Slashdot Mirror


User: PuckSR

PuckSR's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
136
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 136

  1. I would have posted earlier.... on Jonathan Coulton Offers Some Gleeful Turnabout · · Score: 4, Interesting

    But I spent the weekend trying to figure out why my Xbox suddenly quit communicating with my TV. Turns out that Microsoft pushed a new version of HDCP(a cracked encryption methodology) to encode NETFLIX in some weird attempt to protect all media all the time. Of course, this entire action makes no sense at all. It doesn't protect content from being pirated, and it doesn't make anyone's life any easier(mine, Microsoft's, or Netflix's). It was simply some idiots idea. That idiot worked for a major movie company. He required it in the contract with Netflix/Microsoft. They obliged because it was a minor issue.

    Why do I mention that on a comment about Jonathan Coulton getting ripped off by Glee? Media companies are giant corporations who see the law as something to be abused only to protect themselves. It doesn't have to make sense or even be consistent. If the situation was reversed, he would be sued. In this situation, he has no recourse. It will never make sense if you try to think about it from the perspective of a rational and reasonable individual.

    This will, unfortunately, always be the way of things. Unless lawmakers suddenly have some reason to drastically restructure the legal system to protect sanity, reason, and the individual over the monetary interests of their most important supporters we will never have a 'fair' system. Considering that no state in the history of the world has been able to avoid the egalitarianism and quid pro quo nature of Mandarin-type social levels, I doubt we will be able to achieve such a drastic technocratic change any time soon.

  2. Some Clarification on FBI Dad's Misadventures With Spyware Exposed School Principal's Child Porn · · Score: 5, Informative

    The "FBI" didn't wipe his computer. He simply asked his co-workers for some help. Apparently neither he nor they were particularly tech-savvy so he took it to a computer shop. He probably asked the shop owner to remove "all of my kid's games and stuff". I imagine that this spyware tries to mask itself so that kids cant just find it and uninstall it. The shop owner probably just uninstalled all of the "games and stuff" and then returned it.

    The problem is that a person who was so confused by removing software that he had to go to a "computer shop" is trying to tell you what he did. He didn't get the FBI to clean the machine, he simply asked his co-workers who didn't know either. This also happened in Saipan, not New Jersey. The FBI has a small office, not a high tech lab.

    The FBI agent screwed up by not notifying authorities immediately(he tried to solve the case himself), but he was probably concerned that the evidence wouldn't hold up in court. Lucky for everyone, the Judge seems like he was willing to stretch the letter of the law to punish a clearly guilty man.

  3. Re:Maybe Someone Should Explain L2? on NASA Pondering L2 Outpost, Return To Moon · · Score: 1

    Hope the explanations helped. I was just trying to make sure people understood as quickly as possible. I mostly just wanted to get the word "Lagrangian" into the discussion and displayed as quickly as possible. I figure people can "google" Langrangian. It is a bit difficult to google "L2". It reads like gibberish.

    So, there were some technical errors. Also, some of the Langrangian points are more stable than others. This was just a "quick primer"

  4. Maybe Someone Should Explain L2? on NASA Pondering L2 Outpost, Return To Moon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Maybe someone should explain L2? LaGrangian points are not exactly common things discussed over coffee, and the importance of the Earth/Moon L2 isn't going to be readily understood by most people.

    L2 is referring to the L2 Langrangian point

    Quick Primer:
    Any time two planets interact with each other there are 5 points where gravity is essentially zero. These can be though of as eddies in a stream. These are known as "Lagrangian Points". They are referred to as L1, L2,...L5. L1 is the point between Earth and the Moon. L2 is the point behind the moon. L3 is the point behind the Earth. L4 and L5 are not in a direct line between the two bodies. They exist at a 60 degree angle off of the first 3.

    These Lagrangian points exist between ANY two gravitational bodies. The greater the gravity, the larger the 'hole'. Anything that falls into this 'hole' stays there. This makes it ideal for a satellite or similar. It wouldn't drift away. Just like the eddy in a stream, the external current keeps forcing everything back into the hole.

