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User: otter42

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  1. PhD on Stay Off the Grid, Win $10,000 · · Score: 1

    I'm in the last hectic months of writing before finishing my PhD. Months where I need absolute peace and quiet and a full withdrawl from the world.

    Easiest. Challenge. Ever.

  2. Checks and transfers on UK Wants To Phase Out Checks By 2018 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I lived in France for four years, using checks. Now I live in Luxembourg and use bank transfers. I much prefer bank transfers. It's easier, faster, less prone to fraud, etc...

    However, a couple things bank transfers don't do that checks do:

    1) Security deposits: recently my fiancée and I reserved a monastery in France. We had to make a deposit of, what is for us, a significant amount of cash. With checks this is easy. He has a check, which is only valid if we don't show up, and we have a year to pull together the money. If he has hard cash, first of we lose access to that cash for a year. Second, if he doesn't deliver the goods, he has the cash, and all we could do about it is sue him!

    2) Large amounts between individuals: we're selling our car and aren't quite sure what to do. Obviously cash is a little inconvenient, but a wire transfer happens at a bank or online. So neither of these work as nicely as a check either. Of course, I'm certain there's some way around it, but until an online bank transfer happens immediately, it won't be as nice and secure as a check.

  3. Re:seems dangerous on Microsoft Invents Price-Gouging the Least Influential · · Score: 1

    You're kidding right? This is the epitome of a free market. Charge the price that the market will bear. The supply-demand curve is the most basic of tools that economists use to express their ideas to laymen. In fact, economists would like to see every person be charged exactly the price they think the item is worth. This reduces prices for some and raises for others.

    Secondly, prices ARE widely available, it's just that the prices you see won't be the ones I see. I admit this will cause macro-economisists analyst a certain amount of headache, but you as a consumer will still be able to find 100 sites that sell your item. And you will choose the one that is cheapest. And then you will decide if this price is the right price for you.

    I call this "spreadsheet economics". With the advent of very sophisticated control and observation models, businesses can now gage the effect of each individual action against their bottom line. This leads them to do things that would normally seem insane from a customer-service standpoint. Witness RyanAir implementing plans to charge for bathroom usage on aircraft, Apple refusing to repair all smokers computers because of tar build-up, or Best Buy firing customers. They already know how much the bad press will cost them vs. how much they will save/earn based on a new policy.

    With spreadsheet economics, one can now see which markets will bear which prices, and don't be surprised if you turn out to be a market unto yourself.

  4. Pot calling the kettle black, non? on AT&T Moves Closer To Usage-Based Fees For Data · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'The first thing we need to do is educate customers about what represents a megabyte of data...

    Excuse me, but aren't you the people who charge me for 1MB if I download 1byte?

  5. Re:Obama Health Care Ad, WTF??? on Google May Limit Free News Access · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I care that much about healthcare to drag it into /. What I *do* care about, though, is intentionally misleading advertising that is designed to pollute and discourage any sort of reasonable discourse. I hope you are, too. And that was only obvious on this one story. Not any other. So putting it into a /. journal entry becomes less than apropos.

    According to the above /. definition, "troll" is completely wrong. I might give you "Flamebait" (although my intention is not to enrage others, as you say it's a charged issue and we all read these things in different ways), but not trolling. And labeling it as such, when you've got the "Offtopic" button at hand, is, quite honestly, trying to prove an agenda. And that's as lame as making the original graphic in the first place.

    Although one wonders is it offtopic if the referenced image can only be seen in this topic? (That's making a big assumption, of course, that you see what I see. Which is not as unlikely as you think, as if this showed up in Europe, it's pretty obvious it's not regional based.)

    (By the way, you seem to misunderstand the journal entry. I'd be far more interested if you could have explained, in 2005, what comments had inspired people to list me as their "friend".)

  6. Re:What is going one here? on Google May Limit Free News Access · · Score: 1

    Sadly, not the case. I regularly run across pdfs that I cannot access because they're behind a paywall. Even if I tell google "filetype:pdf", it still finds them for me. Which, quite frankly, pollutes the results to an extent that I sometimes cannot find the signal (actual readable scientific articles) amidst all the noise (IEEE, JSTOR, etc...).

