I found the following information interesting:
Funding: This work was funded by a grant from Dairy Research Institute, The Beef Checkoff, the Egg Nutrition Center, and the Robert C. And Veronica Atkins Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Partial funding for Open Access provided by The Ohio State University Open Access Fund.
The problems with this are that the Dairy, Beef, and Atkins people may not have a say how this research was done and or published, but they certainly can decide if they will fund any future research by these particular scientists. Good research should be very careful where its funding comes from. It becomes suspect when the funding parties have high financial stakes in the results.
Well if Apple really only wants to pay $1.00 per phone, and Motorola says 2.25%, why not sell the phones for $44.44? Both companies would be happy, and so I suppose would the consumer.
The big cost of gaming is the time used for the sport that could have been used for much more productive activities. For example, I teach engineering, and have had a number of PC gamers as students who have ruined their careers by playing games instead of doing the learning someone paid to give them the opportunity to do.
I am a professor of engineering, and the way I solved this problem for my students was to write software that allows me to process photos of the whiteboard very quickly (a minute or two per day). It automatically puts them on the web for the students. They can browse them at: http://people.wallawalla.edu/~Rob.Frohne/ClassNotes/ and they can print a pdf document of them as well from the web site. Lately I've included an MP3 recording of the lecture as well, so that they can hear it again as necessary. The processing software is called Save My Whiteboard and is available under GPL3 here: http://people.wallawalla.edu/~rob.frohne/SaveMyWhiteboard/index.html
The php code for the web pages is available under GPL too if anyone really wants it.
Rob
Kirk Weedman, KD7IRS, has posted some good Verilog classes on http://verilog.openhpsdr.org/ that are tailored to amateur radio enthusiasts that have been working on the High Performance Software Defined Radio (HPSDR) an interesting open source hardware project.
Find a friend who is going overseas, and send them to someone in Africa or Asia whose income is so low that they will be a real blessing. This works especially well with students overseas, as they are willing to learn something new like a computer. Laptops are light relatively and so make prime candidates for this. If you don't have contacts who do this kind of thing, a good place to start is your local church, especially ones that are mission oriented.
Kudos for seeking to find a way to recycle those old computers.
And who knows! They may have a point. Maybe vaccines are not as safe as we all are made to believe. The "force the crowd to comply" mentality on vaccines bothers me. Let these YouTuber's have free speech. Remember Copernicus. If you are so concerned, make your own video to support your viewpoint.
I like it when professors hand out notes, but I have a hard time making notes and then following them, so I use a digital camera to photograph the whiteboard or blackboard. I developed software to process those photos for presentation on the web. On the web pages the photos are also made available in a pdf handout that is generated from them. You can see some of my notes at:
My students like having the notes available, because if they are having a difficult time understanding, they can drop their pencils, concentrate on the lecture, and possibly ask questions until they understand without giving up the notes they aren't taking.:-)
The notes allow me to review last day's lecture quickly (using the laptop and projector) to bring everyone up to speed. I find answering students questions is a lot easier now, as I can use the notes instead of having to recreate them for every student. It takes me about 3 minutes a day to process the photos, but it saves me hours every week.
I found the following information interesting: Funding: This work was funded by a grant from Dairy Research Institute, The Beef Checkoff, the Egg Nutrition Center, and the Robert C. And Veronica Atkins Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Partial funding for Open Access provided by The Ohio State University Open Access Fund. The problems with this are that the Dairy, Beef, and Atkins people may not have a say how this research was done and or published, but they certainly can decide if they will fund any future research by these particular scientists. Good research should be very careful where its funding comes from. It becomes suspect when the funding parties have high financial stakes in the results.
Well if Apple really only wants to pay $1.00 per phone, and Motorola says 2.25%, why not sell the phones for $44.44? Both companies would be happy, and so I suppose would the consumer.
On the voting page, you should post the logos. How else can you decide, unless all you care about it who the author is?
The big cost of gaming is the time used for the sport that could have been used for much more productive activities. For example, I teach engineering, and have had a number of PC gamers as students who have ruined their careers by playing games instead of doing the learning someone paid to give them the opportunity to do.
I am a professor of engineering, and the way I solved this problem for my students was to write software that allows me to process photos of the whiteboard very quickly (a minute or two per day). It automatically puts them on the web for the students. They can browse them at: http://people.wallawalla.edu/~Rob.Frohne/ClassNotes/ and they can print a pdf document of them as well from the web site. Lately I've included an MP3 recording of the lecture as well, so that they can hear it again as necessary. The processing software is called Save My Whiteboard and is available under GPL3 here: http://people.wallawalla.edu/~rob.frohne/SaveMyWhiteboard/index.html The php code for the web pages is available under GPL too if anyone really wants it. Rob
Kirk Weedman, KD7IRS, has posted some good Verilog classes on http://verilog.openhpsdr.org/ that are tailored to amateur radio enthusiasts that have been working on the High Performance Software Defined Radio (HPSDR) an interesting open source hardware project.
Find a friend who is going overseas, and send them to someone in Africa or Asia whose income is so low that they will be a real blessing. This works especially well with students overseas, as they are willing to learn something new like a computer. Laptops are light relatively and so make prime candidates for this. If you don't have contacts who do this kind of thing, a good place to start is your local church, especially ones that are mission oriented. Kudos for seeking to find a way to recycle those old computers.
And who knows! They may have a point. Maybe vaccines are not as safe as we all are made to believe. The "force the crowd to comply" mentality on vaccines bothers me. Let these YouTuber's have free speech. Remember Copernicus. If you are so concerned, make your own video to support your viewpoint.
http://www.wallawalla.edu/frohro/ClassNotes
and a dated version of some of the software used to process the photos is available here:
http://www.wallawalla.edu/frohro/SaveMyWhiteboard/
My students like having the notes available, because if they are having a difficult time understanding, they can drop their pencils, concentrate on the lecture, and possibly ask questions until they understand without giving up the notes they aren't taking. :-)
The notes allow me to review last day's lecture quickly (using the laptop and projector) to bring everyone up to speed. I find answering students questions is a lot easier now, as I can use the notes instead of having to recreate them for every student. It takes me about 3 minutes a day to process the photos, but it saves me hours every week.
Rob