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User: kaiidth

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Comments · 396

  1. Re:I'm curious, on Professor Resigns From Stanford To Launch Online Education Project · · Score: 1

    The AI-course was used for recruitment purposes (ie. the top 1k students were invited to apply to Google), which I'm sure made many of the top 1k students very happy.

    That said, someone less squeaky-clean than Google might take the approach slightly further, deciding to run a carefully targeted education project, retain data from student use of virtual learning environments and, in the long run, use it to screen out sub-standard potential recruits. However, that would be kind of evil - so I'm sure nobody would ever seriously consider deploying a Trojan course.

  2. Re:Autism... on Oxford Professor Taken To Task For Linking Internet Use To Autism · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Greenfield actually was made redundant from her directorship at the Royal Institution in 2010.

    It was suggested at the time that, "She became a bit too convinced of her own infallibility" and whilst, "She is an intelligent, lively and interesting person [...] the level of recognition is a bit out of proportion to what she has actually achieved in science." Her love for designer clothes and appearing in places like Vogue raised a few eyebrows.

    "Self-promoting celebrity" is not an unusual description. If you were starting a collection of crackpots, you could do worse than starting here.
     

  3. Re:New Apple patent on Apple Granted Patent For Slide To Unlock · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    It's because they employ a lot of very smart, creative patent trolls.

  4. It's Internet Time all over again... on Ask Slashdot: Could We Deal With the End of Time Zones? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First thing that came to mind on reading this article was "1998 called, they want their suggestion back".

    Back in 1998 when the Web was new and cool, Swatch were attempting to market a metric alternative to the 24 hour clock, which they excitingly referred to as 'Internet Time'. It divided the day into 1,000 'beats', and was based around the Central European timezone (GMT + 1) on the basis that Swatch's headquarters are in Biel. Unsurprisingly, the concept went down like a lead balloon.

    FWIW, you'd have to think about different timezones anyway. No amount of universally-shared timezones are going to change the physical reality, so they may as well reflect it.

  5. Re:what are you going to do 20s from landing... on Alaska Airlines Jettisons Paper Manuals For iPads · · Score: 1

    And then you discover that the iPad is out of battery or is for some other reason b0rked.

    Manuals are a good idea. Manuals that don't require a battery are an excellent idea. I can see benefits to having both, but I can't understand at all why one would actually stop carrying the dead-tree version.

  6. Re:Super-injunctions “best publicity value&a on Twitter Sued By British Soccer Player · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not just the Internet. Spanish press published the identity of said soccer player weeks ago. We must eradicate the teaching of foreign languages in Britain!

    Actually it is fair to say that the last decade or so of educational policy already did a pretty good job of that, but at least now we know it's a good thing.

  7. Re:Streisand effect on Twitter Sued By British Soccer Player · · Score: 2

    You want to know what is posted on twitter? Ask Google: 'football super injunction'. For me, the first link returned was something called 'CaughtOffside.com', who obviously need to be sued in England until the pips squeak.

  8. Re:nuclear can be safe; short term profit preferre on Engineers Find Nuclear Meltdown At Fukushima Plant · · Score: 1

    maybe in some parallel universe those items still radioactive are indeed stored, but not in this reality.

    To be fair, technetium emissions from Sellafield have recently been greatly reduced. Apparently Sellafield launched a new trial treatment in 2003, in which technetium is removed from the liquid waste and, wait for it, stored as medium-level solid radioactive waste. Apparently this led to a 95% reduction in Tc-99 during trials. As a result of this, this cleaning technology was adopted on a permanent basis.

    I agree that the Wikipedia article does not contain this factoid. Wikipedia is not the only source of information on the Web.

  9. At least you put 'modern' in scarequotes on Alabama Nuclear Reactor Gets 'F' Grade · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Modern nuclear age? What?

    The Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant began construction in 1966 (Fukushima Dai-ichi dates from 1971). Furthermore, both use General Electric boiling water reactors. The major difference seems to be that Browns Ferry is/was expected to continue to operate until 2033.

