Slashdot Mirror


User: Jellodyne

Jellodyne's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
40
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 40

  1. Re:feels hollow on AMD's New Flagship HD 6990 Tested · · Score: 1

    You're probably also not in the market for a $700 video card, which is about the same level of exotic and pricey as a 30" monitor. Or, better yet, a pair of $700 video cards and a 1200 watt power supply to feed them.

  2. Re:That's it, I quit humanity on Blade Runner Sequels and Prequels Happening · · Score: 1

    He must if he's still working after The Tooth Fairy.

  3. I think this is a great idea! My wishlist... on Blade Runner Sequels and Prequels Happening · · Score: 1

    I hope they cast Shia LaBeouf as the son of Deckard and Rachael, who has grown up to be a kick ass Blade Runner like his old man.
    I hope they forget all that boring what-it-means-to-be-human nonsense and just give us some awesome chase scenes and explosions.
    I hope they update the movies for young people by getting Fall Out Boy to do the score instead of crusty old Vangelis.
    I hope the new films feature continuous voice-over, explaining what is already being shown onscreen.
    I hope Deckard gets to ride an robot unicorn and fight an army of evil Nexus 6 assassins.

  4. 24 bit at what frequency? on Apple in Talks to Improve Sound Quality of Music Downloads · · Score: 1

    Sony's SACD sounded great and it was a 1 bit format... at 2.8 MHz.

  5. Re:Amazing with all we are facing on House Fails To Extend Patriot Act Spy Powers · · Score: 1

    Maybe, but not THIS Supreme Leader, which is actually good thing for the whole checks and balances system.

  6. Wait... 75% of the torrents are fake, too on 100 P2P Users Upload 75% of Content · · Score: 1

    75% of torrents are fake, visit-our-website-and-click-our-ads-for-the-password nonsense or malware. I can believe that around 100 accounts are responsible for the majority of this stuff. They may also fake-seed each other to raise the profile of their garbage files. I do not, on the other hand, believe the vast majority of legit torrents are posted by a small number of people. I mean legit as really in what they claim to be, not as in legal.

  7. Re:Go ahead scientists ... chow down on them bugs on Scientists Advocate Replacing Cattle With Insects · · Score: 1

    Just wait -- if insects take over as mainstream protein the Ramen flavor packets will read Grasshopper or Aphid instead of Beef or Chicken. Or Buggalo. On the other hand, it'll still just be salt, MSG and artificial flavoring.

  8. Re:Tron 1.0 on Tron: Legacy · · Score: 2

    If there's one positive you can take from the trend to 3D is that it tends towards longer, wider takes. Every time there's a cut in a 3d film it's a jarring experience which forces your eyes to reestablish the 'new' 3D topography. Also, shaking the camera doesn't translate well to 3D either. Witness the 3D Pirates OTC trailer in front of Tron, which is nonstop jump cuts, compounded by the way everything being projected waaaay out into the screen. I had to look away from the screen it was so painful to look at. I certainly hope the final movie isn't cut like that. I really enjoyed the Wizard of Oz aspect to the 3D in TL -- where the real world was shot flat and the 'Grid' computer world was 3D.

  9. Re:Anti-matter behaves as expected, like matter on LHC Scientists Create and Capture Antimatter · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's a bad analogy -- we believe our existing laws of physics (including relativity) DO account for antimatter. It should behave exactly like regular matter apart apart from the whole charge reversal deal, but we've never had enough to play with to find out. The reason we are asking the question of whether there is a disparity between regular matter and antimatter isn't because of anything we've observed, but because we live in a universe which appears to consist of almost entirely regular matter. The models we have of the early universe should lead to a universe in which neither type of matter is more prevalent. So the question is: are our models wrong or is there something different about antimatter which lead to regular matter dominating the universe?

  10. Re:How much extra does it cost to make a 3D HDTV? on Huge Shocker — 3D TVs Not Selling · · Score: 1

    Certainly your friend hasn't had a TV that supports the current Blue Ray 3D standard "for years" since they have just begun to be sold this year.

