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User: TheNarrator

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  1. Rain is a big emergency in North Chile! on Snow Falls On the Most Arid Desert On Earth · · Score: 1

    They had rain a few years ago in Iquique, another town in North Chile that hardly ever gets rain. It caused quite a disruption because many poorer people have cardboard roofs on their houses, which ,obviously, do not work particularly well when it rains.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/21/tiny-drizzle-wreaks-havoc_n_242057.html

  2. Heim Theory says its mass is 0.51617049 MeV/c on Fermi Lab May Have Discovered New Particle or Force · · Score: 2

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heim_theory is an alternate model of particle physics that does a pretty good job of predicting the mass of fundamental particles mathematically.

    The theory also allows for particle states that don't exist in the Standard Model, including a neutral electron and two extra light neutrinos, and many other extra states.

    What's the predicted mass of the neutral electron particle? It's 0.51617049 MeV/c.

  3. Because Microsoft broke SSL on Why Doesn't Every Website Use HTTPS? · · Score: 1

    If Microsoft would ever fix this bug more sites would use SSL.

    http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/ssl/ssl_faq.html

    Why do I get I/O errors when connecting via HTTPS to an Apache+mod_ssl server with Microsoft Internet Explorer (MSIE)?

    The first reason is that the SSL implementation in some MSIE versions has some subtle bugs related to the HTTP keep-alive facility and the SSL close notify alerts on socket connection close. Additionally the interaction between SSL and HTTP/1.1 features are problematic in some MSIE versions. You can work around these problems by forcing Apache not to use HTTP/1.1, keep-alive connections or send the SSL close notify messages to MSIE clients. This can be done by using the following directive in your SSL-aware virtual host section:

    SetEnvIf User-Agent ".*MSIE.*" \
    nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown \
    downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0

  4. I think the politicians have just run out of ideas on 'Son of ACTA' Worse Than Original · · Score: 1

    Ever notice how a politician will hardly ever take a specific stand on any issue and if they do they'll never follow through (e.g Obama)? It's like politicians don't want to lead anymore and they just let their handlers and lobbyists put laws in front of them to sign and they do it because they don't really give a crap and they've completely run out of ideas. If you get a guy like Ron Paul who actually has ideas and doesn't just talk in meaningless genralities, all you see is non-stop ridicule.

  5. Not exactly WWII on Terrorists Bomb Moscow Airport · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The last time Russia was fighting for its territorial integrity 24 million Russians died. The terrorists have severely underestimated what it takes to frighten the Russian leadership into making concessions. You see, as long as all the terrorists die, the Russians don't really care. If you look at the Beslan massacre or the Moscow Theatre Seige, there was very little concern for the hostages, many of whom died during the raids by the security forces. It seems the main thing the government accomplished in both of the raids was killing all the terrorists and minimal casualties to security forces. It's probably modeled after things like Stalin's decision to not evacuate Stalingrad when the Nazis invaded.

  6. Re:Heh on Autism-Vax Doc Scandal Was Pharma Business Scam · · Score: 1

    No, the worst problem is researching the causes of autism is now a stigmatized field. It would be good to figure out what causes it, whether it's genetic, a brain damaging pathogen, or some sort of new environmental toxin like BPA or even an old one like Dioxin. Now every time someone comes out with a study that probes the causes of autism, a huge avalanche of skeptics will come out comparing it to the earlier fraudulent vaccine finding and dismiss it before giving it a through review.

  7. Re:That's nice... on Microsoft Ready To Talk Windows On ARM · · Score: 1

    x86 is such a funny architecture. If you've ever done operating system development in x86 it's crazy to see how much old crap there is in there from the 80s. Real Mode! Hello? Not to mention such inglorious hacks as getting the keyboard controller to reset the CPU!

  8. Re:And Windows is? on Is Linux At the End of Its Life Cycle? · · Score: 1

    Windows also has the disadvantage of not being invented in a country like Finland that won a war against the Soviet Union!

  9. Re:mm on Oracle To Monetize Java VM · · Score: 1

    What about the LLVM Java JIT? It apparently runs Eclipse and Tomcat.

  10. What about the Windows XP effect? on Oracle To Monetize Java VM · · Score: 1

    I wonder if most Java development will stay on JDK1.6 and not move anywhere. That's sort of the problem Microsoft has with Windows XP.

  11. Cargo Cult? on Harry Potter Blamed For India's Disappearing Owls · · Score: 1

    This sounds like some sort of Harry Potter Cargo Cult.

  12. And The Dining Patent Philosophers Starve!! on Apple Counter-Sues Motorola Over Touchscreen Patents · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This whole patent war reminds me of the famous computer science analogy: the dining philosophers.

    If each fork represents a patent, all the philosophers have picked up a fork and now are unable to eat because they don't have enough forks to make a smartphone.

  13. Re:Here we go again (SCO) on Oracle Claims Google 'Directly Copied' Our Java Code · · Score: 1

    They could always move to The Go Programming Language. It's Google's homegrown attempt to get something in between Python and C++. It's got a lot of neat concepts in it and could eventually be a real competitor to JAVA IMHO. The standard libraries still need a lot of work, but in a few years, especially if Oracle screws up Java, it could enter the mainstream.

