A couple of years ago I took a MOOC called "systematic program design." Even though I was a self tough programmer and had been programing for 25 years, i still learned something new.
Actually not, homeopathic medicine is made from the wrong stuff.
When you make a homeopathic sollutins you observe the symbtoms and chose a chemical component which would give the same symptoms if it was given in a concentrated form.
You than add this component to pure water, shake it, dilute it, skate it etc. Where the resulting remedy have the OPPOSITE effect of the original chemical.
When you add a chemical to water it will prompts an opposing reaction. So, water will take on a vibration which is the opposite of the chemicals. When you add some more water and add some energy by shaking, then the new water start to vibrate in resonance with the first water. Then you repeat this process until no trace of the original chemical is present.
With those laws journalist will actually have to do some research
before writing an article.
As for Simon Singh, as Ph.D he should know the difference between a good and a bad hypothesis/claim. A claim like "there is no evidence supporting claim x" is a very bad one. Because in the real would you can never prove that something does not exist. Better claims would be "As far as I know there is no evidence supporting claim x" or better "The result of study y contradict claim x".
I think the conclusion is that Simon Singh was sued, because he used bogus science to write he's article on bogus science.
A couple of years ago I took a MOOC called "systematic program design."
Even though I was a self tough programmer and had been programing for 25 years,
i still learned something new.
They used this book
https://www.amazon.com/How-Des...
I recommend you check it out and google the course name.
I have ideas for several medical devices.
But what is the most cost effective way to get them in hands of Doctors ?
Does the exist an doctor equivalent of Slashdot where you can post a story about it or buy ads ?
Take a look at Julia. http://julialang.org/
It is almost as fast as C, which make it much faster than Matlab, Octave, R and Python.
What we need is a holodeck.
Where we can simulate every posible learning experience.
There is also OpenSCAD
Check out OpenSCAD
Here is a link to the database and the question
http://www.trueknowledge.com/q/what_was_the_most_boring_day_in_history
Wave had many interesting features.
But there was no way to let you see waves from
you email client like a feed or a plugin.
The psychic speaks for humanity.
Because most alien is telepathic, it is that simple.
One protective paint is yshield.
http://www.yshield.com/
That is actually a interesting question.
Have any studies show addiction to placebo ?
Actually not, homeopathic medicine is made from the wrong stuff.
When you make a homeopathic sollutins you observe the symbtoms
and chose a chemical component which would give the same symptoms
if it was given in a concentrated form.
You than add this component to pure water, shake it, dilute it, skate it etc.
Where the resulting remedy have the OPPOSITE effect of the original chemical.
If you know a little chemistry you know Le Chaterlier's principle.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Chatelier's_principle
When you add a chemical to water it will prompts an opposing reaction.
So, water will take on a vibration which is the opposite of the chemicals.
When you add some more water and add some energy by shaking,
then the new water start to vibrate in resonance with the first water.
Then you repeat this process until no trace of the original chemical is present.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Chatelier's_principle
try to send them this video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LA4Xx5Noxyo
There is a tool called grep which is very useful.
I am on board, If we can find some funding for this.
I am a freelance programmer from Denmark.
Have done a lot of web programing with c/c++,php and sql.
Also I have made a new type of polls,
which I call eigenpolls, it might be something we can use.
http://all-technology.com/eigenpolls/
What is your skill set ?
Hi
I just had a quick look at your idea.
Isn't it just to develop full spectrum light blubs ?
If not could you explain the difference ?
I consider Google a smart company.
But I don't think they have manage this project very well.
Instead of going trough 150000 suggestion and let the
public vote for 16 made-up projects.
They should have used the wisdom of the crowd to vote for the 150000 suggestions
and have the advisory board chose between the top 100.
What I would like to see is a open funding network.
Where people can post ideas like this, vote on there favorite projects
and where funds can find and support this projects.
ps. yes, I did submit this idea to 10^100.
It would have been better if they
With those laws journalist will actually have to do some research
before writing an article.
As for Simon Singh, as Ph.D he should know the difference between a good and a bad hypothesis/claim.
A claim like "there is no evidence supporting claim x" is a very bad one.
Because in the real would you can never prove that something does not exist.
Better claims would be "As far as I know there is no evidence supporting claim x"
or better "The result of study y contradict claim x".
I think the conclusion is that Simon Singh was sued, because he used bogus science to write he's article on bogus science.
Go watch "dragons den" or "shark tank"
So, you can see how it is done.
Go, find a big company that can use your technology,
get a initial order.
Then go to a angel investor and get the money to set up production and get the patent.
That it not entirely correct.
Magnetic monopoles have been observed.
The problem is that most student are told that magnetic monopoles haven't been observed,
and very few student check to see if that is correct.
Check out chapter 5 in
http://www.scribd.com/doc/4445/quaternionic-electrodynamics
for references to the articles.
Google should just let the people vote between all
150000 ideas and then select the best 5 ideas from top 100.
It is in situation like this the wisdom of the crowd is useful.
The article forgot to say that Steven talk
at Harvard tomorrow and that the talk is available over webcast.
See http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/2009/04/wolfram
While we are waiting for alpha you might like
to play 2 other knowleadge engines like:
http://start.csail.mit.edu/
and
http://quizbot.trueknowledge.com/
PS. Also check out my news site
http://crowdnews.eu/
Does anyone know if a material exist with similar reaction to radio waves and what such a material is called?
Materials called radiochromics normally react
to radioactive radiation not radio waves.
I think you linked to the wrong movie.
The movie you linked to is a comedy.
quizbot at
http://quizbot.trueknowledge.com/
says 206