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  1. Re:Bullshit on Amid Fiscal Uncertainty, Venture Capital Is Way Down In Silicon Valley · · Score: 1

    What options have they? Put their money in the bank? (snicker)

    They have to invest in something and few investments have the potential of Venture funding. The paranoia that tax increases seems to cause is all in the overhyped media. The reality is that historically the economy and the rich have done very well during periods of high taxes.

  2. 100 times as thin ! on Better Brain Implants With Ultrathin Carbon Fiber Electrodes · · Score: 2

    Boss: So how are things going down here Greeves?

    Greeves: Oh, hi Boss, we've had a breakthrough- we got it down to 1mm thin!

    Boss: Not bad for a start, Greeves, but you know the investors won't be satisfied until it's 100 times as thin. How long till it's 100mm?

  3. Re:Job Performance on CIA Director David Petraeus Resigns, Citing Affair · · Score: 1

    "That is the only thing that should be taken into consideration..."

    That's way off the mark. World leaders, be they elected, military or religious should meet a higher standard to satisfy those they lead. Someone already mentioned 'honor', a great contribution, and I'll add 'loyalty'.

    We expect loyalty to be embedded into the character of those we respect. Implicit and explicit. Loyalty to country, loyalty to one's boss, loyalty to one's spouse. If a man can't be loyal to his spouse, can we expect him to be loyal to his country? Can we trust him in any matter of importance?

      - - -

    That said, I have immense respect for the General far beyond any other military person I can think of at the moment. He seemed to be incredibly dedicated to his work and his mental and physical preparedness for it.

      - - -

    and finally ... can we really believe anything that is spread to the media from such sources? Was there really an affair or is that juicy gossip a coverup for a more embarrassing reason? Will we ever know why he really stepped down?

  4. only one hull ? on Steve Jobs' Yacht Revealed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Try as I might with these poor images, I can find only one hull. So many elegant multihull designs in recent decades and he has chosen a barge. It's not just speed that he's sacrificed, it's comfort, safety, fuel efficiency, ability to approach shallow water and, as so many have noticed, class.

  5. facts on Using Winemaking Waste For Making Fuel · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Since they don't provide any useful facts, allow me to insert pseudo facts to fill the gap.

    First, the words 'especially ethanol' ring a bit hollow due to the low fuel efficiency and great cost in terms of equipment, raw materials, etc relative to petroleum. Reserve the word 'especially' for biodiesel- a much more promising but still long term project.

    Now if we start with 100k tons of grape stuff and push our imaginations to the extreme, let's suppose that will support 100k vehicles. That would be 2% of the vehicles in California (pseudo facts, remember). The land, plant and equipment to process the grape stuff will cost $23M (partly offset by generous federal grants but encumbered with additional costs for environmental studies, protests and court hearings). Assuming that the equipment works and the private enterprise receiving the grant money hasn't absconded with the money or cut corners on costs, we now have one hundred thousand vehicles operating for, say, five years at an annual fuel cost of $__________ . What's the point of doing the math when the numbers are fake?

    Ennywhey it looks like a boondoggle to me. Only the Governor's friend who gets the grant money will be happy with the results.

  6. Re:Timely Idea, but Do It Yourself? on Zimmermann's Silent Circle Now Live · · Score: 1

    "might be prudent to establish an on-line persona that can't be traced"

    It would be prudent for everyone to do so. And everyone should encrypt every communication possible.

    The simple reason is that if only 1% seek privacy, then governments and others can simply focus their great power on that 1%; but when everyone seeks privacy it is more difficult to snoop on any particular 1%.

    Yes, it will be harder to pin down bad guys & terrorists, but that's the wrong approach anyway. When people are educated, treated with respect, given medical attention and given opportunities to prosper there won't be any terrorists, and mentally ill 'bad' guys will be managed with dignity.

  7. restore cuts? ... or restore funding? on Bill Nye 'the Science Guy' Urges Letters To Obama To Restore NASA Budget Cuts · · Score: 2

    I'm very confused as to why it is desirable to restore cuts.
    Or even possible.
    If cuts exist, how can they be restored?
    Perhaps he wants to increase cuts?

    Or perhaps everyone at /. failed English as well as Logic.
    I'm pretty sure that most of you want FUNDING restored, not CUTS.

  8. metric system coming real soon now on A Day in Your Life, Fifteen Years From Now · · Score: 1

    In 1955 our 5th grade class (in the US) was told that there is a 'master plan' to convert to the metric system. As a result we spent two days in a mandatory exploration and comparison of metric measurements.

    Personally I won't be satisfied until we have a metric system for measuring time.

