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User: eanbowman

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Comments · 11

  1. Shocking Life Experiences on The Odd Effects of Being Struck By Lightning · · Score: 1

    I've been shocked by wall current many times, but that doesn't even come close.

    I've been shocked by a TV capacitor once, that merely hurt.

    Being within 15 feet of a lightning strike was weirder. It wasn't pain so much as a tingling everywhere. Most of the charge dissipated around me.
    (Lightning struck a tree and I was in a porch area nearby playing video games outside a farm house on a giant old TV. The game and the TV didn't suffer any damage, so I think the charge may have not come from them.)

  2. Context for the Japanese Car comment? on US Revamping Its Nuclear Arsenal · · Score: 1

    'I now appreciate the bitterness I saw in former WW2 warriors when they would see a Japanese car. '

    Can you elaborate on this? It looks bad without context.

  3. That book cover... on In Maryland, a Soviet-Style Punishment For a Novelist · · Score: 1

    http://d188rgcu4zozwl.cloudfro...

    From the Amazon page.

    I wonder how you get the job of making these? I could make a better book cover in my sleep.

  4. Re:Free market escapades! on China Gives Microsoft 20 Days To Respond To Competition Probe · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laissez-faire

    It literally means let them do.

    The more you know

  5. Re:Official Vehicles on DoT Proposes Mandating Vehicle-To-Vehicle Communications · · Score: 1

    You can experience this effect after travelling at highway speeds (or the comfortable maximums thereof) for hours on end.

    Slowing down to catch your off ramp feels like crawling, until you look at your speedometer and you're still 20km/h faster than the ramp speed.

    Your subjective feeling of safety is often dead wrong. It's just that you don't often have to test that safety.

  6. Re:Official Vehicles on DoT Proposes Mandating Vehicle-To-Vehicle Communications · · Score: 1

    When you speed up a car, damage on impact is exponential, not linear.

    Sorry to be a pedant, but it's velocity squared, not exponential.

    O_O

    squared

    As in x^2.

    What do we call ^2? I think it starts with an e. Help me out here.

  7. Re:Better Idea on EFF's Cell Phone Guide For US Protesters · · Score: 1

    Rarely? By-standers get caught up in protest activities all the time. You're delusional if you think otherwise, sadly.

    In such a situation, you're not there to protest but may be detained anyway for simply being outdoors in or near a neighbourhood that's under police control.

    Trust me. You can't always plan for this kind of thing.

  8. Re:still the same galaxy. dont worry. on Samsung Announces Galaxy Alpha Featuring Metal Frame and Rounded Corners · · Score: 1

    I get thunderstorm alerts but since I never leave the ringtone on, I never hear anything. Just a quick vibration and a notification in the notification area.

    Do you... leave your ringtone on while you sleep?

    I'm too used to getting texts from friends at 3AM, or FB notifications or something. Silent pretty much all the time unless I need to be doing something where I won't notice the vibration.

    By leaving the ringtone on, you're pretty much telling your phone, "Yes make a loud noise. I don't care if I'm sleeping."

  9. /. is a prime example on Writer: Internet Comments Belong On Personal Blogs, Not News Sites · · Score: 1

    /. tends to be a cesspit of sexist commentary, or dude-bro whining, or sweeping sexism under the rug because these insular men and women don't believe it exists because they can't see how it affects _them_. Evidence: Almost every comment above this one.

  10. CS teaches low-level programming on Ask Slashdot: "Real" Computer Scientists vs. Modern Curriculum? · · Score: 1

    As far as I'm aware, any university level CS (now dubbed computer studies and not science) has a required module where you learn processor logic down to the flip-flops, you make machine code in an emulator and you make your own "OS" which is really just a string processor that can interleave the strings as if they were tasks.

    To get through CS you need to at least see this stuff and achieve a 60 or higher. Sure, the language they teach you abstract data types has changed over the years. When I started it was Pascal in the intro course and standard C in the abstract data type courses. Then C++ in the object oriented courses until midway through my studies they switched over to Java for things like the machine learning and simulations courses. Generally you could use whichever languages you wanted for your submitted work, however.

    That said, I was always surprised by the skill-level of people who were able to temporarily remember the material for said courses but who could not grok it for the life of them. Usually, I hope, these were people from other majors who wandered into a CS course to fulfil a requirement. I shudder to think that some of them intended this as a career.

  11. What about my right to be remembered? on Bing Implements Right To Be Forgotten · · Score: 1

    Remember me, Internet. For all of the intelligent and the silly things I have done. Who am I kidding? Nobody cares about me.