Cosmos 1.0 was also "watered down science and at worst, factually inaccurate".
In any field, to describe the work of the experts of that field to humans that are not experts in that field, the experts must summarize/analogize/tell stories to those other humans who have not spent a lifetime in a particular field.
In these retellings, "facts" can actually get in the way of the non-expert getting a basic understand of the subject at hand.
70. From the wiki... "...whose payload length is limited by the constraints of the signaling protocol to precisely 140 octets (140 octets * 8 bits / octet = 1120 bits). Short messages can be encoded using a variety of alphabets: the default GSM 7-bit alphabet, the 8-bit data alphabet, and the 16-bit UCS-2 alphabet.[40] Depending on which alphabet the subscriber has configured in the handset, this leads to the maximum individual short message sizes of 160 7-bit characters, 140 8-bit characters, or 70 16-bit characters. GSM 7-bit alphabet support is mandatory for GSM handsets and network elements,[40] but characters in languages such as Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, or Cyrillic alphabet languages (e.g., Russian, Serbian, Bulgarian, etc.) must be encoded using the 16-bit UCS-2 character encoding (see Unicode)."
Yep. That's the only way I could remember the acronym.
I remember the first time I saw the original acronym, I knew it would never take. Eventually Marketing took over from Engineering, and started calling it PC-Card.
This American can't even find a map anymore. I used to have 2 or 3 maps in the car, along with my Thomas Guide.
Now, I have Google maps on the phone, gps in the car, and a compass in the dashboard; I had trouble even remembering the name of the Guide the other day.
"We all love America. It's just that conservatives are proudest of the America that never was, and liberals are proudest of the America that isn't here yet."
I hate bureaucracy as much as the next person, but it does seem to be the best way humans have found to institutionalize advanced knowledge to the point where very complex procedures can be handled by mere mortals.
Spreading the wealth pleases the folks on the left, and enhancing the military pleases the folks on the right. A win-win situation, as far as politics in the US is concerned.
I suppose that another way of dealing with the politics of a complex project is the way Putin financed the Olympics. He spread the wealth too.
To save Slashdotter's time, here's the "blogged about" part.
" This reminds me of the Uncanny Valley. Up to a certain point making the AI better and better makes the NPC seem more real, until they become too convincing and then their shortcomings suddenly become glaring and overshadow everything else. "
The words "Uncanny Valley" are linked to the Wikipedia page. The blog is all about Skyrim, so all you 'Rimmers out there might like to check it out.
Interesting points. Fwiw, I enjoy both games, and my "immersion observations" are the reverse. I can immerse myself in the western, while Portal I find to be an interesting puzzle game with robots.
Once it gets into the hands of the pubescents out there, any social norms may be thrown out the window. Today's kids grew up w/ the likes of FB/twitter/etc, and saw no problems with sharing everything about their lives on the 'net. Today, many or most do not care that they are constantly broadcasting their location to the ether, with GPS accuracy (I might add, as most of us put up with the fact that we broadcast our locations to cell towers at all times). Tomorrow's kids, once price and availability for Glass (or something like it) are more consumer oriented, will glom onto it as a favorite new toy. There will be lots of apps and utilities; new social sites designed for Glass such as FacePalm (tm) that the kids will flock to (until their parents learn how to use it); and they will create their own games and memes.
I like this analogy. I think it sums it up nicely.
"Pop music is like the Jungle Boat Ride at Disney. The animals always show up, there's a nice little narrative, it's over in a few minutes. Most "serious" music is like observing animals in the wild. You have to really look and listen..."
What an "ourreputation"?
Cosmos 1.0 was also "watered down science and at worst, factually inaccurate".
In any field, to describe the work of the experts of that field to humans that are not experts in that field, the experts must summarize/analogize/tell stories to those other humans who have not spent a lifetime in a particular field.
In these retellings, "facts" can actually get in the way of the non-expert getting a basic understand of the subject at hand.
