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User: MozeeToby

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  1. Re:Buzz elaborated on his reasoning yesterday. on Buzz Aldrin Pressures Obama For New Space Exploration Initiative · · Score: 2

    It's a dream that can focus and revitalize the space program, whereas the asteroid visitation is simply aiming too low as the overarching goal for NASA.

    I never understood this. An asteroid visit is the first and most necessary step to asteroid mining which is arguably the only way to open up the solar system with chemical rockets for propulsion. Go out and grab a water rich asteroid, ship up a few hundred square meters of solar panels and start cracking the water into fuel. Obviously there are challenges involved, but not having to haul all the fuel for your interplanetary burns from the Earth's surface would cut the difficulty of a Mars mission significantly.

  2. Re:Power? We dont need no stink'n power! on Airbus Patents Windowless Cockpit That Would Increase Pilots' Field of View · · Score: 1

    [...] until those guys did it a few years ago in the Hudson, no commercial plane had ever done it and remained intact.

    Your friends in the aviation industry were mistaken. If you come in flat and level on a decent glide slope and decent weather, the vast majority of the passengers are likely to survive. Some of the ditches in the linked article went terribly, with the plane breaking into multiple pieces on impact, and still had the majority of the passengers surviving. Floatation devices on airplanes are not a joke, despite what some would have you believe.

  3. Re:It's here already? on The AI Boss That Deploys Hong Kong's Subway Engineers · · Score: 1

    That story bugs me, not the technology or anything. Just the fact that he spends the first 40% of it lamenting how bad things are and how the wealthy just want to live their life of leisure and leave everyone else to rot in the slums. Then the main character suddenly becomes fabulously wealthy and... leaves everyone else to rot in the slums while he farms... I guess... No one, not even the "good guys" with essentially limitless resources actually tries to change the system that is leaving 99% of humanity living in abject poverty with no hope of escape.

  4. Re:Christmas is coming early this year on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    Yes, because it'd be impossible to modify a batter so that 5% is functional (at least, functional enough to turn on the device for a few seconds) and the rest is... whatever.

  5. Re:Call me on Android Wear Is Here · · Score: 2

    Why don't thy have wireless charging on these things? It wouldn't be so bad if I took off my watch, threw it on the dresser, and went to bed. Having to stop and fiddle with a charger for multiple devices is a bit of a no go IMO.

  6. Re:Did the editor know...this is Google/Android te on Disappointed Woz Sells His "Worthless" Galaxy Gear Watch · · Score: 2

    I won't delve into the details, I'll just say that calling Woz an "Apple insider" is both misguided and unfair. He hasn't been part of the company in almost 3 decades and has many valid criticisms of the company and Jobs in particular.

  7. Re:Uber should be stopped on Mayors of Atlanta & New Orleans: Uber Will Knock-Out Taxi Industry · · Score: 1

    If you're driving a car for a living and don't understand the difference between liability insurance and collision/comprehensive insurance, you probably need to pick a different career path. Incidentally, in March or so Uber did in fact add $50k of collision and comprehensive insurance so... yeah...

  8. Re:Trust on Mayors of Atlanta & New Orleans: Uber Will Knock-Out Taxi Industry · · Score: 1

    Uber has coverage for all of their operators, see here for a full run down.

  9. Re:Taxi Medallions on Mayors of Atlanta & New Orleans: Uber Will Knock-Out Taxi Industry · · Score: 1

    You will always need a cab to get to a bad part of town from a nice part of town because yuppies won't drive you there, but taxi drivers (usually) will.

    So what you're saying is... people will use Uber for 90% of their needs and only call a taxi when they want to go somewhere that is almost by definition unprofitable for said taxi. And you don't think they're going to destroy the taxi industry?

  10. Re:Detroit calls Google arrogant? on Google, Detroit Split On Autonomous Cars · · Score: 1

    Google has a long history of failed projects because they're not afraid to over promise and blindly charge into a project.

    Google also has a long history of successful projects for the same reasons.

  11. Re:Far-fetched? on Funding for iFind Kickstarter Suspended · · Score: 1

    As other people have stated, Bluetooth is not RFID, the power requirements are different by a couple orders of magnitude (don't quote me, lets just say they're significantly different). Passive RFID do not require power to listen for an incoming signal, Bluetooth does. RFID has an extremely limited range, making it's use as a "finder" pretty much worthless. Bluetooth sends and receives many times more data at many times higher speed.

    If phones had active RFID scanners or even Zigbee hardware, it might be possible to make something like this work, with Bluetooth it's physically impossible.

  12. Re:pnysically impossible on Funding for iFind Kickstarter Suspended · · Score: 2

    RFID does not have the same power requirements Bluetooth does, the power requirements for Bluetooth are described in detail in the spec; it's not something you can get around. If nothing else, unlike RFID, Bluetooth does not have a totally unpowered "sleep" mode, that can be woken by the Bluetooth protocol itself. If your device is awake enough to receive any signal at all, it is drawing power. In fact, it's drawing very nearly the theoretical maximum you could harvest from ambient sources for the dimensions of the device they are describing... and then said device has to actually power up and send besides (not to mention the theoretical maximum is a good order of magnitude higher than what you'd see in real life usage).

    There's a difference between "this concept is theoretically possible" (what you describe) and "this idea, as described and designed is workable in real life" (which is what the iFind people are, erroneously or fraudulently, arguing.

