The better plan would be to patent a gene on a specific crop that Monsanto also produces. Buy land adjacent to one of their production farms and grow your GM version of the plant. When your modified gene shows up in the seed sold by Monsanto, you sue them extra hard.
Perhaps explain evolution next. If you can make a small child understand, you've got some hope of making an adult creationist understand...
The primary difference here is that a small child might want to understand, while the creationist prefers to ignore logical explanations. Most creationists would be capable of learning and understanding if the desire were present.
I absolutely love the concept of these challenges to develop really good explanations of science related concepts. Children generally want to know why things are they way they are. Giving them clear lessons to their questions will only result in improved scientific literacy and interest. Very few things are as discouraging as an incorrect or poorly constructed explanation. For instance, my 5th grade science teacher (also a sports coach) totally screwed up the explanation of how the phases of the moon work, basically confusing them with eclipses. I'm sure that damaged several of my classmates.
Your scenario is not always plausible. Small private universities and rural state run universities may not have the required budget to acquire properly trained or capable personnel to implement and maintain your solution.Would you perform the tasks you describe for an annual salary of $35,000 to $45,000 with at most two people handling implementation, support and maintenance? Would you move to a small 10,000 person town that is at least 100 miles away from any metropolitan area to take that position? That is why many end up running Exchange along with spam blocking appliances. I previously worked at one of these locations. We started with Unix/Linux based Sendmail but moved to Exchange because of features that our administrative users needed, which weren't available in the Open Source community at the time. Additionally, it wasn't difficult to find employees who were competent enough to handle some of the normal support and maintenance tasks. Eventually we added our students to the Exchange system to prevent the IT staff from maintaining two completely separate platforms.
Later on, we looked at outsourcing student email to Google or Microsoft. There were several reasons for this. Among them were 1. Collaborative tools for creating and sharing documents, spreadsheets, and presentations that would be beneficial to the students; 2. Reduced storage and server expense;3. Zero licensing costs vs. upgrading client access licenses for the next version of Exchange; 4. Reduced administrative effort to support email; and 5. Built-in Disaster Recovery/Business Continuance operation of email.
In conclusion, each situation is different. If there is an abundance of technically competent and skilled IT workers in the area, a university might be able to do email the way you described. Otherwise, that approach becomes less feasible, opening the other options. As you stated in #2, a university that can't do what you say is in fact evaluating its IT capabilities by finding the most cost-effective and functional option available to it.
Not quite. Picking winners =/= winning at gambling. Margin of victory, aka the spread, comes into play. That is a bit harder to account for in these types of situations involving so much human variable. Granted, being able to identify some potential upsets could allow someone to bet big on those and become potentially rich.
I didn't read the article (yet), but I put together a game result predictor a couple of years ago that I ran against the tournament field with about an 83% success rate for the whole tournament. It was in the 93% range for the first two rounds. My algorithm utilized season long team statistics to get a team's baseline and then incorporated strength of schedule and seeding components. Just like you mentioned about how far a team has historically progressed from a specific seed, I used historical analysis of seed matchups as another component. Essentially those historical #12 beating #5 type of matchups included a slight scoring boost to the worse seed. In some pairings, that modifier kicked the scoring over the top, but in others it didn't. It turned out to be quite accurate and even predicted the Murray State win over Vanderbilt, among others.
I might make another run at tournament prediction this year using some different statistical metrics that are game pace independent rather than the raw scoring and defense that I used before. Game prediction simulators present unique challenges and are quite fun to work on, especially for nerds who also like sports.
You're right about the barrier to entry for serious contention. Look at how many GOP debates have invited Buddy Roemer during this presidential primary cycle. That guy is a former governor and also served as a member of the US House of Representatives, and he can't get in the room for a debate. His only presence has been on the internet, twitter, and random TV interviews that generally have him comment on the other candidates.
BTW, I'm not advocating the guy in any manner. He just seems like a really good example of your counterpoint.
It's great that the bill was introduced to Congress. Now let's see it pass. I have my doubts of that happening between the "Law and Order" and "Stop the Terrorists at All Costs to Liberty" types of congressmen that seem to control Congress.