  5. My Question for Prof. Dawkins on Ask Richard Dawkins About Evolution, Religion, and Science Education · · Score: 1

    I had the opportunity to attend a lecture when Richard Dawkins was speaking at the University of Oklahoma. Given the frequently religious nature of his conversations and his lineage in the concept of the "meme", I had wanted to ask a question. Unfortunately, I was not able to approach the microphone because several religious individuals had taken it upon themselves to annoy everyone with stupid questions. I am not saying that religious people are stupid, just that the questions that these particular individuals were asking(some were not questions) were rather stupid.

    My question was heavily influenced by some recent reading, namely the "The Evolution of God", but also "Misquoting Jesus" and a few others. I wouldn't say that I loved Robert Wright philosophizing about some supernatural power guiding the evolution of religion, but the concept of evolution as an evolved social component intrigued me. This concept is not unexpected, as religions are simply ideas held by humans. The interesting argument made in "The Evolution of God" is that religion co-evolves with society, specifically to allow human society a mechanism of influence. This seems to reverberate with the classic idea that "religion is a tool of control", but the argument being made is that the control is unconscious and unguided.

    I am curious what Prof. Dawkins thinks about the idea. Also, if we allow that religion is simply an evolved superstition that has provided some support to our social structure, then what would modifying this 'habitat'(for lack of a better term) mean for the world at large? In other words, would removing religion from society be a bit like causing the extinction of a keystone species? There are certainly ways to mitigate disaster, but without the species it is highly complex.

    As an atheist myself, I have a great deal of respect for the position. I just don't know if human minds are capable of outwitting the incredibly complex evolutionary algorithm that produced the world's religions.

  6. Re:Translation on Parent Questions Mandatory High School Chemistry · · Score: 1

    The problem is that the current high school curriculum is too specific to be generalized and too generalized to be useful. Math is generally acceptable, but most of the science is so poorly taught or so randomly taught that it is of no use at the University level.

    So, we have a bunch of kids taking a chemistry class where we give them some busy work figuring out the number of molecules in a gram of carbon. Then we make them balance some equations. Rinse and repeat. This doesn't really help anyone. We then have them trying to teach to a random state test which may or may not be applicable.

    Not disagreeing with the premise, but I would think it would be far more useful to teach much more open classes if the whole point of the class is to "open their eyes". Less focus on rout memorization and more focus on concepts, ideas, and learning. Teach them a little about reactions, teach them a little about the elements. Teach them some material science. Maybe throw in a bit else. Let the kids decide if they want to take a basic, advanced, or college credit course. They have to take one of them.

  7. There seems to be a flaw on Roundup Tolerant GM Maize Linked To Tumor Development · · Score: 1

    I have been reading about this all day, and I keep getting flummoxed by something. Am I not reading this correctly?

    Genetically Modified(Roundup resistant) corn was fed to some rats
    Normal Corn to a second group
    Normal corn with Roundup to a third group

    The GM corn group and the Roundup group had similar health problems. This makes sense, because the GM corn was probably sprayed with a lot of Roundup(why else would you grow it). Now, the conclusion everyone seems to make is that this proves that the GM corn causes health problems. It seems really odd that drinking Roundup or eating GM corn would cause nearly identical health problems. It makes more sense that Roundup caused problems in both samples, and the GM corn was rather meaningless. Even using that very cursory understanding of the research, it seems to me that the study has almost nothing to say about GM crops, yet "GM" is in the title of every article.

  8. Re:Yeah they did stop innovating on Who Cares If Samsung Copied Apple? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, and other people stepped up to innovate. Apple doesn't have some magical innovation juice. They are just a company. If they want to get lazy, then talent will move elsewhere. You mentioned "multi-tasking", but that would have been something that required talented and competent engineers, not innovators. Innovation is something you come up with while half-drunk. Everyone understood how multi-tasking was supposed to work, it was just a matter of "making it work". Apple innovated in the same way that George Selden innovated(the patent holder to the automobile). He didn't exactly create the greatest car in the world, he just had the idea for a car. Henry Ford developed some of the greatest ideas in automotive history, but he did it all while violating Selden's patent.

