Way to go with the fact checking. Sure, Norwegians celebrate the end of the American Civil War. Just like the US Independence day and Thanksgiving.
(We do have a day off for Pentecost, though.)
Indeed, if you want to spoof an encrypted military GPS signal you're limited to relaying genuine signals with a time delay (as mentioned in the paper linked from TFA), which requires a very specific geographic setup of transmitters and spoofing targets in order to resolve. With civilian, unencrypted GPS you can just pretend to be a satellite and send completely bogus information, which is a lot easier.
So it's possible to spoof military GPS without the encryption keys, but it's much harder. It could work though, since Iran and Afghanistan would be covered by the same satellites. So either this is down to careful and well executed planning from the Iranians (which is scary), or total incompetence from the Americans who may have built a drone using civilian GPS (not likely and kind of scary) or lost their encryption keys (hopefully very unlikely and extremely scary).
Since Earth is a lot larger than Mars, and the habitable regions typically lie somewhere near the surface, it's no surprise that a larger proportion of Mars's volume is habitable. (The outer layer of an onion is larger in comparison to the onion when the onion is smaller.) The real question is that of absolute size: How many cubic metres of life-bearing volume is there on Mars in comparison to Earth?
The submitter had the link (check Firehose), but it seems that the edititors deemd the submission to be too long and chopped it off. After all, this is Slashdot and nobody RTFAs anyway.
I totally agree, and with Scribus coming along nicely for your InDesign needs, there really isn't any reason why a "occasional photoshopper" can't do just fine with free tools instead of pirating Adobe. Plus, free software rarely breaks compatiblity without any sort of migration path, so you don't even have worry about repirating once a year.
Maybe someone should package all these tools into a Free Creative Suite?
Well, the N900 does Maemo, Meego and Android (if you don't mind a bit of broken stuff). As always, it really is only a question of the hardware drivers being available. Something I'm sure the average Linux user about ten years ago could relate to, but everything gets better with time. Nokia dropping the ball is a bit of a setback in the short term, but I believe that eventually commonality of components means it will go the way of the PC. In X years installing your own OS will be a viable option.
Goodness me, I would have thought that the trade between France and Germany was significantly reduced after France declared war in 1939. Or maybe, you know, after Germany invaded France in 1940.
If you had said before 1939 you would have been correct, remember that the USA arrived late for the party that was WWII.
Well, at the moment the article is slashdotted, so all we can do is speculate wildly based on the introduction. Which, if you think about it, is what we do best anyway.
That is a good idea, but on the other hand it might not be so cheery for the average Facebooker to have to answer questions when registering about what to do when they (inevitably) die... The logic is obvious, people's reaction to something that might be called morbid is a lot harder to gauge.
The movie Space Cowboys had a similar device, a satellite that would launch a bunch of warheads at the USA when it lost contact with the Motherland (or was approached by other spacecraft). Obviously it started failing, which also would trigger the launch, and the only ones old enough to know how to fix it were Clint Eastwood and his gang! One helluva movie.
But I dare say that military perspective is not on saving fuel costs. After all, why save money by putting in a smaller fuel tank when you can keep it the same size and use the fuel savings to fly further/faster?
Windows and Mac OS provide a devoloper with a guaranteed stable platform development-wise, and as such are much safer bets.
Pretty much every major release of Windows or of OS X is guaranteed to break someone's application. More stable than Linux? Maybe so. Really, truly stable? Not so much.
Quite true, but that brings us to another of Linux's double-edged swords. Windows and Mac OS have many years between each monolithic release, whereas typical distributions make new semi-major releases twice a year. Great for geeks like me who like the bleeding edge, another headache for developers who have to cope with constantly shifting goalposts.
Let's face it, one of the things all Linux evangelists like to emphasise is the opportunity to use whatever you want and even build it yourself if you want to. But it's maddening for developers to create something that will work on every kind of linux desktop in existence. From political choices of free vs. non-free, to preferred distribution, version numbers, favourite window manager and a host of other choices, no two desktops will be the same. Linux isn't an operating system, it's an operating eco-system. Taking Google as an example, today I tried to install Google Earth on my Ubuntu 9.04 laptop to no avail, despite it having installed without a hitch on my Xubuntu 7.04 Pentium III plaything in my room back in my parent's house. The exact same version of the program with dramatic differences depending on where you try it, that quickly becomes a support nightmare.
Now for the dedicated GNOME/KDE/xfce/whatever volunteer this does not pose much of a problem because your target audience has broadly the same machine makeup as you do, but for a commercial developer looking for a good ROI it quickly becomes untenable. Windows and Mac OS provide a devoloper with a guaranteed stable platform development-wise, and as such are much safer bets.
I agree that the only way Linux can make itself more attractive to commercial desktop program developers is with a mighty amount of consolidation, but the problem is that I don't think it will happen. The great OS wars that went before the dominance of Windows had winners and losers because they were systems of a closed nature, and so if you held with a losing team they closed down because it wasn't economically viable and you had to move to something more mainstream, thus consolidating the market. With Linux a project will never close down as long as someone like it more than something else.
If we do accept that, we are still left wondering why the (possibly fake) Asus site is so polished and the windowsisbetter site is so crap by comparison. If someone is pulling a prank, I don't understand his reasoning.
At last, mankind will have a convenient and cheap way of intergalactic travel: Wait for it to come to us.
Way to go with the fact checking. Sure, Norwegians celebrate the end of the American Civil War. Just like the US Independence day and Thanksgiving. (We do have a day off for Pentecost, though.)
Also known as the cheap laptop screen.
