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User: jehan60188

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Comments · 87

  1. Engineers have to be brave on 'Paying Taxes Is a Lot Better Than Phony Corporate Courage, Apple' (theintercept.com) · · Score: 1

    "engineers are very smart, but their job does not typically require much bravery"

    Try saying that to Boisjoly, Snowden, or the GE Three.

  2. call a spade a spade, please on Google, Facebook, Microsoft Deliver K-12 CS Demands To Congress (politico.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google, Facebook, Microsoft need script-kiddies that they don't have to spend money training

  3. Using "mysterious" in a scientific publication. Ever.

  4. low standards for kickstarter on An Open Source Flat Pack Robot Arm That's As Easy To Build As Ikea Furniture · · Score: 3, Insightful

    seems just about anyone with a decent camera, a half-baked (usually derivative) idea, and 5th grade writing skills can get a kickstarter now.
    maybe I should start a kickstarter for my brilliant idea of a pet stone

  5. Re:Should let them work inside parks. on Councilmen Introduce Bills Strongly Regulating UAV Use in NYC · · Score: 1

    just like those designated "free speech areas" the government likes to set up, right?

  6. hooray for the government on Councilmen Introduce Bills Strongly Regulating UAV Use in NYC · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm so glad our benevolent overlords are here to keep us safe!
    Banning things like UAVs, guns, and large sodas is definitely the best way to keep citizens (who are all too stupid to make their own decisions) healthy.
    But thank goodness cops can still use guns and UAVs; they never abuse their power, and are always fully trained, so we know nothing could possibly go wrong!

    Never mind educating and empowering them to make their own decisions, who has time for that?! No, we citizens want to be spoon fed. And as long as we have a good TV signal while american idol is on, we won't really care what you do to us

  7. do as I say, and as I did on Ask Slashdot: How Should a Liberal Arts Major Get Into STEM? · · Score: 2

    I got a degree in mathematics, and didn't go the teaching route. after working for a while in the geophysics industry, I got bored and wanted more options- I realized the best way to open up a lot of options is to go the engineering route (every job posting I found interesting required a BS in ME)

    so, go back to school. start at community college (get calculus, diff eq, physics, chemistry out of the way), and make a good impression on your professors there (evaluate the ones worth making an impression on). this isn't hard- you don't need kiss up to them, just volunteer to answer questions, sit up front, ask questions, etc. then go back to them and ask for letters of recommendation (masters programs usually require three)
    then, (now this is key), get a 4.0 in your undergrad engineering classes (you'll need to take a few in order to 'catch up' to other grad students; but you won't have to waste time with classes outside of your specialty- I focused on thermofluids, and skipped advanced materials/vibrations stuff). Alternate between co-op semesters, and class/research semesters. Your degree will take a bit longer to complete, but you'll have a lot of fun, make important contacts, and have the chance to do really cool stuff (I joined formula SAE and EWB, and it was a blast)

    After your first, or second semester, hit the job fairs. Try to get a coop/internship (maybe with an aerospace firm?). This will help finance your schooling- save your money, and use it for books/rent/food (not tuition, take out loans for that)

    BUT this is assuming you want an MS in mechanical engineering. you say you want to go into STEM, and something space related. That's still incredibly vast- you could design fuel systems, airframes, engine components, heck (if you're good at it) you could make an entire career out of analyzing drag on nose cones!
    So, don't say you want to go into space, quiet yet. Narrow down the field of STEM you want to work in- teaching math, researching biology, designing blu-ray players, investigating car crashes? I knew i wanted to go into ME, so I took the basic ME undergrad courses and fell in love with thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics- so I went the thermofluid route. I would've been happy designing pumps that move liquid chocolate around, but instead I get to work on the fuel system for the F-35
    (also, read what color is your parachute)

  8. drop out on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With Electronics-Induced Inattentiveness? · · Score: 2

    getting distracted by something else means you don't care enough about the subject to pay attention. if it wasn't a phone, you'd find another distraction because you don't care about whatever you're studying
    you're ruining it for serious grad students by driving up tuition, and watering down the value of whatever degree you hope to achieve.

    this is grad school, not the third grade- nobody's going to hold your hand through it, and nobody cares if you succeed or not.

