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  1. Re:Please translate. on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Seriously, most people might just want to know why they should give a shit that BE condensation has been observed at solid-state. Don't get me wrong, I think there is something fascinating in all this, just wish the summary would have pointed to that aspect instead of regurgitating the so-called claimes of a breakthrough.

    It depends on what you find important, remember most physics is a lot less practical than most biology. In my view people are interested in BEC because it is one of the few systems in which lots of quantum particles sit around and interact strongly, and of those, it is probably the most experimentally accessible. As for BEC in solid state quasiparticles, time will tell and I can only speculate from a position of ignorance. On the one hand it might sacrifice what I called "expermantal accessiblilty", because you have to deal with all the muck inside real solids, on the other hand a high temperature condensate made of magnons seems a lot more practical than normal condensates. Maybe it is easy to interface it to electronic control and measurement, so you can create and probe all kinds of weird and wonderful quantum states. Don't be surised if someone comes up with a paper trying to plug this as the next big thing in Quantum Computation.

  2. Re:Can anyone read the articles. on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 1

    You are probably right, but ... Deveaud-Plédran happily dismisses both assertions. "BEC is forbidden only in two dimensions for an infinite system without disorder. We have a finite system with disorder, so standard BEC is allowed. And despite the quasiparticle nature and very short lifetime, we have shown that we are able to get a thermal equilibrium."

    Well the bit about disorder is prossibly a triumph of hope over experience, but they are right about the finite system size. They say 2-d systems can't have phase coherence over infinite distances, but who cares as long as the coherence is as big as the device! Still, in practice people probably will care about picosecond lifetimes, with or without thermal equilibrium.

  3. Yes, I really am dumb. on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 1

    By the way "magenets" and "Enslisigh" were not put there on purpose, out of any sense of irony. They are there because I can't write sensible English. I might give Enslisigh a try though....

  4. Re:Wow on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 0

    Nahh, all the magenets are there for their reasons. Even if one of the reasons was that someone was not thinking about writing sensible Enslsigh.

  5. More like O'Neil. on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 3, Funny

    Carter: "Well how do *you* think it's done".

    Oneil: "Magnets."

  6. Re:huh on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You intuation is right.

    They cool thing about BEC is that it violates that intuition. Until B&E published, everyone thought that "much higher than zero kelvin" meant when that (in the appropriate units) the temperature (i.e. roughly the average energy per particle) had to be (much) less than the difference in energy between lowest state and any of the the others. If you think about this assumption, you will see that it nearly comes from
    Bolzman's law (and if you don't know what Boltzman's law is, and are not a science or engineering student, you probably don't care).

    Satyendranath (sp?) Bose came up with the bombshell that although Bolztman's law is right Bolztman's law operates differently for quantum particles. Some quantum particles (nowadays called Bosons) are more likely than expected to get into the same quantum state. They will do this wheneve the temperature is low enough
    that their momentum uncertainty forces their position uncertainty to be at least as large as the typical distance between partciles (i.e their wavefunctions must "overlap" coherently, and again if you don't understand, you don't care).

    So even ordinary BECs happen at relatively high temeratures. Unfortunately these temperatures are still in the nanokelvin range, at least for atoms under experimental conditions.

  7. Re:Solid State? on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 1

    The bit about "solid state" was almost B.S.

    Normal matter, including every BEC I have heard
    of is made of atoms, which are quantum particles.
    However solids, like every other kind of matter
    (even BECs!) support excitations, which can
    also be quantum particles (or quasi-particles).

    It seems that they have made a BEC out
    of
    the quasi particles in in a solid (which
    is not itself a BEC).

  8. Can anyone read the articles. on High Temperature Bose-Einstein Condensation Observed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Unfortunately I'm at home, so I can't read the actual articles.
    The main thing I am wondering about is dimensionality. I've seen
    lectures before where people have come up with pancake like-systems
    that are *like* BECs at 1 Kelvin, but unfortunately you can't meet the
    pedantic requirements for BEC in less than 3d.