  7. Re:Obama Health Care Ad, WTF??? on Google May Limit Free News Access · · Score: 1

    Right, Mr. Get-your-government-hands-off-my-medicare moderator, pointing out that there is an amazingly biased and misleading political attack ad on /. is somehow trolling? I'll need that one explained to me. Offtopic, why not, but "troll" makes it look as if you want to disagree, but aren't brave enough to do it with words.

  8. Obama Health Care Ad, WTF??? on Google May Limit Free News Access · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Did anyone notice that the ad on /. is an anti-Obama ad, that then links to a newsmax "poll"?

    photo

    Well, of COURSE if you have that pic, with that message, the only people who will participate will be rabidly anti-Obama. Kind of makes for a nice poll, Newsmax, right? Of course, that *couldn't* be the purpose, now could it?

    LAME.

  9. Seems like a good plan on Google May Limit Free News Access · · Score: 1

    Having read the article, this seems like a reasonable plan. Not only does it push those who read lots to pay, it also leaves some pretty good options for those who want to read lots, but don't want to/can't pay. That's all you can really ask for. These people need to earn a living somehow, and I'd rather they did it writing news articles than working on a factory line.

  10. No problemo on Newspapers Face the Prisoner's Dilemma With Google · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Alright, so some American newspapers put up walled gardens. No problem, I'll just read the foreign press. BBC does a good job, and so do many others.

  11. Re:What? on Newspapers Face the Prisoner's Dilemma With Google · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and if you look at the demographics who like newspapers they are almost overwhelmingly older. Talk to a 20 something and ask them if they read the newspaper, most will just laugh at you.

    If you asked someone that 10 years ago, it was the same response. And they, for sure, weren't getting their news online.

    Not saying you're wrong, just that your example could be better chosen.

  12. Re:Kurt Greenbaum, you are stupid, puritanical scu on Vulgar Comment On Newspaper Site Costs Man His Job · · Score: 1

    I wonder if 4chan will catch wind of this. Kurt just opened a whole can of worms in this case. If he really thinks that one person being inappropriate is bad, imagine every AC from /. trolling his comment section.

    You know, if you want 4chan to do this, you could start it yourself, instead of trying to "subtly hint".

    4chan is not your bitch, and trying to connive all the various actors into doing something would be like herding pussy.

    Cats, I mean. Pussy. Cats.

  13. In exchange for stronger privacy laws... on Smart Grid Could Pose Threat To Privacy · · Score: 1

    A lot of /.ers are pointing out that this is the logical tradeoff for the gains that smart-metering promises us. Some are suggesting that we do without. I say it makes far more sense to strengthen our privacy laws, so that this kind of thing is so clearly off limits from data sharing that no non-criminal consider it.

    For example, I'm a member of a local (ballroom) dancing club. I'm organizing a Thanksgiving Dinner, but the privacy laws here are so strong that it was made to me very clear that I *must* delete the club's (snail-)mailing list from my computer after I send out the invitations.

    There are indeed tradeoffs between any level of internet-connected progress and our privacy, but it's shortsighted to think that the only response can be "get your gov't hands off my...!"

  14. Re:Conservation of Energy on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 1

    Quite neat. Especially the Vanderbilt photos of the Whole-room Indirect Calorimeter Activity Measurement System. Thanks for elucidating this topic for me.

    So maybe my urine and feces are far more energetic than the average person's. (I'm not interested in testing this concept). While that doesn't change the fact that I shed more heat than someone of equivalent skin surface area but lower temperature, it does certainly make the problem more interesting.

  15. Re:Conservation of Energy on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 1

    That sounds a little hard to shit... err... swallow. Unless you mean caloric intake in the sense of long-chain starches, etc. that are undigestible by the human body. I'm guessing these don't figure in to the daily calorie allotment.

    Could you please give a reference or link for your claim?

  16. Conservation of Energy on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know a lot of people are going to talk about CoE. After all, that's the driving equation here. It is absolutely correct, but can we not glean more insight into the problem?

