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User: joe_frisch

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  1. Re:Bullshit on The Hobbit and Game of Thrones Top Most Pirated Lists of 2013 · · Score: 1

    I would have been happy to pay for GOT, but they wouldn't let me. I had to buy a continuing subscription - that based on past experience might be nearly impossible to cancel. Regulations requiring a "cancel subscription" button right next to the "subscribe" button on websites would help.

    I don't know if this is the case with HBO in particular, but it isn't obvious from the website how to cancel.

  2. Re:What is the added value over Python? on GNU Octave Gets a GUI · · Score: 1

    Wish I could mod the parent up.
    If you use a tool like Matlab professionally,. the purchase cost isn't a significant issue. Matlab's toolboxes, and support are excellent. I've used Octave,and Python-pylab. Both are fine, but I'm more productive with Matlab.

    Of course other people solving different types of problem may see very different results. I do mostly electron accelerator calculations and control, and so far matlab is the best tool I've found for those applications.

  3. Re:Clueless on Protesters Block Apple and Google Buses In California · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Disparity and poverty are very different. The US has quite high disparity, but the average wealth is quite high, so the poor in the US are in general not nearly as poor as the poor in 3rd world countries.

    Disparity and poverty are both bad and both cause very serious problems, but they are different.

  4. Re:No on How To Avoid a Scramble For the Moon and Its Resources · · Score: 1

    We went from the Wright brothers to landing men on the moon in less than 60 years. In the 45 years since we have gone from landing men on the moon to not being able to land men on the moon, and the US isn't even able to put men in orbit anymore.

    "We could but we just don't want to" is a common excuse, generally used by those who can't do something.

  5. The moon is BIG on How To Avoid a Scramble For the Moon and Its Resources · · Score: 1

    It may be small as planetary bodies go, but is still really huge, its.surface area is similar to all of Asia. We are ridiculously far away from having a resource conflict on the moon. As far as environmental concerns - it already is an ugly ("sort of like a dirty beach") lifeless radioactive wasteland - what could we possibly do to make it worse?

    If some country or agency really manages to use a substantial fraction of the 40 MILLION square kilometers of lunar surface, then as far as I'm concerned they can have it, I'm on their side.

    In reality any attempt to regulate commercial or national exploitation of the moon is just a way for the countries that no longer have the will to explore space to discourage others from doing so.

  6. Re:nothing of any us to us on moon on How To Avoid a Scramble For the Moon and Its Resources · · Score: 1

    Please god let this be a joke.

  7. Re:Said every IT person. Ever. on CryptoLocker Gang Earns $30 Million In Just 100 Days · · Score: 1

    Can it encrypt files on a different type of system? If you backup from a PC to a linux server, if the PC is infected can it corrupt the files on the linux machine. (sorry if this is an ignorant question)

    I generally have one addition layer of protection - the linux server has a backup that only has root write permissions, so the windows machines can't write to the backup disks (though I assume this can be hacked as well). Then I have offsite backups, but they are only updated monthly.

  8. Re:What the hell is the point of these huge number on Swedish Man Fined $650,000 For Sharing 1 Movie, Charged Extra For Low Quality · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Both presumably. By collecting them they scare people. The judgement was $650K, even if that is above his net worth (it may or may not be), they may be able to garnish it from future wages. $650K is below the lifetime earnings of a lot of people.

    This is not to say that the ruling isn't completely unreasonable.

    Piracy is tricky. People who produce content do have some right to keep other people from stealing it. It is very difficult to track down individual pirates, so most get away and reasonable fines are not a deterrent. This leads to a sort of reverse-lottery where lots of people take a chance at disastrous penalties.

    Part of the problem is that the public is very split on what is reasonable.

    Some people believe ALL content should be free.

    Some people believe that small payments for content are reasonable, but that some industries charge "unreasonable" rates for content.

    Some people believe that the industry should make all content available at the same time everywhere at the same rates.

    Some people do not mind paying the rates industry charge, but prefer to download for reasons of convenience, lack o tracking, lack of advertising, or others. (many of the people who pirate Game of Thrones would purchase the content if they were allowed to without creating a subscription that they know may be difficult to cancel).

    Some people are happy with any arrangement that industry wants because the purchase is voluntary .

    It would be interesting to see a survey of opinions on this and see how well public opinion matches the law.

  9. Re:Prove it on NSA Says It Foiled Plot To Destroy US Economy Through Malware · · Score: 1

    There is some value in developing cyber weapons of mass destruction to used as a deterrent, or for retaliation, similar to the way that a number of countries maintain nuclear arsenals. The existence of a possible application does not necessarily imply that such weapons could or were developed, and if they do exist it does not mean that they will be deployed.