    Similarly designed technology dating from a similar time has similar flaws. In most areas engineers learn from their mistakes and upgrade regularly for precisely this reason. Then we actually would be in the 'modern nuclear age', and discovering a new flaw would be disturbing news as opposed to being a wholly predictable consequence of expecting to keep dodgy, ancient crap running for well over half a century.

  10. Re:I'm not happy on US Alarmed Over Japan's Nuclear Crisis · · Score: 1

    Completely agree with you about the sensationalism of the media, and the vulture lobbies, who are treating this as though everybody's ideological Christmas has come early. The whole feeding frenzy is in very poor taste, foul and dehumanising. Plenty of time for zOMG NUCULAR! once this situation has been resolved. I finally blew a fuse last night and put the BBC, Telegraph, Guardian and Independent in my hosts file underneath the entry identifying the Daily Mail as 127.0.0.1. In the short term, turning off the TV is probably the best move, but perhaps it would be worth sending a complaint to the BBC. The coverage of this has hit rock bottom in quality.

    Be all that as it may, I wish you all the best - that all goes well, that your wife's family and friends are OK, and that the area recovers quickly from the earthquake damage and everything else that has happened since.

  11. Re:hack on HBGary Federal Hacked By Anonymous · · Score: 1
  12. Re:So... on Bill Gates Says Anti-Vaccine Effort Kills Children · · Score: 1

    I wish your analysis were accurate, because it would be the simplest possible solution to the whole problem if it could be boiled down to personal responsibility. However, some people are allergic - not "OMG autism!" allergic, but simply allergic - to components like egg protein or gelatin. Those who were perfectly able to take the vaccine and decided not to because "OMG autism!" are increasing the risk for those who can't, and have to depend on others to do the responsible thing.

    To compare with the examples you give - people have the right to drink, but not to undertake activities that might harm others while they are intoxicated (ie. driving, etc). Similarly, they are free to smoke, but there are increasingly strict limits on where and when - I'm in Britain and my personal opinion on the nanny state is unprintable, but I see that New York just banned smoking on beaches and in parks, so I guess Britain is not alone.

  13. Re:Certainly qualifies for Geek of the Year on Experiment Shows Not Washing Jeans for 15 Months is Disgusting But Safe · · Score: 1

    I find in a humid client jeans will smell within days.

    What job title do you have? I doubt there's a large waiting line for a job that requires you to put on jeans and then spend days immersed in damp clientele.

  14. Re:Everything? on Living Earth Simulator Aims To Simulate Everything · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I know. Although before they start solving differential equations, they need to work out the model, which in itself is a potentially intractable problem on this scale. IMO, the proposal should've been junked by reviewers at the first stage on the basis that, whilst noone expects this sort of funding to actually achieve anything concrete other than paying IBM for another round of supercomputer hardware, it's good practice to politely pretend that they're not entirely, overtly kicking the arse out of the system. Taking data they know nothing about from point A and collecting it in point B does not necessarily mean that they have a clue about what they're storing, let alone what it signifies or how it may be processed or modelled.

    As Douglas Adams put it:

    'I think,' said Dirk, 'you will be impressed. Consider this. An intractable problem. In trying to find the solution to it I was going round and round in little circles in my mind, over and over the same maddening things. Clearly I wasn't going to be able to think of anything else until I had the answer, but equally clearly I would have to think of something else if I was ever going to get the answer. How to break this circle? Ask me how.'
    'How?' said Miss Pearce obediently, but without enthusiasm.
    'By writing down what the answer is!' exclaimed Dirk. 'And here it is! With the result that I am now able to turn my mind to fresh and intriguing problems, like, for instance...'
    He took the piece of paper, covered with its aimless squiggles and doodlings, and held it up to her.
    'What language,' he said in a low, dark voice, 'is this written in?'
    Miss Pearce continued to look at it dumbly.
    Dirk flung the piece of paper down, put his feet up on the table, and threw his head back with his hands behind it.
    'You see what I have done?' he asked the ceiling, which seemed to flinch slightly at being yanked so suddenly into the conversation. 'I have transformed the problem from an intractably difficult and possibly quite insoluble conundrum into a mere linguistic puzzle. Albeit,' he muttered, after a long moment of silent pondering, 'an intractably difficult and possibly insoluble one.'