    IWAHTE (I Was A Heat Transfer Engineer), so my guess is that what's going on is that people spend the vast majority of their calories maintaining body temperature. If you eat less, your body's first reaction might well be to reduce skin temperature, maintaining core temperature. This theory links the fact that women eat less then men by 20% with the observation that women are complain about being cold earlier than men. Less calories burnt to keep skin temperature high.

    In the case of someone who is overweight, they have an additional layer of blubber (yes, basement /. denizens, you are coated in blubber) that insulates them and maintains their core temperature for free. Maybe there's a hysteresis? First the body weight comes down, then the body learns it can waste excess heat maintaining skin temperature, and then, and only then, the body is free to consume additional calories.

    Now, I don't do human anatomy, so a doctor would have to chime in and confirm just how much of the body's caloric consumption is lost to heat, vs. other bodily functions.

    A personal example: on an average day, I eat some 3500 calories. But I am athletic, and only weigh 70, so this is a "good" 3500 kCal. What I notice is that my skin temperature is always warm, especially compared to women. In fact, I am very comfortable when the temperature is around 15deg inside. I go outside on a 5deg day in nothing more than a sweater and a top hat. I routinely mock my friends who wear a sweater, coat, and scarf when I'm sitting around in short sleeves. Certainly, my body is horribly inefficient, and if society falls in some sort of catastrophe, I will certainly be one of the first to starve (if my 20/800 eyesight doesn't make me walk off a cliff first). However, in a society that has mass amounts of overconsumption, it seems to fit me just fine.

    A second personal example: I dated a German doctor who as a 16-year-old doing a year-abroad in Minnesota, had been anorexic. After she came back, she put on a lot of weight: obviously her body reacting to the extreme abuse she had given it. Now as a 25-year-old, she was in the Bundeswehr (German army), and this girl could RUN. She ran marathons. She ran 2 hours with 25kg of weight attached to her. And yet she was always, always overweight by 8kg or so vs. her pre-American anorexia bout. Not a lot, but she was... pudgy. She'd been to doctors, etc, and could do nothing to get her weight down. I lived with her for a while, I can guarantee she ate nothing but healthy food, and only somewhere around 1600-1800kCal/day. However, she liked her rooms warm.

    So I am less physically active, yet consume twice as much. The only thing that can explain this is that physical activity just doesn't use that many calories, not compared to maintaing body temperature. Since I go outside without a coat, I burn more calories than she does to maintain the same core temperature.

    My two cents, but I certainly welcome other /.er ideas, though.

  17. Re:Love to use it, but... on Google Betas Chrome 4, Touts 30% Speed Boost · · Score: 1

    Not only the Chromium nightlies, but there's also a Google Chrome for Mac, http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en/eula_dev.html?dl=mac

    I'm not quite sure what the difference is. Right now, Chrome is a couple versions behind the absolute latest Chromium nightly, but I have no idea what is different. I don't even know if Chrome for Mac is just the Chromium nightly from a few builds back, or if some things are and will always be different.

    One thing I noticed right away is that in Chrome my bookmarks are poorly formatted to the tab screen, whereas the latest Chromium nightly fits the bookmarks quite nicely.

  18. Re:God damn it this again on Toyotas Suddenly Accelerate; Owners Up In Arms · · Score: 1

    There's no car you can buy today where you cannot overpower the engine with full braking force. Try it: stand on the accelerator with your left foot for a while, then stand on the brake. Push both down as hard as you can; your car will slow down and stop. It won't be happy about it, but it will. The drivers in this case didn't do that: they panicked and didn't press the brakes hard enough.

    Unfortunately, you are categorically wrong.

    In fact, it might not be far off to say that there is not ONE SINGLE car that can be stopped with brakes alone when at full throttle. Read http://spectrum.ieee.org/blog/computing/it/riskfactor/how-hard-should-it-be-to-stop-a-runaway-car

    As for hitting the brakes to slow a car down, another issue pops up, says the Times. "The ES 350 and most other modern vehicles are equipped with power-assisted brakes, which operate by drawing vacuum power from the engine. But when an engine opens to full throttle [like in a runaway car situation], the vacuum drops, and after one or two pumps of the brake pedal, the power assist feature disappears."
    Tests indicate that a person would have to exert 225 pounds of pressure on a brake pedal to stop it - a mean feat for almost anyone, let alone a person trying to keep a car on the road while avoiding hitting anything as it is traveling at 176 feet per second.