  9. well sure on US Looks For Input On "The Next Big Things" · · Score: 1

    Why shouldn't we give our billion dollar ideas away?
    And who is more deserving than our military establishment?

  10. every grad is blue collar on The Case For the Blue Collar Coder · · Score: 1

    Perhaps some exceptions among the liberal arts.

    Classical education was about exploring our universe. From the internal (psychology, medicine etc), the external (sociology, physics, astronomy, languages etc). The Gods offered ways of projecting the essence of human nature in stereotypical form suitable for discussion and analysis. The educated person could exchange original thoughts about any discipline.

    Today every college major is a job training routine. Nobody is interested in education, everyone wants a job. If you can say of yourself "I am a ..." doctor, lawyer, machinist, programmer, teacher, football player - then you are blue collar. If you have a title then you are not educated.

    Education in its most recent European incarnation (Renaissance) was designed for gentlemen and to some extent for gentlewomen. People who needed the knowledge to communicate with gentlepeople from other lands about politics, business, war, economics, trends, etc. People who were expected to represent their respected families and countries. People who would set an example for others less educated. It was unthinkable that an educated person would not know several languages, that a well bred woman would not be able to play piano, that a child might not be equipped to spew the most elegant insults to his mates.

    America received a bit of that attitude about education in the person of Benjamin Franklin and a few others, but generally declined into a morass of religious superstition which continues today.

    I was an English major. I was beset with inquiries about my planning to be a teacher (the only occupation open to English majors). I tried to explain that I was merely interested in language and creative writing. This explanation was incomprehensible to other students.

    Despite my classical education (some sciences, philosophy, arts, programming, electronics and quite a lot of business courses), I am still blue collar. Nobody will hire me for what I am capable of. They only see a useless degree.

    However hungry I may become, I have immense satisfaction in my broad perspective. I feel that I have a fuller sense of my environment, of the past and future, of human nature, of the essence of math, logic and physics. Could be my imagination but my life is a process of growing, expanding in every direction.

    It seems there are two ways of observing our environment. With our eyes, we see straight ahead. We focus, perhaps on programming, and to the extent that we focus, we eliminate all else. Most Nobel winners are highly focused. The other way of observing is as we do with our ears. All sounds, from all directions come to us. To the extent that we can hear and absorb, we admit a wide spectrum of understanding. Da Vinci consumed a wide spectrum. Some balance of these two is probably ideal.

  11. job qualification on US House Science Committee Member: Evolution Is a Lie From Hell · · Score: 2

    If you want a McJob at minimum wage, expect to be fingerprinted, probed and studied. You will take tests, have your references checked and be watched constantly while on the clock and off. Your FeceBook and other activities will be scrutinized, your credit checked and you better not pick your nose where a street camera can spot you.

    If you want a job in Congress, all you need is a big mouth and enthusiastic handshake. Ethics, intelligence, education not required. You will be guided; told what to say, what to do, when to do it by the best handlers that money can buy. Make a mistake and they will cover for you. Usually.

  12. facts? on Laser Strikes On Aircraft Becoming Epidemic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow. Dramatic video of catching a perpetrator. And interesting representation of what a laser hit looks like in a helicopter. It's so easy to become captivated by a video even if it has no relevance.

    How many tragedies have resulted from these thousands of incidents?

    If I can just learn if there were 5 or 50 or 500 fatalities resulting from laser strikes, then I will be better able to weigh the significance of the problem. I'm pretty sure that is what elected officials will be asking.

    Each year a certain number of people die from drowning in their bathtub. A few die from shark attacks. Some, including celebrities, die from erotic asphyxiation (hah! I speled that rite on the frist tri!). Legislators have to decide where is the most effective place to put their limited funds and protect people from a dangerous world.

  13. Ah, the mammaries... on 15 Years of Stuff That Matters · · Score: 1

    But rather than dwell on the past I prefer, with the little free time available, to take the advice of my sig:

  14. yea, SCIENCE, that's what I'm talkin bout! on Successful Engine Test in UK For Planned 1000 mph Car · · Score: 1

    As professor Irwin Corey, world's foremost authority, might have said; "Scientists know best- never trust science to engineers and mechanics."

    And so we have Scientists designing rocket cars. Why? Well apparently they majored in Rocket Science, a course offered only at the prestigious Brighton School of Rocket Science and Hard Knocks.

    To add even more prestige to the stunning development of this unique rocket car, respected Science publisher iScienceTimes has consented to publish an abstract of the work to date. You will recall some of their recent work:
    Ancient Statue Discovered By Nazis Is From Outer Space, and;
    Looking At Cute Animal Pictures Good For Productivity ...

