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User: Dean+Edmonds

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Comments · 89

  1. Apple, meet orange. on Thorium: The Wonder Fuel That Wasn't · · Score: 1

    The failed attempts at "commercialization" of thorium reactors that the article describes were all for reactors which were designed to breed uranium for other uses. Extraction of that uranium was what made them uneconomical. A thorium reactor designed purely to generate power would not have that problem.

  2. Economist and NYT - but with conditions on Ask Slashdot: What Online News Is Worth Paying For? · · Score: 1

    I currently do pay for The Economist.

    I would pay for the New York Times as well if they provided cheaper pricing options. I wouldn't mind paying $10 a month to read 30 articles of my choice, but I don't like having to take a full subscription just to access the handful of content which interests me.

  3. Bad Science on Art Makes Students Smart · · Score: 1

    The "control" group didn't go on any kind of field trip. They just continued to attend class like normal. So there's no reason to believe that the art had any influence. It could just be that giving kids a day off from the usual school grind, getting them away from their usual neighbourhoods, and showing some kind of interest in them beyond the norm had a positive impact.

    I do happen to believe that exposure to art can aid in personal development, but this study does little to prove that.

  4. Re:Four bursts? on Mystery Intergalactic Radio Bursts Detected · · Score: 1

    In other words, point all your telescopes at the Parkes Observatory.

  5. IR3 And IR4 Are Overlapping on Krugman: Is the Computer Revolution Coming To a Close? · · Score: 1

    120 years passed between the start of the first industrial revolution and the start of the second. Only 90 years passed between the start of the second and the start of the third. I think the gap has now shrunk to the point where the start of the fourth (widespread use of robotics, digital manufacturing, dramatic extension of human lifespan) is actually overlapping the tail end of the third.

  6. It takes one to know one, apparently. on Two Teams Win the BotPrize · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I find it interesting that the ordering of judges on the "Most human humans" list is the exact opposite of those on the "Best human judges" list. So the more robotic a judge appeared to others, the better they were able to recognize the true bots in the games. A great example of "it takes one to know one".

  7. Would it have been so hard to say 89%? on 90 Percent of Eligible Kansas City Neighborhoods Sign Up For Google Fiber · · Score: 1

    180 out of 212 is ~89.1%

  8. Off by a factor of 10. on Majority of Mobile Malware Now Reliant On Toll Fraud · · Score: 2

    The report says that devices in Japan have a 0.04% chance of being infected. If China and Russia are "10,000 times more likely" to be infected then that would give them infection rates of 400%, which seems unlikely.

    In fact the report states that the rate for Russia is 41.6% making it "only" about 1,000 times more likely than Japan.

  9. Misleading Title on In Vietnam: Being a Blogger Could Land You In Jail, Cost You Your Life · · Score: 4, Informative

    The title of this article claims that being a blogger in Vietnam could cost you your life. But the only person to lose their life was a non-blogger who set herself on fire in protest at the new law. So a more accurate title would be, "In Vietnam: Being a Blogger Could Land You In Jail. Setting Yourself On Fire Could Cost You Your Life".

  10. Re:Obvious question missed on Bas Lansdorp Answers Your Questions About Going to Mars · · Score: 1

    Also, I dont know two females who can get along living together without outside influence for 2 days let alone 2 years.

    Apparently you have led either a very short or very sheltered life.

  11. Not An "Underwater Vehicle" on The World's First Supercavitating Boat? · · Score: 1

    "Juliet Marine Systems [...] says it is the world's fastest underwater vehicle"

    Except that it's not an underwater vehicle. It's a surface boat riding on two underwater pontoons. Not much different from a hydrofoil in structure. So they've built a surface boat that is faster than any underwater vehicle, something which is true for thousands of boats already in existence.

  12. In Other News... on NYC Teachers Forbidden To "Friend" Students · · Score: 1

    A couple of teachers who have run into students on the street ended up in improper relationships with them, so the New York City Department of Education is preparing to ban teachers from using any sidewalks which are also used by students.

  13. Not a chance on Qualcomm Calls To 'Kill All Proprietary Drivers For Good' · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I expect that a very large percentage of drivers are infringing on other companies' patents. Make the driver open source means exposing yourself to IP litigation. Only the larger hardware companies are going to be willing to spend the $$ necessary to audit their drivers and expunge all foreign IP.

    IMO we need to get rid of software patents before this will take off in a big way.

