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  1. Re:Humans are just biased towards natural numbers on Proving 0.999... Is Equal To 1 · · Score: 1

    I think it's time we make math more interesting and switch to base 23. Then it will be equally as complex as the US's Imperial ("Standard" or "English" or whatever) system of measurements- which might actually make more sense in base 23.. who knows. At least it will reduce the fixation on 9's and keep mathematicians busy for a few years while re-writing all their text books.

  2. Re:Not as Sharp on Google Releases New Image Format Called WebP · · Score: 1

    The reason they are not as sharp is because the reference image IS the JPEG version. They are using wikipedia images for examples, and they are working off the JPEG image to produce their WebP version.

    They don't even know what quality the JPEG images were saved with, how many times they were resaved, or which JPEG algorithm was used.

    I suspected the file sizes of the "original" JPEGs didn't match up with their quality. To verify, I took the second sample image, opened the "original" in photoshop, saved for web at 50% JPEG quality, and the file size was 139KB and the image was visually sharper and more detailed than the WebP version at 161KB. However, the WebP version was pixel per pixel, closer to the "original" and did not have the same JPEG artifacts you see in the new JPEG version. But I can't be sure this would be the case if a RAW image were used as the original.

  3. too many atoms, not enough processors on Simulating Galaxies With Supercomputers · · Score: 1

    did anyone consider ahead of time how many calculations would be necessary before they invested all that money?

  4. of course it works better... on Microsoft Tech Can Deblur Images Automatically · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure they took a clear photo, and blurred it with their custom software to look like an unsteady hand, and then, knowing how it was blurred, their un-blurring algorithm worked great... show me some real-world examples of photos you didn't take.

  5. Re:OK, At least two problems with this anaylysis on The Physics of a Rolling Rubber Band · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm thinking either they haven't considered a lot of things in this experiment, or they're keeping all the data to themselves until they can prove their speculations. I also hope they tested this with different elasticity coefficients and weights to be thorough.

    To be honest, the results they are describing just make sense to me given what we already know about elasticity.. imagine the rubber band was made up of tiny links (like a the tread on a tank) and they were connected with the appropriate elasticity coefficient (that changes with the application of heat). I'm pretty sure if you model that you'll see that it's not so complicated after all.

  6. Re:Uh...a little help? on Google Tweaks Buzz To Tackle Privacy Concerns · · Score: 1

    That's amazing. I have 3 checkboxes... the last one being "Display the list of people I'm following and people following me." I created my profile this last year when google wave went preview so it could have something to do with the age of your profile. Wish I could have been more help.

  7. Re:Uh...a little help? on Google Tweaks Buzz To Tackle Privacy Concerns · · Score: 1

    Use this url:
    http://www.google.com/profiles/me/editprofile?edit=t#about
    The preference is a checkbox on the right side. It says "Display the list of people I'm following and people following me."

    It took me a while to figure out how to get to that page. And if you started using buzz with the public option, you may want to have a look at the bottom of the page where you can use a long string of numbers for your user ID instead of your email address- mine defaulted to my email address when I allowed my profile to be public.

  8. Re:It's not just a "phone subsidy." on Verizon Doubles Early Termination Fee and More · · Score: 1
    I had a similar situation, actually 2...
    1. I bought a smartphone online with a 1 year contract. The website promised I could use the pay as you go data plan. I selected that plan. I got an email and paper receipt with that plan listed for $0/month. When I activated my phone, Verizon automatically began billing for the unlimited data plan. Customer service reluctantly switched me back to the pay as you go data plan (which is $15.36 per MB for a smartphone, BTW, or $1.99 per MB for a standard phone. Figure that one out!). Anyway, to make a long story even longer, I went online to block VCast and other crap I didn't want on the new Smartphone only to discover that I cannot change my plan features without selecting a $30/mo data plan. Had to call customer service AGAIN so they could block what I wanted without changing my data plan.
    2. I blocked all data usage I could from their website, including VCast stuff, etc. I later added a phone to my plan (the smartphone from #1). A couple months later I accidentally hit the one-key get it now button. I hit end immediately and rapidly until it quit. They charged me $1.99 for 1MB of usage. I went online and looked at my features only to find they had re-enabled all the data usage on all my lines. Didn't bother with customer service, I knew they wouldn't admit to anything or refund my $1.99.

