Censoring breast pics is okay, as long it's opt-out, and there are parental controls. Google, Facebook, and the government shouldn't censor things for us that we want to look at in our own homes. (Well, certain things I take strong exception to, like child porn and snuff films because there are victims.) We should be empowered to censor things for ourselves. That being said, many common beliefs should be taken as default, like not putting full frontal nudity on highway billboards. It's not that I believe everyone _should_ be offended by that; it's just that since a vocal majority of people are offended by that, I don't mind curbing some of these things in situations where it's otherwise shoved up people's noses.
There are some middle grounds. Consider gay pride parades. I think that there should be gay pride parades that demonstrate to everyone that gay people are just normal people who want to work normal jobs and live their lives. That, sadly, is not what gay pride parades do. They are hyper-sexualized. There's public nudity and sexual acts in the streets. I don't care if you're gay or straight; I don't think this is appropriate in public. Those who engage in this display are really only hurting themselves because it perpetuates a stereotype of perversion, which is really only true for a minority of people (gay or otherwise). Fortunately, MOST people who find this offensive are able to JUST NOT GO TO SEE THE PARADE. Those who live along the nearby streets can tolerate it or go somewhere else for a few hours. So I have mixed feelings about this, because I don't like some of the stuff they do, and I'd just rather people got over their homophobia and dealt with more important issues.
Anyhow, to continue the analogy with muslims. I think that parodying Muhammad and Islam is perfectly acceptable. I also think putting it on public billboards is at the very least impolite, and at worst entirely unnecessarily offensive to certain people. But if you want to put these things in a magazine or on a website that people have to intentionally take action to find, then those who find it offensive can just not go there!
The objective here should be to maximally empower individuals to see or not see what they want. Because we have to live together, we have to make some compromises about what is publically visible in a way that can't be avoided.
Actually, science it's so bad about this. Sure, it's been wrong, but research is steadily improving. Also, there have always been nutritionists.
The biggest offenders are the MDs. The first thing that happens when you enter medical school is that you have brain surgery to remove every stich of knowledge you have about nutrition. Seriously, every MD I have ever met is totally ignorant of nutrition. The SMART MDs will at least admit that. The rest just assume that nutrition is never the problem. Magnesium, B12, and D deficiencies are rather common, actually. The American diet is HORRIBLE, so people have nutrient deficiencies and get fat eating too many calories while their bodies struggle to extract things it needs from nutrient-poor foods.
About the best the MDs can ever do is tell you to eat less. But NEVER would they consider telling you to cut out certain specific foods. Do you know how many people have gluten sensitivity? About 10% of the American population have some sensitivity whose effect can be correlated with a variety of diseases, especially auto-immune. (Do 23andme, and put the data through NutraHacker, and see if you have the genes for it. I do. However, my wife, who has celiac disease, doesn't have the gene defects, so it can be environmental too.)
Speaking of auto-immune disease, in medical school, doctors are specifically trained to assume that an ailment is all in your head if you come in and report a constellation of symptoms, ESPECIALLY if you've written them down. However, constellations of symptoms are common with auto-immune diseases like Hashimoto's and lupus, and the associated brainfog forces people to have to take notes on things, because they know they'll forget something.
I've met an immunologist who thought hashimoto's was untreatable and gastroenterologist who didn't believe in food allergies. You think these people would be better trained in their own fields!
I'm not a Zuck fanboi. I actually feel like Facebook is as invasive as the NSA, datamining your every word. I'm very careful with what I put on there; little that isn't already in my public LinkedIn profile.
However, the situation with Turkey isn't as cut and dried as some people want to make it out. Is Zuckerberg being two-faced, saying one thing and doing another? Not necessarily. He can have a strong opinion that censorship is wrong, at the same time being FORCED to do it (to the minimum extent possible) by local laws. If you were to ask him how he feels about this, he would tell you that it really sucks.
