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User: Pingmaster

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  1. Re:That... on Erasing CDs By Using 150,000 Volts of Electricity · · Score: 2

    The 9V battery probably saw precisely none of that voltage. Chances are, the way it was set up is to put 75kV on one post and -75kV on the other, giving a potential difference between the posts of 150kV. The electricity then arced from one post, through the metal in the CD, to the other post because the metal provided a path of less resistance than the air over the CD. Once the metal was gone from the CD, it arced though the chassis of the motor mostly (from what I could see). There was no reason for the arc to pass through the battery terminals since the chassis provided a much shorter path.

    Now, had they placed the battery in line with the arc, that probably would not have ended quite so well...

  2. Re:Privatised Culture on Berners-Lee: Web Access Is a 'Human Right' · · Score: 1

    If there were ever a day I wished for mod points, it's today.

  3. Re:If you ain't moving.... on Could You Pass Harvard's Entrance Exam From 1869? · · Score: 1

    While some knowledge is made obsolete by the advancement of technology, it does not mean that we cannot also become as competent with such knowledge as our forefathers were. We have the distinct advantage in the ability to research and rapidly absorb volumes of data on a particular subject (something that would not have been possible 100 years ago - we have instant access to just about any piece of knowledge we need, something that has never before been available) means that we can become adept at a particular task much faster than our forebars could.
    Note: I'm saying much faster, not instantly. Learning to become a 'period' blacksmith will still take months, if not a year or two. However, a smith in those times would take a lifetime learning their craft, it is handed down through the generations etc. But learning how to make a spear? Let me look up a couple articles on paleolithic spear design and I bet you within a day or two I can knock out some pretty effective spear tips.

  4. Re:FAIL on Wi-Fi Shown To Interfere With Aircraft Systems · · Score: 2

    A resonant antenna can be found in PCB traces that are the right length, yes. These traces are usually shielded to the nines, so that stray signal does not get in. Transmission cable is also shielded to prevent extra noise coming in (there's enough of it at the antenna already). Non-shielded cabling (i.e. power) is usually protected from the sensitive stuff by means of an inductor (often called an RF choke) to block off as much of that extra noise as possible. On top of that, Antennas can be designed with a small narrow bandwidth amplifier to give the signal a boost as it enters the system, and also reduces the incoming signal bandwidth to that of the preamp, cutting out more noise. The way I see it, if they're getting enough interference from a standard strength wi-fi signal to bork the system, they have some major design flaws to work out.

  5. Re:For what reason? on Posting AC - a Thing of the Past? · · Score: 1

    I'd think that if an employer would read radical accusations from an AC against my name, and immediately assume that a) they're true and b) they are actually about me, and not someone who shares my name, I'd have to think twice about working for them.

  6. Re:Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? on Timezone Maintainer Retiring · · Score: 1

    It's the combination of environmental, social and internal logic. It's the same reason people get motion sickness, vertigo, and a host of other problems caused by conflicting signals. Going back to my initial analogy, you're used to getting up at 2am, when it's light outside, eating lunch at 7pm, when the sun is at it's peak and going to bed at 6pm when the sun has long since set. You are used to this; you've done it for (presumably) a few decades. Now, you travel somewhere (alone). You are informed that you have to wake up at 7am (lunchtime) when the sun is just coming up (you're used to 7am being peak sun time), eating at noon (which your brain thinks is sunset) and sleeping at midnight (holy shit! I need to wake up soon!).
    Now, not only do you have jet lag to worry about, you also have to remember inane shit like what time lunch is in a foreign country, when do stores open and close, when should I wake up to be in sync with the rest of the population etc. instead of just setting your clock to the correct standard time for the particular locale and calling it a day.
    Yes, it's possible to just deal with it, but when there is a decent system in place to alleviate the issue to the point where it's actually pretty easy to pick up and go when you land in a foreign country, I'd have to say that I would prefer it this way.

  7. Re:Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? on Timezone Maintainer Retiring · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's say you live your life in New York, where the sun is at it's peak at 7am (UTC -5 hours, 12:00pm-5 = 7:00am). You are used to waking up at 2am, having lunch at 7am and going to bed at 6pm. You then travel overseas, where the sun peaks at 1:00pm (UTC +1 hour). Now, instead of setting your watch and waiting for jet lag to run it's course, you now have to re-wire your brain to continuously remember to eat lunch at 1pm, not supper and that bedtime is somewhere around midnight.

