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User: henryteighth

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  1. READ_EXTERNAL_STORAGE on Many Android VPN Apps Request 'Dangerous' Permissions They Don't Need (zdnet.com) · · Score: 2

    The VPN app I use appears as "suspicious" in this analysis because it uses READ_EXTERNAL_STORAGE. So far as I can tell, this is needed to access downloaded files. The way I configure my VPN connection is to download a config file from a website and import it into the app. The config file includes certificates to a) authenticate me to the server, b) authenticate the server to me. Typing in a long binary string for (a) is not going to work, so the app needs to be able to read downloaded files. I think this counts as "core required functionality" rather than "suspicious behaviour"

  2. 2.5 million papers per year on Ask Slashdot: Why Are Scientists Constantly Surprised By What They Discover? · · Score: 1

    As well as the point about sensationalist journalism (as plenty of others have already pointed out), current estimates are that there are 2.5 million scientific papers published each year (http://blog.cdnsciencepub.com/21st-century-science-overload/). Obviously, only an incredibly small fraction of those get any coverage in the wider media - the vast majority of research that gets done is the "long tail" of work that is generally rather dull and unremarkable.

  3. He showed up a workshop entitled "High Energy Theory and Gender", where attendees expected to "discuss issues of gender and equal opportunities in the field." It sounds like the topic of his presentation was appropriate for the workshop.

  4. Re: Seems to Be a Pattern of Behavior on SourceForge and GIMP [Updated] · · Score: 1

    Pro tip: go to filezilla website, go to the download page (left hand menu). Ignore the big green "download from sourceforge" button, and go for "show additional download options". The Windows installers linked to *there* are clean of all the sourceforge-bundled crap (well I only use the 64 bit exe version, but I presume the others are OK too)

  5. not an experimental demonstration on First Experimental Demonstration of a Trapped Rainbow Using Silicon · · Score: 5, Informative

    The paper is entirely numerical simulation, despite what the linked blog post says. I quote: "In this paper, we numerically demonstrate an approach..". I'm not denigrating numerical simulations: I'm a computational physicist. Just, you know, RTFA?

  6. Re: There's a question about that at Skeptics on Parents' Campaign Leads To Wi-Fi Ban In New Zealand School · · Score: 1

    Faux isn't phonetically similar to fox, though. You do realise that faux is a French word, and that pronouncing it like "foe" is entirely consistent with other French pronunciation, don't you?

  7. Redundant summary is redundant on Scientists Extract RSA Key From GnuPG Using Sound of CPU · · Score: 0

    I'm so glad to know they examined the *acoustic* sound (or the acoustic *sound*, even) instead of any sort.

  8. Re:Not much worry with a source build on Ask Slashdot: Linux Security, In Light of NSA Crypto-Subverting Attacks? · · Score: 2

    Did you build your own compiler? If not, how can you trust the binaries it produces? Have you dissected your CPU? How do you know it's executing the instructions you want and not quietly running other instructions too? As others have said, you have to draw the line somewhere. Personally, I have no trouble running a binary distribution (not sure why you pick on Ubuntu and not Redhat or Suse or Debian or FreeBSD, but meh)

  9. The HTCondor (formerly known as Condor) distributed computing project has always been free to use, but transitioned from a closed-source to open-source license a few years ago. Development of the software has been continuing unaffected, so far as I can tell. So: yes, it's definitely possible.

  10. Re:Sputtering is experimental? on Spintronics Used To Create 3D Microchip · · Score: 2

    Maybe by "experimental technique" they meant "a technique that is used in experiments",

    Indeed. It is an "experimental technique" rather than a "theoretical technique" or a "computational technique", say. It's frustrating to read an abstract of a physics paper which sounds like the authors have performed a nifty measurement, only to find that in fact they are proposing an idea, or have performed a simulation, or theoretically analysed the problem. (Don't get me wrong, they're all equally important things, but not the same as performing an experiment). Thus, it's nice to emphasise one's "experimental technique".

  11. Without hot air on Will Renewable Energy Ever Meet All Our Energy Needs? · · Score: 1

    http://www.withouthotair.com/ Great book which performs a detailed analysis and discussion about energy usage (written by a Physics Prof who is also chief scientific advisor to the UK Government's Dept of Energy), freely available for download as a PDF (Off-topic: he's also the author of a brilliant textbook on Information Theory, also available as a free PDF)

  12. Re:Just hire the Irish on Microsoft Wants Computer Science Taught In UK Primary Schools · · Score: 2

    Ireland != Northern Ireland. The latter is part of the UK, the former is not. That's kind of why there's been ~50 years of violent and, more recently, significantly less violent conflict in that part of the world. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Troubles

  13. Re:Read original paper on Purported Relativity Paradox Resolved · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.0096 Many physics papers are also uploaded to the arxiv where they are freely accessible.

  14. Misleading title on What Birds Know About Fractal Geometry · · Score: 3, Informative

    The title seems to be trying to suggest (to me at least, and based on the other comments here also to plenty of other readers) that birds can perceive fractal dimensions (FDs). However, if you read the journal article, it's all about a study of how the fractal dimension of the plumage correlates to different measures of the bird's health. They then also investigate some causative effects, by changing the bird's food intake and measuring the effect this has on FD. Nowhere in the article do they make any claim that birds can necessarily perceive or calculate a fractal dimension: the paper ends by saying "We therefore suggest that considering FD should shed new light onto the evolution and maintenance of complex animal patterns. " So they suggest (entirely reasonably IMHO) that it would be interesting to study that latter aspect, which is quite an important difference from what the Slashdot title is trying to imply.

  15. Re:Devil's advocate here... on The UK's New Minister For Magic · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A basic precept of science is that you can't prove a negative.

  16. Inaccurate summary on British Prime Minister To Announce Porn Blocking Plans · · Score: 2

    FFS, RTFA! "The Prime Minister is expected to announce formal plans to look into...Cameron will announce a consultation". No plans to do anything at all have been announced, which is what the summary says

  17. Totally wrong on Researchers Demonstrate Quantum Levitation · · Score: 1

    Firstly it's a superconductor, not a semiconductor (as would have been obvious had the editor even bothered to glance at TFA). They're totally different things. Also, this is not news at all: it's a cool video, but again as TFA states it's just an example of the well-known Meissner effect.