Facebook has two options with regard to Turkey. They can either pull out entirely, or they can obey shitty laws. For one thing, they ARE a business, and nobody has ever tried to claim that they're especially benevolent. The users are the product, and we that use Facebook accept that. So it makes sense for them to maintain a revenue stream from Turkish people. Secondly, remaining in Turkey and censoring a few things is better for free exchange of ideas in general than pulling out and effectively censoring EVERYTHING. Facebook is a platform for free exchange of ideas in the extreme. Your personal information and everything you say are spewed to the world whether you want it or not. So in spite of the privacy concerns, Facebook's presence is nevertheless a force for freedom.
I have some "old" computers that really aren't that old and are in fabulous condition. Is there an organization I can contact to send it to Cuba so that it ends up in the hands of people who would make good use of it (instead of one of those scams that makes it end up in a dump in China)?
For that matter, I have other things like old clothes destined for the garage sale I could send there too. Seriously. I would feel good about sending clothes that no longer fit me (I lost weight) to people who would benefit.
Quoting someone's comment on the article: "Distilled down, this is your argument for god. God set the fine scale variation so that 13.8 billions years later, we could evolve and Jesus could visit so we could kill him and save the universe. So if someone were to dispose of this error in your thinking, would you dispose of god."
What some people don't quite realize is that we can have Jesus'es without God. A Jesus is just a cultural archetype that arises in times of (societal) turmoil who teaches some (ethical) principles, which are then spread by followers. This sort of thing happens all the time, with Jesus being a particular case. There were lots of messiahs at the time of Jesus, and Jesus is just the one who became the most famous. Buddha is another Jesus. In Science, Einstein is a Jesus of sorts. Also, there are other kinds of cultural architypes besides Jesus'es.
If you restrict yourself to political and social Jesus'es, which has happened many times on Earth, it seems inevitable that Jesus will come to "visit" alien societies. The alien world will experience some very alien concept of societal difficulty. Someone (or lots of someones) will arise in this time and teach some useful lessons. One of those Jesus'es will become the most famous (although many of the others' lessons will be attributed to this individual), and some of those messages will survive in an alien religious way. This all assumes alien worlds that have "individuals," which is surely not always the case.
What is Christianity anyhow? It's just a set of ethical principles (which have been horribly bastardized by most of the followers). Everyone is created equal under the eyes of [Abstract Deity], even women and slaves. Everyone has done some bad things. Forgiveness is available to those who acknowledge that they've done bad things and truly prefer to not do bad things. Most of the rest of it (accepting Jesus as your savior, the virgin birth, his death and resurrection, various Hebrew rules, etc.) is all fluff there to perpetuate the religion, which is only maintained due to cultural natural selection (those religions without properties like this don't survive, so those things are just artifacts).
I'm using the word "idiot" as a hyperbole to refer to "people naturally disinterested in anything remotely techncal." Most people are this kind of idiot. Scientists, engineers, lawyers, doctors, architects, writers, and others who think abstractly are RARE.
Perpetually, many who ARE interested in technical things lament that those people seem to have missed out on the right opportunities or education, which is a sad, sad thing. The truth is that MOST people who are naturally inclined to care about technical things will learn technical things. Sure, there's the occasional person who is otherwise missed, but mostly, those efforts to educate disinterested people in technical things result only in incompetent, disinterested people CLAIMING to know technical things. Force someone disinterested to memorize a bunch of technical facts, and all they'll ever know is a bunch of disconnected facts. This does not lead to competence. Really, they still don't care and pretty much don't get it and would be better off, for everyone's sake, doing something else. You can't MAKE someone think abstractly; it's either present as a talent, or it's not.
That does not imply that everyone with abstract thinking ability will be competent. You also have to have passion for something. That's rare too.
Reminds me of a recent bad experience with Jet Blue. Not only was the flight an hour late, but when we arrived, they lost our stroller, which we had to check at the gate. We ended up leaving about 2 hours late. If it weren't for the constant screaming of our 2-year-old, that wouldn't have been so bad. I realize that people deal with a lot worse, but the $30 off our "next" flight was really lame, considering that we're unlikely to be flying with them again within the year they give us to redeem it. Really, all that discount is is lock-in to ensure they get more of our business, which makes it not really a discount.