Indeed, if you want to spoof an encrypted military GPS signal you're limited to relaying genuine signals with a time delay (as mentioned in the paper linked from TFA), which requires a very specific geographic setup of transmitters and spoofing targets in order to resolve. With civilian, unencrypted GPS you can just pretend to be a satellite and send completely bogus information, which is a lot easier. So it's possible to spoof military GPS without the encryption keys, but it's much harder. It could work though, since Iran and Afghanistan would be covered by the same satellites. So either this is down to careful and well executed planning from the Iranians (which is scary), or total incompetence from the Americans who may have built a drone using civilian GPS (not likely and kind of scary) or lost their encryption keys (hopefully very unlikely and extremely scary).
Since Earth is a lot larger than Mars, and the habitable regions typically lie somewhere near the surface, it's no surprise that a larger proportion of Mars's volume is habitable. (The outer layer of an onion is larger in comparison to the onion when the onion is smaller.) The real question is that of absolute size: How many cubic metres of life-bearing volume is there on Mars in comparison to Earth?
When I read "cracker-sized", I thought of petroleum crackers and was very impressed by the sudden audacity.
The submitter had the link (check Firehose), but it seems that the edititors deemd the submission to be too long and chopped it off. After all, this is Slashdot and nobody RTFAs anyway.
I totally agree, and with Scribus coming along nicely for your InDesign needs, there really isn't any reason why a "occasional photoshopper" can't do just fine with free tools instead of pirating Adobe. Plus, free software rarely breaks compatiblity without any sort of migration path, so you don't even have worry about repirating once a year.
Maybe someone should package all these tools into a Free Creative Suite?
I'm disappointed that the words "Murder Simulator" aren't in there anywhere.
http://www.phdcomics.com/comics/archive.php?comicid=1432
Well, the N900 does Maemo, Meego and Android (if you don't mind a bit of broken stuff). As always, it really is only a question of the hardware drivers being available. Something I'm sure the average Linux user about ten years ago could relate to, but everything gets better with time. Nokia dropping the ball is a bit of a setback in the short term, but I believe that eventually commonality of components means it will go the way of the PC. In X years installing your own OS will be a viable option.
Because he was killed by a very bad man before the world recognized how awesome he was, and the prize can't be awarded posthumously.
What, you don't agree that the town needs a new chemical weapons dumping site?
Back then it wasn't close to the capital. It was rural farmland and houses weren't built there until the nineties, according to the article.
Goodness me, I would have thought that the trade between France and Germany was significantly reduced after France declared war in 1939. Or maybe, you know, after Germany invaded France in 1940. If you had said before 1939 you would have been correct, remember that the USA arrived late for the party that was WWII.
Thank you for the tip, I checked out The Non-Designer's Design Book and promptly ordered it!
Well, at the moment the article is slashdotted, so all we can do is speculate wildly based on the introduction. Which, if you think about it, is what we do best anyway.
That is a good idea, but on the other hand it might not be so cheery for the average Facebooker to have to answer questions when registering about what to do when they (inevitably) die... The logic is obvious, people's reaction to something that might be called morbid is a lot harder to gauge.
The article states that the memorializing function is in part to prevent exactly that from happening.
Your job blocks a PC magazine but not slashdot? As far as time spent/wasted goes, I would have thought this was the site to block.
The movie Space Cowboys had a similar device, a satellite that would launch a bunch of warheads at the USA when it lost contact with the Motherland (or was approached by other spacecraft). Obviously it started failing, which also would trigger the launch, and the only ones old enough to know how to fix it were Clint Eastwood and his gang! One helluva movie.
But I dare say that military perspective is not on saving fuel costs. After all, why save money by putting in a smaller fuel tank when you can keep it the same size and use the fuel savings to fly further/faster?
Windows and Mac OS provide a devoloper with a guaranteed stable platform development-wise, and as such are much safer bets.
Pretty much every major release of Windows or of OS X is guaranteed to break someone's application. More stable than Linux? Maybe so. Really, truly stable? Not so much.
Quite true, but that brings us to another of Linux's double-edged swords. Windows and Mac OS have many years between each monolithic release, whereas typical distributions make new semi-major releases twice a year. Great for geeks like me who like the bleeding edge, another headache for developers who have to cope with constantly shifting goalposts.
Let's face it, one of the things all Linux evangelists like to emphasise is the opportunity to use whatever you want and even build it yourself if you want to. But it's maddening for developers to create something that will work on every kind of linux desktop in existence. From political choices of free vs. non-free, to preferred distribution, version numbers, favourite window manager and a host of other choices, no two desktops will be the same. Linux isn't an operating system, it's an operating eco-system. Taking Google as an example, today I tried to install Google Earth on my Ubuntu 9.04 laptop to no avail, despite it having installed without a hitch on my Xubuntu 7.04 Pentium III plaything in my room back in my parent's house. The exact same version of the program with dramatic differences depending on where you try it, that quickly becomes a support nightmare.
Now for the dedicated GNOME/KDE/xfce/whatever volunteer this does not pose much of a problem because your target audience has broadly the same machine makeup as you do, but for a commercial developer looking for a good ROI it quickly becomes untenable. Windows and Mac OS provide a devoloper with a guaranteed stable platform development-wise, and as such are much safer bets.
I agree that the only way Linux can make itself more attractive to commercial desktop program developers is with a mighty amount of consolidation, but the problem is that I don't think it will happen. The great OS wars that went before the dominance of Windows had winners and losers because they were systems of a closed nature, and so if you held with a losing team they closed down because it wasn't economically viable and you had to move to something more mainstream, thus consolidating the market. With Linux a project will never close down as long as someone like it more than something else.
If we do accept that, we are still left wondering why the (possibly fake) Asus site is so polished and the windowsisbetter site is so crap by comparison. If someone is pulling a prank, I don't understand his reasoning.