  9. Re:The more I think of it the less silly it sounds on Samsung: Apple Stole the iPad's Design From Univ of Missouri Professor · · Score: 1

    The idea for these patents was developed with no technical expertise and in a short period of time. The development of the actual idea required hours or programming time and expertise. State-of-the-art is typically considered to be technology. Technology isn't developed in a focus group that determines that they like the "bouncey" ending the best. State-of-the-art is the brilliant programmer who makes it work, not the interesting idea.

    Unless Samsung copied Apple's code, I don't think Apple has a leg to stand on. I don't know why it isn't quoted more often, but Selden had the patent on the "automobile" until Ford pointed out that while they had a 4-wheeled vehicle, they weren't using any of Selden's engine technology to propel it. Ford had Selden's patent claims thrown out.

    Copying ideas is GOOD for everyone. Copying "technology" is bad. Samsung copied ideas, not technology.

  10. Re:And that is what is required on Nexus Q Stretches "Made in USA" Label · · Score: 1

    Ok, and then should they also be required to track that? That can change day-to-day on most electronic components. They order transistors to spec, not from a specific country. So, they want a component that meets spec, they don't care who made it.

    Also, should they keep track of where the original sub-components came from? The raw material? The ore for that raw material? No one keeps track of that? Fungibility is a bitch

  11. Re:Gov't for you on Texas GOP Educational Platform Opposes Teaching Critical Thinking Skills · · Score: 1

    I think it is important to point out that any analog between the modern USA and the Romans is flimsy at best. These two empires were entirely different in almost every imaginable way. They emerged at different rates, built their empires by different methods, had different social values, and were different in just about every way imaginable. The idea that parallels can be drawn between societies of the past fell out of fashion long ago, and unless you subscribe to the ideas of Arnold Toynbee I doubt you will find much traction with modern scholars.

    Rome was a complex empire, and claiming that it's success or its failure can be linked to a single trait is ridiculous. Claiming that we should emulate that single trait is equally ridiculous. It is just an illusion to attempt to lend some historical significance to an OPINION that someone holds. Let us try to play this game a bit....

    Rome had very free trade. Rome was economically very successful. Free Trade makes a country very successful.
    Rome had slavery. Rome was economically very successful. Slavery makes a country very successful.
    Rome had legal prostitution. Rome was economically very successful. Legal prostitution makes a country very successful.
    Rome adopted Christianity right before the empire began to crumble. Christianity is bad for empires.

    Macedonia(of Alexander the Great fame) was a state-controlled economy where the king controlled and owned almost everything. It was one of the most powerful empires and at one point the most powerful empire in the world because of its concentration of power with the king. Therefore we should follow their example and appoint a young and powerful king. This will give us the best of all possible empires. Thanks to this short exploration of history, we will now have the following country:
    Free-trade
    State-owned industry
    Legal prostitution and slavery
    A ban on Christianity
    And a king(though he will be trained by the greatest philosophers)

  12. Re:Facebook is just the new MySpace on Dark Days Ahead For Facebook and Google? · · Score: 2

    Yeah....why didn't he compare google to facebook? Google is clearly acting like microsoft(another unprofitable company).
    I mean, seriously, Facebook and Google are analogous. They both create a web page. It isn't as if one of the webpages(Google) is defined by patented technology while the other webpage(Facebook) is mostly just defined by copyright.

    Also, they both have made software(wait, Facebook doesn't), so Google should be compared to these too. Don't you remember all of the facebook software?

    All sarcasm aside:
    At the end of the day, they are both advertising companies...but all webpages are advertising companies. There are 3 main types of web companies, those that create, those that innovate, and those that don't do either. Sites that produce content(every news site) are only as good as their content, and if that goes down the drain they fail. Companies that innovate(like Amazon and Google and Netflix) may not be producing content, but they are typically innovating new software and new ideas. This might be a new algorithm, a new bit of server tech, or a new content delivery method. These companies are as good as their innovation. The final category is those that neither are content producers or innovators, and these are your Facebooks and your Myspaces. They aren't actually doing anything but aggregating and serving regurgitated information. They might be really successful(like Slashdot), but at the end of the day someone can come along and surpass them just because they are more "popular"....and there is nothing that can be done about this because they aren't actually doing anything.

