Umm, be careful about that. Topic modeling is a thing, and even if it and similar techniques are only useful right now for digesting large amounts of text I suspect we'll see interesting improvements in the next decade or two.
The 3.5mm headphone jack is one of the stupidest connectors in existence, and it only still exists because of inertia. Like floppies in 1998. You'll see.
Why? The floppy failed because there were better options- faster, more storage, etc.
Is the new connector somehow going to transfer data faster? Well, no, 3.5mm is analog so you're not going to do any better. Is it going to be more durable? Given that it will be smaller than 3.5 mm, doubtful. Cheaper? Not a chance. Other than OMG THIN! and proprietary what does this have going for it?
This. I've given out more than a dozen to faculty members using them to flip their classes. Active digitizer + full OS capable of running everything + OneNote + Camtasia makes for an amazing all-in-one device to generate educational video. Write like you're at a whiteboard while recording voice, annotate on top of images or complex math, run Matlab or Mathematica live, include anything from video to physics simulations. When done hit a couple of buttons and you're finished. I barely need to train people on them- even non-techies get it in an hour or so. There really isn't any competition in this segment- tablet form factor is much easier to write on than a laptop and iPads (even the new one) are far too limited. Yes, it's niche, but I can't keep them around. (I thought I might be able to move up to a 2 from my original vintage when a prof with a 2 upgraded to a 3, but literally the same day he said he was going to give it back I got a call from another prof wanting one.)
The problem is that you're comparing the current self-driving car to a *perfect* human. Yes, Google's cars might have problems in bad weather, with flag signals, etc. But they don't have problems with falling asleep, texting, being distracted by the two kids fighting in the back seat, etc. And having driven in the south after a light snow any number of times, I've seen an awful lot of humans who simply cannot be trusted with a car in the same weather conditions you're complaining that SDCs can't handle. I've seen three really bad accidents in my life- two were caused by the driver falling asleep at the wheel, the third by a person who wasn't paying attention to their right side blind spot. SDCs would have avoided all of these. I've been in two accidents bad enough to set off airbags- both were caused by a driver suddenly stopping to avoid a problem and the following car not paying enough attention to stop in time. And while I'm a pretty good driver, I caused one of these- it was a moment of inattention that a SDC wouldn't have had.
Depends. I've seen attempts by astrologers to come up with a set of relationships that's both systematic and testable. I would argue that those attempts approach scientific hypotheses.
Now, they uniformly *fail* those tests, so even if they are potentially valid scientific hypotheses, they're wrong and thus can be discarded, but that doesn't make them non-scientific in the first place.
It's not. It's actually one of the biggest problems the LSST will have for a couple of reasons
1) It's not in the middle of Europe, it's on a remote mountain in Chile. A bit harder to get super high speed internet up there
2) The data off the LHC can mostly be analyzed by computer. While some of the LSST data can be (transient stuff), discovery of interesting new things is going to be a lot harder to automate, so trying to figure out how to get people to actually look at the torrent of info coming off of it will be a challenge.
That said, they aren't very worried about the actual data itself- they are starting with a 150TFLOP computer to do the initial analysis and figure they will need about 950TFLOP after a decade of use, which is fast but not world record setting. ~60PB of info over a decade is doable with a variety of tech
And speaking as an ex-tanker guy, speed and height are not what we want. The job is *close* air support- this means being nearby, able to see the target. Is this a dangerous role? Yes- modern AAA is very good. But being on the ground is kind of dangerous too, and it would be kind of nice if the Air Force were willing to actually help out rather than just chucking a precision bomb from 20KM away and hoping it's enough. (And then being shot down by a modern dedicated fighter jet since it's not very stealthy with the weapon racks open and sucks in air-to-air combat even against 40-year-old models like the F-16)
It's also a lot easier when you start from scratch and don't have to support any old versions/file formats. The bad decisions you make on day 1 (and you *will* make them, no matter how good you are) are going to haunt you for the rest of your life.
Except you then have a problem- why aren't we flung off the Earth? Spin around while holding a ball and let the ball go- it doesn't stay stuck to you.
Aristotle has the answer here- we're stationary and earth moves towards its natural place at the center of the universe. Copernicus and Galileo have no such explanation, and indeed their result seems to be physically impossible.
(And for everyone who thinks "duh, gravity", check the dates we're talking about)
More on how we know things rather than how little we know, but it touches on a lot of the same issues. We spend a lot of time on the trial of Galileo and how we know the Earth goes around the Sun. It's far harder to show than most people think. If you exclude "I've seen photos from space" I suspect less than 1 in 100 people can give the correct answer of stellar parallax. Galileo proudly announced in 1610 that we'd soon see the proof - he was still waiting for anyone to see it by the time of his second trial in 1633. It wouldn't be officially discovered for 200 more years- so why was Galileo so sure he was right?