This makes me think of the technological progress of communications between computers. (Note: This is not a totally accurate depiction of history.) First, we had serial communication, like RS232. When that wasn't fast enough, we went parallel, like Centronics. That reached a certain speed limit due to signal skew between the parallel wires. But by then, on-chip transistors were so fast that we could modulate differential serial in a way that beats the heck out of parallel. (Notice that modern highspeed interconnects, like USB3 and PCI-Express, are all differential serial, where any parallelism has decoupled phasing.)
So imagine we computed the transfer function of the "typical" record player, accounting for all the distortions in the needle, amplifier, and speaker. Then we took the waveform we WANT to get and reverse engineer exactly the groove we need on the record to get the exact sounds we want. It might take a decent amount of compute power to do it, but we could do a far better job than we ever could back in the 1970's.
There are many common algorithms at the heart of important workloads that are not parallelizable. Consider sorting and shortest path algorithms that are important for managing data and route finding. The O(n-squared) versions can be parallelized (Bellman-Ford vs. Dijkstra's), but for any useful input size, the n-log-n version will be faster on a single core than the n-squared on a supercomputer (no hyperbole there). Even for workloads that do have a lot of parallelism, the inter-process communication often dominates. Except for benchmarks with no application to reality, there is always SOMETHING that serializes computation. Amdahl's law always bites you in the ass.
So much for parallel computing.
If you have many INDEPENDENT tasks, then sure, parallel computing is great. Web servers with many clients, graphics, etc. But that's for servers.
On end-user systems, the amount of thread-level parallelism is very limited. Unless you're compiling Gentoo, you're going to top out at a handful of cores. This is not limitation of the languages people use. It's a practical limitation of the parallelism inherent (or not) in the workloads people run, and it's a hard mathematical limitation of the optimal algorithms people use for common low-level tasks.
I got to play with the IBM T221 back when I worked at Tech Source. One dual-link DVI didn't have enough bandwidth for a decent framerate, so I helped adapt one of our dual-head air traffic control video cards to drive the display. That monitor was awesome. Retina display before its time!
I suspect that if I could drink alcohol, I might do so on occasion. However, even small amounts make me feel awful. As a result, I'll never get a DUI (unless it's a false positive or someone spiked my drink, but in the latter case, I probably would be unable to stay awake). Does that make me fortunate or not?
When I was in my 20's and would go bar-hopping with my friends, they'd smoke and drink alcohol. I'd smoke and drink espresso.
Are you trying to match the M&M's to the decor of a room or something? Do the brown ones clash with your shoes?
Ok, sure, I realize that the green ones have some special magic that improves your chances of making a home run in baseball. But I just don't see any way that the brown ones are otherwise special.
There are two legal causes I know of where autism was linked with vaccines. In one case, the girl had mitochondrial disorder and was given too many shots at once. In general, doctors don't recommend getting too many shots at once, because it's a burden on the immune system, so if your immune system is compromised, you have to take it easy and spread out the shots.
As for things that MIGHT "cause" autism (or more precisely, some autism-like symptoms that may or may not really put you in the autism spectrum), I think we should reflect on all the other crap we put in our bodies. Pollution in the air and water, pesticides, the really shitty diet Americans eat, and so forth. A highschool in the southeastern US changed its lunch program to include primarly healthy foods: Behaviorial problems and absenteeism were reduced substantially. Eat better, and you'll think more clearly. This works on anyone, and helps alleviate some of the symtoms experienced by people with ASD.
Recently, autism was linked with some neocortical malformations. I'm not sure what is the cause of the malformations. But in some cases of mild autism, dietary changes anecodotally appear to help. Lowered immune system load and toxin load may be associated with some reduction in some autism symptoms. In my case, dietary changes have helped substantially with fatigue, brain fog, and OCD. I haven't narrowed down exactly which changes have helped the most, but I avoid wheat, soy, and dairy, and I take vitamin supplements only in their biologically active forms. My wife has Hashimoto's disease, so she got on the auto-immune SCD diet (similar to paleo), and following that to a degree has helped me too, and I also lost weight. Also, it's good to maintain a good array of intestinal flora, so eat your cultured vegetables, and drink kombucha and kefir. These things don't treat autism, per se; they just mazimize your baseline health, which can help with all sorts of disorders that might otherwise cause you more trouble.
