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User: jsprat

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Comments · 118

  1. Re:Why not use... on Casting Doubt On the Hawkeye Ball-Calling System · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    mounting a rugidtized radio transmitter (a ball probably has to go through 20gs or something)

    rugidtized???

  2. Re:Solving the wrong problem on Tweaking The Math Behind Political Representation · · Score: 4, Informative

    (...) they would by definition be reflecting the people who voted for them.

    Not necessarily. Gerrymandering is the art of changing the boundaries to gain an advantage. In a simple way, this image shows an even distribution redivided to give one party the advantage.
  3. Re:Excessive litigation better than the alternativ on 10th Annual Wacky Warning Labels Out · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sad but true. Check out this ad.

    "More doctors smoke camels than any other cigarette..."

  4. Re:The qualifications for 'celebrity' -- But ... on When Celebrities Speak on Science · · Score: 1

    What's ironic about Melinda Messenger's comment is that she has two bags of man-made chemicals in her body, just to make her look better!

  5. Re:AOL! on Who Will Join Microsoft in the Portal Wars? · · Score: 1

    I'll send one too - if I can clean all the coffee rings from the coaster^H^H^H^H^H^Hd!

  6. Re:How much do "court costs" usually run? on GPL Price-Fixing Lawsuit Dismissed · · Score: 1
    =$140/hr for court costs.


    But the trial only lasted 10 minutes, so that's $140 / 10 min, or $840/hr!

    20hrs * 840 = $16800 (+ the filing fees and such).

    Painful lesson, if the numbers are right.

  7. Re:The good thing about InfoCards on Slashback: Quinn, InfoCards, McKinnon · · Score: 1
    The card is not a physical card.

    From the summary (emphasis mine):
    ...save personal information on virtual cards on their computers ...
  8. Re:Dehydration and pain - link known for nearly 30 on Thirsty People Feel More Pain · · Score: 5, Funny

    What few people realize is that Dr. Batmanghelidj is really Bruce Wayneghelidj's alter ego. Everybody knows that the Wayneghelidj Water has a stranglehold on the world's water distribution networks, so who really benefits if everyone drinks more water? ;)

  9. Here's a link to the actual application on Cingular Patents the Emoticon? · · Score: 1
    From the Abstract of the actual application:

    A method and system for generating a displayable icon or emoticon form that indicates the mood or emotion of a user of the mobile station. A user of a device, such as a mobile phone, is provided with a dedicated key or shared dedicated key option that the user may select to insert an emoticon onto a display or other medium. The selection of the key or shared dedicated key may result in the insertion of the emoticon, or may also result in the display of a collection of emoticons that the user may then select from using, for example, a key mapping or navigation technique.


    It's not patented yet (it's a patent application) and they aren't attempting to patent emoticons (just a system to use them, which is just as silly IMO).

    Just thought I'd throw out some facts...
  10. Re:Dare i ask on Tux Can Even Milk Cows! · · Score: 1

    I have nipples, Greg. Can you milk me?

  11. Look at it like any other advertising on Preference Engines Side-Effects in Online Retail · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Rather than thinking about word of mouth versus preference engines, think about it as preference engines vs any type of advertising.

    Preference engines are just a way of introducing a product to a person. Traditional advertising does it by targeting demographics that they think the product will appeal to. A preference engine is an expert system that correlates other people's tastes and your's, and then can recommend something you will probably like. Sounds to me like more product will get sold, and the customer will be more likely to walk away with music they will enjoy. Everybody's happy.

    Given a choice between "one-size fits all" mass media where everyone sees the same ad and this, I'd much rather have semi-intelligent software point me to a song that I might like.

    BTW, Amazon does this too, and in my experience they are right more than they are wrong about my tastes.

  12. Re:It's quite simple really: on OpenOffice vs. MS Office for Education? · · Score: 1

    You can export to .doc - File menu, Save As, select "Microsoft..." from the File type combo box (OOo 1.1.3).

    That said, I do agree #2 is misleading, because the document's formatting doesn't always look the same in Word and OOo.