Science isn't blindingly obvious- if it was someone would have discovered it ages ago. It's piecing together tiny bits of evidence until something coherent starts to become visible, and even then most of the time someone else comes and kicks apart your jigsaw puzzle with new data
Especially when it's historic. We had a long term dampness and mold problem in one of our large, old (by American standards, ~140 years) academic buildings. The final solution was to literally dig out the foundation, lower the entire basement floor by two feet and rebuild the foundation, one six foot segment at a time. As you might imagine, this cost a bloody fortune.
We're looking at another renovation of a historic building which will convert it from a gym into a new academic space, and tie it into another existing building that needs some help. Current estimates are that it will cost more than the entire new middle school the district built 2 years back, and the middle school is huge- far larger than the renovation we're doing.
Hmm- I just checked my order and my home PC is from August, 2007, so almost exactly 8 years old. Works just fine on Win7 64-bit, will upgrade to 10 when it gets its first service pack. I do game on it- not cutting edge, but Skyrim, Borderlands 2, Fallout NV and the like run just fine. I will admit to upgrading the video card and installing a SSD a few years back- it's mostly limited at this point by the 4GB RAM on it. I don't want to buy more since I suspect it will crap out someday and DDR2 800 isn't of much value anymore, but I have no intentions to upgrade so long as it runs.
Don't see too many Macs from 2007 still in use. I got a new work iMac about two years back which was nice since the previous one (~2010) was almost too slow to use. An SSD would have made it tolerable (Apple mechanical HD's are the lowest tier junk out there) but of course you can't upgrade an iMac. My current one is nicer since I stuffed it with RAM and a SSD- it will probably make it 5 years.
Hell, I'm still using a Crusoe C2D in my primary desktop at home. With a decent video card, 4GB RAM and a SSD, it's just fine for most everything that isn't super high end simulation and gaming.
Your story is clearly false, as any child taken into the water to try and tame sharks would be quickly killed by box jellyfish, stonefish or any of the hundreds of other immensely poisonous animals in Australia that want nothing more than tasty human flesh to dine on.
Ignoring stuff like a fountain pen and a mechanical watch (both of which I use daily) we had an old Wheatstone bridge in one of the PChem labs I taught a number of years ago. It was pre-WWII, mid-1930s and still worked fine.
If you want computer tech, I've used Fortran 4G on some ancient IBM mainframe back in college to run some analysis on research results, and we had an HP-85 running an HPLC in a lab a while back. The HP85 had the worst case of screen burn in I've ever seen- the main HPLC control screen could be seen clearly even when the computer was turned off
In Car Wars it was impossible to kill yourself with a.45 magnum pistol. (People had 3 HP, 1 damage injured, 2 made the character unconscious. A heavy pistol did 2 damage so shooting yourself with it made you unconscious) Unforeseen bizarre results often appear in game play- what was your favorite?
was the day I went into the campus bookstore. There were some boxes of OS/2 Warp, ~$200 with the networking stack, right next to the SDK, which was well north of $500.
Meanwhile, on the next shelf over there were some really colorful boxes of Visual Studio for $99, including the bundled copy of NT 4.0. Laugh all you want at Ballmer screaming about "Developers", MS got it.
Yes, let's look at Berea. 1600 undergrads, more than $1 *billion* endowment. There's a good reason they don't need to charge tuition. I work at a college too, and we do have to charge tuition, in part because our endowment to enrollment ratio is less than 1/7 of theirs.
Ozarks is a bit worse off, at only $427M for 1300 students. They're only 4x better off than we are. Given that their students are required to work for the college, they can make up that difference.
So in order to manage to do what they can, all we need to do is raise either a ~billion dollars (we have more students so will need more cash) and have all of our students work, or raise ~2 billion and we can avoid that.
Drew: There's no attempt to make Fark more PC. I think what happened is the rest of the Internet moved -far- past us on the anything-goes relative scale.
This really isn't the case, but it's not necessarily bad. Ironically, the recent "PC" changes have been less offensive than previous ones. Fark has removed a number of "extreme" posters over the years- Gorgor and Rugbyjock are two of the most obvious. IMHO, that really hurt- they both added a lot of substance to the site, and since everything they did was only accessible if you went looking I'm still not sure why they were so awful.
The more recent changes aren't anywhere near as bad as people think. For example, there is a tradition of posting links to tasteful pinups on the football threads during commercial breaks- one poster did every Playboy centerfold in order. Nobody has griped about it. The one time a mod really cracked down on this (and other offtopic pics) they were overruled in less than an hour. OTOH, there was a poster who started posting links to bondage porn in those same threads. Some of the most prolific posters in football threads are women, and it was clear it was over the line- I had no problem with him being squashed.