    Define "standard stereoscopic glasses". Stereographic glasses are a bit like the SCSI standard -- the great thing about the standard is that there's so many to choose from. The glasses sold with these sets are lcd shutter style glasses which block each eye alternately at 120Hz so that each eye sees a different 60Hz image. The new glasses use an IR reciver in the glasses to receive the timing signal from the set, and are battery operated. I had a hard wired pair of LCD shutter glasses which came 'free' with an old nVidia card -- I used to play one of the old Tomb Raider games in 3d. Even the CRT computer monitors of the time couldn't do 120Hz.

    The reason I think it's a $1000 markup because I see electronics stores proudly offering 3D HDTVs for $2500 and $3000 which are almost identical spec-wise to TVs which cost at least $1000 less.

  11. How much extra does it cost to make a 3D HDTV? on Huge Shocker — 3D TVs Not Selling · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What differentiates a 3D TV from a non 3D set?

    1. Infrared transmitter for frame syncing glasses
    2. A display panel with a refresh rate of at least 120Hz
    3. An HDMI 1.4 input for receiving 120Hz signals
    4. Capability of processing 120Hz content

    Let's break these items down and see what it's costing the set manufacturers.
    1. The only real added (as opposed to incremented) hardware to the TV, but it's a 50 cent part, at most.
    2. Good luck buying a larger HDTV which doesn't already do 120Hz or 240Hz or 6000Hz or whatever. Free.
    3. I'll be generous and say the HDMI 1.4 chips are $5 more than the older HDMI 1.3 chips.
    4. This is the real wildcard, since even 240Hz TVs up until now haven't had to deal with anything over 60Hz on the input side, and generating 120Hz and higher signals is done with simple field duplication. Still, if you're handling 120Hz and higher signals later in the path, you can do it earlier with not a lot more effort. Let's say this costs whatever it costs to handle 1080P 60Hz signals 18 months ago. Let's call it $25-50 extra.

    Of course you also need to include LCD shutter glasses with batteries and IR receivers. Pack in 2 pairs at, maybe $25 each manufacturing costs, though $5-$10 is more likely. Add another buck or two to pay off the standards body to ensure interoperability of the glasses with all TVs. Wait, scratch that, instead throw in a buck for security measures to ensure other sets glasses don't work with your sets. Why? Because f*** 'em, that's why!

    So a 3D HDTV with a couple of pair of glasses should cost somewhere between $41.50 and $106.50 more to manufacture. I'd guess it is probably closer to the low end than the high. Double it for profits, and there's a fair markeup to go to 3D. A $1000 markup and $200 glasses is severe price gouging and everyone knows it. When the premium to go to 3D gets down to a reasonable level, it will be embraced. I'd look for a lower end manufacturer like VIZIO to realize they can bundle in 3D for practically nothing and sell a ton of sets to drive the 3D markup down.

  12. Games should be cheaper on Game Prices — a Historical Perspective · · Score: 0

    When VHS tapes of movies were $80-120, nobody bought them. Once the movie business realized that they could make a lot more money selling them at $10-30 they exploded in volume. I suspect a similar effect would happen with games were they priced comparable to movies. At $60, I rarely buy games. I check reviews, I wait for the price to drop (and usually forget about it) and maybe if it goes on sale on Steam in a couple years time I pick it up on the cheap. I've bought too many $60 games that rarely get played. But if they were at an MSRP of $30, with release day deals around $20 and $10 bargain bins (like DVD or Blu-Ray), I'd buy a lot more, and so would a lot of other people. Yes, games are expensive to develop. So are movies. The marginal cost of 1 unit is very low, and at half or a third the price, you'd probably see at least 4 times the sales. There's a reason Nintendo DS games always top the sales lists.

  13. Re:You fail math forever on Nicholas Sze of Yahoo Finds Two-Quadrillionth Digit of Pi · · Score: 0

    To express zero in roman numerals, you need to use an I in front of an I. The problem was that this was often confused with 2, which is expressed as an I AFTER a I, leading to the the belief that Romans lacked the zero.

  14. Re:So, what is the digit in decimal? on Nicholas Sze of Yahoo Finds Two-Quadrillionth Digit of Pi · · Score: 0

    Each digit is half as significant and therefore half as interesting as the one before it. In binary that is -- in base 10, each digit is 1/10th as interesting. Either way, by the time we get this far in, it's incredibly insignificant.

  15. Re:So that's like... on NASA Universe-Watching Satellite Losing Its Cool · · Score: 1

    Ask the Mars Climate Orbiter which set of units we use.