunity. Also, there is nothing in that law that says anything about immunity to local prosecution - which is the main thing that most people think of when they hear 'diplomatic immunity'. This act only grants immunity from suits or civil actions "relating to acts performed by them in their official capacity and falling within their functions as such representatives, officers, or employees".

  15. Re:Nothing to see here, move on on Copyright Time Bomb Set To Go Off · · Score: 2, Informative

    Does Arkham House (for example) really deserve to have the rights (and thus get a cut) of most of H.P. Lovecrafts works? Why the hell did they do to deserve such an eternal money maker?

    Uh, yeah, they do deserve it. Arkham House was created by August Derleth, who was a friend of HP Lovecraft, and was a more financially successful writer. He didn't do it to make money, in fact he said (in 1970)"[T]he fact is that in no single year since its founding have the earnings of Arkham House met the expenses, so that it has been necessary for my personal earnings to shore up Arkham House finances."

  16. Re:I don't understand advertising on Toyota Claims Woman "Opted In" To Faux Email Stalking · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe they were hoping for Stockholm syndrome to set in?

  17. Re:This seems to be getting pretty routine on HD Video From the Edge of Space, On the Cheap · · Score: 1

    Ask, and ye shall receive... Salvage

  18. Re:Oh, come on... on New Hitchhiker's Guide Book "Not Very Funny" · · Score: 1

    The only thing that could have made his delivery of the part better was if it didn't seem to be emanating from something apparently designed by Apple...

    Funny - that was the one thing I thought the movie really got right. I never liked the costume for Marvin in the TV miniseries - I didn't think it fit with the Sirius Cybernetics Corps Marketing Division definition of a robot as '... your plastic pal who's fun to be with'. Having the stylish, well designed exterior helps throw his depressed, misanthropic exterior into sharp relief...

  19. Re:Worried about the cost of your actions? on Why Should I Trust My Network Administrator? · · Score: 1
    If you require your outsourcer to work the way you would if you hired staff yourself, they can't possibly provide the same service for less cost. Think about it - if they have to hire staff exclusively for you (since they are on site at your location), and do all the other things that your in-house staff would do - then their costs (irrespective of labor) will essentially be the same as yours would be (I'm oversimplifying a bit - there are some costs, like office space, that they won't bear - but you will, so it will not affect the final analysis). So the only way for them to provide the service cheaper than you, would be to pay people a lot less than you would (remember, they need to make a profit off it; which you don't). In general, if they are hiring in the same local market that you are, and paying significantly less than you would, then they are not going to get the same quality of people. Now they might do it by bringing in foreign workers - but if they have to work and live in your location, they are eventually going to expect the same compensation as local workers - so there will be very high turnover.

    It seems to me that the only way this type of outsourcing really works is: it's for a short time, while you get staffed up, or get through a backlog of work; or it's an accounting trick to move operational expenditures to capital expenditures, which may look better on the balance sheet.

  20. Re:I'm surprised.... on Funds Dwindle To Dismantle Old Nuclear Plants · · Score: 1
    Of course, the government has already subsidized the road that the bus or car drives on. With rail, the railroad currently has to buy the land and build out the infrastructure. Even with toll roads, the government subsidizes them in a major way - so competition is currently nowhere near fair.

    A similar situation exists for airports - the government invests a huge amount of money in the nation's airports (including providing the air traffic control system) - again, the competition is currently nowhere near fair.

  21. Re:Physics? on MIT Electric Car May Outperform Rival Gas Models · · Score: 1

    A pace is two steps - and back in the dark ages, when I was in Boy Scouts, and learning orienteering, we actually practiced getting a 5 foot pace, so we could consistently pace off map distances. So 1,000 paces would be 5,000 feet, which is close to the 5,280 feet in the current definition of a mile.

  22. Re:I know why. on Bill Gates Puts Classic Feynman Lectures Online · · Score: 1

    As far as I know, you can still buy Six Easy Pieces in CD format (I received it as a present 6 or 7 years ago). I occasionally play the CDs in my car when driving with my daughter (who is now 9).

  23. Re:Anything like this for maths? on New Science Books To Be Available Free Online · · Score: 1

    Just have to say - I went to UW Madison in the 80s, and Kiesler's Calculus textbook was notorious. It was only used by him. Those that were able to take his class, and get through it with a passing grade, ended up with a good understanding of calculus - but the drop and fail rate in his class was significantly higher than in the classes that used the other textbook (don't have it in front of me right now, so I can't tell you whose it was).

  24. Re:The problem is... on Cheap 3D Motion Sensing System Developed At MIT · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, if you RTFA, you'll see that they already address this. One of the difficulties with current systems is that you have to go to the system to do the motion capture. This new system could potentially be used on set - which would be very attractive in situations where live-action and CG are mixed.

  25. Re:Makes sense on Social Networking Sites Getting Risky For Recruiting · · Score: 2, Informative

    At least in the larger corporations I've worked in, you need to provide an assessment of the candidate to HR (not to the candidate). That assessment is filed, specifically to use in the case of an EOC complaint or lawsuit. Generally, if the assessment for a candidate that you didn't hire looks better than the one you do recommend for hire, HR may ask you to elaborate on the decision.