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  1. Read between the lines though. on Tag Heuer Partners With Google and Intel To Create Luxury Apple Watch Rival · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's *extremely* telling that Google is running after luxury brands.

    Why?

    Because everyone at Apple and Google know the truth. And the truth is: This is not a product anyone needs.

    How do you sell something nobody actually needs? Well... Nobody knows the answer to that question better than watch manufacturers.

    The immediate flight to "luxury" speaks volumes about the actual utility value of these silly gadgets.

  2. My income is pretty close to zero on $56,000 Speeding Ticket Issued Under Finland's System of Fines Based On Income · · Score: 1, Funny

    Pedal to the metal, baby.

  3. They mis-spelled NSA on NASA Wants Your Help Hunting For Asteroids · · Score: 3, Funny

    Please accept this home software which will communicate directly with our servers in Fort Meade. We assure you it's just helping us look for asteroids.

    Also, if you have moved the location of your Photos directory, please enter it's current location in the install wizard. Thanks for your help ... looking for asteroids.

  4. USB is exponentially faster than Wifi on Reactions to the New MacBook and Apple Watch · · Score: 1

    Apple made a pretty laptop at the cost of basic efficiency.

    Even wireless-N has a top throughout of 300 megabits per second. Although that's *if* you're on a wireless-N router. And even then you may not achieve that for numerous secondary reasons.

    USB-3 has a top throughput of 5 GIGABITS per second.

    There's no comparison. If you need to regularly transfer (of backup) large quantities of data, wifi is not the optimal choice.

  5. Just y'know... reconnect them spinal nerves on Surgeon: First Human Head Transplant May Be Just Two Years Away · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just reconnect the spinal nerves? This is like saying interstellar spaceships are just two years away. Just connect the warp drive to the antimatter, and there you go.

    Perhaps we should start by inventing a warp drive first? Or in this case, connecting severed spinal columns?

  6. Re:Actually on Stephen Hawking: Biggest Human Failing Is Aggression · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Or what if testosterone levels in the developed world were reduced by almost 30% by using an insidious combination of phyto-estrogens, cholesterol-reducing statin drugs, plastic water bottles, ubiquitous soy, and birth control pills polluting recycled water.

    Oh wait... We did that already.

  7. No, But maybe the end of manned combat vehicles. on Will Submarines Soon Become As Obsolete As the Battleship? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The issue isn't "The End of War" or even MAD. The issue is that we are very quickly approaching the technological threshold where unmanned vehicles will outperform all manned vehicles at a fraction of the cost. (And needless to say, reduced risk to our military personnel).

    To put a finer point on it: How well will the latest Virginia-class sub fare in a combat scenario against 150 different 2-meter long drone vessels?

    Want to bet that the 150 drones can be produced for less than $1.8 billion?

  8. Re:New research find's water wet on Your Java Code Is Mostly Fluff, New Research Finds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, but the point is silly anyway.

    The notion that everything that isn't core functionality is "fluff", gives the impression that it is non-essential.

    Let's say I have a weather application that reports meteorological data for a specific zipcode. Let's say that I have a super slick user interface, and I display animated weather graphics in HD.

    Fluff?

    Not at all. A spartan application which displayed a bunch of plaintext data might have zero downloads. Sexy, eye candy might equate to 20 million downloads.

    Which raises the question: What is the actual point of this app? Is it to display weather information?

    No. The point of this app is to get downloaded.

    So what's "core" again?

  9. Re:Fuck Google on Google-Advised Disney Cartoon Aims To Convince Preschool Girls Coding's Cool · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The really hilarious implication here is that young boys code because society portrays coding as "cool" for boys.

    Really? What society is that?

    Take a peek at the adolescent reality of pimply-faced, never-gonna-get-laid young geeks and the truth becomes clear: Young males code *despite* it's complete LACK of coolness ...because they like it.

    And therein lies the truth of most gender-heavy careers: The issue was not, and has never been one of innate capacity. It is one if interest. And interest breeds capacity.

    Men and women LIKE different things. To argue with this point is to push ideology in front of empiricism.

    Young chess aficionados spend thousands and thousands of hours watching chess games. Why? Because they like it. That's why chess grandmasters are men. And it's why there are women's chess championships. To suggest that some patriarchy is at work is laughable. But feminists insist that this is the case.

    We are expected to believe that 90 pound, bespectacled chess geeks who spend their days fantasizing about even having a conversation with a female are somehow intimidating women out of the field.

    In software the same dynamic exists. But feminists ignore the thousands of hours that geeky teenage boys spent along staring at CRT's, look only at the hiring patterns of large firms, and cry "patriarchy".

  10. Re:HUD in a car? on Graphene Based Display Paves Way For Semi-Transparent Electronic Devices · · Score: 2

    For that you don't need a transparent device. You just need a transparent display.

    Those are two different things actually.

  11. Re:No elaboration? Is it a cubesat? on State Television Says Iran Launches New Satellite Into Space · · Score: 2

    You absolutely could.