    And just because I want to rant a little more... Verizon tells me I can get 2 new free phones. They send me emails and letters saying to go get my new phones right now. I go to the Verizon store. Verizon employee says I can get a $50 discount on ONE phone. I said I was told I could get 2 free phones? He said they only had one phone that would be free after a mail in rebate, and I'd have to pay for the second. I really needed 2 new phones, so $120 later, I have 2 "Free" phones.

    I have no intentions of ever extending my Verizon contract again. Ever.

  9. Re:Mis-application of technology on "Road Trains" Ready To Roll · · Score: 1

    telecommuting is not for everyone though, this can be for everyone who does not or cannot telecommute.

    I think it's a brilliant application. I'm not so sure the fuel consumption, travel time, and congestion are the greatest benefits. But imagine telecommuting from your car, getting in an extra hour or more of work every day instead of spending it driving. you could go home earlier, or just get more done in one work day. It would even allow people to commute greater distances without feeling like half their day was wasted. Or you could catch up on some sleep... as long as it's not illegal.

  10. Allergies! on Robotic Mold · · Score: 2, Funny

    Great, now I'll be allergic to my electronics too. Nature I can escape, but mold in my computer??

  11. Re:or on Astrophysicists Find "Impossible" Planet · · Score: 1

    That was my very first thought. I thought it was a no-brainer. Either that or it has a perfect orbit and will never decay? is that possible?

  12. Re:Yes, it's a load of bollocks basically. on Habitual Multitaskers Do It Badly · · Score: 1

    Exactly what I thought when I read the article. Only the third test is remotely close to multi-tasking, except it is task switching (like a computer multi-tasks) not multitasking as in you can actually understand 2 conversations (or other streams of media) simultaneously.

    My biggest problem with this example of bad research is that they took people who claim to multitask with media, especially language, and tested their ability to focus and solve logic problems. Many people who are strong with language are NOT strong with logic to begin with; It is not a result of multitasking. Also many people who "multitask" do so because they cannot focus well on one thing at a time.

    Sorry I don't have the research to back those statements up, but the fact is, these researchers should have tested (or even developed a test for) actual real-world multitasking before they came to any type of conclusion. Once again, science concludes what the biased scientist wanted to assume. What happened to actual science?

  13. Re:Adapt inside the game? Not too likely... on Classifying Players For Unique Game Experiences · · Score: 1

    From what I read of the paper, the research is not about a universal set of game play styles that can be applied to other games, but rather a method of automatically grouping players into different styles of game play given a particular game. They choose Tomb Raider as an example, not the data set to base all other games on. Yes it requires game play to be analyzed before hand, and yes, people have to name the groups, and yes, this is done per game.

    When applied to enough games however, you may find similar groupings in every game with similar and dissimilar game play, but not necessarily, and I didn't read anything about this kind of assumption in the paper (I could have skimmed over it if it was there).

  14. Re:Thanks for the heads up on Classifying Players For Unique Game Experiences · · Score: 1

    Just because they collected data on 1365 players using XBox live doesn't mean they collect data from everyone playing the game. They very well might, but for all you know those 1365 could have opted in after seeing very clear terms.

    Also, why is everyone so afraid of having their game play analyzed by a machine? Is there a particular reason besides/in addition to the words "privacy" and "monitored"?

  15. Re:465 Million $ loan?? on Tesla Motors Turns a Profit For the First Time · · Score: 1

    Thank you for clearing that up. It makes more sense to me now. I still stand by my opinion, though, but it apparently doesn't apply to Tesla.

