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User: Maladius

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Comments · 37

  1. Re:Age related? On/Off Switch? on Genetic Mutation Enables Less Sleep · · Score: 1

    I've personally noticed the opposite effect. When I was younger I could get by with 5 hours of sleep with no problem. Somewhere along the line I started requiring much more, and can now barely wake up if I don't get at least 7 hours. It would be nice if someone could just flip a genetic switch and make it so I can again only get by with 5 hours....assuming there aren't any nasty side affects that these women experience. The doctors say they seem healthy...but who knows in the long term.

  2. Re:Fine by me on Wikipedia Bans Church of Scientology · · Score: 1

    LOL. I just tried viewing this article at work and it came up blocked. "This Websense category is filtered: Tasteless."

  3. Re:Pfft... on Microsoft Patents the Crippling of Operating Systems · · Score: 1

    Please don't give them ideas.

  4. /. affected? on Confirmed Gmail / Google App Outage · · Score: 1

    Right when it started I had trouble loading /. even. It kept stalling while loading Google ads. However that seemed to only last for 10 minutes while my Gmail, iGoogle, etc. was slow for 1/2 an hour or so. Maybe they fixed the ads quickly...

  5. Not SG1? on SGI Lives On, In Name At Least · · Score: 1

    I was very disappointed to see that this wasn't a story about Stargate.

  6. Wow. on Lose Your Amazon Account and Your Kindle Dies · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Looks like I'll never be buying electronics from Amazon again.

  7. 40% per year on Time Warner To Offer Unlimited Bandwidth For $150 · · Score: 1

    From the article:

    "Here at Time Warner Cable, consumption among our high-speed Internet subscribers is increasing by about 40 percent a year"

    So basically they want to see their profits go up by 40% per year, since I'm sure the 10GB cap isn't going to become 14GB next year.

  8. Re:and in a manner that is completely transparent on Apple Patent Claim Threatens To Block Or Delay W3C · · Score: 1

    I guess Microsoft must have already had the patent on automatically updating in a manner that was completely not transparent to the user.

  9. Re:North Korea on North Korea Missile Launch Fails · · Score: 1

    Since the NPT entered into force in 1970, three states that were not parties to the Treaty have conducted nuclear tests, namely India, Pakistan, and North Korea. (Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_with_nuclear_weapons )

    Granted it says they probably have less than 10. But I'll bet they could do a lot of damage with 10 nukes.

  10. Finding Reception on Is the Bar of Soap Tomorrow's Smarterphone? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm definitely foreseeing a problem when you hold the phone out in front of you and move it around to try and find reception. That's a very similar position to the one you would use for picture taking.

  11. Is it hot in here? on EEStor Issued a Patent For Its Supercapacitor · · Score: 1

    This technology definitely has the potential to revolutionize the energy storage industry, between the high energy density, the quick charge time, the ultra-low self discharge rate, and the potentially unlimited cycle life. I'm curious though...The patent mentions that a some of the electrical measurements were done at an ambient temperature of 85C (185F). Was this maybe done to simulate operation near a hot car engine? Is this the standard operating temperature of the device? Or were the results just much better when recorded in a warm environment?

  12. Is it hot in here? on EEStor Issued a Patent For Its Supercapacitor · · Score: 1

    The energy storage numbers that they claim are quite impressive. 55kWh for 285 lbs is absolutely remarkable. As someone else pointed out in another comment, a lead-acid battery with a comparable weight would only provide 4-5kWh. Lithium batteries generally have an energy density of about four times that of a lead-acid battery, so this technology still gives a 200-300 percent improvement over Lithium batteries in terms of power to weight ratios. What's really impressive is the stated charge times and self-discharge rates. To be able to pump 55kWh of power into something and store it within 3-6 minutes without creating huge heating issues is an amazing feat. Their leakage current of 4.28 micro-Amps means that it will stay virtually fully charged for years. One thing which I thought was kind of strange though was that many of their measurements were done at an ambient temperature of 85C (185F). Do you think this is to simulate operation near a hot car engine?