Slashdot Mirror


User: BZWingZero

BZWingZero's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
48
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 48

  1. Re:Make organ donars have priority access to organ on Nobel Prize Winning Economist: Legalize Sale of Human Organs · · Score: 4, Informative

    At least in the US, this is 100% wrong. If you donate a kidney and later need one, you are automatically at the top of the list to receive one.

  2. Re:Jabber on Meebo Discontinuing All Services Except for Meebo Bar · · Score: 1

    I wish I could abandon those "legacy" services. Want to convince my friends to move from YIM/AIM/MSN en masse for me?

  3. Re:Let's just say on Is Google the New Microsoft? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Having a monopoly (at least in the US) is not illegal. Abusing that monopoly is. Bundling IE and tying it deeply into the OS is what got Microsoft in trouble.

  4. Re:One week? on SpaceX Launch To International Space Station Delayed For Code Tweaks · · Score: 1

    For the ISS, launch windows are less than 10 minutes with about one window every day. This lasts a few weeks then there's a couple week period without a window.

  5. Re:Hardcore math time. on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 2

    Who said anything about going to the asteroid belt? There are hundreds of asteroids classed as "near Earth" that would be significantly easier to get to and from.

  6. Re:Who cares? on 1366x768 Monitors Top 1024x768 For the First Time · · Score: 1

    16:10 allows the windows taskbar and window titlebar to remain on the screen without obstructing a 16:9 video, while still letting the video take the full monitor width.

  7. Re:Poor people exist on Ask Slashdot: Why Aren't Schools Connected? · · Score: 1

    The problem with giving every child a computer isn't them having the computer, but all the costs associated with it like internet access. And a safe place to store said computer. Probably for a non-zero portion of the students that cannot afford a computer and internet access for it, the computer would be taken by the parents and sold for some quick cash.

    I like the idea of a set of elementary school textbooks nationwide, but who gets to decide on their content? Right now, its the largest states (California, Texas, Florida, New York) that determine nearly all the content for the rest of the nation by virtue of their student population and buying power.

    And you'll have to buy them again every couple of times a decade. Mostly because elementary school covers more than just the "three 'r's". I distinctly remember learning history (state and country), as well as government, science, and current events in addition to readin, ritin, and rithmatic.

  8. Re:No DRM but has tracking on What Book Publishers Should Learn From Harry Potter · · Score: 1

    So its DRM-free but tied to a specific user. Its still possible to put it on any device you own and give copies to your friends, but when its shows up on a torrent site it can be traced back to an individual.

    Just make sure the friends you share it with don't upload it to a public place.

  9. Re:Only sort of DRM free? on What Book Publishers Should Learn From Harry Potter · · Score: 2

    Well, you can convert it to .mobi, which the Kindle will happily read. Amazon has a few formats, including .azw which is a DRM'd version of .mobi.

  10. Re:Stop calling it Xbox 720 on Xbox 720 a No-show At This Year's E3 · · Score: 2

    360 was pretty dumb as well, it puts you in the same place you started.

    Yeah, its a terrible name. But what else would they have named it? Xbox 2? That would be really bad, because the general public would see the choice between "Xbox 2 or Playstation 3". They'd read it as, "3 > 2, why should I buy the system with the lower number, its obviously worse," and buy PS3 instead.

  11. Re:Sigh, slashdot is rather prone to hyperbole on Ann Arbor Schools Want $45M For Tech, Partly For Computers To Run Google Docs · · Score: 2

    But what about those students who cannot afford a computer at all? How are they supposed to complete their assignments?

  12. Re:Propulsive landings... on SpaceX Tries Out Its New SuperDraco Rocket Engine · · Score: 1

    Its steps one and three. The SuperDracos are to eliminate step two. At least per the video they released a few months back.

    SpaceX Reusability

  13. Re:NASA intern, SpaceX Elon on 2nd SpaceX Demo Flight Slated For Feb. 7 · · Score: 1

    NASA did do a full duration "Flight Readiness Firing" before each Shuttle lifted off for its first mission. Videos of them can even be found on Youtube.

