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  1. Re:What about long-term data integrity? on How Intel and Micron May Finally Kill the Hard Disk Drive · · Score: 1

    Ok, so you probably aren't going to read this 3 days later, but just to note that most RAW file formats are highly compressible. So if your archiving decade-old RAW photos there's little reason not to pass them through gzip or bzip2 or lzma and cut their size in half or more.

  2. Re:Oh Please Edge Detection and Motion Detection on fMRI Data Reveals How Many Parallel Processes Run In the Brain · · Score: 1

    history is full of examples of this, When Columbus came to the Americas, many of the natives he encountered could not see the ships because they had no invariant example of "Ship" so they simply couldn't see them.

    Ok, I've gotta call 'citation needed' on this. It sounds like urban legand BS.

    Another example that comes out in some fields of psychology is the inability of some cultures to be able to distinguish between "Green" and "Blue" simply because in their language there is one word that describes both colors.

    This is false. You need to look deeper into the linguistics research on colour words and cognitive psychology. When presented with coloured cards or other objects and asked to identify which have *exactly* the same colour and which differ people from all cultures perform equally well. In other words all people have the same basic colour perceptions.

    However a difference emerges when it comes to the ability to *recall* colour differences. In other words if you present a person with the objects then take them away and distract them with other tasks for a while then ask them to recall which objects where, again, *exactly* the same colours the response will depend on the basic colour terms in the language they speak. Interestingly for multilingual people you can influence how they classify colours by priming them in different languages they are fluent in before/during the task.

  3. Re:Good on Chinese Court Orders Ban On Apple's iPad · · Score: 2

    Well, actually Taiwan officially claims to *be* China (specifically they claim to be the 'Republic of China' [ROC] and that they have territorial rights over all of China (and Mongolia and parts of India and parts of Burma and parts of ...)) and that the Chinese Communist Party [CCP] government (the People's Republic of China [PRC]) is illegitimate. Meanwhile the PRC claims Taiwan is a rebel province under their jurisdiction. So they both claim Taiwan is part of China, just they claim it's part of *different* Chinas.

    (There has been growing support for officially declaring Taiwan an independent country and no longer holding onto the claim to be the real government of China. But a lot of people in Taiwan oppose this because such a declaration would seriously anger the CCP and could lead to war.)

  4. Re:Our repressed media is bad enough on Arizona Ponders FCC Decency Standards For the Classroom · · Score: 2

    He asks why we invent a word and than decide it is not appropriate to say?

    History.

    Most (but not all) of our 'dirty words' today were regular anglo-saxon English words prior to the Norman invasion of 1066. After the Norman conquest the elites spoke French while commoners continued to speak English. Over time the elites were assimilated into the English speaking community (similar to how China keeps assimilating their conquerors over and over again (e.g. the Mongols, the Manchu)). But this separation that existed and how the elites adopted English leaves a lot of relics in our language. The vulgar [in linguistics meaning the 'common speech'. Language as it is actually spoken, not as it's written down or used in official functions] speech of the peasants became first vulgar [meaning crude and unrefined] and then vulgar [meaning explicit and offensive]. 'Proper people' would use French-descended terms brought into English. Essentially it was a form of 'class war' in which the elites may have adopted English but they rendered older English vocabulary of the lower classes into something unacceptable.

    (Of course all languages have 'improper' words. Having such words makes us able to express anger, frustration, etc that is 'beyond the pale'. Or just so we can be offensive because we want to be. So English would still have such words (although they'd probably be different words) even without the Norman conquest. But nevertheless this is how things evolved and where most of our particular 'vulgar words' came from.)

    Similarly this is why English is rather peculiar in how it has in many cases a word for a live animal and a separate word for meat from that animal (e.g. pig - pork, cow - beef, deer - venison). The animal was looked after by the poor and thus retained the original English term while the meat was consumed by the elites who called it by the French word.

  5. Re:The real questions should be different on Is Agriculture Sucking Fresh Water Dry? · · Score: 1

    Yea, they do that here. I live in a small town out in the middle of nowhere in southern Manitoba, Canada. The town is surrounded by farm land. Town sewage is pumped into a lagoon where it sits and gets natural 'sewage treatment' through bacteria breaking down wastes. Then every so often the contents of the lagoon is just pumped into nearby fields. (With the full consent of the farmers involved because, hey, free fertilizer.)

    This works fine for moderate amounts of sewage. But you'd have to work out quiet a complex system to deal with all the sewage from a decent-sized city. You can't put too much sewage all in one place or you'd overwhelm the ability of the land to deal with it and it starts becoming a liability instead of a resource.

