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User: MyFirstNameIsPaul

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  1. Re:It takes only 5 minutes to load a dishwasher on Google's Eric Schmidt Says People Want Dish-Washing Robots To Clean Up the Kitchen More Than Any Other Kind (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Exactly. In looking through the comments so far, it appears /. is still inhabited by young, single people that do very little cooking. I estimate the washing of dishes to be at least half of the time to cook (assuming prep and clean, as "cooking" is usually unattended), and even more time when serving multi-course meals, such as holiday meals for a group of people.

    Taken to its conclusion, time tending to cooking duties can be cut in half at such gatherings. This is worth a lot of money.

  2. I have been saying this for almost a decade. on Google's Eric Schmidt Says People Want Dish-Washing Robots To Clean Up the Kitchen More Than Any Other Kind (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    When people travel thousands of miles to visit someone they rarely see, but care about very much, who the hell wants to do dishes? This is time that is invaluable and I'm fairly certain even a price of $20,000 will be a worthwhile expense to millions if not tens of millions of households.

  3. Re:They will take them while you are smoking on Startup Plans To Clean Up Cigarette Butts Using Crows (popularmechanics.com) · · Score: 1

    Ever try to take a cigarette from a smoker? Yeah, that won't last long.

  4. Another Graphene breakthrough, ugh. on New Battery Technology Draws Energy Directly From The Human Body (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 4, Funny

    Some folks call it a Graphene; I call it a Flubber.

  5. Re:Another Earth on Slashdot Asks: What's Your Favorite Sci-Fi Movie? · · Score: 1

    With original score by Fall On Your Sword, makers of Shatner Of The Mount, to boot.

  6. Re:Primer - 6000$ one on Slashdot Asks: What's Your Favorite Sci-Fi Movie? · · Score: 1

    I felt the point of Primer was that man cannot control the future, which is why I didn't watch it again - I was sated with that.

  7. Re:Spaceballs on Slashdot Asks: What's Your Favorite Sci-Fi Movie? · · Score: 1

    I had the same experience. This Brooks piece was more appealing for us adolescents and teens in the 80s. However, other Brooks pieces got better with age, especially Blazing Saddles (I recall not understanding and being largely bored with the Governor scenes - now they are my favorite: "Work-work-work...")

  8. +1 for Primer on Slashdot Asks: What's Your Favorite Sci-Fi Movie? · · Score: 1

    I think this was the first core Sci-Fi film I watched and felt like I really got the whole thing. I never went back and watched a second time, because that is really the whole point - man cannot create a desired future, it is just too complex. I totally dug that the film maker treated the audience as intelligent viewers, something that can't work in a big-budget piece (see Starship Troopers).

  9. Re:Starship Troopers on Slashdot Asks: What's Your Favorite Sci-Fi Movie? · · Score: 1

    It looks like nearly everybody here missed the point of the movie. I missed it also, and then I watched RedLetterMedia cover it in this episode of re:View, and really felt humbled and disappointed that I completely missed the point of a brilliant piece.

  10. How do you feel about UT patent management? on Interviews: Ask Lithium-Ion Battery Inventor John Goodenough a Question · · Score: 2

    Somewhere around the mid- to late 2000s, I was researching LiFEPO4 patents, and came across the University of Texas (UT) patent for which you are listed as an inventor. When I investigated licensing the patent, it was so expensive that it was not profitable to bother with the license at all. The factory partner I worked with was in China, and they were mass-producing the same LiFePO4 for jurisdictions not impacted by the patent.

    As I understand it, the law firm that UT chose to manage the patent set a price that was incredibly high. Then, invariably, some company would build a market for a LiFePO4 product that violated the patent, and then the law firm would step in after the company had actually done some business and sue them for all they were worth. I have to admit that this last bit was told to me by some battery industry veterans, but it seems plausible based on how the battery industry works.

    Nonetheless, the decision of UT to exclusively grant permission to the law firm to manage the patent kept the invention out of the market and likely cost UT some incredible amount (billions?) in royalties.

    How do you feel about your invention, which clearly made mass-production of the chemistry viable, being effectively kept off the market for so long?

    (BTW, when UT lowered their prices with, like, 5 years or so left on the patent, the factory I worked with immediately purchased the licensed material for selling their batteries in the U.S.)

  11. Re:Who will algo the algos? on Google's Featured Snippets Are Worse Than Fake News (theoutline.com) · · Score: 1

    "It can only be attributable to human error."

