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  1. The Simpsons comes to life, again. on Massachusetts May Soon Change How the Nation Dies · · Score: 1
  2. Re:Stanislaw Lem on Ask Slashdot: Good, Forgotten Fantasy & Science Fiction Novels? · · Score: 1

    I wholeheartedly second the recommendation of "Tales Of Pirx The Pilot." Terrific short stories with a lot of humor. This would be the book I'd hand to a young person who had never read any science fiction before.

  3. Re:Tower of Babel on Recent Discovery Contains Oldest Depiction of the Tower of Babel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At any rate, whatever meaningful socialism there was in Hitler or in Nazism was wiped out ... during the Night of the Long Knives.

    Whatever meaningful socialism there was in _______ was wiped out during ________

    1) the USSR / Stalin's purges
    2) communist China / Mao's purges
    3) Cuba / Castro's purges

    and on and on.

    Socialism / Communism isn't a way of running a society. It is a method used to disrupt and destroy a society. The nuances and differences between socialism, communism and Progressivism are as meaningless as the nuances and differences between the effects of different types of nuclear weapons on a city. Socialism, Communism and Progressivism are a means to achieving totalitarianism, no more, no less.

  4. Re:CS equivalent of the tower of babel on Recent Discovery Contains Oldest Depiction of the Tower of Babel · · Score: 1

    With the exception that BAL is still in use today. If you do systems programming on IBM mainframes for any amount of time, You. Will. Learn. BAL.
     

  5. Turntable mats on Competing Contests To Create Pro- and Anti-Piracy PSAs · · Score: 1

    Heh. A DJ friend has a set of turntable mats with the slogan on them:

    "Copyright infringement is your best entertainment value"

    Says it all right there,

  6. RS6000 boot times were horrible on The Death of Booting Up · · Score: 1

    The worst I ever had to deal with was an IBM RS/6000 Model F50 with a lot of SCSI cards. This was in 1998. Boot time was upwards of 30 minutes. It did these incredibly long self-tests of every card in the system. IBM didn't seem to understand that spending 5-10 minutes self-testing a SCSI card wasn't acceptable when there were a half dozen or more of those cards in the system ...

    That system really messed with us. I'd come in at midnight to take the system down, and if there was any problem that required multiple boot attempts, I would be stressing about getting the system back up by 8AM. Nothing like being blasted by industrial strength air conditioning at 5AM watching the little LED numbers change over and over again. Once the system got up and running it was pretty fast (for the time), but oh my god the boot times.

  7. Re:no free energy on Artificial Leaf Could Provide Cheap Energy · · Score: 1

    Go feel the air blowing through the outside-part of your air conditioner or the air blowing out of your refrigerator vent in the back or on the bottom.. It's warmer than the air that went in.. That's where the heat is going. Air conditioners and refrigerators separate hot from cold, they don't generate cold only. They actually make more heat than they make cold. The difference is equal to the energy in the electricity used to run the air conditioner or refrigerator.

  8. Re:How do you separate the H2 and O2? on Artificial Leaf Could Provide Cheap Energy · · Score: 1

    It seems from the article that the H2 and O2 come off opposite sides of the device, making it trivially easy to isolate the two gasses. This is a very important detail that is not exactly clear from the article. It's important because you can safely store H2, and O2, but not the two mixed together.

  9. Grid storage at last! on Artificial Leaf Could Provide Cheap Energy · · Score: 1

    It seems to me like this would be a good candidate for grid storage. Say you had a solar farm with both conventional solar cells and this new technology. When the sun shines, the regular solar cells both provide the product energy from the power plant, and also operate pumps that pressurize the hydrogen and oxygen coming off of the new cells. At night and when clouds come overhead, the system switches to fuel cells to burn the stored hydrogen and oxgen, regenerating the water in the process, and keeping the power plant producing electricity through the night. Thus, you overcome the biggest problem with solar power plants -- their intermittancy. Such a power plant, properly designed, should be able to produce continual power effectively indefinitely, barring extremely long periods of overcast weather. The "nighttime" capacity of the power plant would be a function of the size of the hydrogen tanks you could store on site -- and I believe that pressurized gas tanks scale upwards very cheaply and easily. As a bonus, the water in the system would be continually contained and recycled, making the system attractive for use in arid places like deserts where solar is most profitable.

