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User: dtmos

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  1. It was a tremendously big deal. on When Flying Was a Thrill · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We would look forward for weeks to a flight, and wear our best clothes. There was no security hassle, and you waited in the departure area for your flight to be called, then walked outside to the gate in the chain-link fence that led to the planes. Somebody pointed out which one was yours, and you went up the stairs and got in. The rest of your friends and family who were there to see you off stayed behind the fence, and waved at you, and watched the door close, the engines start, and your plane taxi away. If it was a reasonably small airport your friends could wait and try to identify your plane as it took off.

    Ah, those were the days. (Sniffle.)

  2. Endless possibilities. . . on Motorola To Cut 4,000 Jobs, Focus On High-End Devices · · Score: 1

    Imagine a world where . . .

    Given any thought to doing voice-overs for movie trailers? There's an opening.

  3. Assembly language: Batshit liberal? on Software Engineering Has Its Own Political Axis From Conservative To Liberal · · Score: 2

    I would have gone the other way with this one. The AL programmers I know like it precisely because they have more control of the machine (e.g., they can name specific registers and memory locations for storage) than if they were using a higher-level language, where they would be at the mercy of the compiler, and its unknown decisions. If "we regard political conservatism as an ideological belief system that is significantly (but not completely) related to motivational concerns having to do with the psychological management of uncertainty and fear," then these guys manage their uncertainty and fear of the compiler by doing everything themselves, and therefore fit the definition of conservative. Yes, they're typically older; I haven't met Mel, but he's of this type -- although because he' uses machine language, he's perhaps even more extreme. One wouldn't call him liberal, correct?

    I suppose it's possible that the spectrum line is actually more of a circle, and batshit liberal and batshit conservative are either the same, or next-door neighbors.

  4. Zenna Henderson on Ask Slashdot: Most Underappreciated Sci-Fi Writer? · · Score: 1

    Zenna Henderson, for her "People" series.

  5. Mexico vs. New Mexico on Could a Category 5 Hurricane Take Down East Coast Data Centers? · · Score: 1

    New Mexico has terrible flooding when hit by a Hurricane.

    ?????? Citation REALLY needed.

    He's probably mixing up the state of New Mexico and the country of Mexico -- something more common than one would think. Who knows why. . . .

  6. *sigh* on AT&T Killing Its 2G Network By 2017 · · Score: 1

    Oh, well. I guess I'll have to join the 21st Century, like everyone else.

  7. Tokelau nation status on Tokelau Becomes First Country To Go 100% Solar · · Score: 1

    FWIW, Tokelau is on the US Department of State's list of "Dependencies and Areas of Special Sovereignty", as well as the United Nations' list of "Non-Self-Governing Territories", the latter because it is considered to be a colony of New Zealand.

  8. Re:When man bites dog, it's news on Mysterious Sprite Photographed By ISS Astronaut · · Score: 1

    A very rare and beautiful view of a red sprite has been photographed, by Expedition 31 astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS), hovering just above a bright flash of lightning in a thunderstorm over Myanmar.

    That's one possibility, to be sure, but I would have preferred:

    A very rare and beautiful red sprite, hovering just above a bright flash of lightning in a thunderstorm over Myanmar, has been photographed by Expedition 31 astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

    I'm still not wild about "hovering", especially for such a transient phenomenon, but none of the alternatives that come to mind (replacing with "appearing" or "visible", or just deleting the word) fill me with enthusiasm, so it gets a shrug for now.

  9. When man bites dog, it's news on Mysterious Sprite Photographed By ISS Astronaut · · Score: 5, Funny

    A very rare and beautiful view of a red sprite has been photographed by Expedition 31 astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) hovering just above a bright flash of lightning in a thunderstorm over Myanmar.

    You see, this is the kind of poor journalism that gets me upset: The International Space Station somehow manages to come to a complete stop in its orbit and hover -- or somehow move out to the Clarke Belt, and stay geosynchronous -- and what does the reporter think is newsworthy? The pretty photograph it took while it was there.

  10. Re:It's like this. on Does Grammar Matter Anymore? · · Score: 4, Informative

    You're completely missing the point. We should be talking about the quality of Google's tools here.

    If I'm missing the point, why does the submission end with the question, "So, does grammar matter anymore?"

    I would say that was the point.

  11. It's like this. on Does Grammar Matter Anymore? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whether grammar matters or not depends on the recipient of the message, not the originator. As anyone who has designed a compiler will tell you, it's an error-prone PITA to have to pre-process input before it is in a useable form. If the recipient can do this, no harm is done, except that the recipient is aware that the sender gave him more work to do than was necessary -- something usually not considered a compliment.

