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Comments · 187

  1. Re:A little misleading on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1

    It is misleading. The slashdot summary is setup to imply that parents are preventing their kids from getting the vaccine b/c the parents are stupid.

    In only a small fraction of the total cases is the reason for getting the disease b/c the parents declined to have their kids vaccinated. From the actual article: "Of those who were completely unvaccinated, 86% were because the parents declined vaccination." However, the vast majority of cases were for kids who were too young to be fully vaccinated.

    Sure, vaccinating everyone against it would eliminate the risk, but to date this vaccine is not often recommended for the general adult population.

  2. Re:Autism on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1, Informative

    From the actual article, "Of those who
    were completely unvaccinated, 86%
    were because the parents declined vaccination."

    The vast majority of cases are for children who are too young to be completely vaccinated though. It's (intentionally?) misleading.

  3. Re:Misleading Summary Title on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1

    Exactly, this topic is very misleading.

  4. Re:Here's an idea on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1

    This vaccine is not recommended for newborns/infants. It's not that people are saying "OMG, this will hurt my kid if they get the vaccine." ...At least not in all cases.

    The disease however, is probably most dangerous to newborns/infants. There is the crux of the issue. It poses little risk to parents and adults...so few naturally get the vaccine.

  5. A little misleading on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1

    This is somewhat misleading.

    In general, the pertussis vaccine is not recommended for small infants. They need to be a few weeks/months old before receiving it. However, infants are probably the most succeptible group to complications from it.

    It is recommended that adults get the vaccine to prevent them from passing it to their children. Again though, this vaccine is not always covered by insurance and the disease poses little threat to adults.

  6. Re:Better to eliminate them altogether on Ask Slashdot: Reducing Software Patent Life-Spans? · · Score: 1

    Companies do research because there is a problem (with a market) that needs solved. You never research purely with the goal of a patent. A patent w/o a product to apply it to is useless to a legitimate company.

    You don't require patents. Other factors such as better implementation and first to market are huge bonuses for whoever invents a technology (software or not). Copiers will always be one step behind you.

    The other thing with software patents is that the provide poor notice of what they actually cover. Because software is an abstract thing, describing the limits and details in a patent is hard. As a result, the boundaries of what is covered by a software patent tend to be very fuzzy. This is primarily why there is such a huge rise in software patent lawsuits. Even if one was very diligent in researching past patents, it's almost impossible to really know if you're in the clear.

  7. Re:You must test the obvious on Why We Have So Much "Duh" Science · · Score: 1

    The other issue with this is the poor reporting of what was actually measured.

    To use an example, often, the study will look into "how much more likely thin men are to be married than overweight ones?" What is the "tipping point?" Is it effected by X (X=race, religion, age, country)? Those are more interesting conclusions that are likely to come of the research, and not obvious at all.

    The news report will latch onto the shallow conclusions and say that "thin men get married more" when there is really much more.

  8. Re:Meet the New Boss on Congress Makes Deal To Renew Patriot Act For 4 Years · · Score: 1

    He's right though, people care more about avoid some improbable act of terror and want to feel all warm and fuzzy.

    Just go look at any comments thread on the TSA on any major newspaper. Most of what the TSA does is economically retarded (spend a ton for minimal benefit), has little effectiveness (they've never stopped a terror plot and probably won't), is a very likely violation of the 4th ammendment, and is just a knee jerk reaction to what was tried last time.

    Those threads are littered with comments about how great they are for keeping us safe and cost and rights be damned.

  9. Re:I would support it if... on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 1
    RTFM before being a smart ass.

    The article specifically mentions the use of electronic monitors on vehicles with the information automatically transferred to a reader.

    Among other things, CBO suggested that a vehicle miles traveled (VMT) tax could be tracked by installing electronic equipment on each car to determine how many miles were driven; payment could take place electronically at filling stations.

  10. Re:Bad. on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 2

    ecnomically, it's not really similar.

    For one, it encourages different behavior than a gas tax.