    If you think I am wrong...name one "feature" that Facebook introduced that didn't exist in some way on some other site(perhaps identically).
    Mark Zuckerberg doesn't scour the planet for the best minds to innovate or develop. It didn't take a genius to decide to add "photos" and "photo-tagging" to facebook. It just takes him looking at another site and saying "We should have flash games on facebook!!".

    When you buy stock in Facebook, you are essentially betting that Facebook will remain popular for awhile longer. If people start leaving Facebook for something else, then Facebook cannot stop them(same thing happened to MySpace). Sure, you can add some features....but that doesn't bring back page views. If people stop using google search for something else, Google can improve their search results. If the search gets better, people use your product. Sure, popularity matters...but at least you have some competitive tool(Just look at what Microsoft is doing with Bing)

  13. Re:That was Rand Paul. on Congress: The TSA Is Wasting Hundreds of Millions In Taxpayer Dollars · · Score: 2

    Given that Rand Paul frequently lumps so many things that are disconnected together(i.e Fed employees make more than the average American)....I don't think it is too bad that they got him confused with his Dad.

    Note: The error with the Federal Employee comparison is that it would be more apt to compare Federal employment to a large company like 3M(with a large number of professional employees) than to compare it with the entire population of the country which has a high number of minimum wage employees and retirees.

  14. Re:Is she? on Is Siri Smarter Than Google? · · Score: 1

    The problem with this entire article is that it treats the google and siri as if they are two distinct technologies. They are not two distinct technologies. At their core, they are the same technology. The technology is evolving to be more intelligent, and I agree that this is the future of "search".

    This is a bit like saying that we went from large servers with terminal access to personal wearable computers. This did occur, however, it didn't occur as a "step". It occurred as a natural evolution of the technology due to the shrinking of the physical size required for computing power. While someone speaking in 1968 may not have been able to foresee the iPad, they would have seen the progression of more powerful and smaller computers(Moore's Law for example). How this technology is used will always be a difficult guess. Most newer technology(within the past 5-10 years) has been re-hashing older ideas that were not executed "as well". The iphone, the tablet, touchscreen tech, digital paper, and even the MP3 player. The fact that technology will continue to evolve is a "fact". The idea that "Google" will be replaced with something like "Siri" is just a wild guess. I can say with absolute certainty that Google will continue to implement more information into determining search results to try to make them more accurate, as will all search providers. I don't know if we will all be using an app on our phone or a keyboard in the future, or maybe some unforeseen input technology. We will, however, still be looking outside of our immediate equipment for more information.

  15. Re:Obligatory xkcd on Multiword Passwords Secure Or Not? · · Score: 2

    When are you going to realize that most of those websites don't require good passwords. Ars Technica requires a complex password to comment on an article. Why? Are you really worried that someone will waste the time to brute force crack your Ars Technica account and leave mean comments?

    Gawker got hacked, but who cares? Just use 4321 as your password on a site like that. If you really want to go to the trouble of creating an 8-character truly-random password for a news site or a site like slashdot....good luck.

  16. How do they know it was intentional. on Secret UK Network Hunts GPS Jammers · · Score: 1

    I own a cheap FM transmitter from China. It creates significant interference with GPS.
    Considering that GPS is such a weak signal, it isn't surprising that accidental interference occurs. How are the sure that these were not cases of accidental jamming?

  17. Religion is not fraudulent on James Randi's Latest Debunking Operation · · Score: 1

    There is a difference between a fraudulent religion and a normal religion. Fraudulent doesn't mean that it isn't absolutely true. Fraud is intentional deception. The Pope believes in Catholicism. The Mormons leaders probably believe it too. The Republicans DEFINITELY believe it.

    You also cannot prove any of these people wrong. Their main claim is a belief. An untestable and non-verifiable belief. You might find them to be incredibly WRONG, but that doesn't make them fraudulent.

