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User: tyrione

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  1. Re:I'm sorry on Google Announces 2,000 Schools Now Use Chromebooks, Up 100% In 3 Months · · Score: 1

    As a Mechanical Engineer, the Computer is only valueable for data acquisition. All the knowledge comes from the Engineer's Brain and some test calculations he/she has made with their designs, all accessible from a calculator. Once the data acquistion systems are in place [from small to large scale] the next step is to write some routines whether in Matlab, Octave, or whatnot as a means of taking the data stored from the database or spreadsheet and then used to run large matrix computations over hundreds to millions of data points, depending upon the accuracy and closed system you are testing. The OP who discussed brain rot is correct.

  2. First World Nations are few and far between on Google Announces 2,000 Schools Now Use Chromebooks, Up 100% In 3 Months · · Score: 1

    There are tens of thousands of third world schools. This is impressive in the sense they now have a chance to eschew into the 21st century with and without central plumbing.

  3. Re:The sad fact of life is ... on Steve Jobs Movie Clip Historically Inaccurate, Says Woz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... that 50 years from now the media will have deified Jobs and next generations will believe he was a much much larger than life superhero who bootstrapped the entire computer industry and singlehandedly created new innovative products and touched so many people on a deep and personal level through his enduring work. And the real heros, Woz and the hundreds of Apple engineers and designers, will remain a footnote in some obscure appendix in a seldom read computer book, if that.

    Makes me sick, this cult of the Jobs personality and posthumous canonization of a glorified $20-profit salesman.

    The only people complaining of any fame are fans of Woz. Follow Wozniak's track record once the Macintosh [which he had nothing to do with] arrived. He completed a double B.S., got married, and did nothing but small, mindless little startups while getting paid today $120k a year [honorarily by Apple] for simply being alive. The real talent at Apple are the guys who Steve cultivated and who demanded he create NeXT when the board ousted him. I worked around them at NeXT. They dwarf Wozniak in knowledge, skills and capabilities to create great products. That same zeal was brought back to Apple. Wozniak had decades to extend his respect technologically by actually pioneering research in design of CPUs, GPUs, etc. He doesn't know it. He never did. Technology blew past Steve Wozniak and he decided to play Steve Jobs as a CEO and failed miserably every single time. The guy holds 4 patents in his entire engineering career, while being given Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory of resources to create. He isn't that genius. He's a celebrity who will always be the fat kid who Steve Jobs pulled out of his shell [Wozniak is quite clear on this point] and made him wealthy.

  4. India joins the US on India Bars ZTE, Huawei, Others From Sensitive Government Projects · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It isn't a coincidence that India agrees with the US on building out by using local talent. Europe will follow suit in each nation state, and South America will do the same. China's stranglehold on cheap materials/labor is no longer the driving factor in manufacturing. The top manufacturers in China are working on investing in foreign lands to avoid losing their present contracts. Over time, they'll lose them. It's an economic/intelligence/political trifecta approach to breaking China's dominance on flooding world markets and thus driving down competiting economies. In short, US, Euro and other nation states corporations realize that game is up. They know the import/export tariff imbalance days are over.

  5. Re:Bad approach. on Why Ray Kurzweil's Google Project May Be Doomed To Fail · · Score: 2

    there is nothing in the brain you can point to and call it a memory.

    Hogwash! The weightings you talked about are the memories. They may not be easily recognized as a coherent memory (or part of) by a casual observer, but that's not the same as not being a "memory". You are confusing observer recognition with existence. Confusion does not end existence (except for stunt-drivers :-)

    As far as whether following the brain's exact model is the only road to AI, well it's too early to say. We tried to get flight by building wings that flap to mirror nature, but eventually found other ways (propellers and jets).

    I'd vote you up if I had points left. The OP is missing on so many areas. I started laughing with the fMRI not discovering free will bit.

  6. Re:I don't get it... on NASA Achieves Laser Communication With Lunar Satellite · · Score: 2

    They have mirrors on the moon, that we routinely bounce lasers off of to measure distances and do Relativity experiments with. It's suddenly difficult to transmit information via laser? Why so slow? Why was this an accomplishment?

    To demonstrate a line of sight transmission, from any possible point of orbit? Think about it. They are developing towards a true subspace solution.

  7. Re:Open Source drivers? on Driver Update Addresses Radeon Frame Latency Issues · · Score: 1

    When will Nvidia and ATI release proper open source drivers instead of us having to install a binary blob to get our hardware working? That would really help if there were drivers that could ship in the kernel to handle ATI hardware instead of the closed source options.

    Get off your butt and pitch in on the R600 target for LLVM/Clang and later the Mesa 10.x roadmap so that OpenGL 4.x and OpenCL 1.2 quality is available. After all, it's already happening. Worry about general computing first. Those improvements will role into the Catalyst driver.

  8. Re:Ban Walmart on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    This shows that everyone against the Walmart can easily have the store chain banned. They sell everything needed for mass destruction, and guns aren't even needed!