I doubt private industry would have ever invented the internet. Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information. That was a purely military and academic interest. It was only the advertisement angle that got them to adopt any type of internet presence. I suspect at this point in time, if we were depending on private industry, we might have a few separate walled-garden AOL type of sites run by cable companies that have no inter-connectivity - basically like having Microsoft Encarta through cable access instead of a CD as in the early to mid 90's.
I had a similar experience with a backup solution purchased through Dell. This was about 9 years ago. My employer put me in charge of fixing our backup infrastructure which was previously based on ArcServe running on a couple of servers with HP DDS-3 drives attached. It only protected Windows servers, and did it badly. I decided to go with Dell for an automated tape library. They were one of our approved vendors, which was important at the state funded university for which I was working. On the front-end, we discussed our specific requirement with the Dell sales "engineers", explaining that we needed a software solution to pair with the library that could backup both Windows and Linux hosts. After some bad advice from them, we ended up with great hardware for the server and library, but software didn't meet our original spec since it didn't have any linux backup capability. Since we had a written list of specifications, we were able to get Dell to make it right. To their credit, they ate a significant cost difference between the software they started with and the Commvault Galaxy sent as a replacement. Getting sales and support on that software was a nightmare with Dell when we had to purchase additional client agent licenses or just get basic support. The Commvault software was great for us, and got even better when we started getting direct support through Commvault. Because of that experience, we later decided against purchasing a SAN through the Dell/EMC partnership.
Yes, you can use EAS or IMAP/CalDAV/CardDAV to get an iOS, Android or WM/WP device to work, but none of them are anywhere near as secure or manageable as BES. For the consumer or light business user, yes, EAS is fine, and geeks can suffer with IMAP+DAV and it's limitations, but as you increase either the number of users or the security and manageability requirements, they don't scale. Anyone who says otherwise has never actually used BES and has no idea what it does.
I disagree. I manage BES and ActiveSync in an enterprise environment. Some may like BES, but I don't see any real advantage in scalability in my environment. It is much easier to provision an Activesync device since I don't have to provide full access to the user's mailbox to a third party (BES service) user account, not to mention the security implications associated with a privileged account that can access everything in every BB users' mailboxes. If I need an audit trail on a user's mailbox, I would prefer all access to be done through the user's specific account. I find it just as simple to perform a remote wipe for a device through Exchange ActiveSync as I do with BES.
That said, as soon as someone duplicates what BES can do on iOS, Android and/or WP, BlackBerry is dead to the enterprise. It'll be Symbian all over again, and RIM will be left selling featurephones to teenagers, third-worlders, and third-world teenagers.
We're already there. MobileIron, Air-Watch, and Air Patrol are a few options out there. They cost money, but they have the functionality.
Additionally, the C-level administrators generally love the iPhone and iPad unless they have been long-term Blackberry users. Even those are frequently leaning toward the Apple devices. RIM has fallen behind in the usability department, and I am not sure they can catch up.
I have a hard time believing that BoA wouldn't have a geographically dispersed and replicated SAN. I work for a large regional bank that has this capability, and we test it frequently as part of SOX compliance. I'm not ruling that out, but it could explain the slowness in site response if they are running on secondary site hardware that isn't designed for the scale of the primary site.
That simple calculation doesn't consider geographic clustering of people. Since many people are clustered in large population centers that are outside of the predicted possible impact locations, you shouldn't include the entire world population in the reduction of personal odds to generalized odds. For instance, if it is predicted to impact the southern hemisphere, you could rule out all people except those on the African, South American, and Australian continents and islands south of the the equator.
My point is that the sites in.xxx will get indexed just like everything else. It will show up in search results just like everything else. Like another poster mentioned,.xxx would be targeted by users looking for whatever porn criteria they are trying to find. If you are concerned that.xxx doesn't show up when someone is using safe search, what do you think the intent of safe search is? Do you honestly think Google will avoid indexing the.xxx TLD and miss out on all of that ad revenue?