    Hopefully it will turn out to be cheap in practice and can be used this way.

  10. Clueless on eBay on Kodachrome Takes Its Final Bow Today · · Score: 1

    I'm amused at the apparently clueless people on eBay bidding against each other for film that can no longer be processed. There are several examples of multiple bids on auctions for unexposed film ending tomorrow.

  11. Re:What's with the Y2K snark in the summary? on What's the Oldest File You Can Restore? · · Score: 1

    Ditto. I worked for a university at the time. We upgraded every last speck of software in our IBM 370 mainframe facility in the months leading up to Y2K as IBM went through the operating system with a fine tooth comb sending out bug fixes, and we found and killed dozens of minor bugs in our local software in the months leading up to Y2K running a second level OS with the date pushed forward. Then Y2K happened, and the worst thing that happened was that an old mail program that was only used by old timers started showing people's new mail at the wrong end of the list. And everyone sort of felt like it was a big non-event and kind of made fun of it. It's no coincidence that that era was a high water mark for IT jobs.

  12. Re:Apollo Guidance Computer on What's the Oldest File You Can Restore? · · Score: 1

    Well if you're going to include surviving printouts that could theoretically be scanned, I have a complete assembly printout of the IBM APL/1500 operating system (fanfold paper, about 5 inches thick), dated 12/1/1968, but I certainly have no plans to take the time to recover the operating system from the assembly listing.

  13. Re:Code monkey or engineer? on Does Typing Speed Really Matter For Programmers? · · Score: 0

    Yes, but good architects draw fast because they get lots of practice. It's like playing an instrument, or athletics, or any other skill. The more you do it, the better you get. Good programmers usually can type fast because they program a lot. But it's the fact that they spend a lot of time programming that makes them good programmers, not the fact that they can type fast. Fast typing is a side effect of spending enough time programming that you get good at the physical mechanics. If you can't type fast, then you're like a guitar player who can't find the notes on the fretboard. It's a sign that you aren't practicing enough.

    The last part of this comment makes me laugh. If you're sitting around "processing the rest of the design" while "code monkeys" do the actual programming, then you are not an engineer. You are a manager, and you are not doing the programming. You may think that you are doing the very important thinking part of the job, but actually it's your "code monkeys" who are working their asses off trying to implement the half-baked designs of the "engineers" who not only never get their hands dirty writing code, but look down on the "code monkeys" who actually write the code and make it work.

  14. Re:More important - having a Model M on Does Typing Speed Really Matter For Programmers? · · Score: 1

    I use a vintage 1984 Model M "compact" model -- with no keypad. I can type 100WPM on that keyboard. Any other keyboard and my speed falls in half.

  15. Purpose of the color coded alert system on Homeland Security Drops Color-Coded Terror Alerts · · Score: 1

    The best explanation of the purpose of the color system I have heard is as follows. Potential suicide bombers are, by definition, not afraid of death, because they believe that their murder/suicide will bring them paradise. They are, however, terrified of being captured. This would mean an ignominous death in a jail cell of old age, and they would be denied their afterlife reward. As a result, AQ is said to be extremely skittish. If AQ believes that a plan has been exposed, they will scuttle the plan and go into hiding, sometimes for years.

    The color system was designed to work in conjunction with the sort of intelligence we were getting -- where we knew from traffic analysis that an attack was likely about to be executed, but did not know the specifics. The idea was that the color level would be maintained at yellow, but when U.S. intelligence felt that an attack was imminent, but had no specifics, they would make a public announcement and raise the color level. This would, it was hoped, spook AQ enough for them to postpone or cancel the attack. Then, of course, there would be no attack, and the talk show hosts would mercilessly mock the government officials, who would have to console themselves with the knowledge that they had possibly saved hundreds or thousands of American lives, but not really knowing for sure.

    The article gives no indication that the current Homeland Security understands the actual purpose of the system. They seem to be dismantling it for no other reason than that being mocked by the media rubs them the wrong way. I certainly hope that there are no more successful AQ attacks, but it is sobering to realize that the U.S. government is dismantling what may well be a very well functioning part of our national defense system because they find using it to be embarrassing.

  16. Re:Wake up, people. on Former Employee Stole Ford Secrets Worth $50 Million · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I suppose that by failing to elaborate on how they came up with the value, they invite speculation.