  15. Re:Everything? on Living Earth Simulator Aims To Simulate Everything · · Score: 1

    It's a safe assumption.

    Actually, it's probably a safe assumption that this is just a way to extract $1.3 billion of funding out of the EU in order to pay for a bunch of supercomputers and interdisciplinary research. It's apparently part of something called FuturICT, a submission to the EU's Flagships initiative, which is to say that it is meant to be ambitious - here a codeword for 'infinitely improbable'. FET Flagships are long term initiatives on a budget of around 100 M€ Euros per year.

    You can get a copy of the proposal from here. It's a bunch of hand-wavy maybes. Most of the proposal is taken up with the interesting observation that knowing stuff about stuff is a prerequisite to revolutionising education, understanding and fixing the world economy, identifying financial crises before they happen, identifying innovations before they catch on, solving transport problems, creating a whole new scientific paradigm ('science 2.0'), fixing energy consumption and making us all safer. However, they have letters of support from George Soros and various other luminaries, so presumably the EU will assume (or already assumed) that they know what they are talking about.

  16. Re:Not surprising in a socialist society on UK Gov't Wants To Block Internet Porn By Default · · Score: 1

    Legally, LocalH is correct. The wording of the law relates to use rather than ownership; if you're using it to receive or record broadcast TV, emphasis on broadcast, then you are liable for the licence. If you're not using it then it suffices to take a cursory step towards demonstrating that you do not use it - like not plugging it into an aerial, and ensuring that it is not tuned. You'd need to use the epoxy approach in some other European countries that take a different approach to TV Licencing law, but it's hardly worth it in the UK.

    The licence requirement deals only with the action - not the capability - of receiving/recording broadcast TV, which has the intriguing side effect that catching up with programs on iPlayer is perfectly legal without a TV licence. Similarly, watching sports shows on the Web as they are being streamed (broadcast) is illegal without a TV licence. And if your fillings picked up ITV, you would have to get a TV licence for the receiver in your skull.

    The level of enforcement is variable, as the enforcement is done by 'visiting officers' who are very much like any other rent-a-goon on a small wage, with one exception: a good part of their salary is paid through performance-related bonuses (commission). This gives them an excellent motivation to lie, cheat and generally harrass their way through life ('oh, the law's changed, you need a licence for iPods now. No, I can't show you any proof. And I'm not leaving until you sign this, and if you don't sign it I'll have you arrested and fined £5,000'). They will lie like a rug, partly because they barely know the law themselves, partly because they don't think you know the law, but mostly because they need the money for whatever it is Blattaria sapiens do in their free time.

    I haven't had a TV for a decade, so I've had a lot of practice in dealing with TVL enforcement. It's true that the BBC is incredibly popular, but like diet soda, it's an acquired taste. We lost the habit because we couldn't afford it, being students. Having lost the habit, the BBC now tastes like carbonated aspartame.

  17. Re:No force? on Oracle Asks OpenOffice Community Members To Leave · · Score: 1

    From the perspective of the body under discussion, the answer would have to be OO.o. And if there's reason to think the answer would be otherwise, then there is indeed a conflict of interest.

    Not sure I agree with you here. That's very much 'in the box' thinking, if you like, and it comes from a mindset that believes very strongly that even admitting to the existence of other options is marketing suicide.

    How about, 'Here on the left side of the stand, we discuss the strong, stable and supported OpenOffice.Org, which is insert marketing spiel for OO.o here, and here on the right you will see the bleeding-edge, exciting, cheerfully compatible LibreOffice, which is insert marketing spiel for fork here'? Direct competition will only happen here as and when Oracle definitively fails to compromise, which is to say, sometime next week.

    Marketing deals with nuanced choices all the time; Cheap 'n Cheerful, Traditionally Produced At Twice The Price, Extra Hot With Chilis. There are many possible ways to market across a range in a manner that is not particularly offensive to either and optimises involvement with both products, and it happens all the time with open source. The customer can then choose whichever fits in best with their own perceived needs, and will usually get what they deserve (if not what they actually needed).

    Oracle's stiff-necked attitude is damaging for all concerned.

  18. Re:Budget on iPads On American Campuses? Maybe Next Year · · Score: 1

    Authors in academia are only rarely given a significant upfront advance, unless the author is famous and/or notorious and/or appears on TV, Star Trek or The Economist.