    But if these systems are 3d, then it seems reasonable. We are talking
    about quasi-particles here. As one of these abstracts says, their
    (effective) mass is much less than that of an atom, therefore for they
    can have much higher energies than atoms of similar momentum. Because
    BEC is all about getting (the uncertainty of) momentum * (uncertainty of)
    position down below a magic number, it seems reasonable.

  9. Re:I'm an Australian, and I don't mind... on Australia Spying On Its Own · · Score: 1

    For the sake of Democracy in Australia I sure hope it is a committee of the parliament and it
    includes all parties......


    What has democracy got to do with it. This is
    the Westminster system we are talking about.

  10. unaustralian on Australia Spying On Its Own · · Score: 1
    (Aside: Does anyone else dislike the term "unAustralian" (or whatever nationality you please)? Simon Crean used the term and it really ticks me off.)

    Pisses me off no end too. What does it mean? In general you find it refering to any kind on
    offensive or dubious behaviour. As if non-Australians had no problems which such things.

    Does this mean that people who say "unaustralian" beleive aussies to be inherently superior to other peoples? Of course not, that would be racist, worse, it would be unaustralian.

  11. Re:This man is right - heed his warning on Jaron Lanier Takes On "Cybernetic Totalists" · · Score: 1

    >No combination of bio/nano/computing technology
    >is ever going to be me for the simple reason >that it will have different boundaries from me,
    >and our idea of self is shaped from these
    >boundaries.

    Last year I couldn't swim more than about 200m.
    Now I can do at least five times as much without
    difficulty, I don't actually know what my
    boundary is now. Have I lost my self?

  12. "Now we are turning a problem into a feature." on Biotransistors · · Score: 1

    See subject. That is how we know the idea
    comes from the computer industry.

  13. Re:OOP Gadgetry vs. Pipes. on Miguel Says Unix Sucks! · · Score: 1

    That and reuse is not a simple as it often
    seems. Someone else in this thread said
    how usefull say a window INI file decoder
    class is for reuse.

    I am writing a python script to draw plots.
    My previous version used exactly such a decoder
    (one which comes with python). Eventually the
    language grew beyond what INI files can do,
    so I wrote my own.

    On the other hand, the one thing which has NOT
    changed, is that my program communicates whith
    GNUPLOT through a pipe.

    Compared with OO-stlye compenentry, pipes are
    clunky and difficult. Nonetheless they tend
    more usefull, due to their simplicity.

    Not that I dissagree with OOP gadgetry.
    That INI file decoder made my scratch version
    a whole lot easier to write. I'm just saying
    that Miguel is wrong, UNIX already allows
    reuse in a far more significant way than
    Bonobo ever will. Witness the average size
    of applications in a windows environment.

  14. Re:Theory behind broadcast regulation? on Australia To Consider Licensing Streamed Content · · Score: 1

    In Australia the main purpose has been to
    keep the media moghuls happy. A few other
    lobby groups also manage to further muck
    up the policy from time to time. In good times
    the do-gooders and media-moghuls cancel
    each other out.

  15. Re:But do we need them? on SOCs: Say Goodbye To C's? · · Score: 1

    If the article is concentrating on web pads it has missed the point. The wonderful thing about mu-C's is that you can replace a whole lot of IC's with just one IC. The task you are trying to do can often be very simple, and you competing muli-IC's can be very cheap. When is it going to be possible to put a real OS on a machine costing less than $2? These are the kind of machines which will be attracting mu-C's in the future.

  16. Python, not BASIC. on Are Computers in Classrooms Bad for Learning · · Score: 1

    They used to come with basic, but
    now there are better alternatives. (I
    guess Python is not the only one).

    Also teachers will winge that programming
    is highly technical. I guess they are
    right, but the basics of programming give
    one a mental model of what is actually
    going on inside a computer. It seperates
    people who know what a computer is from
    those who don't, and eventually users from
    lusers.

    Think about how much time people spend
    unproductively banging their metephorical
    heads against the computer. This is why
    I think 21st century kids should
    be taught a little programing.