    Sometimes, when asked the value of a document, companies will give a figure that corresponds to the cost of producing that document. In other words, if you were to add up all the engineer-hours involved in designing a car, it might add up to $50-$100M. Since Ford is not deprived of access to their own design (because they still have copies of it), this does not represent $50-$100M losses to Ford. They could be saying that, by stealing the design, the Chinese company saved themselves $50-$100M in engineering costs, but that explanation isn't really complete, because the design was manufactured, so the Chinese company could easily buy one and reverse engineer it. So, by stealing the design, the Chinese company at the most saved themselves the cost of a full reverse-engineering job on the Ford car. This might still be a substantial figure. However, automobile manufacturers regularly buy each others products and reverse engineer them anyway, to keep track of what the competition is doing, so the Chinese auto company's engineers were probably already pretty familiar with the basic Ford design before they stole the documents. They probably had already done most of the reverse engineering. These documents let them fill in the gaps in their knowledge.

    This has damaged Ford to the extent that the design revealed trade secrets that the Chinese car company might not have been able to reverse engineer from existing cars. This might allow them to improve their cars to the extent that some number of people choose to buy Chinese cars instead of Fords. That is the real value of the stolen documents and might be worth $50-$100 million or more.

  17. Let the market decide. on Malfunction Costs Couple $11 Million Slot Machine Jackpot · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Wildwood Casino experiences a drop in customers. There's no way in hell I would play the slots there.

  18. Amazing on Oil Leak Could Be Stopped With a Nuke · · Score: 1

    My god. Is there anything that nuclear weapons can't fix?

  19. No need for two cameras on James Cameron To Develop 3-D Camera For Mars Rover · · Score: 4, Funny

    This will satisfy the burning need for three dimensional movies of stationary martian rocks.

  20. The data is for fatalities, not accidents. on Toyota Accelerator Data Skewed Toward Elderly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The data in question catagorizes fatalities. Elderly people are often
    killed by accidents that would only injure a young person. This could explain
    the data skew regardless of whether or there is an actual accelerator defect.

  21. Bell and Howell Apple II on Looking Back From the 1980s At Computers In Education · · Score: 2, Informative

    Check out the black Bell and Howell branded Apple II on the cover. Apple was having trouble selling Apple IIs to schools, because the computer needed to have an interlock to power it down when you opened the cover to meet purchasing requirements. B&H manufactured a special Apple II with the required power interlock, a black case, black keyboard, a B&H logo in place of the Apple logo, and a B&H sticker on the bottom covering over the Apple sticker. The disk drives were also black.

    There was an optional back attachment that provided a couple of additional power plugs, three line level audio inputs, and I think a video output. There was also a joystick socket on the right side of the case.

    I got one of these because my dad knew a Bell and Howell distributor and bought it from him. Unfortunately mine is missing the space bar. Try and find a black Apple II space bar. Talk about unobtainium!

  22. Picture caption on Extreme Close-Up of Mars's Moon Phobos · · Score: 5, Funny

    For sale: One Death Star. Full size. Somewhat lumpy. Amateur construction. Needs work.

  23. Glass is not a slow-flowing liquid on Spray-On Liquid Glass · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Window glass used to be made by blowing giant glass discs and cutting rectangles or diamonds out of them to piece together to make leaded windows. The method of blowing the glass discs resulted in glass that was often thicker on one side than the other. The person building the window would naturally orient the thicker side of each piece to the bottom of the window, to work with gravity to make the window stronger and longer-lasting.

    If the glass were really a flowing liquid, then the edges of the pieces would be rounded and deformed, but they are not. They are as sharp and straight as the day they were cut.

  24. Nature imitates art on "Mandelbulb," a 3D Mandlebrot Construct, Discovered · · Score: 1
  25. Hey there! FlashMob4Jellyfish is using Twitter on Swarm of Giant Jellyfish Capsize 10-Ton Trawler · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Relatively little is known about Nomura's jellyfish, such as why some years see thousands of the creatures floating across the Sea of Japan on the Tsushima Current, but last year there were virtually no sightings."

    Hey there! FlashMob4Jellyfish is using Twitter

    WhN? 2day. Where? Sea of Japan. What? Jam as many of us into
    a fishing net and capsize the boat.
    4:48 PM Oct 9th from ocean