    The intro textbooks may actually carry an advance, but the low-volume specialist works either won't, or will carry a tiny advance, as in a few hundred dollars. General interest technical books make more, as in maybe 5-10k.

    People write academic stuff for tenure, not for cash in hand. Only about three hundred people will ever care enough about shoelace manufacture in ancient Rome to bother reading the author's magnum opus. Essentially, specialist academic publishing seems to follow the rules laid down by print-on-demand organisations.

  19. Re:Waste of Money on Australian Schools Go iPad-Crazy · · Score: 1

    And while the funding "had to go to Australian institutions" - where else could it go? But as soon as it gets to Hardly Normal, that new iPad sends the money straight to the US...

    True. The implication of 'had to go to Australian institutions' is just 'no international collaborations.' It just tends to characterise the profile of work that gets done (ie. everyday research activity commonly has international elements, which will not be possible with this funding), the type of deliverable, and so forth.

    Oh well. You can never have too many assembly areas, or too much multimedia, or too many case studies.

    Oddly, I'm actually a fan of the Australian government's approach, even though I can't spell 'innovate' without scarequotes. But there are predictable results to short-term funding with specific terms and a risk of the cash being clawed back by the agency, and this sort of spend-and-study activity is often seen when there is a short-term surplus.

  20. Re:Waste of Money on Australian Schools Go iPad-Crazy · · Score: 4, Informative

    This may be related to Australia's recent funding opportunities.

    The Australian government's reaction to the current world economic situation has been to throw a series of large bucketloads of money in the direction of research, development and infrastructural work. Australia decided it could spend and 'innovate' its way through the next few years. There are some restrictions on the use of this plentiful funding, notably that it all has to go to Australian institutions. As is usually the case with this sort of funding it is also strictly short-term.

    I would imagine that a lot of people have found themselves with a few k left in a budget and a need to zero the budget in the very near future, have asked themselves, "now what can we do that sounds sexy and means we get to play with cute shiny hardware?" and they've all come up with the same (incredibly unimaginative, sorry guys) solution.

    The e-book research area is currently choked with iiiiiiPPPPaaaaaaddd zombies. It would be depressing if it weren't - no, wait, what am I saying? It's depressing.

  21. Re:Alzheimer on Terry Pratchett's Self-Made Meteorite Sword · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yeah, he looked good. Says that the condition is progressing very slowly -- slower than expected, or words to that effect. Aside from the fact that he no longer reads out the bedtime story (part of an unreleased book) at the Discworld Convention himself (Rob, his PA, did that), he seemed, if anything, much more cheerful than he was in 2008. Which is awesome.

    MozeeToby's comment later in the thread, suggesting that someone make "a pretty interesting study on the effects of Alzheimer's on language by studying his books," reminds me of Pratchett's comment that he throws away drafts for fear of what English Literature researchers might theorise in future. Although I am now strongly inclined to test the hypothesis by comparing actual vocabulary used over time, because it does not seem to me that there has been a marked reduction in the complexity of language used. That said, there may very well be changes in structure due to using dictation software and so forth, as well as in punctuation and in the use of concrete poetry/structural games, footnotes, etc.

  22. Re:Sequel? on James Cameron Commissions Submarine To Visit Challenger Deep · · Score: 1

    I saw Transformers 2 on a flight to South Korea, or rather, it looped several times while I zoned in and out of consciousness. It was running for about six or eight hours, so in theory I saw it several times, but I have very little memory of it other than a sort of deliriously Pythonesque stop-motion montage of people running, people driving, people running, people lying around in various states of repair, things exploding and so forth. A surreal experience.