    Second, the amount of percent of tax paid by the public turned into revenue available for the government is significantly different. The costs for the mileage monitoring system mentioned in the article are VERY high. You have the costs of purchasing AND installing a monitoring device on every vehicle in the USA. You have the R&D costs to ensure the system is reliable, accurate, functional on every type of vehicle on the market, etc. You have the "customer service" and administrative costs to process all the transactions (every vehicle vs. every gas station) and deal with defective or broken systems (which there will be many). There are on the order of 250 million passengar vehicles in the USA. Even at a 1% failure rate per year, that's 2.5 million per year. You also that many more "taxpayers" to deal with than you did with a gas tax

    For a gas tax, you basically just set the rate and forget it (with a little monitoring to ensure compliance).

  11. Re:I would support it if... on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 1

    Yes, but to date it is not worth worrying about. The fraction of vehicles that fit that mold are miniscule.

    On the whole, that's a position that is generally something that the government wants to support. Improved fuel economy is good.

    The biggest problem with the solution proposed in the article is that it's extremely complex and expensive to implement. You put a new electronic device on each vehicle at $X each so you need to offset that much expenditure before seeing a return (plus R&D costs, reader costs at whatever locations are chosen, administrative costs, "customer service" costs and replacement costs). They're also a moderately complex item, so it's prone to breaking and fraud.

    A straight gas tax is easier. It encourages responsible driving, as a mileage tax does. It encourages efficient vehicles, which a mileage tax doesn't. It's mostly hidden from the public within the price of gas. It also costs (the government) essentially nothing to change.

  12. Re:Entry barriers are set to low on Reform the PhD System or Close It Down · · Score: 1

    The failure rate is a bad metric to look at. Few people "fail" out. People know they're not going to pass X metric and choose to change their degree goals.

    A conciliatory masters is very common for those who do not meet expectations, and most people are given multiple tries.

    If you look at a "wash out" rate at many schools, that can be as high as 40-50% of those who enter the programs.

  13. Re:"irrelevant to the world beyond academia" on Reform the PhD System or Close It Down · · Score: 1

    For humanities and social sciences, yes b/c those are (mostly) the only jobs that exist for PhDs in those fields.

    For science and engineering, it means you want to do research more than anything. Academia is a viable option, but it shows that you are capable of doing productive research on new topics. Less than 1/2 the people I did my studies with ended up in academia (and did so by choice).

  14. Re:"irrelevant to the world beyond academia" on Reform the PhD System or Close It Down · · Score: 1

    It depends entirely on the field of study.

    For the humanities and social sciences, there is little outside of acedemia for a PhD to do. The job market just doesn't support a large number of PhDs in those fields and government funding for them is limited.

    For biology and to some extent chemistry, PhDs can get decent jobs in industry. If you want to have significant responsibility, you probably need one as there are so many people with BS degrees in those fields. Jobs do exist in significant numbers outside academia. There also isn't much interest in people with MS degrees as those are seen as people who washed out of PhD programs in these fields (esp. biology).

    For engineering and the hard sciences in general, there is a large amount of possible jobs out there. Government labs, industry, the tech sector, startups, and acedemia all hire significant numbers.

    Now, it is likely that you will not end up doing what you did in grad school after you get into the work place. Typically, grad work just doesn't correlate directly into what the job market needs as a result of the overspecialization in intellectually curious things for your thesis. However, that doens't mean that the skills aren't valuable.

  15. Re:"Bulletproof glass" mistake? on MythBuster Developing Light-Weight Vehicle Armor · · Score: 1

    Yeah, this is what most people don't realize.

    There is a hell of large difference between different calibers and even different types of ammunition at the same caliber.

    Saying something is bulletproof only means something if you specify against what projectile AND what projectile velocity.

    You can get away with much thinner than 6" for .30 cal, but it's still a fairly thick piece of armor.