  14. Ignition != Break Even on Is It Time For the US Government To Back Fusion At NIF Over ITER? · · Score: 1

    This seems to be a fairly common mistake in reporting on the NIF. "Ignition" is the term NIF uses for having the resulting fusion generate more energy than the beamlines deliver to the target. However, much more energy goes into generating the beamlines than ends up getting delivered to the target. So even after they have achieved ignition, they'll still be a long way away from true break-even.

  15. "now complete Florida primary"? on States Using Cloud Based Voting System For Overseas Citizens · · Score: 1

    Is the submitter a time-traveler, or was zie just expecting the /. editors to take a week longer than they did in posting the submission?

  16. Repost on Strange Places To Find Open Source · · Score: 2
  17. It's A Fallacious Argument on The Real Job Threat · · Score: 1

    The article argues that IT is destroying more jobs than it creates and does so by pointing to total job growth in the United States, which was positive in each decade from 1940 through to the end of 1999, but negative in the first decade of this century. I don't know if this is an accurate portrayal of the argument put forward by the authors of the book, but if so it's flawed to the point of uselessness.

    First, it assumes that all job gains and job losses are due to IT, which is clearly not true. Teasing out the effects of IT on total employment is extremely difficult, but essential for establishing any sort of causal relationship.

    Second, up until 2008, US job growth in the previous decade *was* positive, to the tune of about 4%. While not a stellar performance, it does still represent growth in jobs, not decline. It is only the massive job losses since the recession started which leaves the decade as a whole with a small decline in total employment.

    All that the article has shown is that recessions cost jobs and that big recessions cost lots of jobs, which isn't exactly news. It says nothing at all about the effects of IT on employment. Unless you think that IT causes recessions.

  18. Turn It Around on Ask Slashdot: Does Being 'Loyal' Pay As a Developer? · · Score: 1

    It can be useful to look at the situation the other way around.

    Let's say that the company you work for is worth $10 million. In other words, someone would have to offer the owners $10m to buy it from them. Let's further assume that the 7k increase that the new job offers you is 10% of your current salary.

    Here's the question: If a potential buyer offered to pay the owners of your company an additional $1 million (10% more) if they cut some staff, including you, would they take it or would they reject it out of loyalty to you?

    If they'd take the $1m and dump you then they have no loyalty to you so you owe no loyalty to them in return.

  19. Re:Let's hope that 15%... on Linguists Out Men Impersonating Women On Twitter · · Score: 1

    a blind guess has 50% chance of being right

    If you guess "female" you've actually got a 55% chance of being right.

  20. Next Big Future on How Do You Keep Up With Science Developments? · · Score: 1

    http://nextbigfuture.com/

    Brian's copyediting is atrocious, but he stays on top of a wide range of technological developments.

  21. And not a Spaniard was to seen... on Spanish Surgeon Performs First Synthetic Organ Transplant · · Score: 1

    Italian surgeon. African patient (studying in Iceland). English technology. Operation took place in Sweden.

    I guess the poster of the article can be given for the error in the subject line. With such an international cast it's hard to believe that a Spaniard wasn't involved *somewhere*.

  22. Handling Wildly Disparate Timezones on What Is the Best Way To Build a Virtual Team? · · Score: 1

    I'm working with a small team with members in three different timezones, up to 8 hours apart. That makes any of the immediate-mode forms of communication, like Skype and IRC, difficult as it always requires someone to make themselves available outside of normal working hours.

    What we've been doing is using a team blog in which each team member writes a brief summary of what they did each day, raises flags on potential issues, etc. Email is used for more extensive temporal discussions.

    We're running on two-week agile cycles, so once every two weeks we have a half-hour teleconference in real-time, which helps to keep people from drifting too far apart.

    We use Code Collaborator for code reviews. It's got a couple of minor annoyances but on the whole is working pretty nicely for us.

  23. Re:I'm an American... on US Reneges On SWIFT Agreement · · Score: 1

    Two points:

    1) When has the Fed ever printed "unlimited amounts of bills", or even unusually large amounts for that matter?

    2) Deflation is, arguably, even more dangerous to an economy than inflation. Just look at Japan for the past 10-15 years. If your economy goes into a deflationary slump, you want the ability to print lots of bills to counteract it.

  24. Re:Politicians are products of "political machines on US Reneges On SWIFT Agreement · · Score: 1

    "Political Machines" would be utterly powerless if voters thought for themselves instead of taking the lazy way out and just voting for whomever their leaders/preachers/idols/spouse told them to.

    So don't blame the powerful, blame the sheep who listen to them and allow themselves to be bought off with trinkets.

  25. Counterclockwise Clocks on Do Tools Ever 'Die?' · · Score: 1

    It took a while before everyone standardized on what we now know as "clockwise", but once upon a time there were clocks which spun the other way.