    But keep in mind that the principal expense is actually the "launch" part, not the satellite part. It's difficult to translate prices from what an orbital launch costs to achieve in the US vs. what it would cost for the government to achieve an orbital launch in Iran -- but using CubeSats as a metric, consider that the development cost of a CubeSat can be as low as $10k USD, with the remaining cost going to placing the satellite in orbit.

  12. No elaboration? Is it a cubesat? on State Television Says Iran Launches New Satellite Into Space · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There's nothing particularly impressive anymore about launching a satellite into space.

    Cubesats are 10cm x 10cm satellites that can be built using off-the-shelf components and cost as little as $50,000 to produce *and* launch into orbit. (Although launch costs are ramping).

    If Iran state media isn't "elaborating" on the nature of the satellite then we have no reason to believe the Iranian government has done anything more impressive than launch a 10cm DIY satellite.

  13. Isn't freedom itself a potential lawless zone? on Justice Department: Default Encryption Has Created a 'Zone of Lawlessness' · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The notion that liberties could be misused and potentially give way to lawbreaking behavior is never a justification for the repeal of liberty.

    We are always and everywhere free to break the law. That our social contract with government grants government the ability to prosecute law breakers ex post facto, does not equate to a wholesale license to restrict a liberty prior to its potential abuse.

    To jump to such a conclusion would equally justify a national curfew. After all, who knows what we might get up to after dark?

    Liberty by definition, always carries with it the potential for individual abuse.

  14. Here's my problem with this on New Nicotine Vaccine May Succeed Where Others Have Failed · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For one, Nicotine (when smoked) passes the blood-brain barrier within seconds.

    The notion that a human antibody can intercept (and neutralize) a foreign substance that quickly is highly questionable. (If not silly).

    However, the half-life of nicotine is 1-2 hours, and the metabolites have a half life of up to 20 hours. So let's assume for a minute that the vaccine does have an effect on systemic nicotine 'at some point' over the course of it's metabolization. Okay, fine. But the nicotine still went 'straight upstairs' after that first puff. Which means the only effect I can conceive of here is that the smoker will need another cigarette more quickly.

    Is that a good thing?

    Of course, IANAD so please correct me if I've got something wrong.

  15. Re:Google Plus Defined Itself As a Hazard on Tracking Down How Many (Or How Few) People Actively Use Google+ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This.

    Google+ wasn't ever *just* a social network. It was a real-name, real-identity service tied to the entire universe of Google products.

    This made Google+ decidedly dangerous for a vast majority of users who enjoy anonymity as one of the principal "features" of the web.

    Google had an opportunity to create a fantastic service but their extremely weird philosophical tirade to bring identity to the web, coupled with an overly aggressive "whoops, you just created a Google+ ID and revealed your identity on 5000 YouTube comments" rightfully turned off millions of users.

    They deserve this failure. Pursuing products that nobody wants, by ramming them down the throats of their existing customers, is a bad idea in any business.

  16. Straight jacket included on Thync, a Wearable That Zaps Your Brain To Calm You Down or Amp You Up · · Score: 0

    And if you act now, the manufacturers will throw in not one, but TWO all-cotton straight-jackets, and a complete set of heavy duty bed-straps for your own electro-shock therapy sessions.

  17. Not expensive for an audiophile device on Sony Thinks You'll Pay $1200 For a Digital Walkman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Audiophile equipment often costs in the tens of thousands of dollars -- and there will always be a market for it.

    Regarding your title: SONY clearly does not think *you* will pay $1200 for this device. But they know that *someone* will. This isn't a mass market device. It's a very niche product, well-targeted at its niche.

    More importantly: It's great for publicity. After all, it's already being discussed on Slashdot.

  18. Re:A good calculator for ios. on What Isn't There an App For? · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Well, it might not be what you're looking for per se... But RetroCalc with its epic nerdiness, is IMHO the most awesome calculator app for iPad: http://retrocalc.com/

  19. Torvalds is half right on How We'll Program 1000 Cores - and Get Linus Ranting, Again · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem is that Linus is discussing two different things at once and so it sounds like he's making a more inflammatory point than he is.

    The issue is not whether parallelism is uniformly better for all tasks. The question is, is parallelism better for some tasks. And as Torvalds points out, those tasks do exist (Graphics being an obvious one).

    The nature of the workload required for most workstations is non-uniform processing of large quantities of discreet, irregular tasks. For this, parallelism (as Torvald's correctly notes) is likely not the most efficient approach. To pretend that in some magical future, our processing needs can be homogenized into tasks for which parallel computing is superior is to make a faith-based prediction on how our use of computers will evolve. I would say that the evidence is quite the opposite: That tasks will become more discrete and unique.

    Some fields though: finance, science, statistics, weather, medicine, etc. are rife with computing tasks which ARE well suited to parallel computing. But how much of those tasks happens on workstations. Not much, most likely. So Linus' point is valid.