    It is well within the job of the NSA to protect us against large scale cyber attacks. The problem here is that they are not longer trusted, so it is impossible to determine if the threat ever really existed, or if their countermeasures (whatever they were) were effective and didn't produce worse vulnerabilities.

  10. Re:Seriously? on US Light Bulb Phase-Out's Next Step Begins Next Month · · Score: 2

    Usually people turn lights on and off as they enter and leave rooms. The automatically puts the radiant heat where the people are. The light bulbs also produce a large part of their heat in the form of radiation which directly heats people, rather than a typical resistance heater which operates at a lower temperature and tends to heat the air by convection.

    Its not a big difference, but overall I think the light bulbs are modestly more efficient at providing heat where it is needed.

    Of course during times when heat is not needed, the extra heat is pure inefficiency, and may even need to be removed with air conditioning.

    Heat pump type heaters are also probably more efficient at heating than light bulbs under the great majority of situations.

  11. Re:Seriously? on US Light Bulb Phase-Out's Next Step Begins Next Month · · Score: 1

    Its a very valid point. Incandescent light bulbs add heat directly where people are located. Even though there is significant efficiency loss going from primary fuels to electricity, it is possible that it is an overall win over gas heating, and certainly is better than electrical heating. (assuming no heat pumps)

  12. A properly designed reactor will not go "boom" but an improperly designed, operated or fueled reactor can go pphhhhfftt. (the way Chernobyl did). You need enough delayed neutrons to make the reaction growth rate controllable and it is possible to get out of that regime and make a mess.

    Nuclear power is not inherently dangerous, but it needs to be designed, built and operated by intelligent careful people. This is probably my only objection to small reactors - it seems like it will increase the chance that one of them is operated by morons.

    In general though I'm very much in favor of nuclear power, large or small installations. we just need to be careful.

    --- Joe Frisch

  13. Separate military and domestic spying on NSA Head Asks How To Spy Without Collecting Metadata · · Score: 1

    The US separates military and police for very good reasons. We give the military all sorts of devices (grenades, napalm, thermonuclear bombs) that we do not give to the police, but we prohibit using the military as law enforcement inside of the country.

    I believe we should do the same with information. The military gathering information doesn't bother me much if it is ONLY used against external threats. What I mostly object to is military type information gathering used to enforce drug laws, copyright, child porn and other purely internal criminal issues.

  14. Re:Physical, sure. Data security? Not anymore. on Switzerland Wants To Become the World's Data Vault · · Score: 1

    Long ago Swiss bank accounts were protected from international scrutiny, and under those rules I would have trusted them with data. Since the accounts are not longer protected, I see no reason to think the data will be.

    Maybe North Korea should do data storage - they never seem to give in to international pressure, but at the same time have to power to act on any data that they find.

  15. Re:Bahahahahaha on Thousands of Germans Threatened With €250 Fines For Streaming Porn · · Score: 1

    Unless there are no legal streaming porn sites, it seems that there is no way for a user to know if the content that they are viewing / downloading is legal. It is the equivalent of being arrested for buying stolen property when you purchased it off the shelf at a standard retail store.

    If the material were obviously stolen, things would be different, but that is not the case. The streaming sites present adds, and therefore have a plausible business model. It is also a reasonable business model that porn producers might release a small percentage of their material to streaming sites to act as advertising for the rest of their for-pay content.

  16. Re:Two parametres on Study: People Are Biased Against Creative Thinking · · Score: 2

    There is a good engineering reason not to. Small aircraft performance is very sensitive to weight, a typical small airplane will only have a non-fuel payload of around 1/4of the total weight. The added weight to make the aircraft also function as a car (removable / pivot-able wings, road worthy tires, bumpers, transmission, etc) will rapidly cut into that weight and reduce the overall efficiency.

    At the same time modern consumers have become accustomed to very well optimized car designs, the added weight / drag of the folded wings etc will reduce the automotive performance to a point where it is not competitive. There are also significant differences in the optimization of automotive and aircraft piston engines.

    Then there are operational issues: Aircraft require a thorough pre-flight before operation, so there is a significant delay at the airport, aircraft are almost never a time saver for trips of less than an hour driving. Most modestly priced (1M$) aircraft have limited weather capability and have nothing like the reliability of cars for transportation.

    The real killer though is that (at least in the US), most small aircraft pilots will drive to their home airport, transfer their luggage to their plane, fly to the destination and rent a car. Rental cars are generally delivered right to your aircraft when you park for a small fee. In this way the airplane is optimized for flying and for a similar price as much better performance than the hybrids.