    Plus big cities tend to crowd out nearby farm land to make room for suburbs.

  6. Re:Color me weird. I like both. on EU and US Approve Google-Motorola Deal · · Score: 2

    So now I get Google building a standard. Unlocked. Updateable. Frequency agile. GSM. Mobile world wide.

    Uh, that's more or less what the Google Nexus (Nexus One, Nexus S, and now currently the Galaxy Nexus) phones are. (Although Google is sometimes a little slow at pushing out updates, but they get there eventually.) The Nexus phones all come with stock Android - no extra vendor software or configuration.

    Although I'm not sure about 'Mobile world wide'. Your ability to use your phone somewhere (like, say, another country) will always be dependent on your service provider. But everything else you want is there.

  7. Re:To stop child pornographers and organized crime on Canadian Govt To Introduce Massive Internet Surveillance Law · · Score: 1

    We didn't do this to ourselves. Less than 40% of voters voted for the Conservatives. Since the turnout rate was just a little over 60% that means that fewer than 25% of eligible Canadian voters actually voted for the Conservatives. Less than 1/4 of the population is dictating all political policy to all Canadians.

    I think this should make it official. Canada is no longer a democracy. And it won't be a democracy until we get real electoral reform (such as proportional representation).

  8. Re:and where is exactly the problem? on Journalist Arrested By Interpol For Tweet · · Score: 1

    "About the only two groups who haven't waged wars for their religion (or lack of one) are atheists and Buddhists"

    Buddhists I agree.

    Well, then there's the Tibetan Empire

  9. Re:Easy fix. on Did North Korea Conduct Secret Nuclear Tests? · · Score: 2

    I don't think that's really China's view.

    The Wikileaks cables have included suggestions that Bejing is willing to accept a unified Korea under the South's government

    China is also seriously concerned about an influx of refugees should North Korea 'collapse'.

    And that's really everybody's concern. North Korea can't be allowed to simply 'collapse'. (It really already has collapsed economiclly but somehow manages to soldier on politically and socially.) There is too much military hardware there. There are too many people there. It would be a mess for everyone in the region (China, Russia, South Korea, Japan).

    But there are several realities in the way of unification:

    1) The Northern elites don't want it. This is really the biggest problem because until you can get the North to agree to unification there will be no unification. It's essentially impossible to forcedly unify the country. The people of the North have been so indoctrinated to fear everyone from outside the country. And the North's army remains powerful enough to cause so much destruction - not just to the North but to the South as well - that invasion is simply a no-go. You must somehow convince the rulers of the North to give up control to the South.

    2) Unification would ruin the South. Unification is expensive. And it takes a long time. You don't just declare a country unified and all is good. You have to build up the poorer partner and work on social unification as well.

    The unification of Germany cost upwards of $1.9 TRILLION. And West Germany was a lot richer than South Korea is. And East Germany wasn't nearly as poor as North Korea is. And socially there is still a gap between former East and West Germans. It will take another few generations to create real social unification.

    A similar lesson can be learned by looking at Yemen, which was separated between North and South between the end of WWI until 1990. Yet after declaring unification the social separation between the peoples of the two former nations remained and resulted in civil war and unrest which really still continues today. (Equally note that both North and South Yemen were extremely poor nations, which made unification difficult economiclly as well.)

    Really, the best scenario would be for the Northern elites to liberalize - open their economy bit by bit and reveal the truth about the rest of the world to their people bit-by-bit. Spend less on the military and more on developing the country - education, infrastructure, and a Chinese-style economic modernization. Then, as the North slowly climbs out of poverty and absolute self-imposed social isolation then maybe in a few decades unification will look more and more realistic.

    And really that's what everyone wants. Everyone outside of the Northern elites that is.

    There had been some hope that after Kim Jong-il died that his successor would be more open to the rest of the world, but that seems not to be the case.

  10. Re:you're a troll but even so.... on Pentagon: 30,000 Pound Bomb Too Small · · Score: 1

    I'm going to nitpick here and point out that the Ottomans were able to attack Vienna in 1683. A battle they lost and marked the end of the Ottoman Empire's ability to threaten a major European power, but still 200 years after the 1400's.

  11. Re:format and rhymes on NTT DoCoMo Asks Google To Limit Android Data Use · · Score: 1

    The Japanese love to come up with abbreviation with double meanings.

    Even more so if you can work some English into it.

    So, as newcastlejon mentions above, DoCoMo was picked because it was an abbreviation of an English phrase *and* when pronounced became the Japanese word for 'everywhere.'

  12. Re:He can't win on Bill Gates Gives $750M To AIDS Fund · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with being able to recognize both sides of the man?