70. From the wiki...
"...whose payload length is limited by the constraints of the signaling protocol to precisely 140 octets (140 octets * 8 bits / octet = 1120 bits). Short messages can be encoded using a variety of alphabets: the default GSM 7-bit alphabet, the 8-bit data alphabet, and the 16-bit UCS-2 alphabet.[40] Depending on which alphabet the subscriber has configured in the handset, this leads to the maximum individual short message sizes of 160 7-bit characters, 140 8-bit characters, or 70 16-bit characters. GSM 7-bit alphabet support is mandatory for GSM handsets and network elements,[40] but characters in languages such as Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, or Cyrillic alphabet languages (e.g., Russian, Serbian, Bulgarian, etc.) must be encoded using the 16-bit UCS-2 character encoding (see Unicode)."
Outstanding post, thanks for your viewpoint!
Yep. That's the only way I could remember the acronym.
I remember the first time I saw the original acronym, I knew it would never take. Eventually Marketing took over from Engineering, and started calling it PC-Card.
Honorable Mention: It Still Doesn't Network
Touche'
This American can't even find a map anymore. I used to have 2 or 3 maps in the car, along with my Thomas Guide.
Now, I have Google maps on the phone, gps in the car, and a compass in the dashboard; I had trouble even remembering the name of the Guide the other day.
Of course my wife still tells me where to go...
"We all love America. It's just that conservatives are proudest of the America that never was, and liberals are proudest of the America that isn't here yet."
Good quote.
I hate bureaucracy as much as the next person, but it does seem to be the best way humans have found to institutionalize advanced knowledge to the point where very complex procedures can be handled by mere mortals.
Spreading the wealth pleases the folks on the left, and enhancing the military pleases the folks on the right. A win-win situation, as far as politics in the US is concerned.
I suppose that another way of dealing with the politics of a complex project is the way Putin financed the Olympics. He spread the wealth too.
I am the mornin' DJ on W O L D
To save Slashdotter's time, here's the "blogged about" part.
"
This reminds me of the Uncanny Valley. Up to a certain point making the AI better and better makes the NPC seem more real, until they become too convincing and then their shortcomings suddenly become glaring and overshadow everything else.
"
The words "Uncanny Valley" are linked to the Wikipedia page. The blog is all about Skyrim, so all you 'Rimmers out there might like to check it out.
+1, excellent post, thx
Interesting points. Fwiw, I enjoy both games, and my "immersion observations" are the reverse. I can immerse myself in the western, while Portal I find to be an interesting puzzle game with robots.
No royalties
Rollin'!
Ok, you got a laugh out of me.
Yeah, they're damned if they do and damned if they don't.
Of course, they're politicians.
The Damned.
---
Go to Heaven for the climate, Hell for the company - Mark Twain
I'll see your lol, and raise you a
*sigh* I must be getting old: ganking.
Ah. Bullying. Got it.
The F-14 could not out-dogfight an F-15.
Companies assume they have the right to use force, and they occasionally even resort to murder. There is no place for them in a free market.
Once it gets into the hands of the pubescents out there, any social norms may be thrown out the window. Today's kids grew up w/ the likes of FB/twitter/etc, and saw no problems with sharing everything about their lives on the 'net. Today, many or most do not care that they are constantly broadcasting their location to the ether, with GPS accuracy (I might add, as most of us put up with the fact that we broadcast our locations to cell towers at all times). Tomorrow's kids, once price and availability for Glass (or something like it) are more consumer oriented, will glom onto it as a favorite new toy. There will be lots of apps and utilities; new social sites designed for Glass such as FacePalm (tm) that the kids will flock to (until their parents learn how to use it); and they will create their own games and memes.
sr
Hey you kids, quit looking at my lawn!
I like this analogy. I think it sums it up nicely.
"Pop music is like the Jungle Boat Ride at Disney. The animals always show up, there's a nice little narrative, it's over in a few minutes. Most "serious" music is like observing animals in the wild. You have to really look and listen..."
Ok, troll, wtf, I have a few minutes:
1) "Why do these stupid Christians keep challenging established FACT"
Religion is based on faith. Facts are more or less irrelevant.
2) "We all know how planets form"
No, we don't. We've got some good theories, and they will be fine-tuned as more and better observations (facts) are made.
3) "Science Works!"
Well, one out of three is better than nothing, I guess.
"Computers are like Old Testament gods: lots of rules and no mercy" - Joseph Campbell