I'm typing this on a desktop running a Conroe-version Core 2 Duo: 65nm process. I just got finished running a game of Borderlands 2 with all of the options cranked up.
Yeah, yeah, I know that's primarily GPU, but the idea that somehow a C2D is a crippled chip is absurd. This thing is fine for pretty much everything I throw at it. The biggest bottlenecks it has right now are the 4GB RAM on the motherboard and the USB2-based wireless adapter- the CPU basically doesn't hold it back at all. The only thing that's CPU bound is Registax, and I can wait a few minutes while it runs.
Ironically, I recently switched to Comcast (105 Mbps) and ended up with the basic channel package. The way the teaser rate worked is that is was actually a lot cheaper to order the two bundled than the bare internet line- it was $10/month less plus $40 less on install.
Only thing I have to do is cancel the basic cable after year 2 on the contract. I'm not looking forward to that...
You mean how trashed the space is where the old Constitution is? It's basically George Washington's axe at this point- there's very little left of the original ship, just all the stuff that they patched her with. She was overhauled and rebuilt multiple times while still on duty, but the article you sent notes that by 1925 she was in such bad shape the stern was ready to fall off and had to be fully repaired. She was repaired again in 1973, then in 1995 they rebuilt her again to return her to her original design.
Umm, be careful about that. Topic modeling is a thing, and even if it and similar techniques are only useful right now for digesting large amounts of text I suspect we'll see interesting improvements in the next decade or two.
Do it with the first generation Mac Portable. Maximum impact
The 3.5mm headphone jack is one of the stupidest connectors in existence, and it only still exists because of inertia. Like floppies in 1998. You'll see.
Why? The floppy failed because there were better options- faster, more storage, etc.
Is the new connector somehow going to transfer data faster? Well, no, 3.5mm is analog so you're not going to do any better. Is it going to be more durable? Given that it will be smaller than 3.5 mm, doubtful. Cheaper? Not a chance. Other than OMG THIN! and proprietary what does this have going for it?
This. I've given out more than a dozen to faculty members using them to flip their classes. Active digitizer + full OS capable of running everything + OneNote + Camtasia makes for an amazing all-in-one device to generate educational video. Write like you're at a whiteboard while recording voice, annotate on top of images or complex math, run Matlab or Mathematica live, include anything from video to physics simulations. When done hit a couple of buttons and you're finished. I barely need to train people on them- even non-techies get it in an hour or so. There really isn't any competition in this segment- tablet form factor is much easier to write on than a laptop and iPads (even the new one) are far too limited. Yes, it's niche, but I can't keep them around. (I thought I might be able to move up to a 2 from my original vintage when a prof with a 2 upgraded to a 3, but literally the same day he said he was going to give it back I got a call from another prof wanting one.)
The problem is that you're comparing the current self-driving car to a *perfect* human. Yes, Google's cars might have problems in bad weather, with flag signals, etc. But they don't have problems with falling asleep, texting, being distracted by the two kids fighting in the back seat, etc. And having driven in the south after a light snow any number of times, I've seen an awful lot of humans who simply cannot be trusted with a car in the same weather conditions you're complaining that SDCs can't handle. I've seen three really bad accidents in my life- two were caused by the driver falling asleep at the wheel, the third by a person who wasn't paying attention to their right side blind spot. SDCs would have avoided all of these. I've been in two accidents bad enough to set off airbags- both were caused by a driver suddenly stopping to avoid a problem and the following car not paying enough attention to stop in time. And while I'm a pretty good driver, I caused one of these- it was a moment of inattention that a SDC wouldn't have had.
Now, they uniformly *fail* those tests, so even if they are potentially valid scientific hypotheses, they're wrong and thus can be discarded, but that doesn't make them non-scientific in the first place.
1) It's not in the middle of Europe, it's on a remote mountain in Chile. A bit harder to get super high speed internet up there
2) The data off the LHC can mostly be analyzed by computer. While some of the LSST data can be (transient stuff), discovery of interesting new things is going to be a lot harder to automate, so trying to figure out how to get people to actually look at the torrent of info coming off of it will be a challenge.
That said, they aren't very worried about the actual data itself- they are starting with a 150TFLOP computer to do the initial analysis and figure they will need about 950TFLOP after a decade of use, which is fast but not world record setting. ~60PB of info over a decade is doable with a variety of tech
And speaking as an ex-tanker guy, speed and height are not what we want. The job is *close* air support- this means being nearby, able to see the target. Is this a dangerous role? Yes- modern AAA is very good. But being on the ground is kind of dangerous too, and it would be kind of nice if the Air Force were willing to actually help out rather than just chucking a precision bomb from 20KM away and hoping it's enough. (And then being shot down by a modern dedicated fighter jet since it's not very stealthy with the weapon racks open and sucks in air-to-air combat even against 40-year-old models like the F-16)
It's also a lot easier when you start from scratch and don't have to support any old versions/file formats. The bad decisions you make on day 1 (and you *will* make them, no matter how good you are) are going to haunt you for the rest of your life.