  16. Re:To all "They're not REAL scientists!" posters on MythBuster Developing Light-Weight Vehicle Armor · · Score: 1

    To prove something doesn't work, you have to do it more than once and do it in more than one way.

  17. Obviously an expert on MythBuster Developing Light-Weight Vehicle Armor · · Score: 1

    Based on the quotes in the article, we can assume that Heyman "saw some s*** blow up, and now is an expert on blast propagation, terminal ballistics, and high strain rate phenomenon."

  18. Re:Simplistic view on RIAA/MPAA: the Greatest Threat To Tech Innovation · · Score: 2

    It's partially voter apathy, but it's also a huge amount of regulatory capture.

    I may feel very strongly, but I really have no money and have other things to deal with day to day.

    As an industry with an agenda, I have a dedicated staff to doing nothing but lobbying and deep pockets behind it. A lone individual also lacks the "credibility" of an industry insider. Regardless of what the industry says, they live it so they "must know the issues." It's not necessarily correct, but that's how it works.

  19. Re:This is Good! on CCIA Calls Copyright Wiretaps 'Hollywood's PATRIOT Act' · · Score: 2

    One of the big issues is that is (currently, in the vast majority of cases) a civil matter. The two parties involved pay for it.

    If it's criminal, your tax dollars are going to be increasingly used to pay for copyright enforcement that the copyright owner doesn't want to pay for. If they don't want to pay for it, why should I? Why should you?

  20. Re:Set up the precedent on Copyright Troll Complains of Defendant's Legal Fees · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, it's hard for people to do it. Copyright litigation is very risky, as fair use is vaguely defined. Although I'd say that 4 paragraphs is fair use, the statutes don't really set the limits. The law/case law says you should consider X,Y, and Z but aren't real definitive about where the line is drawn.

    And lawyers are expensive. It's $200+/hr for a lawyer (roughly) and you're going to potentially need hundreds of hours to litigate a case in court. If it's a few thousand to make the issue go away, that sounds pretty good when you weigh the relative costs.

  21. Re:Good idea on Sony Wants To Put Your Game Saves In the Cloud · · Score: 1

    Problem with requiring a company controlled portal to run the game is the industry has proven multiple times that they're all too quick to kill off network infrastructure required to play the game.

    It also means that you have to have an operational network connection to run the game.

  22. Re:Bad Summary on First-Sale Doctrine Lost Overseas · · Score: 4, Informative

    Basically, the decision said that a company can enforce regional pricing and distribution structures through a (broad) interpretation of copyright laws.

    Omega has various pricing depending on region. Overseas they were cheap and expensive in the US. CostCo bought them from a low priced region overseas and imported them to the USA. The ruling was they couldnt do that as it violated the copyright, despite the fact they were legally purchased overseas.

  23. Re:The State is the true source of these problems on Google Patents Browser Highlight All Button · · Score: 1

    So you have sit on the product that includes a similar feature for 11 years?!?

    For 11 years, you have no way of knowing if it's valid and the fact that it wasn't granted "quickly" would normally be a dead giveaway that it's crap. It's a completely unworkable system.

  24. Re:That long ago? on Greg Bear, Others Cry Foul on Project Gutenberg Copyright Call · · Score: 1

    I would argue that it is mostly large corporations that decided "long time back that the work of their [subjects] hands should go to those of their own choosing --- and have never truly signed on to the notion that the artist should be compelled to surrender his work to the public domain."

    Unfortunately, for the vast majority of the populus, the issue of copyright has not really mattered to them in their daily lives. Especially before the internet, they copied (for personal use) and nobody had any way of knowing about it.

    The large corporations are HIGHLY motivated to push for protectionist copyright policies though, so they end up winning out. You end up with this situation a lot in politics, a significant portion of general populution do care about minor issues but don't have the time/energy to do anything about them.

  25. Re:That long ago? on Greg Bear, Others Cry Foul on Project Gutenberg Copyright Call · · Score: 1

    I don't buy that. In every single other industry people work and create until the day they retire or die. What is so special about musicians and authors?