    Also, on the topic of things like acupuncture and others(homeopathic medicine, chiropractic medicine). The main crux of the argument against these isn't if they provide any good or "help people". The main argument against them by skeptics is that they are FULL OF CRAP as to how they work. Acupuncture claims it messes with one's qi. Qi doesn't exist. Zinc may actually help with some things, but not because it mimics the symptoms of a cold(which is what homeopathy claims).
    Now, I think we could afford to be a bit more empirical with our medicine. If acupuncture does do some real and noticeable good, then we should use it. However, I think it is important to be clear that the previous notion of why it works is wrong. Why? So that it isn't misused.

  18. Re:New technology, old mindsets on Global Christianity and the Rise of the Cellphone · · Score: 1

    Your concept is a bit flawed. Political positions are equally untenable, however they are frequently used to justify important and drastic actions.

    Religion also exists for the explicit purpose of motivating human actions. There is not a religion in existence that does not advocate for specific human actions. The fact that you cannot prove the validity of any of these religions is irrelevant.

    While I can understand your argument that people only use empirical information to reach rational conclusions and act rationally without bias....this is not human. Humans may be the most biased actors in the world. We currently live in a society that exists in a constant state of political debate between two sides which both base their arguments on emotion rather than evidence. We exist in an economy that rewards actors based on the importance of their actions rather than the actual skill(i.e. Mutual Fund managers make millions, but are no better than a weighted equation at selecting stocks). We have almost no capacity to analyse long-term risk and have a severe loss aversion even in the simplest of scenarios. While it might be nice to hope that we all would act without irrational bias, until you can "walk the walk", I suggest you avoid "talking the talk".

  19. Re:New technology, old mindsets on Global Christianity and the Rise of the Cellphone · · Score: 2

    Quick comment. If it wasn't for the Protestant Christian missionary zeal for having people "read the bible", we wouldn't have the literacy rates that we maintain today. Hawaii went from a land without a written language to a literacy rate of 80% in 40 years after the missionaries devised(literacy in either newly created Hawaiin or English). Literacy is a valuable skill for any society that is being exported at an exponential rate by people for FREE because of their religious beliefs. This isn't just handing out some loaves of bread to starving people, rather it is a dramatic and rapid modernization of a country.

    I used to be an Atheist who maintained that religion was misguided. I am still an Atheist, but I don't discourage religion anymore. I would suggest a book like "The Evolution of God" to explain my viewpoint. Basically, religion has always existed and will probably always exist. It is a corollary of the existence of society, and it constantly evolves. Just like anything that 'evolves', it isn't always 'good'. Sometimes the result is downright evil(Jihadists).

    Anyway, while I can fully understand your desire to dismiss these missionaries as misguided idiots...I wish you would remember that some very bright people have been religious. It isn't a case of them being uneducated or of a lower mental acuity than you. Their religion stumbles forward and sometimes does some great good, and at other times some great evil. It is just a component of the existence of society, like technology. Industrialization was wonderful, but it also destroyed the environment. People who hold the Industrial Revolution as "purely evil" are just as misguided as those who hold these religious missionaries as people who have "historic and completely ridiculous ideas".

  20. Re:Are yellows in Denver really short? on Denver Must Prove Red-Light Cameras Improve Safety · · Score: 1

    The problem was that the companies were encouraging cities to change the length of yellow lights to "throw off drivers". It wasn't an issue of safety or not, they were attempting to take lights in cities where all other yellow lights were 5 seconds and change them to 2 seconds. The thought was that this would cause several drivers to be caught in a red. The problem is that it also caused several drivers to suddenly slam on their brakes, because while they would have been fine with a 5 second light...they were suddenly at risk with a 2 second light.

    This causes further trouble because yellow light length is somewhat based on the speed of the road. The thought being that at 70mph it will take longer to stop than at 30 mph. People will need more warning, and you don't want people to have to suddenly stop. Traffic light design takes these factors into account. Arbitrarily changing your light lengths to catch more drivers is therefore causing 2 problems. It confuses drivers who are used to a longer light, and it may be too short of a time period for the average driver to stop safely. It has been found in numerous incidents(i.e. city of Lubbock, TX) to drastically increase the number of traffic accidents.

