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User: jpstanle

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  1. Re:One big one on Samsung Seeking Ban of iPhone 4S in Europe · · Score: 2

    It has a WCDMA radio in it. Samsung holds a patent related to that kind of thing. In the older iPhones, only the Verizon ones had CDMA radios, the AT&T ones had GSM. Now I suppose Samsung could have gone after them, but that might risk angering Verizon and Samsung doesn't want to do that. This one though, all phones have both radios so they can go after it and try to block it generally.

    Every single iPhone since the release of the iPhone 3G has a WCMDA radio in it. While the 2G GSM standard used a combination of TMDA and FDMA, the 3G UMTS standards (Commonly referred to as 3G GSM because they evolved from GSM/GPRS/EDGE, but aren't really GSM at all) use WCMDA technology. CDMA and WCDMA are very general multiple access schemes that are used in multiple standards. When people say "CDMA" talking about an access standard, they probably mean something like CDMA2000 or another standard from that family.

  2. Re:Sounds like what most people would want on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This may have been true for me a few years back, but Discovery Channel isn't compelling anymore. Most of it is scripted "reality" show drivel... Hardly any good documentaries like the good old days. MythBusters is good, and I still like Modern Marvels on the history channel, but most of that is available online through netflix or some other avenue. Nearly all new documentaries worth watching come from PBS or the BBC. These days the only 'documentaries' on the Discovery channel are pipedream speculation about absurd engineering projects that will never be built.

  3. Re:Don't see the problem. on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 2

    whereas pricey sports channels (which cable companies have to pay for) will become HBO-like premium services.

    So why is this an issue? If I don't want to watch ESPN 9, why should I pay for it?

    Yeah, I mean if I choose pay full retail price for my smartphone, I don't have to subsidize cheap smartphones for people on 2 year contracts.

    Oh wait...

  4. Re:Sounds like what most people would want on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 1
  5. Would be nice if I could get JUST sports on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 1

    Live sports and racing are the only thing that could potentially entice me to pay for cable. Any scripted television I might be interested in watching is easily available streaming online or free OTA. I have no interest in actually keeping up with the kardhashians, and thus have no interest in paying $50+/month for crap like E network or MTV. I want to watch college football and motorcycle racing. If I could get all the sports channels for $20/month, I'd fork it over, even if that is a huge mark up.

  6. Re:Sounds like what most people would want on The Cable Industry's a La Carte Bait and Switch · · Score: 1

    Can you cite a reference for that? That assertion sounds unrealistic to me. I'm working entirely on anecdotal evidence, but I'd be willing to bet the ESPN is by far the single most watched cable-only channel in the US.

    For me as a sports fan, ESPN is the only thing that could have enticed me to pay for cable over the past 5 or 6 years. Live sports are the only thing these days that you can't get online or over-the-air.

  7. For what it's worth, the NSA DOES own its own fab on The NSA Wants Its Own Smartphone · · Score: 1
  8. Re:What about latency? on Alcatel-Lucent Boosts Copper Broadband To 100Mbps · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know what planet you live on, but here on earth waves propagate through copper transmission lines at a speed on the order of about half the speed of light. The latency due to a copper cable with a .66 velocity factor over a 10km run is about .050 milliseconds. Considering the latency of the IP network that you're connected to is probably at least 50 ms to even the closest nodes, I doubt a 0.1% increase is going to bother you.

    The biggest problem of copper is not latency, it's that you have to lay the fucking cable.

  9. Re:The iPad touch-screen keyboard is infuriating. on Steve Jobs, Before the iPad, On Why Tablets Suck · · Score: 1

    You missed my point. I never said handwriting recognition or a physical keyboard was a better option. If anything, my point was that handwriting recognition had no business replacing any kind of keyboard, hard or soft. Instead, stylus input is valuable as a free-form entry tool, for note-taking, sketching, or recording mathematical symbols.

    I didn't mean to single out the iPad alone, I was more interested in pointing out a shortcoming of the tablet form factor as a whole. Tablets are great for certain roles, but they have no business in any task that requires a large amount of ASCII text entry. If you're going to be writing code or typing a term paper, it's hard to argue against a physical keyboard.

    Stylus input, just as keyboard input or touchscreen input, has a place in consumer electronics. However, it needs to be viewed as an augmentation rather than a replacement. In the past, there were attempts to use the stylus to replace the keyboard or mouse, and I think the historic failures of the stylus as an input device have caused the tablet industry to stubbornly refuse to include a valuable and appropriate form of input. Do you not think the iPad would be an even more appealing device if it included a pressure sensitive stylus? Touch could still serve as the primary input, but the stylus would be there for jotting down notes, drawings, or formulae. I think that would be pretty sweet.