  14. Re:And the religions of the world.... on Humans Will Need Two Earths By 2030 · · Score: 1

    The Sierra club had a huge internal struggle between people who wanted to limit immigration for environmental reasons and those who thought it was outside the scope of the organization:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra_Club#Population_control_and_immigration

  15. Re:Let the patent wars begin on Webvention Demanding $80k For Rollover Images · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah sure! This is patent World War I, in which patent France won and demanded patent Germany pay patent reparations. These patent reparations ultimately caused patent Hyperinflation in patent Germany and led to patent World War II. In patent WWII patent Stalin signed a patent non-aggression pact with patent Hitler and was completely taken by surprise when patent Russia was invaded by patent Germany. Patent Stalin allied with Patent USA eventually won and signed a patent peace where they divided up patent Europe in a patent cold war that lasted almost 50 years.

    This almost sounds like a plausible analogy!

  16. No Patent Infringement! on Word Processors — One Writer's Further Retreat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One good thing about using technology that old is there's no chance you could be violating any patents. It certainly makes sense as a symbolic gesture at least.

  17. IPV6's Killer App! on Microsoft Eyes PC Isolation Ward To Thwart Botnets · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Every connected device will be mandated to have the bottom 64 bits of its ipv6 address store a pc health certification identifier which will link to their owner's unique citizen identifier. I told you this was coming...

  18. Heim Theory? on Can We Travel To That Exciting New Exoplanet? · · Score: 1

    Just had to mention Heim Theory here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heim_Theory

    Extended Heim theory (EHT) is being researched as a possible way to utilize non-propellant methods of interstellar travel, specifically in overcoming the massive distances involved in any space journey. [39]
    [39]http://www.hpcc-space.de/publications/documents/AIAA2010-021-NFF-1.pdf

  19. Re:I agree on 'The Laws Are Written By Lobbyists,' Says Google's Schmidt · · Score: 1

    Slashdot or some other web 2.0 startup should start a PAC and hire lobbyists. It would crowd source legislation that would be presented by lobbyists as written bills. You just need to find your area of expertise. That's the problem though. The public doesn't really know what goes on inside of various industries and getting that information is difficult, practically the only people who have it who aren't in the business are trade magazine journalists and some financial analysts that follow the sector full-time.

  20. Re:Cool, I can't wait... on Obama Highlights IPv6 Issue · · Score: 1

    Just wait till you can't logon to the internet without your own biometric identifier in the bottom 64 bits of your IPv6 address. IPV6 is just as much a part of the surveillance state program as all the other privacy destroying initiatives he's been pushing.

  21. Re:Impressive. on In France, Hadopi Reporting Begins, With (Only) 10,000 IP Addresses Per Day · · Score: 1

    This is what IPV6 is all about. Your globally unique biometric id in the lower 64 bits at all times you are online. Why the heck did you think they made the address space so absurdly huge?

  22. Re:Already here for a while now on Fujitsu Eyes Wireless Gadget Charging For 2012 · · Score: 1

    The eval board will turn any RF between 850Mhz and 950Mhz into DC power. Not a whole lot of it, but a useful amount for things like sensors.

    See here for more details:
    http://www.powercastco.com/products/development-kits/

    See, this is what I mean by people just refuse to believe this technology is real. In that you're "skeptical", you think it's some sort of pseudoscience or something like that?

  23. You still don't get it !? on Fujitsu Eyes Wireless Gadget Charging For 2012 · · Score: 1

    The power is not transmitted via an electric toothbrush type induction coil. It's transmitted through magnetic resonance which is an entirely different physical process that lets the transmission work when the charger and the device to be charged are not touching.

    Watch the CNET video I linked to above and notice how utterly mystified the presenter is that the Christmas tree light branch lights are lit up and the device has no embedded power source and is not physically touching or adjacent to the power source.

    This is what I mean in that people have trouble understanding this technology. They always seem to mistake it for induction charging. It's as if people somehow simply cannot believe it exists.

  24. Already here for a while now on Fujitsu Eyes Wireless Gadget Charging For 2012 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is it me, or are people having a hard time believing the technology actually exists?

    Two Companies Already Have Products:

    http://www.powercastco.com/
    http://www.witricity.com/

    NY Times Covered this stuff in 2007

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/magazine/09wirelessenergy.html?_r=1&ref=magazine

    Here's CNET demoing powercast's tech in 2007!
    http://cnettv.cnet.com/powercast/9742-1_53-25606.html

    You can buy full blown evaluation boards online that powercast manufactures that implement wireless electricity:

    http://www.futureelectronics.com/en/technologies/development-tools/rf-wireless/Pages/9660812-P1110-EVB.aspx

    Why is everyone having such a hard time with this concept?

  25. Re:What I find amusing ... on German Military Braces For Peak Oil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Britain came close to collapsing in the early 19th century. They had deforested the whole place and were heating their houses with coal that they had to get out of deep dark mines. They had a problem in that the mines would flood and they had no way to drain them. Their civilization could have easily collapsed at that point. However, they then invented this thing called the steam engine, and the rest is history.