    So, let's hear it for SCIENCE! Ain't it the best, folks!

  15. design is the problem on WTFM: Write the Freaking Manual · · Score: 1

    As a programmer, senior member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC) and user of software, I've accumulated some ideas about what works.

    The primary factor is design. Before any coding is done, there should be design. It's the same for movie producers, authors, web designers and people who make products in the physical world. Start with a storyboard before anyone touches a computer. Think like a user. Think like Apple. You want a fantastic design before coding.

    What is Design? Of course it is about accomplishing some task efficiently. It's about speed, CPU consumption, storage & memory requirements. But referring to the user and documentation, it's mostly about the User Interface.

    If you're updating legacy software your job can be more difficult. Existing users will complain about any change, but if you come up with a fantastic user interface that uses the same data sets, they'll get over it.

    If you're programming esoteric stuff like a disk operating system (please do, we need something badly), nobody but a few engineers will see it so documentation is easy- they speak your language.

    Test every step of the way with input from potential users. Adjust, but always with the Design in mind. Users should instinctively know how to achieve their goals with your software. I'm not talking about Mathematica, Autocad or C++ here, but everyday software used at home and in business. (I do have a gripe with Autocad, however, for taking so long to improve their user interface while others had to show the way.)

    In many cases, if you did it right, no documentation will be necessary (Just the required safety warnings, FCC and other regulatory comments, patent, trademark and copyright notices, warranty limitations, etc (barely 20 pages). If you didn't do it right, you can hire one of the thousands of professional technical communicators around the world to make learning it tolerable for users.

  16. huh? on RockBox + Refurbished MP3 Players = Crowdsourced Audio Capture · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry, I have no idea what TFA is about. Please help.

  17. sharing on Nebraska Sheriff Wardriving, Sending Letters About Unsecured Wi-Fi · · Score: 1

    Last I checked it seemed that half of San Francisco was sharing open wifi connections. Yes, that might expose you to nasty hackers. I haven't heard of any problems though. I'd guess that on average, SF surfers are more sophisticated than Nevada surfers, yet they exposed themselves for the public good.

    Would it be such a terrible thing if 75% of all wifi connections were shared openly? Not good for the ISPs who charge $100/mo, but good for the poor, good for the soul of the generous.

    Is paranoia a tool for monopolist ISPs, security software providers, homeland security and the Republican conspiracy to spread FUD to get what they want? Can we shake off that dark cloud and show some public spirit?

    What protections would be appropriate for an ordinary person who is willing to share their internet connection with their neighbors?

  18. RAPS- comforting name on US Department of Homeland Security Looking For a Few Good Drones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Robotic Aircraft for Public Safety (RAPS)"

    Ah, "Public Safety"! Can't you just see it now? Robot helicopters intelligently lifting flood victims from rooftops, rescuing kittens from treetops, spraying killer bee swarms with sleep inducing chemicals. They'll come to the aid of lost hikers, climbers and avalanche victims. They will patrol for lost boaters and surveil and protect tagged endangered species from predators- human or other. Their eye in the sky will alert emergency services of serious auto accidents, fires, or weather conditions. They will survey bridge structures and other critical infrastructure for damage, weakness and risk of failure. Their sensors will give us early warning of radiation leaks, chemical spills, dangerous pollutants, and excess allergens.

    They will be our Public Safety angel!
    I'm sure this is what our beneficent government has in mind, right?

  19. I wept because I had no shoes... on Ask Slashdot: Gaming With Only One Hand? · · Score: 0

    "I never lamented about the vicissitudes of time or complained of the turns of fortune except on the occasion when I was barefooted and unable to procure slippers. But when I entered the great mosque of Kufah with a sore heart and beheld a man without feet I offered thanks to the bounty of God..." -poetry from the Gulistan (or "Rose Garden") of Sa'di

    Or, in more modern parlance:
    "For every door that closes, another opens."
      - which doesn't quite fit, but that's life

    yadda yadda. Yes, these tiresome sayings are great to apply to other peoples' misfortunes, but mine are more complicated. Isn't that what we all think?

    Perhaps it is an opportunity. Perhaps God, or the Invisible Pink Unicorn, is suggesting that you occupy yourself in some other way. You could take part in the world of the living, for instance. Donate time, money or talents to some worthy cause. Take a class on Japanese brush stroke. Go for a swim. Rally votes for your favorite local candidate. Meditate on your navel. Post an outrageous comment on /.

    Best wishes. Let us know if you find enlightenment as a result of your inconvenience.