    At least with time zones (as fucked up as the current system is), you can travel anywhere, set your clock to the local time and have a general estimation of the day. Wake up at 6-7am, eat lunch at noon, supper at 5 or 6, go to bed around 11. Makes things much easier on our dumb little brains.

  8. Re:Temperatures plummet in Hades on Microsoft, Google Sue Troll Who Sued 397 Companies · · Score: 1

    uhm, well, let's see here... geo-tagging is being used by both Google and MSFT in various applications (WP7, Bing maps, Andriod, Google Maps etc). Therefore, having this patent floating around saying that they can't use it is equally bad for both companies.
    Being competing companies does not mean that it may not be in their best interests to team up every so often to take on a threat to both.

    And for all those who comment about Google 'doing no evil' and partnering up with Microsoft, keep in mind that they're also protecting the other 395 companies being sued and encouraging competition in this particular marketplace.

  9. Re:Idiots... on The Most Violent Video Games of All Time · · Score: 1

    so....WoW?

  10. Re:before you do it on Extinct Mammoth, Coming To a Zoo Near You · · Score: 1

    How many movies have been made about computers going apeshit and killing/enslaving everyone? has that stopped our research in computer technology?
    What about alien invasion movies? According to those, the signals we send off into space are luring aliens to come here and destroy us!
    If it weren't for people doing stuff "just cuz we can lulz", we'd still be back in the stone ages. Discoveries and progress are made by people trying stuff simply to see if they can do it.

  11. Distracting? on Should Colleges Ban Classroom Laptop Use? · · Score: 1

    I think having laptops in class should be assumed these days. I bring mine with me every day; I use it to do assignments, take lecture notes, look up stuff the teacher is talking about for more details and so on. Yes, I do occasionally peruse Facebook and /., however, I don't allow it to distract me. The OP saying that someone's screensaver is enough of a distraction should probably get some ritalin or find a more interesting subject to study. People who want to be distracted, will be. whether it's a laptop or just doodling shit in their books, it's gonna happen.

  12. Re:Fuel-Saving? on Ford To Offer Fuel-Saving 'Start-Stop' System · · Score: 0

    Maybe, do you think just maybe, Ford might have thought about that and put a special case instruction in the ECU to oh, I don't know, not do that?
    Just a thought

  13. Re:What we do/don't need in Calculus. on How Much Math Do We Really Need? · · Score: 1

    I'm currently a second year engineering student. In first year, we had several mature students (aged late 20's to late 60's) myself included. The people that survived were the ones who took advanced math courses in high school, or retained their prior knowledge of math. Those who did not have a strong math background dropped out fairly quickly, even though the first term math was considered a 'remedial' math course (covering basic algebra and trig, stuff I did in grade 10). Those with poor math backgrounds quickly floundered and failed out (a couple of the more tenacious types stuck on, but they had to re-take the course and are now severely behind).

    But really, if we're only going to teach the basics to everyone and leave specialty courses to when you've chosen your field, then why not eliminate the need for English after grade 10 for those not pursuing a degree in it? get rid of all science classes for MBA and Economics students too; no more history classes unless you plan on being a history major or social science classes unless you're gonna be a sociologist.

    The point of high school is to provide a well-rounded, general education is just about every academic discipline. To do this, a certain level of math proficiency is required. While I agree that calculus isn't necessary for most students, normal math classes all through will be. Even if you will never again have to sketch a parabola, or solve two unknowns in two equations, having a knowledge of math that is significantly higher than required will not only make the maths that you need to know for life much easier, it will also enable you to expand your horizons later in life if you choose to.

  14. Re:60GB is nothing on CRTC To Allow Usage-Based Billing · · Score: 1

    Do you also pay the gas station a monthly rate for the privilege of using the pumps?

  15. Re:Just another reason on Early Kinect Games Kill Buyers' Access To Xbox Live · · Score: 1

    Not at all. It's more like five razor-sharp titanium spikes, rather than nine.