    Like Columbia's.

  14. Re:Connectivity on Inside the World's Largest LAN Party · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I suspect the chances of all 12,000 people using their internet bandwidth at the same time was pretty likely. Especially since they asked people to try and max it out at a specific time to set a utilization record.

    http://www.dreamhack.se/dhw11/2011/11/22/120-gigabit-at-dhw11/

  15. Re:why 380v? on Are Data Centers Finally Ready For DC Power? · · Score: 1

    Sorry to tell you this, but it is. Newer LCDs have LED backlights which don't require that pesky inverter.

  16. Re:NASA requires 2 good launches before US astrona on Progress Spacecraft Launch Successful · · Score: 1

    The Russians had a Proton M/Briz M fail less than a week before the Soyuz/Progress (M-12M) failure. Both failures, IIRC, were for similar reasons.

  17. Re:This is disappointing as hell on NASA Unveils Design for New Space Launch System · · Score: 2

    I'm not a physicist, so I don't really know a huge amount about this. Is there actually a viable design for a spaceplane with a large cargo capacity in the works anywhere?

    Yes, there is a "viable" design for a spaceplane with large cargo capacity in the works. Its still a significant amount of development away from production, but its past a concept. Its called the Skylon

  18. Re:Wait, these are not MY corporations on A Congressman and an Astronaut Propose a New Plan For NASA · · Score: 1

    Atlantis isn't flying again, but all of the SSMEs are being kept in a ready state to be attached to the "next" vehicle to use as prototype engines. At least until a cheaper, disposable version is designed.

  19. Re:Not an end, but a beginning on Atlantis Lands, Ending the Shuttle Era · · Score: 1

    Then its a good thing that 4 of those craft I named are planning on being flown with or without NASA's help. (NASA funding would just accelerate the process.)

  20. Not an end, but a beginning on Atlantis Lands, Ending the Shuttle Era · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While the Shuttle program has ended (and its been a spectacular run), I guess the only things to look forward to are the MPCV, CTS-100, Dragon, DreamChaser, and the New Sheppard.

    I think the future is looking pretty bright.

  21. Re:Leave one there on Historic Pairing: Shuttle Docked To the ISS · · Score: 1

    Well, they'd work as a classic lifeboat for about two weeks. Then the batteries would die and you wouldn't have any control surfaces on landing. Or life support. Plus, the shuttles leak atmosphere. Not a significant amount for a 2 week mission, but if it was much longer it would be an issue.

  22. Re:Space plane? on House Passes NASA Authorization Bill · · Score: 1

    It was called the Space Transportation System, and has been circling around in LEO for nearly the past thirty years.

  23. Re:Even Hollywood... on Russia's Unmanned Capsule Misses Space Station · · Score: 3, Informative

    They have manual control available for once the Progress gets to the parking orbit. The issue is Progress 38 didn't go to the parking orbit, it just went straight on past.

  24. Re:Just like the game on Masten and Armadillo Perform First VTVL Restarts · · Score: 1

    Oh, so kinda like what BOTH had to do to win the Lunar Lander Challenge?

    Fly up to a predetermined altitude (varied depending on competition level), translate horizontally a specific distance (again, how far depended on the competition level), stay airborne for a certain amount of time (length depended, again, on competition level) land on a simulated lunar surface complete with boulders, then fly back with the same flight altitude, time and distance requirements within the allotted time.

    Oh, and bring enough fuel to make each flight without running out. One of the teams (neither Masten nor Armadillo), did run out of fuel a few feet off the pad and crashed.

  25. Re:Apple on Android Sales Surpass iPhone Sales · · Score: 1

    While yes, you do have to link you Android phone to a Google account, you don't have to download apps from the Google app store. You can download and install apps from anywhere. All it takes is checking one box in the settings.