Now, I'm not sure how HTTPS works, but when you use something like PGP, it first compresses the data in order to increase the entropy, making it harder to crack. So while we're spending more CPU cycles on compression and encryption, doesn't the reduced transmission payload more than offset the cost of the computation? In general, communication is WAY more expensive (in terms of energy) than computation.
Damnit, I'm going to have to read the article to find out if they did this right.:)
Do you really think that the database that Youtube uses to store view counts is limiting that field to 32 bits? Ever? Or that it can't handle overflow in a graceful way that automatically upgrades the value? Or that Google didn't notice this YEARS ago and do a system-wide type change on that table column?
This is FUNNY, but not a technical problem. Of course, many of you may be making jokes in response, pretending to believe it's limited to 32 bits, when you realize it's not. But for those of you whose realities are limited to 32-bit chunks, I just though I'd clarify at the risk of possibly just destroying all the humor value.
As an aside, it amazes me when students first learning circuit design feel compelled to make registers and buses that are all in multiples of 8 bits. There's nothing preventing you from making a circuit component that is 47 bits wide.
I'm an assistant professor. In my job, it's publish or perish. If I don't get enough funding and publications before the ene of my 5th year, I'm FIRED. And this doesn't just affect me. My family and I would be SOL, and we live in Binghamton, so it's not exactly easy to find other tech jobs. So I really don't have time to contribute to FOSS projects.
Except that I do: https://sourceforge.net/p/vortexman/ https://sourceforge.net/p/visualcpu/ https://sourceforge.net/p/openshader/ https://sourceforge.net/p/minuteman/ https://sourceforge.net/p/lsann/ https://sourceforge.net/p/gterm/ https://sourceforge.net/p/ftllm/ https://sourceforge.net/p/educpu/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Graphics_Project (founder, but it's dormant) https://github.com/jbush001/NyuziProcessor (some minor contributions)
Even for states as relatively small as New York, a higher speed limit would be great. Putting aside downstate, we have long stretches of nothing between a handful of major cities. We also have deer, fog, and bad weather, which would require that raised speed limits be restricted to high-visibility daytime conditions.
My main assertion is that many forks are done with good intentions. This new fork, on the other hand, is not necessarily based on the best motivations.
On the one hand, forking is what drives Free Software. It allows us to innovate, adapt software to new needs, etc. Without it, the FOSS community would not be as strong as it is.
On the other hand, Debian's board took a vote, and the anti-systemd people lost. Democracy happened. Democracy is good. Those people who created this fork are a bunch of malcontents that are whining because they didn't get their way. This isn't a "downstream branch" like Ubuntu, which strengthens the community by sending patches upstream. This is breaking up of a strong community, and it's now going to be inherently weaker.
Although they are regulated to death, power companies want to maximize profit, and there are no rules that say they have to invest in improving infrastructure "as long as everything is working fine." They have no motivation at all to seek out aging sections of their power grid and replace them during normal operation. Rather, they are entirely reactive. When power goes out, they fix it on demand. Nothing more. Moreover, whenever there are major storms that take out massive swaths of their network, they cry for help from the government to pay for the repairs becuase they "can't afford it." The only reason they do anything at all when power does go out is because they'd be slapped by regulators if they didn't. Otherwise they'd be perfectly happy to leave paying customers without power the way Comcast leaves paying customers without internet service.
Just imagine if power delivery were government-run. It would be even worse, because there would be no profit incentive.
Censoring breast pics is okay, as long it's opt-out, and there are parental controls. Google, Facebook, and the government shouldn't censor things for us that we want to look at in our own homes. (Well, certain things I take strong exception to, like child porn and snuff films because there are victims.) We should be empowered to censor things for ourselves. That being said, many common beliefs should be taken as default, like not putting full frontal nudity on highway billboards. It's not that I believe everyone _should_ be offended by that; it's just that since a vocal majority of people are offended by that, I don't mind curbing some of these things in situations where it's otherwise shoved up people's noses.