    But I have to take issue of Linus tone in which he downplays "graphics" as being a rather unimportant subset of computing tasks. It's not "graphics". It's "GRAPHICS". That's not a small outlier of a task. Wait until we're all wearing ninth generation Oculus headsets... the trajectory of parallel processing requirements for graphics is already becoming clear -- and it's stratospheric. The issue is this: Our desktop processing requirements are actually slowing and as Linus points out, are probably ill-suited for increased parallelism. But our graphics requirements may be nearly infinite.

    Unlike other fields of computing, we know where graphics is going 20 years from now: It's going to the "holodeck".

    Keep working on parallel computing guys. Yes, we need it.

     

  20. Re:This is why we need a war on Newest Stealth Fighter's Ground Attack Sensors 10 Years Behind Older Jets' · · Score: 0

    Uh... So you believe espionage is a civil offense like copyright infringement?

  21. The bigger question IMHO on MIT Unifies Web Development In Single, Speedy New Language · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ur/Web is a Functional Programming language like Haskell, F# and the like. The performance gains are real -- both in numbers of coders and execution, but the larger questions remain:

    Do we want compiled web languages? Why exactly? Not only does this introduce a compilation layer to the development workflow, but it introduces millions of "black boxes" into a once open and readable landscape. While there may be gains in code protection, there will also likely be losses in flexibility.

    And of course, is it all worth the effort?

  22. Re:Good news! on Sony To Release the Interview Online Today; Apple Won't Play Ball · · Score: 0

    Long live clever marketing campaigns.

    The world's top security professionals are highly doubtful that NK had anything to do with the Sony hack. Where does that leave the claims that NK threatened Sony? How verifiable are these claims?

    What is the possibility that this is all part of a clever marketing campaign to get all of us to see the film.

    One can't help but notice that Sony has been the recipient of some amazing free publicity. Sony said it was far too dangerous to release the film... And then announced that they'd be releasing the film anyway. How many more of us are going to see the film after this debacle? How many more of us are even aware of the film?

    If it wasn't an intentional marketing campaign, should it have been? Will we see more impossible to prove allegations involving rogue states in the future?

  23. Re:That's not what happened at all on Marissa Mayer's Reinvention of Yahoo! Stumbles · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well... aside from the vitriol..

    We do know the following:

    1) She actually did fire all of the senior management and replace them with puppets.
    2) She did hire legions of publicists to promote Marissa.
    3) She did spend quite a bit on acquisitions which were questionable.
    4) It's not working out so well for Yahoo.

    So I'm not sure what citations you're looking for. It's not exactly hearsay.

  24. Announcing the Yune. on Marissa Mayer's Reinvention of Yahoo! Stumbles · · Score: 2

    Yes, Yahoo! has officially announced their music playing device called the "Yune".

    It's going to come in 7 different shades of purple, and offer an interface based on Yahoo!'s homepage design -- squeezing over 270 links onto the device's homescreen.

    Yahoo's CEO, Marissa Mayer apparently designed the Yune at home herself over the weekend using purple Play-Doh, and it will be officially unveiled by her in an upcoming Vogue photoshoot -- where she will be personally modeling the device along with this year's spring collection.

    Most of the underlying technology for the Yune was purchased from now-defunct Palm, Inc. in a purchase rumored to be north of $720 Billion -- approved entirely by Mayer. Mayer has refused to comment on the purchase price, but promised that the investment would yield positive results sometime after her salary review with the board of directors.

    The Yune will be in stores by next Christmas and as a special promotional offer to increase sales, the Yune is expected to come bundled with an iPhone.

  25. Re:Silly me on "Lax" Crossdomain Policy Puts Yahoo Mail At Risk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nearly dead? You're talking about the most popular multimedia platform in the world. Yes, Flash sucks. I'll be the first to agree. And as much as anyone, I'd like to see HTML5 kick ass. But it's still lacking in several departments which prevent it from being widely adopted by online game developers. (Good clock / framerate control, a stellar IDE and code protection not being the least of them).

    I've used several HTML5 IDE's and they blow. Coding is still fraught with browser issues and quirks. Speed is iffy at best for many important libraries. 3D transforms for example ... Don't get me started.

    Relatively few developers are writing hit games in HTML5 yet. (Please note the term "relatively") Not that writing great HTML5 games can't be done. It absolutely can be done. (Save yourself the effort of cherry-picking the latest demo of what HTML5 can do. I know. I've written a few). But "potential" is not the issue. Kingdom Rush, for example is written in Flash. Not HTML5. The devs at Ironhide aren't clueless. They chose Flash for a reason, Kongregate also has Unity games and HTML5 games -- but what percent are those? Why? Because they're all dumb? No. It's because AS3 is standard across platforms, extensible and blazing fast.

    HTML5 fans are absolutely on the right track (I count myself as an HTML5 fan), but IMHO most are wholly delusional about how close they are to victory, and about just how "dead" Flash really is. Slashdotters and other people "in the know" know that Flash's days are numbered. But out there in Internet-land, *hundreds of millions* of users use Flash every day. That doesn't count as "dead" by any definition. And the Flash development community is still growing,