  23. Re:____book.com sites that predate facebook... on Facebook Says It Owns 'Book' · · Score: 1

    Granted that prior use doesn't cancel the trademark, and yeah, that probably is why Facebook are suing, although there are a lot of other companies out there they should be suing if they're that worried about trademark dilution. However,
    1) if there are (say) hundreds of other trademarks that use the same approximate construction and have some sort of 'online sharing' aspects, and
    2) given that the other guys' trademark contains only partial elements of their own (ie. Facebook vs Teachbook share only the term 'book' and a monosyllabic generic prefix) and
    3) given that 'Face' and 'Teach' don't sound remotely alike - 'Fazebook' would be a more obvious attempt to cash in, and
    4) given that there are (say) hundreds of other trademarks that contain that same pattern

    then you could legitimately ask whether 'Teachbook' resembles 'Facebook' more than it resembles any or all of the other options out there, especially given that their actual area of operation more closely resembles PlanBook, which also allows sharing of lesson files between teachers. That's why it's interesting to look at prior use - if it's common enough to be generic, then TFA's 'highly distinctive in the context of online communities and networking websites' is provably inaccurate.

    A trademark should not be generic or reasonably required for use in that trade, nor should it be confusingly similar to other trademarks used in the industry. 'Facebook' arguably succeeds in that, although it is an arguable point given others' statements that the term is used locally as a generic description. The 'use of book in a name' construction mentioned in TFA would seem to fail that criterion. In short, if it's that common for the '*book' pattern to be used in trademarked names for social applications, and it is a long-standing tradition for it to be used in that way, then it would be surprising if the 'book' construction weren't considered generic. But the law is frequently surprising. Also, IA obviously NAL.

  24. Re:Give Me A Break! on Facebook Says It Owns 'Book' · · Score: 1

    Cough cough ljbook.com cough. Which, incidentally, exists in the context of online communities and social networking websites. It's named 'LJBook' because it does what it says on the tin - it makes a book from a LiveJournal. What's more, they've been around for sufficiently long, well over six years from the looks of it, that they slightly pre-date Facebook.

    That 'trademark' has been comprehensively diluted prior to Facebook even registering it, primarily due to the fact that it's such an obvious name that a whole lot of other people thought of it first. According to TESS (http://tess2.uspto.gov/) their trademark was filed in Feb 24, 2005.

    IC 038. US 100 101 104. G & S: providing online chat rooms for registered users for transmission of messages concerning collegiate life, classifieds, virtual community and social networking. FIRST USE: 20041116. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20041116
    Standard Characters Claimed
    Mark Drawing Code (4) STANDARD CHARACTER MARK
    Serial Number 78574730
    Filing Date February 24, 2005

    Perhaps the lawyers ought to have gone after HighPoint Technologies instead, who registered 'my+facebook' as 'external storage hard drives for sharing, accessing and downloading media through the Internet by using propriety hardware and software. The external storage hard drives allow users to upload and share media, play music and videos in addition to viewing photo slideshows by utilizing a software interface from a group of invited guest and users.'

    As for other people to go after, TESS suggests the following:

    AMBook - online files
    PlanBook - lesson planning for educators, with sharing of plans via PlanBookConnect
    MOBook - online travel planning
    PartyBook - business networking
    D VIdeobook - educational services
    Gracebook - internet portal for social communications, the fiends
    Placebook - geolocation software
    TheLookBook - fashion online networking
    BookBrowse - online book review centre from the 90s.
    LiveYearBook
    MarketBook
    StudioBook
    ShagBook (dates from 2006, this one)
    Mobibook
    Smilebook
    Fieldbook
    Whichbook
    Sportsbook
    Genebook
    Sharedbook
    Dealbook - online news, shared databases
    and over eleven thousand others, which is enough to make you wonder whether some-short-word-plus the suffix 'book' is a distinctive enough trademark. Some guys who I wish Facebook would sue, just because there are some good headline opportunities there:

    LameBook - which reposts everything lame and funny about Facebook. A full-time job, especially when they're acting out like this.

    Comparing this one to the Victor's Little Secret case, concluded earlier this year, would seem to suggest that Facebook have a better chance against ShagBook. It's marketed to a fairly similar audience, but comes with added value sexual overtones, and is therefore likely to tarnish the mark. IANAL, obviously.

  25. Re:SURVEY SAYS?? ...Meh. on Google Kills Wave Development · · Score: 1

    can you imagine Wikipedia with simultaneous editing?

    I'm imagining it. Like an ASCII version of Drawball Two.

    Wasn't it Lovecraft who wrote about The Horror that Crawls From The Chaos, The Blind Idiot God? What a prophet that guy was.