  17. Re:Ok, here we go again... on Why Can't We Reverse Engineer .DOC? · · Score: 1

    Hmm, this is probably a bit late, but it needs to be said. DOC isn't going to be very important in a few years anyway, Microsoft are moving to XML based everything. Serialization of com services will be XML based rather binary based as they are today as well.ust don't complain when your documents are 100MB. Mine won't be. You're the one who will be using word.

  18. I want .rog on New TLDs On The Way From ICANN · · Score: 1

    I misspelled .org on my way here today, and
    I thought "If they had a .rog TLD, Rob could
    take care of idiots like me" .

    And when the page finally loaded, what did I
    see up the top but a story about new TLDs.
    It's a sign from God I tell you.

  19. Chips. on New RAM Based On CD-RW Film On Horizon · · Score: 1

    Your TV probably has some little microcontroller inside, and this chipee will will have a small amount of EEPROM. 256, 512 bytes, someting like that. This is all the NVRAM they can get without adding extra chips, and no one wants to add extra chips to a design. If it worries you, then maybe OUM can be integrated onto MCU's, and replace eeprom. We could then have whole kilobytes!

  20. How is it fair use? on Our Attorney's Response To Microsoft · · Score: 1

    I agree with the analasys above (though I too am no lawyer). Maybe contributory/vicarious copyright infringement, but still protected by fair use and other defenses. However, I don't see how it is fair use.

  21. I don't see the authors losing. on GPL To Be Tested by Mattel? · · Score: 1

    It is hardly a secret that a proggy is
    distributed under the GPL. If they didn't
    _volunteer_ this information, and then its
    Mattels own fucking fault for not checking
    up. I thought it was only Little Aussie
    Battlers with a dodgy left leg who could
    get away with no reading the fine print.

  22. Re:It's all very clear now (the settlement) on GPL To Be Tested by Mattel? · · Score: 1

    But the GPL doesn't actually assign the rights
    to the software. In fact it _disclaims_ them.
    Technically the right to modify/distribute
    etcetera is a _liberty_, the copy_right_ is
    what allows people to preven other's excersing
    that liberty in certain cases. The GPL is
    a statement (conditionally) relinquishing
    these rights.

    The authors have not given anyone else the
    _rights_ to the software, only the _licsense_
    to use/modify/distrubte it.

  23. Arghh!! on Wormhole Generator (Kinda) Patented · · Score: 1

    I've had about enough of this FTL==backwards
    in time buisness. BTW: sorry if this is a
    bit obscure for some, but its already long enough
    w/o explanations.

    A particle moving "faster than light" moves
    along a SPACE-LIKE rather than TIME-LIKE
    line in 4-space. We all know what space
    like lines are, they are just what we usually
    call LINES. Now you can do a geometrical
    construction involving arrows alongs space-like
    lines which goes zigzaging back through
    time, but if someone could tell me what
    those lines really mean in terms of MOTION, i'll
    buy them a beer.

  24. Theft. on Jon Johansen Indicted by the MPA(A) · · Score: 2

    >I'm saying nothing at all with regard to the deCSS thang.
    Good, 'cause your comment seem irrelevant too
    it. They tried to prevent people "stealing"
    something they didn't own (I.e. the ability
    to decode DVDs), and they failed. They
    wanted to hold on to it by mere force
    of possession, and failed. That *is* their
    own bloody fault.

    As for any comment about things outside the
    DVD realm, I'm not sure what you are talking
    about.

  25. Protagonists. on Childhood's End · · Score: 1

    I agree with the other commenter that looking
    for protagonists is not very satisfying sport
    with Clarke. In 2001 I have to say HAL is NOT
    the protagonist, he might be the only fully
    developed character, but he is a sideshow. 2001
    is about apes, humans and aliens. In this way
    Bowman and Moonwatcher are the only protagonists,
    even though Bowman neither is really a developed
    character.

    As for you view of Childhoods end being about the
    Overlords, that is an good idea. Never really
    thought about it that way, but yes the book
    is a bit broader than I thought it was.