  16. Re:Do cleanup in the OS on Garbage Collection Algorithms Coming For SSDs · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I disagree with your list of reasons why the OS should do it:
    1. "idleness" should refer ONLY to the SSD not being used, not the OS being idle, in which case they both have approximately the same information.
    2. The OS should NOT hold unimportant writes for very long, and doing GC during this time does not change the possibility for important writes to be necessary
    3. I agree here. However, on battery power, I would expect an SSD would be sent to standby very quickly as if it were physically spinning, in which case the SSD firmware should know better than to do GC during standby, and with a definition of idle being 5+ minutes of zero-usage, it could be effectively the same as the OS not doing it on battery power. But I am only speculating

    On my list of AGAINST the OS doing GC i have:

    1. EVERY OS would have to support it in their next update to be as effective as having GC done in the firmware.
    2. OS software engineers are not likely to know the best way to design a GC for SSDs, leave it to the manufacturers who build the thing.

    There are some pros to letting the OS manage it, but I think it's riskier. I would suggest the firmware do the GC but have an interface for the OS to override the GC for flexibilities sake.

  17. Re:Lucky on Iran Getting Better At Filtering Web Traffic · · Score: 1

    I don't know about the word honest there, I would say it helps keep the government less dishonest, at least here in America.

  18. Re:465 Million $ loan?? on Tesla Motors Turns a Profit For the First Time · · Score: 1

    I would feel better if they were making an AFFORDABLE economical vehicle that would benefit the majority of Americans (and the environment). Making 10,000 unaffordable "green" cars over 10 years has very little environmental impact and not worth my tax dollars in my opinion.

  19. 465 Million $ loan?? on Tesla Motors Turns a Profit For the First Time · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How does a company that makes $1,000,000 in profit over 1 full year, get 465 Million dollars in loans from our government?? How will they pay that back in a reasonable time?

  20. Re:Same result is in top ten from Google on Bing Search Tainted By Pro-Microsoft Results · · Score: 1

    search for "beta" on bing, google, and yahoo. Notice who's software shows up on the first page of results. If you don't want to look for yourself:

    Bing: 2 results for MSN messenger
    Google: 1 result for safari, 2 results for google chrome
    Yahoo: 1 result for AOL, 1 for yahoo IM

    Now, I admit that google users are probably more likely to be looking for google software (the same goes for bing and yahoo), and if everyone tracks their users, that could easily account for the bias. However, it is also possible certain key words are tweaked. It's not hard to add a bias to good results for one's company in their own search engine (by making use of key words and popular search queries).

  21. Re:But... on 3D Images Reconstructed of 300M-Year-Old Spiders · · Score: 3, Insightful
    From the article:

    "Both Cryptomartus hindi and Eophrynus prestivicii were around the size of a 50 pence piece and they roamed the Earth during the Carboniferous period, 359 - 299 million years ago. This was a time before the dinosaurs, when life was emerging from the oceans to live on land."

    At that age, I'm amazed they look so much like the spider I killed on my driveway the other day.

  22. Re:Encryption? on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    Now that I've actually read the article, I discover the information was NOT classified, though considered so sensitive "it would not have been available even with a Freedom of Information Act request." Even so, information is leaked by people, not P2P software.

  23. Re:Encryption? on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    Even if it was encrypted or password protected (implies some form of encryption), this kind of information is obviously classified and should not be on computers with external internet access. I didn't read the article yet, but i doubt P2P networking is why it got leaked, just the medium used.

  24. Re:Let's Say... on Researchers Debut Barcode Replacement · · Score: 1

    I don't think he's thought this bookshelf application through... a cell phone camera won't be able to take a picture with enough resolution to read more than a few bokodes at once. If you watch the video it fills up 1/10th of the video frame before a simple computer would be able to understand it. Also, bokodes on books close together would undoubtedly overlap if you could see several books in one photo, let alone 20 shelves worth. Not to mention, first you'd have to tell your cell phone what you want, or read the results of every bokode. I think Dewey's system will be much faster to those who know their alphabet.

    One final note, I want to see a working example on a cell phone camera. Cell cameras can't change their focus... soooo.. you'd have to be at the exact same distance from the bokode every time you want to read one, right? Am I missing something?

  25. Get what you pay for on Apple Dominates "Premium PC" Market · · Score: 1

    Anyone notice the "average" windows machine selling for $515 sucks? If you compare equally powerful machines, you will get _similar_ costs. I would say a mac would still be slightly more expensive, but that's just a guess.