    Gasoline, Vaseline jelly, and Tupperware = napalm

    Plastic jar, nails and screws, fertilizer, newspaper, and matches = shrapnel bomb

    Bleach and ammonia = mustard gas

    Any one of these (let alone all of them together) would bring as much destruction, pain, and misery as a gun. With this, our government has shown it cares not about the actual cause of the destruction, only the device that caused it and the people/places that sell it.

    Time to pressure them to ban the Walmart and arrest anyone who shops there!

    In a country where people can't write the equation for H2O you think they are going to become chemists and more to create mass mayhem. Shit, they can't even spell Chemistry, Physics, Calculus, Dynamics, Statics, etc. Try again.

  9. Re:Clearly, this will fix the problem. on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Australia has also seen a 47% increase in the rate of violent assault and a 22% increase in the rate of sexual assault since enacting that ban.

    http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/current%20series/tandi/341-360/tandi359/view%20paper.html

    In their case the lack of guns has resulted in fewer murders but an overall increase in violent crime.

    In short, less death, more criminals stand trial. Your point?

  10. Re:Chicken or Egg? on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Lets say, you like firearms. But, lets say you are going through some troubling times personally and need to see a therapist. We've seen the same thing in the military, people are afraid to ask for help, because they will be branded as having mental health problems and no longer be allowed to serve. So, will the problem be made worse now? Personally, I know this isn't a gun problem, it is a mental health problem. Mentally health people don't go mow down other human beings - only those with severe mental deficiencies do.

    Mental health problem, my ass. Go visit several sanitarium, then talk about mental health. Being mentally enraged about your lot in life isn't Mental Health. Talking to invisible people in the corner, thinking you're a famous spy while dressed in ladies lingerie in a facility, now that's Mental Health.

  11. Re:Seems perfectly reasonable on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    I would argue that a shotgun loaded with bird shot is a much better option for home defense, but I digress

    Shotgun, yes, bird shot, no. Bird shot tends to produce nasty-looking but very shallow wounds which will generally not stop a determined assailant. For an effective man-stopper, you need deeper penetration. Yes, that means that your deeper-penetrating projectiles will also penetrate walls better, but anything that will penetrate a human body sufficiently to have a prayer of stopping an attack will also go through some walls.

    There are numerous web sites and YouTube videos that demonstrate the inadequacy of bird shot for home defense. Bird shot is for birds, if you need to shoot people use buck shot.

    As for an AR for home defense, it's certainly perfectly functional, and actually doesn't create as much overpenetration risk as is often assumed, due to the tendency of the bullets to tumble and fragment. But a shotgun loaded with buckshot is a more effective man-stopper at close range and will overpenetrate less.

    Do me a favor, Stand 20 feet from me while I pump a couple 12 gauge choke enable rounds into you. I bet you don't get pissed off. I bet you're dead.

  12. Re:Seems perfectly reasonable on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    EVERY GUN is a military derivative firearm you Texas queer...

    - Most hunting rifles are based off of Mausers, and Springfields, and other older military designs. - The Winchester Repeating Arms were were developed for the military - The flintlock, another military derivative rifle.

    And in the future, when laser guns are viable. They'll be military derivatives.

    Yes, and at one time weapons of war were relegated to spears and arrows, both of which suck at long range, you can dodge and are single action. When guns went from bolt action, to hundreds of rounds per second something got lost in your grasp of military grade to consumer grade.

  13. Re:Seems perfectly reasonable on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Adam broke into the safe while she was traveling. Then shot her with a .22 rifle when she returned, and finished his plans (a couple of days with her dead on the bed).

    Safes keep children and lawyers from guns. There isn't a safe that will withstand a smart and determined attacker with time to get it open.

    Horse shit on the safe meme. A cheap gun safe is easy to get into. A professional quality custom made safe or commercial level apparatus is in all practical purposes impossible to breach without access codes, custom keys, etc. Do I have to cite Banks and their safes? Or those who actually own stuff of value worth millions or more? Security systems that need expertise to breach are affordable and available. Adam won't be getting into them.

    Bottom line, what sort of moron owns guns when their own adult child is mentally unstable? I'd say hundreds of thousands of Americans fit that bill.

    Newtown was coined as one of the safest places to raise a family, yet later we find the town is a gunhaven for god fearing folk. They built their own giant powder keg and never seemed to get that one of their own would light the fuse?

    Sorry, but calling this an isolated incident is an insult. We have millions of unemployed adults who own firearms and who see their life styles going into the crapper, yet you think they are all rational, respectable gun owners?

    Of course, whenever they go postal I guess its comforting to label them as mentally unstable and thus in need of treatment, instead of addressing the real problem: Unstable economies produce a lot of starving people who will commit crimes [or end the lives of those they feel have wronged them before they take their own lives in acts of desparation].

    So instead of fixing the economy we have douchebag GOP members on ideological rants holding a nation hostage [and holding a history of that ideology proven them wrong]; and recognizing that stalemate, several states and soon members of Congress seeing patterns of increased fear have decided to take action you consider foolhardy.

    I consider arming everyone in a nation of nearly 320 million people is insane. Most people don't have the coordination to hit a ball with a bat, yet we should arm them? Fuck that.