  12. Who will algo the algos? on Google's Featured Snippets Are Worse Than Fake News (theoutline.com) · · Score: 1

    When I read these stories, I find myself wondering if I am the only one aware that humans write algorithms.

  13. I need a new plugin. on Mozilla Will Deprecate XUL Add-ons Before the End of 2017 · · Score: 1

    To tell me which installed plugins are going to die.

  14. Re:Darn, moving to Linux in 2020 on CNET Editor Rails Against Non-Consensual Windows Updates (cnet.com) · · Score: 1

    The longer, the better.

  15. Darn, moving to Linux in 2020 on CNET Editor Rails Against Non-Consensual Windows Updates (cnet.com) · · Score: 1

    I was really hoping that Microsoft would realize their blunder, as they did with Vista and 8, but it looks like they aren't seeing it. I'm guessing maybe they have one more release before 7 is dead, but I'm no longer hopeful.

  16. Re:Goolge needs to ban carrier builds and let peop on With Cyanogen Dead, Google's Control Over Android Is Tighter Than Ever (greenbot.com) · · Score: 1

    Did the phone actually connect and state LTE? HSPA+ and lower work without issue, but LTE I have yet to see work, including a friend who has one of the OnePlus phones.

  17. Re:Goolge needs to ban carrier builds and let peop on With Cyanogen Dead, Google's Control Over Android Is Tighter Than Ever (greenbot.com) · · Score: 1

    Is this correct for AT&T? When I have experimented with non-AT&T phones, AT&T will not allow access to their LTE service, so always end up stuck at HSPA+.

  18. Re:Maybe TCL will make an Android Bold? on BlackBerry Stops Making Phones, Licenses the BlackBerry Name To TCL For Android Phones (pcworld.com) · · Score: 1

    I realize I'm getting really nit-picky here, but I also want the trackpad. That is another invaluable tool, especially when used for editing. I have yet to see an interface that is as effective at manually editing. I find most people who try to debate me on this topic have never had a job where actually had to respond, in a professional manner, to a high volume of emails. Everyone else I've discussed this with who has such work experience is in agreement that the touchscreen keyboards are a step backwards in productivity.

  19. Re:Maybe TCL will make an Android Bold? on BlackBerry Stops Making Phones, Licenses the BlackBerry Name To TCL For Android Phones (pcworld.com) · · Score: 2

    Right, which is why it takes considerably longer to type the same email, as I was indicating with the word "quickly". By my estimate, it takes up to five times longer to send a reply on touchscreen than on BlackBerry keyboard, with the biggest time waster coming from the pathetic editing interface that's used for, you know, corrections from proofreading. The sig entry coming because there are still problems. Nothing sloppy about it - respond to 100 emails a day on your touch screen and guess what happens despite proofreading? Stupid spelling errors, and I long ago turned off autocorrect because it never seems to know what word I'm actually trying to type.

  20. Maybe TCL will make an Android Bold? on BlackBerry Stops Making Phones, Licenses the BlackBerry Name To TCL For Android Phones (pcworld.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a salesman, I sorely miss the physical keyboard. For those of us who need to quickly bang out good looking, professional emails, I have not found a single touch-screen keyboard that holds a candle to the physical keyboards of the classic BlackBerry phones, especially the Bold 9900. I had to add back in to my sig "sent from my phone" because of the persistent typos.

  21. Re:Only Fixed by Resigning on Reddit CEO Steve Huffman: I Screwed Up and I Want Reddit To Trust Me Again (cnbc.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    The site was founded on fake. They never had integrity, never will.

  22. Re:Trump is love on Twitters Says It Will Ban Trump If He Breaks Hate-Speech Rules (qz.com) · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have similar thoughts. Let's send one of our biggest personalities to some woeful startup. I do hope that in the event of such an occurrence, Trump has the business sense to just start his own network or work with someone. Gab is terrible. It uses unlimited up/down voting.

  23. I'm suffering math or comprehension issues. on Google Asked to Remove a Billion 'Pirate' Search Results in a Year (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't "most" of 900 million be a number greater than 450 million?

  24. Re:Flabberghasted! on Microsoft Shares Windows 10 Telemetry Data With Third Parties (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    As expected. Fanboys will be out in force on a thread like this.

  25. Re:Flabberghasted! on Microsoft Shares Windows 10 Telemetry Data With Third Parties (betanews.com) · · Score: 0

    Dollars to doughnuts that gets flipped after updates every six months or so.