    I can recognize Gates as a person who used nasty business tactics and questionable technical decisions.

    I can also recognize him as the man who really did play a big part in putting 'a computer on every desktop.'

    And I can recognize him as the world's greatest philanthropist who has done more to help the health of the poorest people in the world than anyone else in history.

    One point does not erase the others. Why can't we recognize him for his full character?

    Trying to put a positive spin on things, if I were to meet Bill Gates as I walked down the street tomorrow (a highly unlikely scenario to say the least) I would be far more likely to praise his recent philanthropic work then to damn him for how he ran Microsoft. The man does deserve some congratulations for his recent work. But I might also mutter under my breath a little about the whole MS thing as I walked away.

  13. Re:Misleading to call it "non-copied" on Non-Copied Photo Is Ruled Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    Yea because the Egyptian slaves constructing the pyramids were better off.

    Just to nitpick, but most historians of ancient Egypt now believe that the pyramids were built by farmers paying their taxes in the form of a few weeks of labour every year. There is plenty of archeological evidence that they were in fact very well treated during that time. Including evidence of very advanced (for the time) medical care.

  14. Re:Misleading to call it "non-copied" on Non-Copied Photo Is Ruled Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    I'd say the invention of ... the airplane

    The Wright brothers 'fought' a major 'patent war' over the issue of 'who invented the airplane.'

    telephones

    There was a long-running lawsuit over who owned the rights to the patent on the telephone.

    electrical generators

    Tesla and Edison fought a long battle against each other for AC vs. DC current based electrical generation. Part of this was fought in courts over patents.

    Patents have been around for a few hundred years now. (The first patents were granted in Italy during the renaissance.) And they have been bitter contested in courts for the past 200 years. This is not a new issue we are facing.

  15. Re:Culture loss? on Outgoing CRTC Head Says Technology Is Eroding Canadian Culture · · Score: 1

    I hate to nitpick ... wait, no I don't. I love to nitpick. But it's good social graces to claim that you don't ...

    The BNA Act didn't 'establish Canadian independence'. It united a few British colonies in North America into one 'super colony'. The new Canadian confederation remained a British colony.

    Canada achieved independence not in any one act or by any single action. It slowly evolved over time. (Some would argue that since we still retain the Queen as our head of state that we're still not completely independent. I'm not sure I agree with that, but it's a point worth considering.)

    Some steps along that road to independence:

    Starting in 1848 the Canadian colonies were granted 'responsible government', meaning that they elected their own local legislative assemblies that could propose and vote on bills but those bills only became law once signed by the governor general which was still appointed by the Queen. (This was in response to the failed rebellions of 1836.)

    In 1867 the BNA Act unified the two Canadas and New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The new confederation meant there were now local provincial governments and a single federal government. Britain delegated responsibility for almost all local issues to these governments. But foreign affairs remained in the hands of Britain.

    Over time Canada was given some ability to manage its own affairs with America. But only as long as that didn't go counter to general British policy. And slowly other areas of foreign policy for Canada also transfered to the Canadian federal government. By 1918 Canada has 'independent enough' to be given its own seat at the Paris conference that ended WWI.

    In 1931 the Statue of Westminister finally formally transfered all foreign policy (and various other areas that had previously be reserved in Britain) powers for the 'developed colonies'/dominions from Britain to their respective local governments. So this is what gave Canada (and Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, and Newfoundland (which later joined Canada)) [almost] full control over it's own fate. This statute is the one most commonly pointed to as 'establishing Canadian independence' if you must point at just one thing.

    In 1982 the Canadian constitution was finally 'brought home'. This required an act of the British parliament but after this point Canada was free to modify its own constitution without having to go to Britain and ask for approval. (This is because there was no amending formula prior to 1982.) This is also sometimes pointed to as the point which 'established Canadian Independence'.

  16. Re:What is the point of Google TV? on Google TV 2.0 Review, Tweaks, and Screenshots · · Score: 1

    The point is to unify the TV/DVD/blu-ray firmware ecosystem.

    Google doesn't want to sell you a box. Although GoogleTV is available to Logitech and Roku and others to make boxes the real long term goal is to get GoogleTV to run *on the TVs themselves*. (And on DVD and blu-ray players.)

    Right now each tv manufacturer writes its own firmware. My parents recently got an LG tv & home theater system which runs it's own special LG firmware which has it's own special UI and connects to it's own special LG app store. If you got a Samsung system it would have it's own Samsung firmware with a slightly different UI and a totally different app store. Similarly with Panasonic and Sony (Sony already sells a GoogleTV tv but most of their tvs run special Sony firmware) and so on. Even worse if you have a TV from one manufacturer and a blu-ray player from another. Then you have two different types of firmware with two different ui's and two different app stores.