  13. Re:You may not like it, but.... on Migrating Visual Basic Applications? · · Score: 1

    I'd like to add that RealBasic announced just today that they are offering a free RealBasic license to anyone who holds a VB6 license, up to 3 per physical address.

    There's a utility to convert a VB6 project to RealBasic as well as a migration guide.

    I've downloaded and installed, but haven't taken the time to review it yet.

  14. Re:Too bad they didn't pick the good version. on Benioff and Weiss To Write Ender's Game Script · · Score: 3, Informative
    Ender's Game (the short story) can be found at Orson Scott Card's website.


    OSC's site is good way to burn an hour or more - writing advice, forums (or is it fora?), philosophy, etc. Mr. Card is an interesting fellow.

  15. Re:In a nutshell on Six Laws of the New Software · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Keep it simple
    2. Keep it small
    3. You're not gonna be the next Microsoft
    4. Do many releases
    5. Comply with relevant standards

    That's 5 laws... What's the sixth?

    Profit?
  16. Re:Google Toolbar for Firefox on Firefox Lead Now Working For Google · · Score: 3, Informative
    I think you mean Hanlon's razor:
    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity."
  17. Re:Space men on Bad Science Awards · · Score: 1
    No thanks... I'm already married

    .oO(I hope my wife doesn't read this)

  18. Re:What? on Math Whiz Breaks Calculation Record · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here is a list of two other records he holds. It hasn't been updated for the one mentioned in the myway article.

    Notice it took him 44.7 seconds to calculate the square root of a six digit number, but only 11.8 seconds to calculate the 13th root of a 100 digit number!!!!

    He also calculated the 23rd root of a 200 digit number in 40.83 seconds.

  19. Re:Umm... on One Terrible Job: IT Manager · · Score: 1

    You hit the nail on the head. This book is humor, not a study of crappy jobs.

    To anyone who is still taking this article seriously, go to amazon.co.uk and see that it is classified under "Subjecs->Humour->General".

  20. Re:seems racist to me on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Speaking of people of Greek descent and "Greek citizenship", how about the Greek Olympic baseball team?

    People in Greece don't play much baseball, but they fielded a team for the Olympics by finding people who were "ethnically" Greek.

    Here are a couple of relevant articles from the
    Christian Science Monitor and MSNBC

  21. Link to yoper on Review of Yoper Linux v2.1 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Since the submitter didn't provide a direct link to Yoper Linux, I will.


    Does anyone else think it's strange that a story about yoper has no link to their home page, but does have a link to gentoo?

  22. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. on MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research · · Score: 1
    You can see a copy here. The ad on the left is the one I saw.

    Looks like I misremembered. It was Camels (not Winston) and it was "More Doctors" (not "3 out of 4")

  23. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. on MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That doesn't mean 4 out of 5 doctors total smoke them, or that 4 out of 5 doctors recommend you smoke them.

    But that is the ad's intent. The point is not about the truth of the research, it's about the presentation. What do "doctors" who smoke have to do with the best/healthiest/coolest brand of cigarettes? Nothing really, but the connection Winston was trying to make is so obvious I can't believe you missed it - if doctors smoke them, they must be the right brand to smoke.


    Nothing is wrong with the statement in itself. The research may have been repeatable and the methodology may be sound. Hell, they may have surveyed every doctor on the planet! None of that matters, because the way the statistic is used is the problem. It is intentionally misleading to a casual reader in order to promote Winston's best interests.

  24. Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. on MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I recently saw an old copy of Popular Mechanics from around 1950 (or so). The back page was an ad that said "4 out of 5 doctors who smoke smoke Winston".

    Wow, after research like that, I'd better take up smoking Winstons!

  25. Re:this is all BS. on Multi-Core Chips And Software Licensing · · Score: 4, Informative
    It is BS. But Oracle used to charge per "processing unit". It took into account the speed of the chip you planned to run it on as well as the number of processers in the system and the number of expected connections. Or you could purchase the "Web server" edition, which would have broken our company.


    Today, Oracle's price list is 11 pages of different price plans that would confuse a car dealership!