  10. The iPad touch-screen keyboard is infuriating. on Steve Jobs, Before the iPad, On Why Tablets Suck · · Score: 1

    I don't own an iPad, but I have used friends' iPads on several occasions. They pretty neat little devices, and I think they have their role as a consumer electronics device and in certain industries (medicine, etc). However, text entry is an obvious failure in my opinion. Touchscreen keyboards make sense in a smartphone form factor where one can hold the phone and type with their thumbs. But a larger tablet has to be laid on a surface or else all you can do is hunt and peck with a single finger. It's fine for a URL or a word or two, but typing more than that is a chore at best.

    Real-time handwriting recognition is kind of misguided, if you need a lot of ASCII text, then you ought to be entering data with a physical keyboard. But if you need a flexible and efficient manner of recording data in a tablet form factor, handwriting is the only way to go. You can do the handwriting recognition after the fact if you need to at all. Styluses shouldn't be viewed as a replacement for text entry, but an augmentation for when free-form entry makes sense like note-taking, sketching, etc.

  11. Good Reference Material on Virginia Quakes on 5.8 Earthquake Hits East Coast of the US · · Score: 1

    Good Information on history and science of earthquakes in Virginia

    I found interesting that the chances of a quake in excess of 4.75 magnitude in Virginia over 100 years are 10-20%. This quake was over ten times as powerful at a 5.9.

  12. Wow you Californians must be so tough! on 5.8 Earthquake Hits East Coast of the US · · Score: 1

    I understand the natural instinct for Californians to be dismissive, but this was the largest quake in the recorded history of Virginia, and the strongest on the east coast in over 100 years. The media is over-hyping it for sure, but it is historically and scientifically significant. Also, keep in mind that buildings on the east coast are not designed to withstand seismic events to the same extent as those in California, and are on the whole MUCH older than west coast buildings.

    Good Virginia Earthquake Information

  13. Re:Being in Richmond on 5.8 Earthquake Hits East Coast of the US · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points, because this quake was definitely NOT in Northern Virginia. Sure it was felt there, it was quite significant even here in Frederick, MD, but the quake was centered in Mineral, VA, just outside of the Richmond, VA metro area, which is very distinctly NOT Northern Virginia.

  14. Re:I wonder when we'll have enough? on Cop Seeks Wiretapping Charges For Woman Who Videotaped Beating · · Score: 1

    While I could see the reason to divide 'blame the soldiers' with 'blame the govt that sent them' I also must stress that 'I was only following orders' does not absolve persons of guilt in cases of wrongdoing.

    This. As a veteran of the US armed forces and campaign in Afghanistan, I'd also like to stress that "following orders" is not a free pass. Every member of the US armed forces has not just the right, but also the DUTY to willfully disobey unlawful orders. Every single service member is sworn to support and defend the Constitution from all enemies foreign AND domestic, including, but not limited to, officers and NCOs ordering the murder of innocent civilians.

  15. Re:Nice strawman on India's Schooling Experiment Tests Rich and Poor · · Score: 1

    But the school aged population of over 50 million in the United States is about 7 times larger than the prisoner population of about 7 million. And it seems reasonable to assume that educating a person is more resource demanding than detaining a person. The fact that the amount spend on prisons is even on the same order of magnitude as the amount spent on schools is more than a little disconcerting to me.

  16. Did anyone else completely misinterpet the title? on Signs of Dark Matter From Minnesota Mine · · Score: 1

    When I first saw the title of the thread, my initial reaction was "How the hell is there dark matter in Minnesota? Did they find Nibbler's litter box or something?"

  17. Re:So, the system works? on Retailers Dread Phone-Wielding Shoppers · · Score: 1

    I agree with your sentiment, but you used a couple bad examples. You've got the Corvette all wrong in particular.

    The Corvette is considered crap on the world stage simply because American sports cars carry a stigma internationally. A much better car can be had for the money? The modern C5 and C6 Corvettes are considered some of the best values in the sports car world. They offer near-supercar level performance rivaling that of $150-200k European cars for a measly $50-60k. Not to mention the Corvette has a tremendous racing pedigree; the C5 and C6 Corvettes are some of the most successful cars in the history of international road racing.

    Does the Corvette suffer from a lack of polish and build quality? Sure, but considering the price-performance return of a Corvette, you can't expect it to be upholstered with the skin from an endangered species or something.

    There are plenty of examples of your initial sentiment, but I assure you the Corvette is not one of them.