    With the market divided like that people have to learn different ways to control different tvs. Sure, technical people can switch between it fine, but it does confuse some such as my elderly parents. A unified system would be better. But even more relevantly with 50 different app stores an app developer needs to write 50 different versions of their tv app to get on all tvs. Or more likely they'll just give up and go develop cellphone apps for iOS or Android instead.

    And speaking of cellphones, this is roughly where the cellphone market was 5 or so years ago. Before Android (and now WP7) offered a third-party alternative that almost all manufacturers could [eventually] agree upon using. This made life easier for end users and for app developers and eventually even the hardware manufacturers themselves. Google, as an 'app developer' wants to do the same thing to the tv market. Plus extra bonuses for them if they get a Google OS of some sort adopted as that standard because then searches go to Google, so Google gets to push out more ads. But even without that latter bonus just having a unified platform to target for development really benefits Google - and everyone else at the same time as well.

  17. Re:This too shall pass. on 'Vocal Fry' Creeping Into US Speech · · Score: 5, Informative

    If the girls talk like airheads, then the guys here talk like wanna-be thugs. Even at an engineering school, I am subjected daily to "Yeah, but uh, y'know I was like... whaaaaaaat?" But that's a whole other topic. First, let's get rid of the word "like". I am convinced that this generation is so disaffected and removed from everything that nothing is real to them anymore. They don't want a cup of coffee; they ask "can I just get like, a cup of coffee?" They didn't go see the movie 3 times, they saw it "like, 3 times". Nothing is real or concrete to them.

    This is not what you think it does. In this context 'like' is being used as a 'filler'. The 'filler like' itself has no meaning, but in a place holder for a pause. Similar to other 'words' such as 'uh' or 'hmm' or 'er'. It does not mean necessarily 'nearly' or 'almost' - although it could mean that too, it depends on context.

  18. Re:Did SHE do it? on 17-Year-Old Wins $100K For Creating Cancer Killing Nanoparticle · · Score: 1

    At least in universities, yes.

    I've read a lot on the internet (especially when a science kook is claiming some big discovery) about people being afraid to share ideas or work with others because 'they'll steal it!'

    But the reality is that professors almost always give primary credit to their assistants and students - even undergrads - (in the form of listing them first in the authors list of a paper submission). Now, of course there are the odd exceptions to this - unscrupulous researchers who take primary credit for everything they touch. But they are very much the exception, not the rule. And you can avoid these type of people simply by first previewing their own publication history. Typically one gets primary or secondary author status early in their careers and slide down the authors list as time goes on.

    There is often good reason for this. A tenured professor may have half a dozen or more grad students at any one time. Plus a post-doc or two, and maybe a couple of undergrads serious about doing research too. The professor can't possibly be heavily involved in all of the projects under their supervision. Instead they are there to provide initial ideas, high level guidance (their experience can be especially valuable - they know the field better than you do and so can point you at previous research, other people that can help, important variables to consider, etc.), and name recognition which helps students' work to stand out more. Professors also provide access to resources and shield assistants and students from university bureaucracy (getting ethics clearances and such). Plus professors are drafted into that very bureaucracy to help run their department or school government or whatever. And constantly chasing grant money. Oh, and some of them also teach. ::P

    Since they're so busy students often *are* the primary workforce on their own research projects.

    In this case I wouldn't be surprised if the core of the idea ('hey, maybe we could use a nano-particle to ...') came from the supervisor but that the 17 year old student actually did do a lot of work (with some sage advice from others) to actually develop that idea into it's current forms.

  19. Re:opportunity on San Francisco Team Wins DARPA's De-Shredding Contest · · Score: 1

    You don't want to burn classified stuff because the government can read what was on the paper from the smoke patterns rising from the incinerator. . (Yes, the above was a joke. And not an original one either. I heard it a few years ago when an ex-government spook was being interviewed on the radio and he was talking about how paranoid he'd become about destroying personal information. Referring to how much he learned over his career about the tools available to recover stuff (from paper, or from harddrives, or whatever else. I'm sure he didn't actually believe the smoke thing either ...)

  20. Re:Annoying closeups on L.A. Artist Contemplates Future Traffic Flow, With Hot Wheels · · Score: 2

    I could be wrong, but the impression I got from the video was that the artist wasn't trying to produce a [realistic] model of traffic flow (future, present, or past) at all. I think people get confused when he makes the comment about the cars' going 230 miles per hour and how that gives him 'hope for the future.' I don't think that's equivalent to saying 'this is (my idea of) the traffic flow of the future.'