    Three hundred plus million guns in a country where easily over 60-70% of the country doesn't own a gun means we have a concentrated collective group of fear and propaganda overshadowing conscientious traditional hunting advocacy who they themselves should be up in arms for such lax laws on gun ownership and possession.

    Since 2002 nearly 100 million have been purchased. For what? Hunting? My ass. Fear drives people to make irrational choices in life. The NRA pipes out fear.

    I grew up Hunting and Fishing. I never got excited about a weekly target shooting time. Hunting season came, we hunted several weekends, and then it was over. Today, people blow a nut visiting the gun range on a weekly basis. The mindset is fucked up. It's all fear marketing.

    The NRA would love to arm every person in America. That's a good $20-$30 billion in additional powder keg sales!

  14. Re:Seems perfectly reasonable on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Anyone hunting big game with an AR-15 or fowl and neither uses say a .300 weatherby or a 12 gauge is full of crap. You were correct to point out a shotgun is a far better deterrent than an AR-15 to defend against a home invasion. Then again, how many home invasions have you ever had or your friends as you describe defend themselves against home invasions [plural] with their AR-15? Who do you hang around with that expect several never mind a single home invasion? The AR-15 never should have been declassified for military only purposes, period. No one should be owning the precursor to the M16, not to mention AK-47 style weaponry. Hunting is not what they are used for, unless by hunting you mean to kill enemies of the same species.

  15. Re:Seems perfectly reasonable on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    You know..... people have always said that the only purpose to a database of gun owners is to know who owns guns so they can confiscate them. Think about the law. it requires registration of all gun owners (a database). If a mental health practitioner reports a dangerous individual, without the database there's no way for law enforcement to know the person owned a gun.

    People say a lot of stupid, fear-based crap to keep everyone on edge. Growing up with several former detectives who owned arsenals, taught me to shoot and go hunting not one of them would be opposed and fearful of their guns being registered.

  16. Re:We need gas control! on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Lightning strikes don't spray in bunches and kill with malice. When the atmosphere is so unstable that anywhere nearby doesn't offer you protection against the coulombs of energy then talk. This isn't the film, ``The Jerk'' where Navin Johnson is getting shot at for being the wrong random pick out of a phone book.

    Sorry, but nothing you discussed as points of argument have any factual, historical or realistic foundation. No little old lady is out there killing thugs with a handgun. If life had infinite value it would be priceless and most certainly people would be fighting to free themselves more than ever from oppression.

    The likelyhood of getting mugged is a complex equation that deals mainly with the proximity and population density, to the physical size and awareness of the potential victim when they enter an area and find themselves either in a position of strength or weakness. You write as if you expect people to see some prescient insight from your statements. Get used to disappointment.

  17. Re:We need gas control! on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Switzerland requires mandatory military service. You want to do that?

  18. Re:We need gas control! on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    Bahama is a drug haven for the traffic of illegal narcotics. Dig deeper and you discover the vast bulk of those numbers are related to transactions of illegal narcotics. No amount of fun in the sun advertising to travel and see the Bahamas changing the culture in all levels of politics that illegal drug traffic is king.

  19. Re:no cool off on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 1

    In short, the USA is over 18.448 times more likely to see a homicide committed than in Norway, per square mile, when comparing the to in a quotient of USA:Norway.

  20. Re:what's on the board? on Open Compute 'Group Hug' Board Allows Swappable CPUs In Servers · · Score: 1
  21. Re:Really? on AMD Files Suit Against Former Employees For Alleged Document Theft · · Score: 1

    Given AMD/ATI's reputation and my own experience, no wonder. I would have left AMD/ATI too. Much about marketing and less on performance. nVidia is my personal preference for just that reason. I am only writing this because of a recent experience with HP/AMD driver issues on a Windows 8 install and non-compliant, non-working OpenGL implemetation. Inexcusable in my humble opinion. This is NOT a gaming issue, rather a high performance application issue and this is not the first time. AMD, GYST (yes, explatives involved)! Screams of SCO type litigation...

    Take some valium. Microsoft pushes DirectX and you're whining about Win 8 OpenGL performance being the sole responsibility of AMD? Gawd how long must people swing from the Gorilla's nutsack to realize Microsoft are douche bags?

  22. Odd Numbers on 2012 Patent Rankings: IBM On Top, Google Spikes · · Score: 1

    At LatestPatents.com you can calculate the numbers yourselves for several of the companies: IFI Claims Apple with 1135 Patents granted in 2012. USPTO claims 1293 Patents granted in 2012.

  23. I'd rather they combine cairographics and poppler in a XUL UI [if necessary] to manage the inlined PDFs. Much better code source, tested even with Adobe and far more extensible support for unicode, etc.

  24. Re:Ironic on Rare Water-Rich Mars Meteorite Discovered · · Score: 4, Funny

    We spend billions on probes, and get more information from looking at a rock in Africa.

    Nice work NASA.

    I imagine if we probed your ass we'd discover a passaage all the way across the Milky Way, perhaps?

  25. Re:Ditching strong partners -- smart move! on TSMC Preparing To Manufacturer A6X Chip As Apple Looks to Ditch Samsung · · Score: 1

    More precisely, Apple has a large investment in ARM.