There are some middle grounds. Consider gay pride parades. I think that there should be gay pride parades that demonstrate to everyone that gay people are just normal people who want to work normal jobs and live their lives. That, sadly, is not what gay pride parades do. They are hyper-sexualized. There's public nudity and sexual acts in the streets. I don't care if you're gay or straight; I don't think this is appropriate in public. Those who engage in this display are really only hurting themselves because it perpetuates a stereotype of perversion, which is really only true for a minority of people (gay or otherwise). Fortunately, MOST people who find this offensive are able to JUST NOT GO TO SEE THE PARADE. Those who live along the nearby streets can tolerate it or go somewhere else for a few hours. So I have mixed feelings about this, because I don't like some of the stuff they do, and I'd just rather people got over their homophobia and dealt with more important issues.
Anyhow, to continue the analogy with muslims. I think that parodying Muhammad and Islam is perfectly acceptable. I also think putting it on public billboards is at the very least impolite, and at worst entirely unnecessarily offensive to certain people. But if you want to put these things in a magazine or on a website that people have to intentionally take action to find, then those who find it offensive can just not go there!
The objective here should be to maximally empower individuals to see or not see what they want. Because we have to live together, we have to make some compromises about what is publically visible in a way that can't be avoided.
Actually, science it's so bad about this. Sure, it's been wrong, but research is steadily improving. Also, there have always been nutritionists.
The biggest offenders are the MDs. The first thing that happens when you enter medical school is that you have brain surgery to remove every stich of knowledge you have about nutrition. Seriously, every MD I have ever met is totally ignorant of nutrition. The SMART MDs will at least admit that. The rest just assume that nutrition is never the problem. Magnesium, B12, and D deficiencies are rather common, actually. The American diet is HORRIBLE, so people have nutrient deficiencies and get fat eating too many calories while their bodies struggle to extract things it needs from nutrient-poor foods.
About the best the MDs can ever do is tell you to eat less. But NEVER would they consider telling you to cut out certain specific foods. Do you know how many people have gluten sensitivity? About 10% of the American population have some sensitivity whose effect can be correlated with a variety of diseases, especially auto-immune. (Do 23andme, and put the data through NutraHacker, and see if you have the genes for it. I do. However, my wife, who has celiac disease, doesn't have the gene defects, so it can be environmental too.)
Speaking of auto-immune disease, in medical school, doctors are specifically trained to assume that an ailment is all in your head if you come in and report a constellation of symptoms, ESPECIALLY if you've written them down. However, constellations of symptoms are common with auto-immune diseases like Hashimoto's and lupus, and the associated brainfog forces people to have to take notes on things, because they know they'll forget something.
I've met an immunologist who thought hashimoto's was untreatable and gastroenterologist who didn't believe in food allergies. You think these people would be better trained in their own fields!
I'm not a Zuck fanboi. I actually feel like Facebook is as invasive as the NSA, datamining your every word. I'm very careful with what I put on there; little that isn't already in my public LinkedIn profile.
However, the situation with Turkey isn't as cut and dried as some people want to make it out. Is Zuckerberg being two-faced, saying one thing and doing another? Not necessarily. He can have a strong opinion that censorship is wrong, at the same time being FORCED to do it (to the minimum extent possible) by local laws. If you were to ask him how he feels about this, he would tell you that it really sucks.
Facebook has two options with regard to Turkey. They can either pull out entirely, or they can obey shitty laws. For one thing, they ARE a business, and nobody has ever tried to claim that they're especially benevolent. The users are the product, and we that use Facebook accept that. So it makes sense for them to maintain a revenue stream from Turkish people. Secondly, remaining in Turkey and censoring a few things is better for free exchange of ideas in general than pulling out and effectively censoring EVERYTHING. Facebook is a platform for free exchange of ideas in the extreme. Your personal information and everything you say are spewed to the world whether you want it or not. So in spite of the privacy concerns, Facebook's presence is nevertheless a force for freedom.