    A couple of quotes from the artist in the video I think show otherwise:

    "the idea that the car runs free. Those days are about to close. So it's a little bit like making a model of New York city at the turn of the last century and your modeling horse buggies everywhere and then the automobile is about to arrive. So something else is about to arrive."

    So he's making a 'model' of a car-centric city on the idea that soon that will be an anachronism.

    "It wasn't about trying to make this a scale model of something. It was more to invoke the energy of a city."

    In other words this is art for art's sake. Something I personally am often rather ambivilant about but I still think this is cool for the sake of the amount of time and effort put into this. It's a giant working mechanism. If he called himself a 'geek' instead of an 'artist' would the comments here have been less hostile?

    And who doesn't remember playing with Hot Wheels and the like as a kid. Wouldn't you have loved to have a setup like this back then?

  21. Re:Did the author completely overlook,,, on What Nokia Must Do To Stay Relevant In Mobile · · Score: 1

    No, they're moving their high-end phones to running MeeGo.

    MeeGo is the product of the merger of Maemo (Nokia in-house developed Debian (and thus linux) based OS) and Moblin (Intel in-house developed OS (based on Fedora?)). Unlike Android MeeGo won't use just the linux kernel but rather the entire standard linux tool-chain and user-space right up to and including X.

    Everyone that's used Maemo agrees it has a lot of potential but requires a lot more 'polish' on Nokia's part before it'll really be able to compete with Android, et. al. Maybe co-operating with Intel will help them there.

    Although on the other hand a lot of 'smartphone' buzz is around app stores, and MeeGo is pretty much destined to be a 3rd-place runner (after Apple's iPhoneOS and Google's Android) in that space. (Although since Android is a modified JVM on top of linux I wonder if there's any reason why someone couldn't just port the Android JVM to run ontop of MeeGo ...)

  22. Re:You've just scratched the surface on A Clock That Runs for 10,000 Years · · Score: 1

    Ok, this reply is coming so late that nobody will ever look at it, but ...

    I used to agree that all alarm clocks sucked, but then I found a good one a couple years ago from RCA. Model number RP3711A, which, oddly enough, I can't find a picture of anywhere on the web. It's not listed on RCA's website either - the closest looking model currently avaliable seems to be the RP3720, which looks like a bit of a step back towards the 'cluster all the little buttons together rather than sanely spacing them out and making them large and easy to find when sleepy'.

    Anyway, the RP3771A isn't perfect, but its by far the best alarm clock I've used. For one thing it has a nice big clock display that I can actually read when I wake up, before I put on my glasses. It also has some nice big buttons for common controls (snooze, changing the station, a fairly big volume wheel). The alarm is nice and loud to :) Etc. Etc. As I said, its not perfect. It still has a few too many features and buttons for my tastes. Also, the speaker is in the back (mostly, it seems, in order to make the clock display bigger, and that's a good thing), so the sound is pointed in the wrong direction, but that's a minor complaint really, and a demonstration that all designs involve compromise.

    Anyway, my point, believe it or not, is not to pitch a clock radio/alarm clock that appears to be no longer in production, but rather to point out that if you look long and hard enough you do find products with semi-sane designs. If more people did that, rather then settling on the first thing they see at walmart, then companies would have more incentive to spend more time creating better designs.

  23. Re:After he died... on I, Robot Hits the Theaters · · Score: 1

    Or you could, you know, buy the book: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0743486595/ qid=1090012082/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_1/002-5280618-31216 60

  24. Re:Tripwire on Top Ten Linux Configuration Tools? · · Score: 1

    Tripwire for Linux is under the GPL. Versions for other unixes are not. (Of course there's nothing to stop people from porting the GPL'd version to other OS's, but the commercial and GPL'ed version have diverged somewhat since the initial release.)

  25. Re:MISSING THE POINT on Microsoft Word 5.1: The Apex of Word Processing · · Score: 1
    Corel did release a newer version of WordPerfect for Linux. I stumbled upon it a couple weeks ago, but didn't buy it at the time. This post made me go back and look for it, and surprise suprise, its no longer avaliable. Too bad, because I was going to purchase it sooner or later. (Apparently it was based on the old WordPecfect 8 for Linux, which was a motif-based Linux-native application, rather then the weird win32-based WINE 'port' of WordPerfect 9/WordPerfect 2000)

    The product information page is still avaliable here. Maybe if enough people email Corel asking for it, they might make it avaliable again. Then again, OpenOffice.org has become good enough for most things. I was going to get more for nostelgic reasons then anything else. (fyi it cost $39.99 while it was still avaliable.)