Slashdot Mirror


User: tfocker4

tfocker4's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
21
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 21

  1. Re: You would trust insurance companies on this? on What the Insurance Industry Thinks About Climate Change · · Score: 1

    FEMA has been simulating hypothetical storms to evaluate risk since the 1970s. And you argue that insurance companies, who are at least as clever, are going to rely on sparse records of extreme events? As a person who does this sort of modeling, trust me, no one who is in the black puts much confidence in historical data.

  2. Not very robust on The Cognitive Cost of Poverty · · Score: 1

    Looking at the methodology of this study, it's not very robust. I generally believe that the state of poverty is a complex mix of one's surroundings and own choices. But this really isn't very convincing. The poor people in the study could easily have more trouble with the question because if your car is worth less (probable for poorer people), then deciding whether to scrap the car in an expensive repair is harder to figure out. Plus, the authors suggest that the poor are constantly under this cognitive strain, yet the study itself showed that they do ok so long as they aren't (at that moment) dealing with a difficult financial decision. Very weak proof if you ask me. Here are the study's details: researchers performed two sets of experiments. In the first, about 400 randomly chosen people in a New Jersey mall were asked how they would respond to a scenario where their car required either $150 or $1,500 in repairs. Would they pay for the work in full, take out of a loan, or put off the repair? How would they make that decision? The subjects varied in annual income from $20,000 to $70,000.Before responding, the subjects were given a series of common tests (identifying sequences of shapes and numbers, for example) measuring cognitive function and fluid intelligence. In the easier scenario, where the hypothetical repair cost only $150, subjects classified as âoepoorâ and âoerichâ performed equally well on these tests. But the âoepoorâ subjects performed noticeably worse in the $1,500 scenario. Simply asking these people to think about financial problems taxed their mental bandwidth.

  3. Re: The Onion said it best on Qualcomm Says Eight-Core Processors Are Dumb · · Score: 1

    Ahahaha. My God where are my mod points!?!

  4. it's so rare on Data Storage That Could Outlast the Human Race · · Score: 1

    That i don't understand half of an article but am still completely blown away. Well done smart research people, well done.

  5. Re: No on NTSB Recommends Lower Drunk Driving Threshold Nationwide: 0.05 BAC · · Score: 1

    I'm not doubting you, but I'd be very interested to see a reference for that statement. Love to read up more on it.

  6. But where do we stop? on NTSB Recommends Lower Drunk Driving Threshold Nationwide: 0.05 BAC · · Score: 1

    Certainly, like most things, there is a limit to the value of the regulation. We know that hands free cell phone usage is still dangerous while driving but we don't outlaw it because using a cell phone while driving is too valuable. What about drinking and driving? Yes, 0.01% can still affect driving, but regulating to that level just isn't worth the burden it puts on people. So where is the cutoff? Is 0.05% already too low, just right, or not low enough?

  7. My new hobby on How Would an Astronaut Falling Into a Black Hole Die? · · Score: 1

    Bringing up old physics thought experiments in order to throw the quantum mechanics community into an intellectual crisis.

  8. in other news on New Zealand Frontline Police Get Apple Devices in Efficiency Measure · · Score: 1

    New Zealand police outfits changing to black turtlenecks and jeans in cost saving measure. Chief quoted saying traditional black with warm/cold weather turtlenecks and rugged jeans are an ideal pair. New Zealand police now driving Porsches as cost saving measure. Chief quoted saying they can cover twice the distance in half the time. New Zealand police adding all-aluminum ships to coastal fleet. Chief quoted saying this is actually a terrible idea... New Zealand police now recognize Opposite Day as official holiday.

  9. tigerdirect on Ask Slashdot: Buying a Laptop That Doesn't Have Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Nuff said.

  10. causation = correlation? on The Mobile App Design Tail Wags the Desktop Software Design Dog · · Score: 1

    So because since their inception, computers have continuously refined their interfaces to be simpler, we ate to assume that current trends are driven by mobile devices? Does the op remember the original google page (long before mobile was a big deal)? 5 year old children draw more complex illustrations. And are we to assume this is a good thing? The tech savvy would say no, give me buttons and drop down menus filled with features. Mobile displays ate simplistic because screen space is a luxury, not because it's a good thing.

  11. sample size, anyone? on Male Scientists More Prone To Misconduct · · Score: 1

    If we're to argue that 9 females is enough to judge the entire population by, then we might want to tell every statistician that they're wrong about, well, everything.

  12. Re:True key to success on Inside an Amazon Warehouse · · Score: 1

    Aww man, that's what I was gonna sayyyyyy!

  13. On moratoria on US Congressman Wants To Ban New Internet Laws · · Score: 1

    What if a moratorium was added, by default, to all but the most important laws the first time they were passed? This could make it mandatory to review the worth of a law after it has been in effect for a while. If deemed worthwhile, being passed a second time could make it permanent. Certainly this would have huge downsides, but many benefits. It might decrease the amount of stale legislation and could allow the benefits of hindsight to be incorporated into the second version of laws deemworthy of re-passing. But, it would significantly increase Congress' workload, likely causing them to be unable to get as much done, and there's no guarantee that "bad" laws wouldn't be passed a second time while "good" laws would. Anyway, just a thought.

  14. i was almost excited on Hands-On With Intel's "Next Unit of Computing" Mini PC · · Score: 2

    Until I saw the price tag. Comparing those specs to a tablet or laptop, this is a pricey machine without an OS or monitor. I suppose I can see a market for this as a compact personal server, but still, no ethernet? I'm just not clear what market they are targeting with this.

  15. Re:hunting? on Activists' Drone Shot Out of the Sky For Fourth Time · · Score: 1

    Puppies? Checkmate.

  16. My thesis took months to write on How Can Wikipedia's Visual Editor Top Other Word Processors? · · Score: 1

    ...because writing equations in Word takes years, and auto-numbering the equations is impossible

  17. What about joint ventures? on US Justice Dept. Sues eBay For Anti-Competitive Hiring Practices · · Score: 1

    My firm is in a joint venture with another, and they explicitly will not hire each others' employees while partnered. Anyone familiar with what the law says in such a case?

  18. to summarize... on Google Wants To Be a Wireless Carrier · · Score: 1

    Hooray for more competition in a Marley with absurd profits. Boo that it's google because they're even more monolithic than the smartphone market.

  19. in other news on Kim Dotcom's Next Venture: Free Broadband To New Zealand · · Score: 1

    I plan on building a free airport, which will travel to every other international hub in the world. It will be funded by my leprechaun-catching business.

  20. No, on Climbing 103 Floors On a 'Bionic' Leg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank you anonymous reader. No one could rightfully call you an anonymous coward.

  21. My new top issue in the 2012 election on FTC Whacks "Rachel From Card Holder Services" · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...is giving whoever took care of this one billion dollars.