The primary place this move might affect porn sites is with people browsing for porn at work or at school, where those network owners might prefer to block it. That shouldn't affect the porn sites revenue greatly, as the location and time of porn access will get shifted to the home, etc.
Microsoft won't patent the dot-x-x-x keystroke. They will add it as a new key on the keyboard next to the Windows button (and that would be patentable if not for this prior art).
I don't think it would harm them at all. People that are trying to find porn aren't going to have any problem finding it. I doubt many people that do Google searches for non-porn terms but get some inadvertent porn links choose to bookmark those porn sites for later use. Likewise, if someone is searching for porn, and no.xxx sites are showing up in the results, that person is probably going to do a Google search for "Why aren't.xxx sites showing in my search results." Sand-boxing to a.xxx is a good thing for users who might be going to websites without thinking about alternative possibilities For example, "I was curious about running shoes, so I went to dicks.com thinking it would be the Dick's Sporting Goods site. Boy was I wrong." or a bigger issue in the US for a while "Went to whitehouse.com, but that wasn't the President's house."
Unless the officer utilized implied consent as the basis for the search, perhaps under the guise that he found the driver to be evasive when he suspected possible influence of drugs or alcohol. More information about implied consent can be found here.
In regards to doughnuts: I have a friend who worked as a police dispatcher. I made a cop / doughnut joke around her once. She informed me that cops only like donuts that are free to them. Unless someone else pays, they aren't likely to consume. If you have a bunch of doughnuts, you might, however, have an effective bribe.
Don't worry. The US has a corporate counter-strategy that could be known as the "Billion Clogged Arteries." The overt health destruction agency known as KFC is having a very successful deployment in China. Deep Fried Success
Have you been to an SEC stadium for a football game? No special technology is required to jam the cell phones. The extreme concentration of people with phones usually overwhelms the capacity of the cell networks. The real danger from the conference's perspective is the home viewer tweeting details of each play. Most of the cell activity at the game is people trying to coordinate with family and friends about locations and refreshments, game statistics, or scores from other games. Overall, the last thing the SEC needs to focus on is twitter effect on revenue. Their television contracts are huge in terms of both dollars and ratings. Given the choice of a Twitter feed for updates, television, or the in-stadium experience, even the most casual fan will pick Twitter last.
Twitter, however, is excellent for people trying to keep track of sports from colleges and universities that don't have large television or radio presence. My alma mater is a prime example. It's located in a very rural location and most graduates move far away after graduation. As an FCS/I-AA school, television appearances are rare. Only a couple of radio stations actually air the games. That leaves a streaming audio stream from the campus radio station and Twitter. Twitter has the added bonus of recreating some of community experience since many of my friends might be following along and commenting as things unfold.
Supporting my argument about the cell networks, I went to a game between my alma mater and Tennessee at Neyland Stadium last year. The game wasn't quite a sell-out, but attendance was around 99,000. Doing anything on the cell phone was an exercise in futility.
It's bad because it specifically targets one religion. That runs contrary to the concept of separation of church and state. Also, the legislature was wasting time debating and voting on this when it is not even remotely a problem in the state. There's not a single community in Tennessee where Muslims are concentrated enough to affect government policy to enact parts of Sharia Law on a town or city.
As a former Tennessean, it saddens to say that by moving to Mississippi for a job I ended up being in the more reasonably and progressively governed state. That might seem like an exaggeration, but the Government in Tennessee changed dramatically in the last state election. Before that, there was the occasional poorly written or conceived law that passed, like allowing guns in bars and other establishments where alcohol is served. Since the beginning of the year when the new legislature took office, there has been a deluge of this type of legislation or at least proposed bills. Examples off the top of my head include:
Don't Say Gay - Teachers in TN can't acknowledge the existence of homosexuality in the classroom
Ban on Sharia Law
Overturning a Nashville Metro Anti-discrimination law with a state law making local government laws on discrimination illegal
Making it illegal for teachers to unionize
Anti-evolution education / Protection to teach Creationism
To put it simply, the Tennessee Legislature is putting the state on the path to race to the bottom. Congratulations Mississippi and Arkansas!