I have some "old" computers that really aren't that old and are in fabulous condition. Is there an organization I can contact to send it to Cuba so that it ends up in the hands of people who would make good use of it (instead of one of those scams that makes it end up in a dump in China)?
For that matter, I have other things like old clothes destined for the garage sale I could send there too. Seriously. I would feel good about sending clothes that no longer fit me (I lost weight) to people who would benefit.
Quoting someone's comment on the article: "Distilled down, this is your argument for god. God set the fine scale variation so that 13.8 billions years later, we could evolve and Jesus could visit so we could kill him and save the universe. So if someone were to dispose of this error in your thinking, would you dispose of god."
What some people don't quite realize is that we can have Jesus'es without God. A Jesus is just a cultural archetype that arises in times of (societal) turmoil who teaches some (ethical) principles, which are then spread by followers. This sort of thing happens all the time, with Jesus being a particular case. There were lots of messiahs at the time of Jesus, and Jesus is just the one who became the most famous. Buddha is another Jesus. In Science, Einstein is a Jesus of sorts. Also, there are other kinds of cultural architypes besides Jesus'es.
If you restrict yourself to political and social Jesus'es, which has happened many times on Earth, it seems inevitable that Jesus will come to "visit" alien societies. The alien world will experience some very alien concept of societal difficulty. Someone (or lots of someones) will arise in this time and teach some useful lessons. One of those Jesus'es will become the most famous (although many of the others' lessons will be attributed to this individual), and some of those messages will survive in an alien religious way. This all assumes alien worlds that have "individuals," which is surely not always the case.
What is Christianity anyhow? It's just a set of ethical principles (which have been horribly bastardized by most of the followers). Everyone is created equal under the eyes of [Abstract Deity], even women and slaves. Everyone has done some bad things. Forgiveness is available to those who acknowledge that they've done bad things and truly prefer to not do bad things. Most of the rest of it (accepting Jesus as your savior, the virgin birth, his death and resurrection, various Hebrew rules, etc.) is all fluff there to perpetuate the religion, which is only maintained due to cultural natural selection (those religions without properties like this don't survive, so those things are just artifacts).
I'm using the word "idiot" as a hyperbole to refer to "people naturally disinterested in anything remotely techncal." Most people are this kind of idiot. Scientists, engineers, lawyers, doctors, architects, writers, and others who think abstractly are RARE.
Perpetually, many who ARE interested in technical things lament that those people seem to have missed out on the right opportunities or education, which is a sad, sad thing. The truth is that MOST people who are naturally inclined to care about technical things will learn technical things. Sure, there's the occasional person who is otherwise missed, but mostly, those efforts to educate disinterested people in technical things result only in incompetent, disinterested people CLAIMING to know technical things. Force someone disinterested to memorize a bunch of technical facts, and all they'll ever know is a bunch of disconnected facts. This does not lead to competence. Really, they still don't care and pretty much don't get it and would be better off, for everyone's sake, doing something else. You can't MAKE someone think abstractly; it's either present as a talent, or it's not.
That does not imply that everyone with abstract thinking ability will be competent. You also have to have passion for something. That's rare too.
Reminds me of a recent bad experience with Jet Blue. Not only was the flight an hour late, but when we arrived, they lost our stroller, which we had to check at the gate. We ended up leaving about 2 hours late. If it weren't for the constant screaming of our 2-year-old, that wouldn't have been so bad. I realize that people deal with a lot worse, but the $30 off our "next" flight was really lame, considering that we're unlikely to be flying with them again within the year they give us to redeem it. Really, all that discount is is lock-in to ensure they get more of our business, which makes it not really a discount.
This makes me think of the technological progress of communications between computers. (Note: This is not a totally accurate depiction of history.) First, we had serial communication, like RS232. When that wasn't fast enough, we went parallel, like Centronics. That reached a certain speed limit due to signal skew between the parallel wires. But by then, on-chip transistors were so fast that we could modulate differential serial in a way that beats the heck out of parallel. (Notice that modern highspeed interconnects, like USB3 and PCI-Express, are all differential serial, where any parallelism has decoupled phasing.)