Aristotle has the answer here- we're stationary and earth moves towards its natural place at the center of the universe. Copernicus and Galileo have no such explanation, and indeed their result seems to be physically impossible.
(And for everyone who thinks "duh, gravity", check the dates we're talking about)
Science isn't blindingly obvious- if it was someone would have discovered it ages ago. It's piecing together tiny bits of evidence until something coherent starts to become visible, and even then most of the time someone else comes and kicks apart your jigsaw puzzle with new data
We're looking at another renovation of a historic building which will convert it from a gym into a new academic space, and tie it into another existing building that needs some help. Current estimates are that it will cost more than the entire new middle school the district built 2 years back, and the middle school is huge- far larger than the renovation we're doing.
Don't see too many Macs from 2007 still in use. I got a new work iMac about two years back which was nice since the previous one (~2010) was almost too slow to use. An SSD would have made it tolerable (Apple mechanical HD's are the lowest tier junk out there) but of course you can't upgrade an iMac. My current one is nicer since I stuffed it with RAM and a SSD- it will probably make it 5 years.
Once again, the conservative Dogecoin-heavy portfolio pays off for the memephiliac investor
Hell, I'm still using a Crusoe C2D in my primary desktop at home. With a decent video card, 4GB RAM and a SSD, it's just fine for most everything that isn't super high end simulation and gaming.
Your story is clearly false, as any child taken into the water to try and tame sharks would be quickly killed by box jellyfish, stonefish or any of the hundreds of other immensely poisonous animals in Australia that want nothing more than tasty human flesh to dine on.
If you want computer tech, I've used Fortran 4G on some ancient IBM mainframe back in college to run some analysis on research results, and we had an HP-85 running an HPLC in a lab a while back. The HP85 had the worst case of screen burn in I've ever seen- the main HPLC control screen could be seen clearly even when the computer was turned off
In Car Wars it was impossible to kill yourself with a .45 magnum pistol. (People had 3 HP, 1 damage injured, 2 made the character unconscious. A heavy pistol did 2 damage so shooting yourself with it made you unconscious) Unforeseen bizarre results often appear in game play- what was your favorite?
Meanwhile, on the next shelf over there were some really colorful boxes of Visual Studio for $99, including the bundled copy of NT 4.0. Laugh all you want at Ballmer screaming about "Developers", MS got it.
Ozarks is a bit worse off, at only $427M for 1300 students. They're only 4x better off than we are. Given that their students are required to work for the college, they can make up that difference.
So in order to manage to do what they can, all we need to do is raise either a ~billion dollars (we have more students so will need more cash) and have all of our students work, or raise ~2 billion and we can avoid that.
Easy!
This really isn't the case, but it's not necessarily bad. Ironically, the recent "PC" changes have been less offensive than previous ones. Fark has removed a number of "extreme" posters over the years- Gorgor and Rugbyjock are two of the most obvious. IMHO, that really hurt- they both added a lot of substance to the site, and since everything they did was only accessible if you went looking I'm still not sure why they were so awful.
The more recent changes aren't anywhere near as bad as people think. For example, there is a tradition of posting links to tasteful pinups on the football threads during commercial breaks- one poster did every Playboy centerfold in order. Nobody has griped about it. The one time a mod really cracked down on this (and other offtopic pics) they were overruled in less than an hour. OTOH, there was a poster who started posting links to bondage porn in those same threads. Some of the most prolific posters in football threads are women, and it was clear it was over the line- I had no problem with him being squashed.
Yeah, yeah, I know that's primarily GPU, but the idea that somehow a C2D is a crippled chip is absurd. This thing is fine for pretty much everything I throw at it. The biggest bottlenecks it has right now are the 4GB RAM on the motherboard and the USB2-based wireless adapter- the CPU basically doesn't hold it back at all. The only thing that's CPU bound is Registax, and I can wait a few minutes while it runs.
Only thing I have to do is cancel the basic cable after year 2 on the contract. I'm not looking forward to that...
You mean how trashed the space is where the old Constitution is? It's basically George Washington's axe at this point- there's very little left of the original ship, just all the stuff that they patched her with. She was overhauled and rebuilt multiple times while still on duty, but the article you sent notes that by 1925 she was in such bad shape the stern was ready to fall off and had to be fully repaired. She was repaired again in 1973, then in 1995 they rebuilt her again to return her to her original design.
The best alternative I know if (even as a Northerner) is y'all, the only Southernism I picked up while living there.
For large groups it's "all y'all"