The better plan would be to patent a gene on a specific crop that Monsanto also produces. Buy land adjacent to one of their production farms and grow your GM version of the plant. When your modified gene shows up in the seed sold by Monsanto, you sue them extra hard.
Perhaps explain evolution next. If you can make a small child understand, you've got some hope of making an adult creationist understand...
The primary difference here is that a small child might want to understand, while the creationist prefers to ignore logical explanations. Most creationists would be capable of learning and understanding if the desire were present.
I absolutely love the concept of these challenges to develop really good explanations of science related concepts. Children generally want to know why things are they way they are. Giving them clear lessons to their questions will only result in improved scientific literacy and interest. Very few things are as discouraging as an incorrect or poorly constructed explanation. For instance, my 5th grade science teacher (also a sports coach) totally screwed up the explanation of how the phases of the moon work, basically confusing them with eclipses. I'm sure that damaged several of my classmates.
Your scenario is not always plausible. Small private universities and rural state run universities may not have the required budget to acquire properly trained or capable personnel to implement and maintain your solution .Would you perform the tasks you describe for an annual salary of $35,000 to $45,000 with at most two people handling implementation, support and maintenance? Would you move to a small 10,000 person town that is at least 100 miles away from any metropolitan area to take that position? That is why many end up running Exchange along with spam blocking appliances. I previously worked at one of these locations. We started with Unix/Linux based Sendmail but moved to Exchange because of features that our administrative users needed, which weren't available in the Open Source community at the time. Additionally, it wasn't difficult to find employees who were competent enough to handle some of the normal support and maintenance tasks. Eventually we added our students to the Exchange system to prevent the IT staff from maintaining two completely separate platforms.
Later on, we looked at outsourcing student email to Google or Microsoft. There were several reasons for this. Among them were 1. Collaborative tools for creating and sharing documents, spreadsheets, and presentations that would be beneficial to the students; 2. Reduced storage and server expense;3. Zero licensing costs vs. upgrading client access licenses for the next version of Exchange; 4. Reduced administrative effort to support email; and 5. Built-in Disaster Recovery/Business Continuance operation of email.
In conclusion, each situation is different. If there is an abundance of technically competent and skilled IT workers in the area, a university might be able to do email the way you described. Otherwise, that approach becomes less feasible, opening the other options. As you stated in #2, a university that can't do what you say is in fact evaluating its IT capabilities by finding the most cost-effective and functional option available to it.
Not quite. Picking winners =/= winning at gambling. Margin of victory, aka the spread, comes into play. That is a bit harder to account for in these types of situations involving so much human variable. Granted, being able to identify some potential upsets could allow someone to bet big on those and become potentially rich.
I didn't read the article (yet), but I put together a game result predictor a couple of years ago that I ran against the tournament field with about an 83% success rate for the whole tournament. It was in the 93% range for the first two rounds. My algorithm utilized season long team statistics to get a team's baseline and then incorporated strength of schedule and seeding components. Just like you mentioned about how far a team has historically progressed from a specific seed, I used historical analysis of seed matchups as another component. Essentially those historical #12 beating #5 type of matchups included a slight scoring boost to the worse seed. In some pairings, that modifier kicked the scoring over the top, but in others it didn't. It turned out to be quite accurate and even predicted the Murray State win over Vanderbilt, among others.
I might make another run at tournament prediction this year using some different statistical metrics that are game pace independent rather than the raw scoring and defense that I used before. Game prediction simulators present unique challenges and are quite fun to work on, especially for nerds who also like sports.
You're right about the barrier to entry for serious contention. Look at how many GOP debates have invited Buddy Roemer during this presidential primary cycle. That guy is a former governor and also served as a member of the US House of Representatives, and he can't get in the room for a debate. His only presence has been on the internet, twitter, and random TV interviews that generally have him comment on the other candidates.
BTW, I'm not advocating the guy in any manner. He just seems like a really good example of your counterpoint.
I read it and thought, "Why would working at Pixar require Top Secret Clearance?" My only guess is they were working on military simulation graphics.
