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User: asicsolutions

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  1. Re:Other sources of cheap batteries on People Are Using Recycled Laptop Batteries To Power Their Homes (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    They'll look particularly nice around the holidays. Just install them in your fireplace and gather the family around. Chestnuts roasting on the Galaxy Note 7 open fire...

  2. F-22 Countermeasures developed on Slackware kinda on OpenSource.com Test-Drives Linux Distros From 1993 To 2003 (opensource.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Worked on ASIC development for F-22 back in the 90's. Management had stupid idea of putting us all in a big room where we had to share Sun IPX's to work on ASIC design. I got permission to build linux PCs so we could work from our desks. I used slackware for X windows terminals. In true defense contractor fashion the PC people bought us the SVGA graphics cards I asked for, but VGA monitors. Luckily I was able to return them and get state of the art 17" 1024x768 ones :)

  3. Re:Engine restart is easy... on Indian Mars Mission Has Completed 95% of Its Journey Without a Hitch · · Score: 1
  4. Re:This has little to do with copyright law on $200 For a Bound Textbook That You Can't Keep? · · Score: 1

    When I did my undergrad, I only had one professor who made us use his book. He sent us to Kinko's and we bought an essentially photocopied version for about $20. It was 1/5 the price of all my other textbooks.

  5. Re:Doubtful on Obama Announces Surveillance Reforms · · Score: 1

    What I really said is "If you like your privacy you can keep it... Only if it hasn't been compromised already"

  6. Re:Nixon 1 - Cancer 0 on Killing Cancer By Retraining the Patient's Immune System · · Score: 1

    Yes, because we know no other people in the world get cancer. Not in the third world. Of course sharks also can't get cancer: Or animals: Have your shark fin soup lately to help ward away the cancer? The only animal that apparently doesn't get cancer is The naked mole rat:

  7. LGPL Open Graphics IP on AMD Intentionally Added Artificial Limitations To Their HDMI Adapters · · Score: 4, Interesting

    gpl-gpu kickstarter launches tomorrow. A fully LGPL 2D/ 3D graphics accelerator written in Verilog. Currently running in an Arria IIgx. GPLGPU Kickstarter

  8. Open Graphics (GPL-GPU) on Nvidia Removed Linux Driver Feature For Feature Parity With Windows · · Score: 2

    Just thought I'd post that our kickstarter goes live on 10/9 for an LGPL graphics core. It is a complete 2D/3D Verilog implementation. The current version is PCI based and runs on Altera/ Xilinx or ASIC. 100% clean and synthesizable Verilog. We have a number of stretch goals that bring new features, generic interfaces so you could run on a PCIe FPGA board or an SOC part. The ultimate stretch goal would be a Unified Shader design.

    We have pictures and will have video from the FPGA board on the kickstarter site (live on 10/9),

    Our Facebook page (pictures and live now): Silicon Spectrum FB Page

    Our Home page (out of date): Silicon Spectrum Home

    GPLGPU.com (not live yet): GPL GPU site (not currently live)

    It won't beat an Nvidia or AMD part in price/ performance (unless someone wants to do an ASIC based on it), but the source is open and no risk of ever not knowing what is inside in the future.

  9. Re:Chances of this being something are a million t on Mystery Intergalactic Radio Bursts Detected · · Score: 2

    Million to one chances occur 9/10 times. (Terry Pratchet (paraphrased))

  10. Data Caps on 2013 U.S. Wireless Network Tests: AT&T Fastest, Verizon Most Reliable · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I did read the article.
    I'm surprised part of the rankings didn't address this.
    I have Sprint and I have used upwards of 8GB in a month, something prohibitive with another carrier.

  11. Serious Question: spoofed caller ID and NSA on Google Asks Government For More Transparency, Other Groups Push Back Against NSA · · Score: 2

    How well can the NSA determine the calls source?
    I get telemarketer calls daily: "Pack your bags..."
    Always spoofed caller ID from a VOIP indian call center.
    The phone company can't seem to block these crap calls.
    What's to stop someone from framing someone if they got a hold of a suspicious #.
    Hate your spouse, spoof their # calling it. Hate your political opponent, do it to them.

    Just curious.

  12. The government should be all over this since they are going to the "give me all your data" model.
    Google should soon safely be able to say: We got one FISA request last year.

  13. Re:Hmmm.... on Israel Airport Security Allowed To Read Tourists' Email · · Score: 1

    I think the bigger thing is that security starts before you even enter the airport. They have less flights, so it's easier, but they check the lists.
    Entering the airport you go through security where they check the car. My father in law is a native, they checked his car.
    The Janitors are all ex-military or at least look it. They also carry radios and have bulges in the back of their uniform. I'm sure they are packing.
    I'm also sure they listen to everyone talking in the airport. They take security seriously.