  16. Re:Um, not quite.... on Five Times the US Almost Nuked Itself · · Score: 1

    So, if I'm out at the range doing some target practice and a person does not mysteriously stumble out from behind the target paper with a bullet stuck in them, then I can go and ask for a refund?

  17. Re:Understanding on Rube Goldberg and the Electrification of America · · Score: 1

    I used to do pretty much all of the work on my older cars; replacing fuel lines, struts, ball joints, doing body work etc. It of course saved me some money in mechanic bills, but would take me a whole lot longer to do since I didn't have any of the specialized equipment that they have there. These days though, I have a mechanic do everything, even oil changes. Now, I don't have to spend my weekends fixing vehicles, nor do I need to spend thousands of dollars on tools that are only useful for auto mechanics. Instead, I can use that time on stuff that I want to do, which to me more than balances out the time not wasted in a pool of oil under my car.

  18. Re:Forward thinkers on When the Senate Tried To Ban Dial Telephones · · Score: 1

    Does Australia not have anti-collusion laws? If that (exact) situation happened in the US or Canada, there wouldd be a pretty big kerfluffle about it.

  19. Re:Power from the people on GPS Tracking Without a Warrant Declared Legal · · Score: 1

    Wait, you can detain and arrest people in the States as a citizen?

    Citizen's arrest, folks. It's legal in most states (and in just about every common law country too) to arrest someone, without warrant, who is in the process of committing an indictable offense. Meaning, if the cops can arrest you for it, you can arrest someone else for the same thing, so long as you immediately bring the offender to the police.

    And enter people's homes (with your bosses permission)?

    Kind of a gray area, but I guess if you are pursuing someone to do a citizen's arrest, it might be overlooked, though I doubt you'd need to call your boss ahead of time.

    And tase people who get unruly?

    Self Defense.

  20. Re:Charge for support on National Park Service Says Tech Is Enabling Stupidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At least when we pay our health care taxes, it means we don't have to pay the hospital too.

  21. Re:Charge for support on National Park Service Says Tech Is Enabling Stupidity · · Score: 5, Informative

    In Canada, ambulances for life-threatening emergencies are free (i.e. you have a heart attack and need a hospital NOW). Non life threatening emergencies do cost money, but it's only about $40-50 CAD (including hooking up diagnostic equipment, medications sometimes cost a little extra) and many (if not most) benefits packages cover a significant chunk of that too. If you call in a false alarm, you don't get billed so much as arrested if they believe that you are willfully abusing the service, since they are not so much concerned about the cost of the trip to get you as they are about committing resources that may have been needed in a real emergency. I've even heard of cases where very serious charges have been laid against someone prank calling emergency services where a person died because the ambulance was tied up in responding to the prank call.

  22. Re:Amen on Convicted NY Drunk Drivers Need Ignition Interlocks · · Score: 1

    Not so much a ban on vehicular transport, but a ban on manually piloting a vehicle. Support research on autonomous vehicles, lobby to make them street-legal. If all you have to do is tell the car where to go, there's no need to worry about how much you've had to drink beforehand. The only thing that might be tricky is motorcycles, since the rider's balance is a significant part of the steering; maybe a separate motorcycle lane would suffice.

  23. Re:Fortunately on HP CEO Resigns During Sexual Harassment Investigation · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here's the thing that gets me: Why do I see the headlines on Google News, CNet and CNN hours before it's on Slashdot? I remember (not too long ago even) when /. would have articles out far in advance of mainstream media.

  24. Re:Misleading Summary on Gasoline From Thin Air · · Score: 1

    maybe not as feasible on back roads as it would be on frequently used city streets/freeways/interstates etc. maybe find a way to create a standing wave of electricity in large cables under each lane. Place an inductive coil under the car in such a way that if the car drives down the road, it will pass through the standing wave and generate electricity(since the car is moving relative to the wave, this would work; instead of the field moving through the coil, the coil is moving through the field). It would just have to be done on a large enough scale that the car would not only be fully powered at whatever speed it's traveling at, but also be able to recharge a battery in the vehicle so that when not on a powered road, it can still drive around. The upshot to this, people could install charging coils in their garage. No plugging in required!

  25. Re:no child left behind and the cert mess = tech t on Steve Furber On Why Kids Are Turned Off To Computing Classes · · Score: 1

    Simply a character reference to the failings of the no child left behind program