It's great that the bill was introduced to Congress. Now let's see it pass. I have my doubts of that happening between the "Law and Order" and "Stop the Terrorists at All Costs to Liberty" types of congressmen that seem to control Congress.
I doubt private industry would have ever invented the internet. Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information. That was a purely military and academic interest. It was only the advertisement angle that got them to adopt any type of internet presence. I suspect at this point in time, if we were depending on private industry, we might have a few separate walled-garden AOL type of sites run by cable companies that have no inter-connectivity - basically like having Microsoft Encarta through cable access instead of a CD as in the early to mid 90's.
I had a similar experience with a backup solution purchased through Dell. This was about 9 years ago. My employer put me in charge of fixing our backup infrastructure which was previously based on ArcServe running on a couple of servers with HP DDS-3 drives attached. It only protected Windows servers, and did it badly. I decided to go with Dell for an automated tape library. They were one of our approved vendors, which was important at the state funded university for which I was working. On the front-end, we discussed our specific requirement with the Dell sales "engineers", explaining that we needed a software solution to pair with the library that could backup both Windows and Linux hosts. After some bad advice from them, we ended up with great hardware for the server and library, but software didn't meet our original spec since it didn't have any linux backup capability. Since we had a written list of specifications, we were able to get Dell to make it right. To their credit, they ate a significant cost difference between the software they started with and the Commvault Galaxy sent as a replacement. Getting sales and support on that software was a nightmare with Dell when we had to purchase additional client agent licenses or just get basic support. The Commvault software was great for us, and got even better when we started getting direct support through Commvault. Because of that experience, we later decided against purchasing a SAN through the Dell/EMC partnership.
Yes, you can use EAS or IMAP/CalDAV/CardDAV to get an iOS, Android or WM/WP device to work, but none of them are anywhere near as secure or manageable as BES. For the consumer or light business user, yes, EAS is fine, and geeks can suffer with IMAP+DAV and it's limitations, but as you increase either the number of users or the security and manageability requirements, they don't scale. Anyone who says otherwise has never actually used BES and has no idea what it does.
I disagree. I manage BES and ActiveSync in an enterprise environment. Some may like BES, but I don't see any real advantage in scalability in my environment. It is much easier to provision an Activesync device since I don't have to provide full access to the user's mailbox to a third party (BES service) user account, not to mention the security implications associated with a privileged account that can access everything in every BB users' mailboxes. If I need an audit trail on a user's mailbox, I would prefer all access to be done through the user's specific account. I find it just as simple to perform a remote wipe for a device through Exchange ActiveSync as I do with BES.
That said, as soon as someone duplicates what BES can do on iOS, Android and/or WP, BlackBerry is dead to the enterprise. It'll be Symbian all over again, and RIM will be left selling featurephones to teenagers, third-worlders, and third-world teenagers.
We're already there. MobileIron, Air-Watch, and Air Patrol are a few options out there. They cost money, but they have the functionality.
Additionally, the C-level administrators generally love the iPhone and iPad unless they have been long-term Blackberry users. Even those are frequently leaning toward the Apple devices. RIM has fallen behind in the usability department, and I am not sure they can catch up.
I have a hard time believing that BoA wouldn't have a geographically dispersed and replicated SAN. I work for a large regional bank that has this capability, and we test it frequently as part of SOX compliance. I'm not ruling that out, but it could explain the slowness in site response if they are running on secondary site hardware that isn't designed for the scale of the primary site.
That is a metric measuring tape. You are looking at centimeters marked in increments of 10, also known as decimeters.
That simple calculation doesn't consider geographic clustering of people. Since many people are clustered in large population centers that are outside of the predicted possible impact locations, you shouldn't include the entire world population in the reduction of personal odds to generalized odds. For instance, if it is predicted to impact the southern hemisphere, you could rule out all people except those on the African, South American, and Australian continents and islands south of the the equator.
My point is that the sites in .xxx will get indexed just like everything else. It will show up in search results just like everything else. Like another poster mentioned, .xxx would be targeted by users looking for whatever porn criteria they are trying to find. If you are concerned that .xxx doesn't show up when someone is using safe search, what do you think the intent of safe search is? Do you honestly think Google will avoid indexing the .xxx TLD and miss out on all of that ad revenue?
