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User: moozoo

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  1. modern kids vocabulary on Authors Alarmed As Oxford Junior Dictionary Drops Nature Words · · Score: 1

    I assume they only have a finite number of words and need to add ipad, tablet, app, network, internet, steam, parental lock, minecraft, DS, exit, start, logon, quit, restart, level, character, profile, desktop, youtube, google and... hangon... aren't kids old enough to use the Oxford Junior Dictionary going to be using Google or an app to look up word definitions on their own tablets.....

  2. Re:Something something online sorting on Why Don't Open Source Databases Use GPUs? · · Score: 1

    GPU have a very wide fast bus to there memory vs CPU's. i.e. 320GB/sec which is something like 10 times that of a CPU What is needed is to connect flash memory directly into a GPU.

  3. Re:Intel is keeping pace on Intel Open-Sources Broadwell GPU Driver & Indicates Major Silicon Changes · · Score: 1

    >they have a patent minefield in front of them. nvidia and Intel have a patent agreement. Intel licensed their technology for 1.5 billion (over six years I think) AMD and Intel have patent agreements with regards to CPU technologies and some of those would apply to graphics (interconnects , memory etc) I doubt Intel and AMD would have trouble coming to an agreement with graphics patents.

  4. We need Terrestrial planet finder on NASA TESS Observatory Will Hunt For Alien Life On "Super-Earth" Exoplanets · · Score: 2

    TESS is a cheap substitute was what is really needed. Its not the real deal, earth like planet finder that is needed. It only looks at the same stars for 3 months. Which means it will only find "habitable zone" planets that orbit their stars 3 times in that 3 month period. i.e.. only red dwarf stars. The planets it finds will be tidally locked and subject to million of years of star flares (red dwarfs are typically flare stars). What we need is Nasa's dropped Terrestrial planet finder.

  5. Wise full data release is due this month on Nomad Planets: Stepping Stones To Interstellar Space? · · Score: 1

    The full sky data release from the wise missions is due this month. It can detect any unbound juptier sized planet out to 1ly. So we will soon know if there is anything like that near us.

  6. Google should buy Nokia on Analysis of Google's Motorola Acquisition · · Score: 1

    And really stir things up. Bye bye Microsoft's plans. Plus they get more patents. But I'm guessing they don't have the money to do it after buying Motorola.

  7. Re:Plane on NASA's Kepler Spots Its First Rocky Exoplanet · · Score: 1

    9) Transit Time Variations, i.e. you have one planet detected by Transit photometry. Variations in time of transits can be used to detect other planets.

  8. Re:It was 30 years old, 50 million years ago. on NASA Announces Discovery of 30-Year-Old Black Hole · · Score: 1

    When the first light of the collapse hit us was when the collapse 50 million years ago became reality. Prior to that the future of its past was a superposition of possible states.

  9. Connect different brains on Rewiring a Damaged Brain · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Its when you use this technology to connect two different brains that things get interesting.....

  10. Re:Why mining? on The Best Near-Term Future of Space Exploration? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nothing... They would use the materials to build space habitats...

  11. Nuke them on The Best Near-Term Future of Space Exploration? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They should visit a number of different types of asteroids and nuke them to see the effect. Its really important knowing what will and won't work in protecting the planet from an asteroid impact. We have zero experience in how effective nuclear weapons are in deflecting or distinguishing asteroids. I don't think we want to be doing this when threatened by a large asteroid collision.

  12. Minimum Framerates and Graphics Lag spikes on Nvidia's GF100 Turns Into GeForce GTX 480 and 470 · · Score: 1

    I think Fermi can be summed up with the comments near the bottom of the Crysis Warhead benchmark in the review done by AnandTech. "The GTX 400 series completely tramples the 5000 series when it comes to minimum framerates, far more than we would have expected. " Fermi is a mac truck that ploughs though the tougher scenes. There is nothing worst than having smoke, explosions, and water falls etc causing graphics spikes.

  13. What I think we need to do on SETI Founder Outlines Ambitious Future Plans · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you want to find a needle in a haystack you need a needle finder (metal detector). Almost all of the existing radio telescopes have too narrow a field of view and/or too long a integration time. What we need is "An L-Band All-Sky Astronomical Surveillance System" as per the Ohio Argus (http://argus.naapo.org/). 5(?) of them would cover the whole sky. Each sees ~100 degree's of sky. They would need to be located in space to cut down the large amount ground thermal noise and perhaps use superconducting antennas.. e.g. http://www.esa.int/esaLP/ESAQGA2VMOC_LPsmos_0.html but pointing out into space (it is at this very moment as apart of its calibration). It needs to be able to spot 10 millisecond transients and have a real-time bandwidth of ~20 MHz (i.e. a real time 20 MHz of spectrum display with 0.1 hz of resolution for each image pixel in the sky). It initially would have a low sensitivity and would be upgraded over time with more antennas and more advanced digital processing (needed to cross correlate all the antennas for all angles) The technology to attempt this type of device has only recently come available (40nm and under FPGAs/GPUs). What if "Argus sees a brief, narrowband pulse at 1420.8807 MHz near NGC 752" (http://argus.naapo.org/~rchilders/) was actually coming from the sky. The chances of any radio telescope being pointed at exactly the right spot an being able to see 1400Jy). What if that pulse is only sent once every 5 months? What if there where other pulses outside of the Argus's 60khz bandwidth? I believe that any SETI beacon ("look here with a bigger telescope") would be a large phased array cycling though a large target list and sending a short burst of pulses on a number of special frequencies.

  14. Critical Mass on The LHC, Black Holes, and the Law · · Score: 1

    What if someone had reached a critical mass of enriched uranium before we knew it would start a fission reaction... And did so in a lab within a major city... I do think LHC is safe. But who knows. Yes the earth has been bombarded by higher energies than those in the LHC. But are they doing so under the same conditions as those inside the LHC. What if there is something we don't know that happens with say high energy collisions in a high very magnetic field (which probably doesn't happen naturally).

  15. Re:Question about particle accelerators on LHC Reaches Over One Trillion Electron Volts · · Score: 1

    >fundamental building blocks of those pieces Just be aware that its false to believe that because X and Y flew out that X and Y where inside the particles before it collided. That is a macroscopic concept of reality.

  16. Human Mind on New Contestants On the Turing Test · · Score: 1

    Human = pattern recognition and classification (compression) engine with the goal of surviving and reproducing. Logic, cause and effect etc are just some of the patterns that we have observed and utilized to meet our goals. A machine that is just logic and cause and effect is vastly inferior to us. Where a problem is unsolvable or to complex (many are) we can match to the nearest pattern that gives a desirable outcome, regardless of the logic of that match. We are also error prone (matching patterns in logically unrelated areas) and this allows us to by pass Godel's Theorem where as a machine of pure logic would be stuck.

  17. Made of Or Creates on Physicists Discover "Doubly Strange" Particle · · Score: 1

    "made of three quarks, the Omega-sub-b. The particle contains two strange quarks and a bottom quark (s-s-b)." How do they know this. Or is it that X smash into Y produces results Z It doesn't follow that X and Y is made of Z.

  18. At what point will people spend big $$$ on this on Trio of Super-Earths Discovered · · Score: 1

    With the LHC they are spending 5 - 10 billion dollars. They are doing this because they know if they built it They will learn something funamental about the universe, even if its that the current theories are wrong. It seems to me that we are at the point now that spending this type of money on planet detection would be garanteed to either 1) find planets that could support life as we know it. 2) Find an earth like planet with life on it. 3) give an much more accurate view of the possible number of planets with intellegent life. Finding another life filled planet would affect everyones perception of our world and our place in the universe.