  9. Re:Art expands thought, science limits it on The Ancestor of Humans Was an "Artist" 500,000 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    do you have a compound I can come live on?

  10. Re:So, ion drive or something??? on Boeing Readies For First Ever Conjoined Satellite Launch · · Score: 4, Informative

    good question, the efficiency comes from the speeds achievable
    squirting pressurized gas out of a nozzle into space results in an exit velocity of ve = sqrt(C), where C is some clever arrangement of specific heat, R, T, etc (it's been a while since i've study nozzle design)
    Basically, the exit velocity is limited by mostly the chemical's temperature; quadrupling the absolute temperature would only double the speed, so a lot of energy would be needed

    ions are different (bare with me, I'm not an electrical engineer), because you just need to create them (chemical reaction, heat, etc), and then control them (static field, magnetic field). it's a lot lower power, and a lot greater impulse (over a lot longer time) than what ejecting molecules in to space can provide

  11. Re:So, ion drive or something??? on Boeing Readies For First Ever Conjoined Satellite Launch · · Score: 1

    although, i suppose you could use a PEM fuel cell, and have it eject water vapor

  12. Re:So, ion drive or something??? on Boeing Readies For First Ever Conjoined Satellite Launch · · Score: 1

    ion drives, probably
    but those still require ions to work, so there will probably be a tank of hydrogen onboard

  13. what a waste on Comet Probe Philae To Deploy Drill As Battery Life Wanes · · Score: 0

    they decided to be cheap, and not install any kind of guidance on the probe, so they get a few days of experimentation instead of the years they could have achieved if they landed in a sunny spot?
    wasteful

  14. why is this necessary? i mean, blender has nonlinear video editing capabilities. what will this offer that blender doesnt?

  15. We finally know! on Revolutionary New View of Baby Planets Forming Around a Star · · Score: 1

    We finally know how is babby formed!

  16. Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. on Pope Francis Declares Evolution and Big Bang Theory Are Right · · Score: 2

    The theory of evolution isn't Earth-origin theory. Why can't people understand that?

  17. nursing? really? on Developers, IT Still Racking Up (Mostly) High Salaries · · Score: 1

    I had no idea nurses were so well compensated

  18. Re:Already gone on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 1, Troll

    the problem is that she's "a woman of [yours]" as in you own her, and don't see her as anything more than property.
    since your blender functions just fine whether you pay attention to its emotions, you don't care if it exhibits emotions

  19. Re:Or you know, not marry on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 4, Informative

    that's the thing, marriage is financially beneficial under US laws.
    it's also necessary for things like wills, and who can/can't testify against you, or even allowing certain people to visit you in the hospital

  20. Re:so what you're saying... on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 0

    emotionally/physically, abusive, yes.
    But how about a person who's suffered years of emotional abuse "knowing" their spouse is cheating without being able to prove it?
    these tools can empower that person. Do we condemn the tool (ban cars/guns/cigarettes!) or do we condemn the people who use them immorally?

  21. Re:Already gone on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "if you feel the need to use data encryption, you're committing a crime"
    "if you feel the need to own a gun, you're going to rob a liqueur store"
    "if you feel the need to wear a seat belt, you're planning on getting in an accident"

  22. Re:What if it was a man who was tracked? on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 1

    arrest? maybe if you're well connected.
    conviction? only if you can pick the right jury

  23. so what you're saying... on Technology Heats Up the Adultery Arms Race · · Score: 0

    ...is that I need a warrant to keep track of my loved ones (in case they're a kid and get kidnapped, or they have dementia and are prone to wandering), but the government can keep track of everyone, all the time without any such permission?

  24. jeeps and planes? on PETA Is Not Happy That Google Used a Camel To Get a Desert "StreetView" · · Score: 4, Insightful

    if google had done that, they'd be criticized for not caring about carbon emissions

  25. Re:Why? on The $1,200 DIY Gunsmithing Machine · · Score: 2

    well put. A lot of "anti-gunners" say to "just call the police"
    I usually tell them to read up on Warren vs DC (three college aged women got raped for 4 hours. called 911 several times, and had no response from police. because police are NOT OBLIGATED TO PROTECT YOU)