The primary place this move might affect porn sites is with people browsing for porn at work or at school, where those network owners might prefer to block it. That shouldn't affect the porn sites revenue greatly, as the location and time of porn access will get shifted to the home, etc.
Microsoft won't patent the dot-x-x-x keystroke. They will add it as a new key on the keyboard next to the Windows button (and that would be patentable if not for this prior art).
I don't think it would harm them at all. People that are trying to find porn aren't going to have any problem finding it. I doubt many people that do Google searches for non-porn terms but get some inadvertent porn links choose to bookmark those porn sites for later use. Likewise, if someone is searching for porn, and no .xxx sites are showing up in the results, that person is probably going to do a Google search for "Why aren't .xxx sites showing in my search results." Sand-boxing to a .xxx is a good thing for users who might be going to websites without thinking about alternative possibilities For example, "I was curious about running shoes, so I went to dicks.com thinking it would be the Dick's Sporting Goods site. Boy was I wrong." or a bigger issue in the US for a while "Went to whitehouse.com, but that wasn't the President's house."
I don't think it's a coincidence. System Admins deserve some free chicken wing love today.
At least that's how it works in the U.S.
Unless the officer utilized implied consent as the basis for the search, perhaps under the guise that he found the driver to be evasive when he suspected possible influence of drugs or alcohol. More information about implied consent can be found here.
In regards to doughnuts: I have a friend who worked as a police dispatcher. I made a cop / doughnut joke around her once. She informed me that cops only like donuts that are free to them. Unless someone else pays, they aren't likely to consume. If you have a bunch of doughnuts, you might, however, have an effective bribe.
Don't worry. The US has a corporate counter-strategy that could be known as the "Billion Clogged Arteries." The overt health destruction agency known as KFC is having a very successful deployment in China.
Deep Fried Success
Have you been to an SEC stadium for a football game? No special technology is required to jam the cell phones. The extreme concentration of people with phones usually overwhelms the capacity of the cell networks. The real danger from the conference's perspective is the home viewer tweeting details of each play. Most of the cell activity at the game is people trying to coordinate with family and friends about locations and refreshments, game statistics, or scores from other games. Overall, the last thing the SEC needs to focus on is twitter effect on revenue. Their television contracts are huge in terms of both dollars and ratings. Given the choice of a Twitter feed for updates, television, or the in-stadium experience, even the most casual fan will pick Twitter last.
Twitter, however, is excellent for people trying to keep track of sports from colleges and universities that don't have large television or radio presence. My alma mater is a prime example. It's located in a very rural location and most graduates move far away after graduation. As an FCS/I-AA school, television appearances are rare. Only a couple of radio stations actually air the games. That leaves a streaming audio stream from the campus radio station and Twitter. Twitter has the added bonus of recreating some of community experience since many of my friends might be following along and commenting as things unfold.
Supporting my argument about the cell networks, I went to a game between my alma mater and Tennessee at Neyland Stadium last year. The game wasn't quite a sell-out, but attendance was around 99,000. Doing anything on the cell phone was an exercise in futility.
I had the exact same thought and was reading comments to make sure I wasn't the only one.
It's bad because it specifically targets one religion. That runs contrary to the concept of separation of church and state. Also, the legislature was wasting time debating and voting on this when it is not even remotely a problem in the state. There's not a single community in Tennessee where Muslims are concentrated enough to affect government policy to enact parts of Sharia Law on a town or city.
As a former Tennessean, it saddens to say that by moving to Mississippi for a job I ended up being in the more reasonably and progressively governed state. That might seem like an exaggeration, but the Government in Tennessee changed dramatically in the last state election. Before that, there was the occasional poorly written or conceived law that passed, like allowing guns in bars and other establishments where alcohol is served. Since the beginning of the year when the new legislature took office, there has been a deluge of this type of legislation or at least proposed bills. Examples off the top of my head include:
To put it simply, the Tennessee Legislature is putting the state on the path to race to the bottom. Congratulations Mississippi and Arkansas!