So imagine we computed the transfer function of the "typical" record player, accounting for all the distortions in the needle, amplifier, and speaker. Then we took the waveform we WANT to get and reverse engineer exactly the groove we need on the record to get the exact sounds we want. It might take a decent amount of compute power to do it, but we could do a far better job than we ever could back in the 1970's.
There are many common algorithms at the heart of important workloads that are not parallelizable. Consider sorting and shortest path algorithms that are important for managing data and route finding. The O(n-squared) versions can be parallelized (Bellman-Ford vs. Dijkstra's), but for any useful input size, the n-log-n version will be faster on a single core than the n-squared on a supercomputer (no hyperbole there). Even for workloads that do have a lot of parallelism, the inter-process communication often dominates. Except for benchmarks with no application to reality, there is always SOMETHING that serializes computation. Amdahl's law always bites you in the ass.
So much for parallel computing.
If you have many INDEPENDENT tasks, then sure, parallel computing is great. Web servers with many clients, graphics, etc. But that's for servers.
On end-user systems, the amount of thread-level parallelism is very limited. Unless you're compiling Gentoo, you're going to top out at a handful of cores. This is not limitation of the languages people use. It's a practical limitation of the parallelism inherent (or not) in the workloads people run, and it's a hard mathematical limitation of the optimal algorithms people use for common low-level tasks.
http://crd-legacy.lbl.gov/~dhbailey/dhbpapers/twelve-ways.pdf
http://www.davidhbailey.com/dhbpapers/inv3220-bailey.pdf
http://www.cs.binghamton.edu/~pmadden/pubs/dispelling-ieeedt-2013.pdf
There are some people in parallel computing who need to go back to school and learn computational complexity.
I got to play with the IBM T221 back when I worked at Tech Source. One dual-link DVI didn't have enough bandwidth for a decent framerate, so I helped adapt one of our dual-head air traffic control video cards to drive the display. That monitor was awesome. Retina display before its time!
When someone says "BU", I'm sometimes not sure if they're referring to Boston or Binghamton.
I suspect that if I could drink alcohol, I might do so on occasion. However, even small amounts make me feel awful. As a result, I'll never get a DUI (unless it's a false positive or someone spiked my drink, but in the latter case, I probably would be unable to stay awake). Does that make me fortunate or not?
When I was in my 20's and would go bar-hopping with my friends, they'd smoke and drink alcohol. I'd smoke and drink espresso.
Are you trying to match the M&M's to the decor of a room or something? Do the brown ones clash with your shoes?
Ok, sure, I realize that the green ones have some special magic that improves your chances of making a home run in baseball. But I just don't see any way that the brown ones are otherwise special.
Vaccines don't cause autism.
There are two legal causes I know of where autism was linked with vaccines. In one case, the girl had mitochondrial disorder and was given too many shots at once. In general, doctors don't recommend getting too many shots at once, because it's a burden on the immune system, so if your immune system is compromised, you have to take it easy and spread out the shots.
As for things that MIGHT "cause" autism (or more precisely, some autism-like symptoms that may or may not really put you in the autism spectrum), I think we should reflect on all the other crap we put in our bodies. Pollution in the air and water, pesticides, the really shitty diet Americans eat, and so forth. A highschool in the southeastern US changed its lunch program to include primarly healthy foods: Behaviorial problems and absenteeism were reduced substantially. Eat better, and you'll think more clearly. This works on anyone, and helps alleviate some of the symtoms experienced by people with ASD.
Recently, autism was linked with some neocortical malformations. I'm not sure what is the cause of the malformations. But in some cases of mild autism, dietary changes anecodotally appear to help. Lowered immune system load and toxin load may be associated with some reduction in some autism symptoms. In my case, dietary changes have helped substantially with fatigue, brain fog, and OCD. I haven't narrowed down exactly which changes have helped the most, but I avoid wheat, soy, and dairy, and I take vitamin supplements only in their biologically active forms. My wife has Hashimoto's disease, so she got on the auto-immune SCD diet (similar to paleo), and following that to a degree has helped me too, and I also lost weight. Also, it's good to maintain a good array of intestinal flora, so eat your cultured vegetables, and drink kombucha and kefir. These things don't treat autism, per se; they just mazimize your baseline health, which can help with all sorts of disorders that might otherwise cause you more trouble.