    In fact. Leaving the US we weren't allowed to bring bottles for our daughter. We also got hand sanitizer taken away (it was about 1/2 of an 8oz bottle but since the bottle was big it was denied even though the contents fell below the amount allowed. When we left amsterdam, we walked right through w/ the bottles and anything else.

  14. Re:PostgreSQL used GPU 2 years ago on Harvard/MIT Student Creates GPU Database, Hacker-Style · · Score: 2

    Altera and Xilinx both have high level synthesis tools out that can target FPGA's using generic C. The Altera one allows you to target GPU's, CPU's or FPGA's. In the case of highly parallel tasks, an FPGA can run many times faster than even a GPU. There are fairly large gate count devices with ARM cores available now so you move the tasks around for better performance. I'd love to see some of these tasks targeting these devices.

  15. The problem is Windows 8 on Microsoft Blames PC Makers For Windows Failure · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My ten year old daughter was in tears because she couldn't figure out her new windows 8 laptop.
    Now the laptop was underpowered, but it couldn't play DVDs out of the box and she couldn't figure out how to run her software on it thanks to the removal of the start button. Also, Toshiba added its bonus software which seemed to take over the whole computer periodically since pop ups now take the whole screen.
    I was frustrated trying to use it until I found a start menu hack and added it back.

    I installed VLC so she can play DVDs and she has a start menu and now is very happy. Perhaps MS shouldn't have tried to do too much too soon?

  16. Re:time to face facts on Supreme Court Won't Hear Body-Scanner Appeal · · Score: 1

    I took a trip to Florida with my son a couple of weeks after 9/11. The flights were insanely cheap and there was no way in hell another 9/11 would happen. No one on the plane would have sat idle. Look at the crazies who have tried to get into cockpits since 9/11. They have been tackled, pummeled and held down. The stupid scanners don't do anything anyways. Look at the people who have managed to get things through inadvertently (Adam savage with a rapier like razor) or through testing. Also, anything implanted below the skin doesn't show, so there's your next attack.

  17. Re:well, on Supreme Court Won't Hear Body-Scanner Appeal · · Score: 1

    I've flown with my kids a couple of times in the last few months. When a parent or family with young children comes through, the metal detector suddenly becomes "good enough" for them. I was conflicted when I went on my trip. I had a 3 and 10 year old girl and I wasn't going to have them groped and I was seriously worried about the exposure to the machine, but surprise, off we went to a separate line and through the metal detector, myself included.

    Of course on the other side was a guy in a wheelchair who obviously had some kind of muscle problems, his legs were like sticks, but they had to reach under and check out everything since he couldn't stand up.

    Sigh

  18. Re:Radiation in Denver is unavoidable on The Panic Over Fukushima · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've avoided it my entire life here in New Hampshire.

  19. Something the Mythbusters can test! on Thunderstorms Proven To Create Antimatter · · Score: 2

    Jamie want big boom!

  20. Re:What a load of shit on Wikileaks Booted From Amazon · · Score: 1

    Please do not lump Afghanistan in with Iraq. The Taliban harbored the mastermind of September 11th. There are other countries who might have just gone in and leveled Afghanistan. Iraq is another story all together...

  21. Re:Logic on Judge Berates Prosecutors In Xbox Modding Trial · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, a better argument is modding a boiler so you don't have to buy a particular gas companies gas, but now can use 'homebrew' gas.

  22. Forget the crater... Crop circles on The Story of My As-Yet-Unverified Impact Crater · · Score: 1

    The sinkhole or crater is nothing. Look at the patterns on the right and the mysterious impression below. I can just about make it out "G..o..o.." damn. The aliens are telling us something.

  23. Simple question to determine # of Rabbits on Researchers Race To Recover Radioactive Rabbits · · Score: 1

    What is the half-life of radioactive rabbit dropping?

  24. Mass market games on Desktop Linux Is Dead · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only reason I run windows on my computer at home and my kids computer is games. Fallout 3, Fallout New Vegas, Civ5, Steam. If all of those were available under Linux _At the same time_ as the PC counterparts, I would wipe windows off my PC tonight. I am writing this on my work laptop HP DV8t running opensuse 11.3.

  25. I call BS on Tapping Solar Wind's Renewable Energy · · Score: 1

    A 1000 meter cable obviously means that it's only orbiting 1000 meters off the ground. That's the cable is the plug into the grid, right? Sheesh. It would have to me at least twice that to be practical. Do I have to think of everything around here.