  13. Re:Only if... on Ask Slashdot: What Would It Take For You To Buy a Smartwatch? · · Score: 2

    I can't imagine using it for voice calls.... that would just feel... ridiculous.

    For what it's worth, my possible uses would be more in line with viewing incoming texts, messages, and email (sender and subject only). Maybe it's not really that much of a hassle to pull out your phone when it buzzes; still it would still be a bit more handy just to glance at your wrist.

    Another good use I could see would be Google Wallet, scan and pin credit card transactions. Put a thumb print scanner right on the face to activate that feature and call it good so long as you can wipe the data remotely and it's stored/sent properly.

  14. Re:You know ... on Florida Man Faces $48k Fine For Jamming Drivers' Cellphones · · Score: 1

    Lots of places don't require vehicle inspection, the one time I've had to have mine done was when I was living in a major city otherwise I've been on the road 15 years without requiring an inspection (WI outside of Milwaukee and Iowa).

    As for insurance... you're driving a 2 ton chunk of metal at 70 mph, I see no problem requiring that you be able to pay for your portion of potential damages in the event that you cause an accident.

  15. Re:Planck trumps Moore on How Vacuum Tubes, New Technology Might Save Moore's Law · · Score: 1

    Moore's Law is about the cost to put a number of transistors in an area, not the size of the elements themselves. Generally we've reduced cost by reducing size, that is not necessarily the only way; you can continue the Moore's law curve by improving manufacturing in other ways until the cost of a chip completely covered in 4nm gates (probably the smallest the laws of physics will allow) falls to 0.

  16. Re:title should be... on Scientists Successfully Grow Full Head of Hair On Bald Man · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you have any idea how much a pill that cures baldness would be worth? After erectile dysfunction that's like the holy grail of the pharmaceutical industry, a drug to treat something that's incredibly common especially in middle aged men (in theory when disposable income skyrockets) that's also very embarrassing for a smaller but still large large number of younger people.

    That's why it's news. Unfortunately for Pfizer (and the many men, including myself, who are balding) his particular baldness was almost certainly caused by a rare autoimmune disorder (and treated by a drug designed to treat similar disorder) and is therefore unlikely to produce a generalized treatment

  17. Re:Solves nothing on "Super Bananas" May Save Millions of Lives In Africa · · Score: 1

    In the areas targeted, banana's are a staple food. Much like rice is an many Asian cultures and wheat is in many western cultures. It isn't the sweet, ready to eat variety we get here, it's a starchy hard fruit that needs to be cooked before eating; in many ways it's closer to a potato than anything else. You are talking about swapping one luxury good for another (relatively speaking anyway), while they are talking about talking about a small modification to a food that is already the primary calorie source.

  18. Re:Morbid obesity is a whole different beast on EU's Top Court May Define Obesity As a Disability · · Score: 1

    I'm 5'9", how much do you think I need to weigh to fall into the category of "morbid obesity"? 300 lbs? 400? Try 240. More people are morbidly obese than you think.

  19. Re:Please make it a mental one on EU's Top Court May Define Obesity As a Disability · · Score: 1

    And at the end of the day, diet is much easier than working out.

    I just want to reiterate this. A pound of fat is 3500 Calories. To burn one pound per week you have to either cut 500 Calories per day (say, but not drinking those 2 cans of Mountain Dew and skipping the handful of Doritos) or you could run 2-3 miles, per day, 7 days a week. With effort, you can shave 1000 Calories off a "typical" American diet without even changing what foods you're eating and without feeling too miserable. If you change to a better protein/carb balance you can make that 1500 pretty easily.

  20. Re:rumor is dems voted for him on House Majority Leader Defeated In Primary · · Score: 1

    Or apathy. I.e. "we know the GOP candidate will win so who cares?"

  21. Re:rumor is dems voted for him on House Majority Leader Defeated In Primary · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure you understand how gerrymandered house districts are. Republicans will not lose the seat unless there's a massive upheaval in the political landscape or, more likely, the Dems eke out a majority at some point in the future and redraw the lines in their favor.

  22. Re:We could definitely use alternatives to paypal on Amazon Launches Subscription-Based Billing And Payments Service · · Score: 2

    Google and Amazon (despite what the summary incorrectly states) have had online payment systems for years. Those are just the 500 lb gorillas, there's literally dozens of other providers, none of which have managed to gain much traction.

    Personally I avoid paypal like the plague, too many horror stories. But then, I've never had reason to argue with Google Wallet or Amazon Payments, so maybe resolving conflicts would be just as much hassle with than as with paypal, I couldn't even say.

  23. Re:Limited? on Lego To Produce Three Box Sets Featuring Female Scientists · · Score: 1

    Though in truth, all sets are

    Dang $500 collectors edition Millenium Falcon... if only I hadn't been a poor college student at the time...

  24. Re:This is news? The stock market is a house of ca on High Frequency Trading and Finance's Race To Irrelevance · · Score: 1

    By law, the corporation can only consider the interests of their shareholders. It is legally
    bound to put its bottom line before everything else, even the public good.

    There is nothing at all saying a corporation can't call out the common good in it's bylaws, mission statement, and investment perspectis.

  25. Re:Maybe forr once they really have to keep it sec on UK Seeks To Hold Terrorism Trial In Secret · · Score: 1

    The risks of government abuse if such a system is available are practically unlimited and, if history is anything to go by, almost guaranteed to come to pass. Ignoring them from your risk/reward calculations isn't just dumb, it's incredibly, mind numbingly dumb.