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User: invisiblerhino

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Comments · 64

  1. Re:A good Hatsune Miku on Japan's Latest Rockstar Is a 3D Hologram · · Score: 1
  2. Re:Further Explanation Needed on India To Build Neutrino Observatory · · Score: 4, Informative

    I assume it's a reference to geoneutrinos, produced by nuclear decays/reactions in the Earth's core:
    http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/22737

  3. Re:Ghost particle? on India To Build Neutrino Observatory · · Score: 1

    Fair enough. It's quite an old reference though, and as I say, not one that people in the field seem to use much. Might check it out.

  4. Ghost particle? on India To Build Neutrino Observatory · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm a particle physics grad student, and I swear I have never heard anyone refer to them as ghost particles. This seems to be BBC science writers only...

  5. Re:Similar problem happened to me on DRM Flub Prevented 3D Showings of Avatar In Germany · · Score: 1

    I saw the first ten minutes of 2012 in the wrong aspect ratio. They fixed it, but refused to show the beginning again, nor to refund us. (Cineworld cinemas were the culprits). It was annoying because we missed some subtitled dialogue, but the storyline was simple enough for us all.

  6. Re:Given all the reviews I have seen .. on DRM Flub Prevented 3D Showings of Avatar In Germany · · Score: 1

    Agreed. I just saw it, and the storyline was appalling, but the visuals nearly made it worthwhile. Nearly.

  7. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review on The Limits To Skepticism · · Score: 1

    For a wonderful introduction to peer review, you could do worse than read this:

    http://www.cgoakley.demon.co.uk/qft/corres.pdf
    It is an exchange, carried out over several years, between a man who believes he has solved quantum field theory, and the reviewers who carefully look through his papers when he tries to publish. They come up with good points and ways to improve the paper, but he resubmits and resubmits until he finds somewhere that accepts it. Along the way, he gets increasingly rude and angry, while the reviewers remain polite and engage carefully with him.

    My favourite part is that it's published on the guy's personal website, although he really doesn't come out of it well.

  8. Re:Math is now a science? on The Science Credibility Bubble · · Score: 1

    Citation needed: what scientist, when and where? Which journal?

  9. Re:Math cannot exist before wind. on Tracking the World's Great Unsolved Math Mysteries · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The requirement to model our universe as closely as possible is a requirement of physics, not mathematics. The fact that mathematics, even very abstract mathematics, accurately models the natural world is a deep mystery.

  10. Re:Google should rename Go to Issue 9 on Google Under Fire For Calling Their Language "Go" · · Score: 1

    Issue 9 has three syllables, same as C++. Although length of name might explain the relative unpopularity of Objective C.

  11. Re:Duh! on Design Starting For Matter-Antimatter Collider · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're absolutely right. To jump on the bandwagon, there's been one since at least the seventies, when CERN modified the Super Proton Synchrotron to be a Super Proton-Antiproton Synchrotron. In the meantime, HERA at DESY collided protons and positrons for years... I don't know the history, so not sure when the first one was. In any case, this is definitely not news. The most interesting things about the forthcoming colliders is not whether they use antimatter: to quote Gerard 't Hooft's replies to physics cranks: "Antimatter is routine, and time travel is impossible." The most interesting thing is what they will discover. Additionally, the article totally misses the point. For some reason, they've latched on to a fairly technical accelerator physics topic. CLIC is not proposed to be built any time in the near future (look out for the International Linear Collider first), and wakefields are a purely electromagnetic effect, nothing to do with space and time warping. They are interesting in themselves, and as a possible future accelerator design (google wakefield accelerator).

  12. Re:Computers have stopped. Biology has not. on Has the Rate of Technical Progress Slowed? · · Score: 1

    There's a saying, can't remember where I heard it: 'Every century is a century of physics'. Whether this will be true for the twenty-first century, we don't know yet. Better to try and help with progress than complain that the pace has slowed.

  13. Re:Really? on Where Does a Geek Find a Social Life? · · Score: 1

    Don't give up hope. One of my male friends from my degree (physics) met a like-minded, older guy who is a real polymath: he works in finance, so knows stochastic calculus, computer programming etc, and he's also a cultured man who enjoys playing the piano and goes to the opera. He's also a millionaire, because he works in finance. Hopefully, this has cheered you up a bit, not made you jealous.

  14. Re:C++ on Particle Accelerators on Should Undergraduates Be Taught Fortran? · · Score: 1

    CERN uses a lot of C++, at least for the LHC experiments. Just look at ROOT...

  15. Re:Odd... on Revived LHC Could Run Through the Winter · · Score: 1

    Bollocks, meant to write IAAPP not IAAPL

  16. Re:Odd... on Revived LHC Could Run Through the Winter · · Score: 1

    This has been a source of confusion on Slashdot before. They usually run an experiment through the year, then stop over the winter to regroup and check the machine. This time, they haven't been running an experiment, so they've saved money which they can spend running the machine over winter, when EDF (French/Swiss power company) hike the prices up due to increased demand. IAAPL

  17. Re:How About Using Stereograms? on Looking To Spammers To Solve Hard AI Problems · · Score: 1
  18. Re:Clean Coal on Energy Secretary Chu Endorses "Clean Coal" · · Score: 2, Funny

    Microsoft Genuine Advantage

  19. Pokemon gene on Nine Words From Science Which Originated In Science Fiction · · Score: 1

    I remember coming across this while flicking through Nature to find physics stories, it seems scientists initially decided to call it "POK erythroid myeloid ontogenic factor" gene, in homage to the game. The wiki page also mentions a "Sonic the hedgehog" protein and "Pikachurin", a retinal protein.

  20. Turning the problem on its head on Reliability of Computer Memory? · · Score: 1

    I would be interested to see if you could use memory errors as a method to detect cosmic rays.

  21. Re:Some other examples on Daemon · · Score: 1
    What about Digital Fortress by Dan Brown?

    *ducks*

  22. Re:No good ideas come to mind.... on Daemon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Primer is brilliant, but it does have its technobabble moments (as close as I can remember it):

    "Come on, what's the variable you can always change, in mechanics, in the Feynman diagrams without changing anything?"

    "Time."

    (putting pedant hat on)

    While this is accurate (most classical, and for that matter quantum theories are invariant under time reversal), this isn't true for weak interactions or thermodynamics, for example. Also, it struck me at the time as something real people, real physicists wouldn't say. They would just say "it's gone backward in time".

    Still, this is unbelievable nitpicking. Primer was wonderful and thoughtprovoking, and I hope Daemon is if and when I read it.

  23. Re:Ethics, line 1... on More Brains Needed · · Score: 1

    1) Doctors appreciate organ doners.

    Sometimes after a late night at the brain lab, what you really need is a kebab.

  24. Keyboard technique on The Best Keyboards For Every Occasion · · Score: 1

    One thing I've always wondered is how people are taught to type, and how it relates to how people play the piano. I've learnt both and one thing I've learnt playing the piano is to try and move each finger as little as possible, keeping them close to the keys. This way you expend less energy, play in a more controlled way, and avoid straining your muscles. Lots of typists, however, seem to raise their fingers quite high while typing, which surely can't be good for you? What do others think?

  25. Re:Store the energy in a massive weight on Batteries To Store Wind Energy · · Score: 1

    Not sure why but I read the title of that post as "Store the energy in a massive virgin".