Now, I'm not sure how HTTPS works, but when you use something like PGP, it first compresses the data in order to increase the entropy, making it harder to crack. So while we're spending more CPU cycles on compression and encryption, doesn't the reduced transmission payload more than offset the cost of the computation? In general, communication is WAY more expensive (in terms of energy) than computation.
Damnit, I'm going to have to read the article to find out if they did this right. :)
Do you really think that the database that Youtube uses to store view counts is limiting that field to 32 bits? Ever? Or that it can't handle overflow in a graceful way that automatically upgrades the value? Or that Google didn't notice this YEARS ago and do a system-wide type change on that table column?
This is FUNNY, but not a technical problem. Of course, many of you may be making jokes in response, pretending to believe it's limited to 32 bits, when you realize it's not. But for those of you whose realities are limited to 32-bit chunks, I just though I'd clarify at the risk of possibly just destroying all the humor value.
As an aside, it amazes me when students first learning circuit design feel compelled to make registers and buses that are all in multiples of 8 bits. There's nothing preventing you from making a circuit component that is 47 bits wide.
I'm an assistant professor. In my job, it's publish or perish. If I don't get enough funding and publications before the ene of my 5th year, I'm FIRED. And this doesn't just affect me. My family and I would be SOL, and we live in Binghamton, so it's not exactly easy to find other tech jobs. So I really don't have time to contribute to FOSS projects.
Except that I do:
https://sourceforge.net/p/vortexman/
https://sourceforge.net/p/visualcpu/
https://sourceforge.net/p/openshader/
https://sourceforge.net/p/minuteman/
https://sourceforge.net/p/lsann/
https://sourceforge.net/p/gterm/
https://sourceforge.net/p/ftllm/
https://sourceforge.net/p/educpu/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Graphics_Project (founder, but it's dormant)
https://github.com/jbush001/NyuziProcessor (some minor contributions)
Even for states as relatively small as New York, a higher speed limit would be great. Putting aside downstate, we have long stretches of nothing between a handful of major cities. We also have deer, fog, and bad weather, which would require that raised speed limits be restricted to high-visibility daytime conditions.
Oh, I didn't mean to imply that anyone was being malicious. Unwise, perhaps.
My main assertion is that many forks are done with good intentions. This new fork, on the other hand, is not necessarily based on the best motivations.
On the one hand, forking is what drives Free Software. It allows us to innovate, adapt software to new needs, etc. Without it, the FOSS community would not be as strong as it is.
On the other hand, Debian's board took a vote, and the anti-systemd people lost. Democracy happened. Democracy is good. Those people who created this fork are a bunch of malcontents that are whining because they didn't get their way. This isn't a "downstream branch" like Ubuntu, which strengthens the community by sending patches upstream. This is breaking up of a strong community, and it's now going to be inherently weaker.
Although they are regulated to death, power companies want to maximize profit, and there are no rules that say they have to invest in improving infrastructure "as long as everything is working fine." They have no motivation at all to seek out aging sections of their power grid and replace them during normal operation. Rather, they are entirely reactive. When power goes out, they fix it on demand. Nothing more. Moreover, whenever there are major storms that take out massive swaths of their network, they cry for help from the government to pay for the repairs becuase they "can't afford it." The only reason they do anything at all when power does go out is because they'd be slapped by regulators if they didn't. Otherwise they'd be perfectly happy to leave paying customers without power the way Comcast leaves paying customers without internet service.
Just imagine if power delivery were government-run. It would be even worse, because there would be no profit incentive.
For a while there, there were some 2560x2048 monitors being marketed for ATC as well. And then there was the IBM T221, which did 3840x2400.
Don't forget Tech Source, who had beat Barco to the market by years with 2Kx2K graphics cards: http://www.techsource.com
Incidentally, Tech Source is now owned by Eizo, but they still produce ATC graphics cards.
Excellent link. Not only did I learn to do overtone singing, but I also have another person I can send prayer requests. :)