  18. This makes sense IF THE RATES ARE REASONABLE on FCC Approving Pay-As-You-Go Internet Plans · · Score: 2

    As long as the per-byte rate is in line with current costs, I don't see the problem with it. Moving bits costs money, and moving more bits costs more money. I've always thought broadband providers should behave more like public utilities given their government endorsed monopoly of the infrastructure.

    If we paid by the byte, it would eliminate the need for arbitrary data caps. If I want to pull down a terabyte in a week, I can. I just pay more than my neighbor who only downloaded a few GB in that same week. That seems fair, right?

    The problem though, as it always is with telcos, is that the pricing will NOT be fair. The cable companies in particular are trying desperately to make a grab for the lost revenue in their PPV and other cable TV cash cows as people opt for cheaper alternatives like Netflix.

  19. Re:I've suspected this for years. on Being Too Clean Can Make People Sick · · Score: 3, Informative

    Why is the parent modded informative? While the antibacterials used in soap are not really an antibiotic, the rest of the post is wrong. Most antibacterial soaps contain triclosan, which when used in concentrations it is use in soaps decidedly does NOT kill on contact and merely inhibits reproduction of the bacteria cells.

    Unlike commercial hand sanitizers that usually utilize ethanol to kill on contact, the triclosan used in antibacterial soaps is relatively simple for bacterial populations to develop resistance against.

  20. For me, Netbook Edition 10.10 is a disaster on Comparing Windows and Ubuntu On Netbooks · · Score: 1

    Slow and clunky with an infuriating and confusing UI is how I would describe it. Now, Netbook Edition 10.04 was perfectly fine and useful, and the UI actually seemed to a good job of using the minimal screen real estate. After upgrading to 10.10, I switched over to the regular desktop version of 10.10 (which performs fine) just to get away from the disaster that is Netbook Edition 10.10.

    I also dual boot Win 7 Starter on this netbook, and based on my experiences and my "gut feeling" benchmarks, performance and usability is just about even all the way around between Win 7 and different versions of ubuntu. The one exception being the latest edition of netbook edition 10.10, which was painfully slow at time to the point of almost being unusable.

  21. Re:Here's the solution on Tide of International Science Moving Against US, EU · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe we just increase the subsidies for students in math, science, and engineering?

    In addition to making the desperately needed technical degrees more affordable and available, doing so might provide the impetus for many students to actually choose those technical degrees.

  22. Re:Can it meet safety standards? on Meet the Virginia-Built 110MPG X-Prize Car · · Score: 1

    I'm not saying those safety standards are necessarily a good thing, just a fact of selling production automobiles in the US. I myself ride a motorcycle and have for years wanted a European-spec Lotus Elise (The American version is much heavier due to emission and safety requirements), so I know where you are coming from. If an individual wants to buy a cheaper, lighter car without air bags and side-impact beams, they ought to be able to.

    Perhaps you are onto something with the motorcycle reference. Looking at the pictures, perhaps they could get it classified in a class like the Can-Am Roadster and be exempt from much of the normal car requirements.

  23. Can it meet safety standards? on Meet the Virginia-Built 110MPG X-Prize Car · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does it have air bags, side-impact beams, crumple zones, etc? It seems like an impressive bit of engineering, but it will never make it to production in the US unless it meets all the government crash and safety standards.

    Safety standards are one of the main reasons a 2010 Honda Civic gets nearly the same mileage in practice as a 1990 Civic. Although the more modern car has made strides in improving drive train efficiency, it weighs over 600 lbs more resulting in nearly the same fuel efficiency. Things like side-impact beams, air bags, and ABS make cars safer, but they also make them a lot heavier.

  24. You have things backwards. on High Fructose Corn Syrup To Get a Makeover · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cane sugar has essentially no free-form fructose. Refined cane sugar is nearly pure sucrose, a disaccharide. Admittedly, it is composed glucose and fructose structures, they are chemically bonded and is not metabolised the same way as either one of the monosaccharides (glucose and fructose).

    HFCS is an engineered product that takes regular corn syrup (essential pure glucose) and turns it into a mixture of free form glucose and fructose in order to produce a substance that tastes the same (sweetness-wise) as table/cane sugar.

    "Corn Sugar" would actually be distinctly incorrect if used to refer to HFCS, as that term is already used to refer to crystalline glucose (Commonly known in the food world as dextrose).

  25. Re:Bath, famous for Rugby Football, to ID on NOSES on Nose Scanners — the New Face of Biometrics? · · Score: 1

    My thoughts exactly. As an American who has only recently started playing the sport of rugby football, even my limited experience has painfully demonstrated how reconfigurable the human nose is.

    As a sidenote, being kicked in the face while laying at the bottom of a ruck sure does make you feel alive =)