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User: crescente

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  1. Re:Is 1% significant? on Matter-Antimatter Bias Seen In Fermilab Collisions · · Score: 5, Informative

    Their error, as stated in the linked abstract, is less than 0.3%. So, if you believe they're doing statistics correctly, yes, the signal is greater than the noise. More importantly, even, say 1.0 - 0.3 = 0.7% is HUGE: the common estimate of matter-antimatter asymmetry at the big bang was merely a billion-and-one to a billion. (linky: http://livefromcern.web.cern.ch/livefromcern/antimatter/academy/AM-travel02c.html). And that extra one in a billion is all the matter we have today.

  2. Re:Headache? on Real-World Synthehol In Development · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually you wouldn't want to drink a bottle of lab ethanol--it's probably denatured, i.e. made unfit to drink by addition of nasty stuff like methanol. This is because most places exempt denatured alcohol from the extra taxes on drinkable alcohol.

  3. Glowing is cool, but the novelty is elsewhere on Fluorescent Monkeys Cast Light On Human Disease · · Score: 5, Informative

    Biologists have been making this glow for a long time: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_fluorescent_protein But the novelty is that now you can make green offspring with no extra effort! For those with journal access to nature, the source: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v459/n7246/full/nature08090.html

  4. Nitpick: 1st reading actually has the least weight on Court Orders Breathalyzer Code Opened, Reveals Mess · · Score: 1

    If I'm reading this right, the most recent reading is given a 50% weight: new_average = (latest_reading + previous_average)/2. That would actually give readings in the past less weight, in some convoluted way. This is better than giving the first reading the most weight, but yes, the "average" is still not an arithmetic average.

  5. That's nothing... on Tokyo Scientists Create Mobile Slime · · Score: 1

    Check out the levitating jello at the end of this clip: http://gizmodo.com/5219724/sprintcam-v3-hd-shoots-breathtaking-full-hd-video-at-1000-fps :P Although, after some thought, it seems both goo and jello both possess some kind of internal vibration, so perhaps the phenomena are related. Any experts in nonlinear elasticity out there?

  6. mental imagery in practice on Researchers Identify Phantom Limb Brain Activity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's been long suspected in sports training that mentally practicing a skill is often as useful and productive as doing the real thing. fMRI supports this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_Practice_of_Action The surprising thing to me is that she actually got relief from phantom-ly scratching herself. I suspect this is some placebo effect. Or related to why you can't tickle yourself.

  7. from AP on UN Attacks Free Speech · · Score: 1

    from the AP, with writer credit: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iRHXSIoJJdXQpG3kPrRO2LWMnWTAD975TOK00 I don't know if I can trust this Frank Jordans, but at least he put his name on this article.

  8. Social aspect of labs on RIP the Campus Computer Lab, 1960-2009 · · Score: 1

    I wholeheartedly agree with parent's points about the economies of scale, and of the need to level the field for disadvantaged students. I'd also like to argue that besides the technological benefits of computer labs, students as a whole gain from a common space in which to interact with their peers. The quad and the lunch hall are great, but when others are nearby, in a work environment, it's really easy to instantly ask questions and get feedback. In fact this may be as close as a university setting can get that of an open, collaborative workplace.

  9. It's like notetaking? on Juror Tweets Could Create Mistrial · · Score: 1

    If he got feedback, that's obviously wrong, it would seem. But let's suppose it can be proven he didn't discuss, only post, i.e. he's sending out information, not receiving it. Then couldn't it be treated as if he was jotting down notes, or writing in a journal? IANAL, but I think there are regulations for when / if you are allowed to journal / take notes. He could just be trying to clear his thoughts by writing them down.

  10. The question: what are you trying to accomplish? on What Restrictions Should Student Laptops Have? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it "protecting kids from themselves"? Besides the fact of whether you want to do this or not, many kids will have access to their parents' or friends laptops anyway. Are you trying to cover your ass if they do something dumb? Just trust the damn students. Put the responsibility on them: if they accept the laptop, they accept that they have to decide what is "good, moral, proper" etc. to do on the laptop, with all the consequences of it. If you start policing, you're basically implicitly assuming responsibility for the kids, not allowing them to take responsibility, or for the parents to teach them responsibility. When you do screw up and let the kids download child porn, it'll be all on your head.

  11. Cool! Go Science! on SpaceX Successfully Tests Nine-Engine Cluster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With all the cries for help in the finance world, it warms my heart to see a science/research based company giving me some good news. Cheers!

  12. more detail... on Political Viewpoints Linked To Fear · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There was also a more indepth article about this last year in Psychology Today: http://psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-20061222-000001.xml

  13. diopter adjustment, please? on How Nvidia Wants To Bring 3D Glasses Back · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's nice that the glasses were "designed from day one to be easily worn over most types of glasses frames" but it just sounds like an excuse not to include diopter adjustment. Should have option for diopter adjustment, just like in good binoculars. It just doesn't feel right to be wearing more layers of headgear than of clothing.

  14. Re:Translation: on GENI To Replace Internet, Gets $12M Funding · · Score: 5, Funny

    New internet has DRM built in! It's for your own protection. Really.

  15. modern data recovery on Workings of Ancient Calculating Device Deciphered · · Score: 1

    Haha, X-rays decipher your transcriptions! Someone forgot to do a wipe before throwing away the computer.