  20. impossible vs unrealistic vs hope on Warp Drive Might Be Less Impossible Than Previously Thought · · Score: 1

    "less impossible" ? Does that sound a bit like 'slightly pregnant'? Possibility is a binary state- on, or off; no shades of grey allowed.

    As often happens, the /. blurb is a poor reflection of TFA, which says that warp speed "may not be as unrealistic as once thought".

    TFA seems a bit optimistic in posing a possible method for faster than light speed. The slashdot response tends to be antagonistic. The heartwarming thing is that all are excited about the idea. Deep inside we want to defy the rules, like Capt. James T. Kirk, and find a way. Who knows- that silly inner child in us may find a solution some day. Then what?

  21. Re:Bob Parsons quote on GoDaddy Goes Down, Anonymous Claims Responsibility · · Score: 1

    I've been doing business with Bob for over 20 years.

    He used to sell Mac software dirt cheap. Simple but functional programs that accomplished some goal effortlessly. I think he lived in Iowa at the time, had a family, was a slightly religious nut.

    Don't know what's happened in recent years but he seems to be the Hugh Hefner of the hosting world now. I hope he recovers, not as a Jesus freak but as a sensible person who can make the internet a better place.

  22. Re:Has anyone ever noticed... on Complex Systems Theorists Predict We're About One Year From Global Food Riots · · Score: 2

    "That the contemporary "Zombie" as portrayed in movies, at the receiving end of a chainsaw or shotgun, looks and acts very much like a hungry person would?"

    Slashdotters have probably never seen a starving person. They are similar to zombies in their slow, poorly directed movement, their vacant stare, their hollow cheeks and sallow skin.

    They are not violent. Not angry. Not protesting. They are the most passive humans it is possible to conceive of. They have no strength to lift their hands to swat the flies that swarm around their faces.

    But their hungry friends, family and neighbors who have a bit more strength may participate in a riot. It's generally unlikely and easily put down, but conceivable.

    Hungry people are an easy target. Shoot them down like zombies, run over them with your Lexus and legislate against them with the Tea Party.

  23. psychological science? on The Motivated Rejection of Science · · Score: 2

    The name of that journal jumped out at me for some reason. I had to follow up to learn why it unsettled me so.

    Not having been provided a link to the journal, I sought it online. It seems that it is one of many published by the 'Association for Psychological Science'. Each of these journals has a dramatic cover depicting a side view of a male head either receding or projecting in six increments.

    I was unable to find this article but pleasantly surprised that I could access some other articles in full text. The subject and content of the articles is about what one might expect- a serious statistical analysis of some perceived phenomenon followed by a conclusion.

    I have my own ideas of what science should be. Someone comes up with a theory and then proceeds with all his might to try to disprove that theory. Then all his friends and enemies try to disprove the theory. If they should all fail, then there is hope that something has been learned. Many areas of 'science' seem to fail this test.

    I love the concept of psychology and the occasional insights that come of the discipline. I've studied it off and on for over 50 years, through a number of fashionable deviations. I'm sure there is hope for some good result due to the millions of people who dedicate themselves to this interest.

    It's just that I really struggle with the concept of science being so closely associated with the exploration of psychology. Can we really use the word science, the same word that we use for physics and chemistry, in relation to psychology?

  24. mormons on Obama and Romney Respond To ScienceDebate.org Questionnaire · · Score: 1

    For a hundred years or so americans have been amused, amazed and embarrassed by the bizarre beliefs of the mormons. Unfortunately we are currently distracted by the strange behavior of scientologists and a particular movie star adherent who is seeking a new scientologist girlfriend.

    In our neverending search for novelty have we forgotten the weirdness of mormonism? Have we forgotten the thirst for power that drives the mormon church? Are we going to let that organization sit quietly in the background while we consider their pawn to lead this country?

    The statements you have seen from Obama and Rmoney are from advisers. The candidates have likely never seen them. Look instead to the forces behind the candidates if you want to know where their loyalties lie.

  25. the Valley is not just a place on Can the UK Create Something To Rival Silicon Valley? · · Score: 1

    It's a state of mind.

    As part of the Bay Area, it includes the universities Stanford and Berkeley- polar opposites yet both a hotbed of creative entrepreneurial talent. It includes San Francisco, another hotbed of creative (artistic) talent. Even the general population is innovative, eccentric and usually fun to be around. All this has been building up to a crescendo since the days of Mark Twain.

    Boston is competitive, again because of the talent drawn to its fine universities and money poured in by alumni. Seattle has Microsoft, Costco, Boeing, Starbucks and a few other businesses and a good university which makes it reasonably competitive.

    I'm not familiar with East London- how does it compare in talent & resources?