    There may be a few special purpose cases were a flying car will work, but with present day technology they are very rare. This is supported by the existence of roadable airplanes since the 50's, but none have seen significant production. The "flying cars" that do not have wings are not practical - not that none of them have actually flown, the pictures are just CGI. The power to weigh requirements are not possible with today's technology.

  17. Two parametres on Study: People Are Biased Against Creative Thinking · · Score: 4, Insightful

    An idea can be judged on "creativity" and "practicality". A creative practical idea is a wonderful thing, but its also quite rare. Fairly often people use "creativity" to excuse not considering practical issues. Flying cars, stratospheric power generation kites, vacuum tube trains, etc. are all "creative" but are not currently practical. Some people, including me, get irritated when someone claiming to be creative effectively says: "here is my design for a flying car - just a few engineering details to work out", when in fact it is the engineering "details" that have prevented practical flying cars for the last 50 years.

  18. Re:But what system does he suggest instead? on Physicist Peter Higgs: No University Would Employ Me Today · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a result of attempts to use "quantifiable metrics". The original idea is great: By having a numerical measurement of a workers productivity (whether that worker is a floor-sweeper or a physicist), we reduce the effects of bias, favoritism, etc in evaluating employees. The problem though is that it is impossible to produce a good metric for many types of work. When a poor metric is used, we strongly motivate workers to maximize that metric, not their "real" productivity. There is a nearly identical problem in school grades: we want to eliminate bias in grading so we use "standardized tests". Pretty soon teachers are teaching the test, not the subject.

    In my opinion, where I work the most productive scientists are not the ones who publish the largest number of papers.

  19. Re:Here is the problem on Elsevier Going After Authors Sharing Their Own Papers · · Score: 1

    Number of citations may also not be a good measure of importance. Review articles with nothing really new could get a lot of citations. Some very important work is read by many but not cited because there is a more recent, though derivative source.

    Still, I don't have a better idea.

  20. Re:Here is the problem on Elsevier Going After Authors Sharing Their Own Papers · · Score: 1

    Its a chicken and egg problem. People won't submit their best papers to you until you have a top reputation. You don't get a top reputation until you get enough high quality papers.

    I think some public journals have managed it, but its difficult. Optics Express is one excellent example.

  21. Here is the problem on Elsevier Going After Authors Sharing Their Own Papers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I work at a big national laboratory that is funded by the US government.

    Naturally the government needs to allocate limited funds among their various laboratories, each of which has more ideas for things to do than there is funding.

    In order to avoid corruption / favoritism (remember total we are talking billions of dollars), the government wants a quantifiable way to evaluate the performance of the laboratories in order to help determine how to best distribute the available funds.

    One of the metrics they have picked is number of publications in "high impact" journals. (its not easy to think of better quantifiable metrics).

    Most of the high impact journals are the old private journals like Physical Review, or Nature.

    So, if the scientists refuse to publish in these journals, the laboratory looks worse, and will tend to lose funds. This will direct money away from the best labs.

    Of course publishing in high impact journals also helps the scientists' careers - and the same sort of arguments apply.

    The journals of course are businesses and quite reasonably want to stay in business and make a profit.

    Sadly I don't have a good idea for a solution.

  22. Re:Predictable on FSF Responds To Microsoft's Privacy and Encryption Announcement · · Score: 1

    Some industries and experts can do this, but for the great majority of users trusting open source is quite similar to trusting a commercial vendor. The NSA has teh resources to flood discussion groups and review sites with posts that generate a false sense of security if they choose to do so.

    In the end I think the LAW is the only thing that can provide protection.

  23. Re:They will, without a doubt, die... on Thieves Who Stole Cobalt-60 Will Soon Be Dead · · Score: 1

    That is what seems strange. I assume the container had all sorts of warning labels an tri-foil radiation symbols. Most people are terrified by radiation - why would the thieves have opened it?

    One part of the problem is that our radiation labeling is poor. some smoke detectors have radiation symbols on the parts that have micro-Curi levels of radiatoin, that look very similar to the symbols on kilo-curie radiation sources.That factor of a BILLION is a big deal and the labeling should make it clear.

  24. Re:Is this about Communist China or the US? on Gov't Puts Witness On No Fly List, Then Denies Having Done So · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, it will get easier to tell them apart soon enough.......

  25. Re:Suggested Slashdot Poll on Fearing Government Surveillance, US Journalists Are Self-Censoring · · Score: 1

    What you posted is the sort of speech that IS still protected. We are all free to gripe and complain all we want. Post an article about how avoid lie detector tests, or real terrorist threats, or details of NSA surveillance and its a whole different issue.

    This doesn't directly affect most people, because most people don't have access to really dangerous information. It indirectly affects everyone because access to this sort of important information is not available.