  21. Re:What about the Government Unions / Payroll Taxe on Federal Contractors Are $600 Screwdrivers · · Score: 1

    Great job of backing up your assumptions. That was a nice trick. Let me try it with something

    Starbucks charges $3 for a cup of coffee, but the beans to make that coffee cost $.50. But Starbucks isn't making a lot of money. They have to pay for the physical space, the employees, the chair, the crappy music, the cup, the milk. "If all these costs were accounted for then the supposed gap would be much narrower or potentially even non-existent." (Even if you account for EVERYTHING, and I do mean EVERYTHING the profit is still about 9%)

    The truth is that the gap would never be "non-existent" or even small. Why? Because companies like to make money, and they like to make a lot of money. If you research this a bit, you will find many cases of government contractors cooking their books so that they can charge insane amounts of money for a contract employee($75/hr for a secretary). A lot of federal employees are not union members, and even if they are....the federal pension plan is pretty moderate(1% of salary per year worked). The stupid thing about your post is that you assume that somehow the contractor will perform the work for cheaper than the federal government AND with less job security. The only way a contractor could do that is to hire sub-standard quality employees. The job security for federal employees is pretty good, but they also get paid less than industry average(even if you consider benefits). Federal contractors are expecting a profit of roughly 20-25%.

  22. Not stealing money? on How To Rob a Bank: One Social Engineer's Story · · Score: 1

    Yes...they are stealing money. They just aren't doing it directly. EVERYONE who steals does it for the money. The guy who steals bread to feed his family would be just as likely to steal money to buy the bread if an opportunity presented itself. These guys are stealing information....that they will then sell to make money.

    Unless you are stealing decorations from Pier 1 in an attempt to make your home look like a twisted and freakish version of a "Better Homes and Gardens" cover, you are stealing money...just not directly.

  23. Re:It depends on contracts on Music Copyright War Looming · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not exactly. That analogy is too simple.

    A coder is hired to write code for a project. A musician is 'hired' to record a work that they created. The work exists independent of the record company. The same cannot be said of the coder. The coder does not write code and then get hired to put his code in the game. If the code existed before the formal business relationship, then the code is licensed from the coder.

    This is actually a point that frequently comes up. Someone works on a project while working for a company. The company claims they have rights to the project because they were employing the individual at the time. The individual will typically argue that the work was not part of their "work for hire" and the truth of that claim is debated by the courts.

    The RIAA argument makes sense in certain respects. Take "The Monkeys" for example and their hit song "Daydream Believer". It was written by John Stewart under contract to write songs. It was performed by "The Monkeys" as part of an employment contract to make a TV show. No debate, very clear cut. However, it gets more confusing when we have a song that was written and performed before the contract even existed. In that case, it is pretty clear that the creation of that work was not "work for hire" and therefore the record company is really licensing the music(though they may have had the artist agree to something else). Lots of artistic works fall into the cracks somewhere in the middle. This will be very interesting.

  24. Re:Hmmm on 8 Grams of Thorium Could Replace Gasoline In Cars · · Score: 1

    a 777 uses a steam turbine engine? Is the 777 a model of train from the turn of the century I have never heard of?

    Your point is perfectly valid though. We are probably more likely to see this as a power plant technology operating at an efficiency of 60%(highly efficient power plant) than operating in a vehicle(which typically only achieve an efficiency of 25%. If I had to guess where they got their 1g = 7500 gal figure, I imagine it was just a quick conversion of the potential energy in each.

  25. Re:Boycott? I Think the Tools Merely Lack Maturity on Is Free Software Ready For E-publishing? · · Score: 1

    PDF is great for a lot of things, but not for readers. Sure you can read your PDF on your Android, but you better be prepared to zoom like a mad-man.
    If I am reading a paper on the geo-political state of Belize, why would I need to be zooming so much? Just let the text be reflowed to my device. This is why epub and similar are the way to go, because they allow a great deal more portability. Why does the author of the paper care if I maintain his margins or his font? He doesn't.

    I get so many different types of information each day via PDF when it really should be in another format that I am sick of it. If you are sending me a document that is about to be published and I am proof-reading the layout, then send me a PDF. If you are sending me an architectural drawing then send me an Autocad DWG!!!