    While what you said makes sense (and I believed the same myself until I started looking into it), it unfortunately is not the reality. You lose your power brakes at full throttle, and it seems that people are paying with their lives in these circumstances.

    I know the tendency at /. is to believe that most people are nitwits-- most of all policemen-- (a belief I tend to share), in the case of the Lexus police officer, he was trained for high speed pursuits, and witnesses say they saw smoke coming out of the brakes. Sometimes, you have to hang your beliefs at the door and examine the facts.

  19. Re:This is a non-event. on Lost Northwest Pilots Were Trying Out New Software · · Score: 1

    Said as a true non-pilot.

    Being out of contact with ATC is how the vast majority of flights are done in the US. And there are very, very, very few midair collisions.

    Nontheless, at those altitudes, EVERYONE is under ATC, so ATC is not going to route someone else into the path of the airplane. ATC assumes that you're going to do what you confirmed you are going to do, until such time as you confirm something different.

  20. Choice of /. imagery on Command & Conquer MMO a Possibility? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How fitting that the /. icon for this article should be a warcraft picture. God, I miss the time when there were two types of gamers in this world: C&C and Warcraft II.

  21. Re:I'm sure it didn't help. on Did Chicago Lose Olympic Bid Due To US Passport Control? · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure which part of France you saw, but the part of it I lived in for years and years never looked like that. Nor did anywhere I've visited, which has been pretty much all over France. Not anywhere. In fact, French cities are remarkable in the way in which they just end, very abruptly. Very often, there's a city limit, and after that there's nothing else. Nothing. Just farms. Not even farm houses.

    Are you perhaps from the future, telling us about how France will be a hundred years later?

  22. Parking slips on "Smart" Parking Meters Considered Dumb · · Score: 1

    Clearly the OP has a chip on his block. Clearly the /. editor (kdawson, what a surprise!) didn't bother to read the article AND the one paragraph blurb, to see that they're completely orthogonal. In fact, the OP misses the fact that in Europe these systems have been used for a decade or more, are incredibly reliable, very efficient, don't clutter up the street, don't have lines (come on, how many people are waiting to park at any given second?), are installed close to parking spots (yes, that 50m "half-block" walk to and from the car. Twice. Horror!), and seem to have general public acceptance.

    Now, the article itself raises some very interesting points. Most of all the privatization of parking meters. Do we really want private entities being responsible for public punishment? Is it acceptable that a profit motive is behind causing people pain (fines and/or lost licenses). Is this in any, way, shape or form compatible with our ideas about government and responsibility? Are we not taking things too far, when we forget that punishment is to cause pain in response to flagrantly bad behavior, not just an incidental breaking of the letter of the law?

    Perhaps someone who has some good links to these subjects could repost this story, in hopes that a real editor gets it this time.

  23. Re:The sensible answer is a protest on No Social Media In These College Stadiums · · Score: 1

    Because of course the SEC (a sports conference of American Universities, many of them public) couldn't possibly have games in private stadiums that were largely subsidized by public money and university stadiums that were almost certainly paid for with public money.

    Yep, another clear case of we the public unfairly demanding our fair due.

  24. Re:His mistake on BetOnSports Founder Pleads Guilty To Racketeering · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm calling B.S. According to The Register article from the time, he was arrested at a hotel in Santo Domingo.

    You're getting this somewhat mixed up with David Carruthers, who *was* arrested at Dallas Airport, but while changing planes. Moreover, wikipedia reports that it happened while he was flying from the UK to Costa Rica. If this had been a CIA/FBI plot, like you insinuate, they would have picked a better spot than Houston, and there wouldn't have been a lay-over.

    I'll agree that the US is overstretching it's bounds here, but injecting misinformation and hyperbole into the conversation doesn't help anyone.

  25. In this economy? on What Questions Should a Prospective Employee Ask? · · Score: 4, Funny

    The only question I can think of is,

    "Are you hiring?"