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User: Alejux

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Comments · 122

  1. All that porn... on Videotapes Are Becoming Unwatchable As Archivists Work To Save Them (npr.org) · · Score: 3, Funny

    Will be lost, in time. Like tears in the rain...

  2. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    Do 10 minutes of Titans of Space, and you'll see the potential for education. Imagine the same technology applied to history, biology, geography. Going with your class through a crowded street of ancient Rome. Visiting different cities in other countries, seeing the customs and cultures. Travelling through the human body and going inside cells and organs. All this, not just looking at an abstract representation of those (flat screen), but actually feeling you're there.

  3. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    PM me in 5 years, and if there aren't at least 100 million people owing VR HMD's, I'll eat my shorts.

  4. Re:why? on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    Unless you want students to have sex with each other, visual and audio stimulation, with limited hand haptics, good hand and facial tracking and binaural audio is all you need for what's been proposed. All this will be easily obtainable within 5 years or less.

  5. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    You contradict yourself. The clunkiness of cars, radios and TV only proves that a good concept is only waiting for the technology to catch up. VR is a great concept, which until now was not feasible. But it's starting to become feasible, and is likely to have massive adoption in 5-10 years, which will definitely include usage in education and surgence of virtual classrooms (as suggested by Oculus' CEO).

  6. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    Let me guess. You never tried a VR done right, and pretty much dismisses the entire concept as a failure. I would really like to see your reaction when actually experience the sense of "presence" in VR for the first time.

  7. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    I think he was referring to people with complete lack of imagination, and who think they know everything about VR just because they tried some clunky low-resolution 3-pound helmet back in the 90's and haven't even had the decency to try the DK2 before condemning VR as an eternal fad.

  8. Re:why? on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    No, a computer monitor is not enough. It's one thing to watch something on a screen, it's another to be in another world or environment. Also, you can't socialize much using a monitor. The most you can do is use text messages and awkward videos. With VR, you can interact with other, as if you were in the real world, while walking in some street in ancient Rome, or cruising on a ship traveling through the human body, or the solar system.

  9. Re:No nerds left on Slashdot! on Oculus Rift CEO Says Classrooms of the Future Will Be In VR Goggles · · Score: 1

    I agree. It's sad to see this level of luddism and ignorance in slashdot comments. It seems common these days.

  10. Finally! on Scientists Developing Remote-Control Cyborg Moths · · Score: 1

    I was starting to wonder when they would get to it...

  11. Re: It's a Samsung Note on 60,000 Oculus Rift DK2 Orders, 20,000+ Units Shipped, New Orders Ship In October · · Score: 1

    The key word is positional. Makes the world of difference.

  12. Re:It's a Samsung Note on 60,000 Oculus Rift DK2 Orders, 20,000+ Units Shipped, New Orders Ship In October · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the flawless ultra low latency positional head tracking, the low-persistent display and the SDK with time warping and all other optimizations that will likely come from Oculus mean nothing, right? Good luck with your Durovis Dive and your Cardboard box HMD.

  13. Re:Kill the researcher on How to Maintain Lab Safety While Making Viruses Deadlier · · Score: 1

    This is NOT a fcking biological warfare research! For fucksake, read about the research! It's about understanding why the Spanish Flu was so deadly. This research helped us identify the genes which made that disease so deadly in the first place, so we have a better fighting chance to prevent other similar diseases from killing millions of people like that one did.

  14. Re:Safest approach on How to Maintain Lab Safety While Making Viruses Deadlier · · Score: 1

    The best way to protect the human race from future occurrences of deadly pathogens, such as ebola and Spanish flu, is to study them and understand why they are so deadly so we can find ways we can counteract them if similar epidemics occur in the future.

  15. Re:The solution is quite simple... on How to Maintain Lab Safety While Making Viruses Deadlier · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No one made the Spanish Flu, yet it appeared and killed millions of people. This type of study, while dangerous if not done safely, will help protect us from future occurrences of similar types of virus. The best way we can protect ourselves from an enemy, if to understand them. This is much needed research.

  16. What sorcery is this?! on 2D To 3D Object Manipulation Software Lends Depth to Photographs · · Score: 1

    I ask you!

  17. Re:Surprise? on iFixit Takes Apart the Oculus Rift DK2, Finds Galaxy Note 3 Display Inside · · Score: 2

    The CV1 may be another beast all together. With FB's backing, they'll have enough resources to order custom panels from Samsung, instead of having to rely on Samsung's mobile phone products.

  18. Re:pentile-matrix OLED panel on The Oculus Rift DK2: In-Depth Review (and Comparison To DK1) · · Score: 1

    Well said.

  19. Games just need to be slower when in VR on CCP Games Explains Why Virtual Reality First Person Shooters Still Don't Work · · Score: 1

    It's not that FPS games don't work, it's just that they have to be designed differently in order to create presence, and provide a pleasant experience, something that running around and jumping like crazy will not do.

  20. You wouldn't... on MP Says 'Failed' Piracy Warnings Should Escalate To Fines & Jail · · Score: 2

    ...steal a handbag. You wouldn’t steal a car. You wouldn’t steal a baby. You wouldn’t shoot a policeman. And then steal his helmet. You wouldn’t go to the toilet in his helmet. And then send it to the policeman’s grieving widow. And then steal it again!

  21. I for one... on Dell Exec Calls HP's New 'Machine' Architecture 'Laughable' · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...am super excited to see what kind of algorithms and applications could benefit from this kind of architecture: artificial intelligence, computer vision, ray-tracing, etc...

  22. Re:How boring. on My Neighbor Totoro In Virtual Reality · · Score: 1

    Please, oh Anonymous Coward. Please dazzle us with your great creations in VR. We're all very interested to see what your great creative mind can achieve.

  23. If it's not computable... on Mathematical Model Suggests That Human Consciousness Is Noncomputable · · Score: 2

    Then it's magic. If the brain is formed by neurons that work within a certain logic and mathematical model, then it's computable.

  24. $18.7 billion?! on Stanford Getting Rid of $18 Billion Endowment of Coal Stock · · Score: 0

    How can a university have so much money?

    Sorry, but it just seems wrong that institutions that are made to educate people and provide venues for scientific research, to become money hoarding corporations. How much research could they do with a fraction of that money?! The educational debt in the country continues to increase while all these universities hoard more and more wealth.

  25. I wonder if this kind of mass parallel computing architecture, can lead to more efficient ray tracing algorithms.