  12. Too good to pass up on Texas Scientists Regret Loss of Higgs Boson Quest · · Score: 1

    Ordinarily I don't reply to ACs, but this one's too good to pass up:

    I find it laughable to listen to someone trivialize CERN, and the EU's investment in it, as an economic waste on the world wide web. Where do you think this wonderful tool came from, the sky? Don't you think that invention of the web alone added more to the economies of the investing EU nations than all the money they invested in CERN?

  13. !Broken window fallacy on Texas Scientists Regret Loss of Higgs Boson Quest · · Score: 1

    No, it's not: I mentioned exactly how much the SSC would cost each citizen, had it been completed -- $40. The argument is that that $40 would have been a good investment for the country, for the reasons outlined, had it been made in 1993.

  14. Re:hmm on Texas Scientists Regret Loss of Higgs Boson Quest · · Score: 1

    I never said anything about a "death knell for science." My point was that smart governments realize that public works projects, especially those that benefit scientific research and understanding, can have a positive value for their nations far in excess of their capital cost, because they make their nation(s) more globally competitive.

    if US companies could've made a competitive bid, they would've been doing that for the LHC.

    What makes you think that the LHC was constructed by companies selected by competitive bid? See, for example, these instructions from CERN:

    Question: Can I send my Price Enquiry to any Bidder?
    Answer: The Technical Officer has to take into account the technical competency of the firm as well as the
    origin of the supply or service (which should be originated from CERN Member States and preferably from
    poorly balanced Member States).
    [...]
    Question: Why it is so important to know the origin of the supply/service?
    Answer: Member states contribute to CERN’s budget, therefore one of the main procurement goals is to
    achieve balanced industrial return for Member states. [emphasis added.]

    This is the point -- the nations that compose CERN recognize the value of the organization to their industrial base. If they didn't, they would just keep the money they invest in CERN. Instead, they make the investment because they realize that they, as nations, get a stronger, more capable -- and, therefore, more valuable -- industrial base as a result of CERN. It's a good investment.

    I have never understood this attraction to the "free market" in dealings between nations. One of the reasons China is gaining market share wrt the US in many fields -- from photovoltaics to high-speed rail transport -- is that it subsidizes their development. Supporting technologies critical to the nation's future is not a crime -- most nations do and, arguably, all should. The US did the same with many technologies, from the telegraph to the railroad, in the 19th Century, and the spending of public funds to develop technology for the public good reached new highs in the federal funding of scientific research during and after WWII. The nation benefited greatly from this investment of public funds -- why not now? Is it really better to stand by, and watch our economy become more and more dependent on the industries of other nations?

  15. How far things have gone on UAV Cameras an Eye In the Sky For Adventurous Filmmakers · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My father was a tremendous model airplane, and photography, enthusiast. In 1962 he strapped his Leica to the bottom of one of his radio-controlled models and took black-and-white photos of the airfield where he flew his models, and the adjacent industrial plant. The shutter was tripped by the Leica's built-in timer; he got pictures of approximately what he wanted by running a second timer on the ground and ensuring the plane was in right place at the right time. The timer was used because the radio-control equipment of the day (at least, the equipment he could afford) had only one channel, used for rudder control. He used black-and-white film so that he could do his own developing; besides the fact that he just liked doing it, doing his own developing allowed him to compensate for things like underexposures. (To compensate for vibration blur, present despite all of his anti-vibration efforts, he was always underexposing these shots.)

    By 1971, the R/C art had improved to the point that multichannel radio equipment (4 to 6 channels) was commonplace, and the photographic art had improved to the point that small, lightweight motion-picture cameras were also affordable. To take advantage, he took a handheld Super 8 mm movie camera and mounted it on a wire frame on the fuselage over the wing, pointed ahead and slightly down, so that the arc of the propeller was just visible in the resulting images (to give scale). He quickly learned to fly very slowly and gently; images taken during even the most mundane of maneuvers would be enough to induce nausea when viewed on the screen later.

    Because of the consumer-grade equipment used, these photos and films will never win any prizes for photographic art; still, it is always a pleasure to see something state-of-the-art in its time, turn into something available at Wal-Mart a few years later.

  16. Re:hmm on Texas Scientists Regret Loss of Higgs Boson Quest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It was still discovered, and this way I didn't have to subsidize it.

    Oh, yes, you did.

    You subsidized it with higher levels of unemployment in the many technical fields needed to design, construct, and use the SSC.

    You subsidized it with lower salaries in those fields, for those able to find work in them.

    You subsidized it with the loss of the many small companies that otherwise would have been started by entrepreneurs in response to the challenges faced by the SSC project. Most would have failed, of course, but in a project of that size it's likely that a handful of these small companies would have survived to make significant advances in the state of the art.

    You subsidized it with a US industrial base that was less competitive than its foreign competition, which honed its capabilities solving the difficult technical problems presented by the LHC, while the US base did not.

    You subsidized it with a loss in stature of the US physics community on the world stage. Having the top-tier experimental apparatus outside the US is not the way to attract "the best and the brightest" to the US and is, in fact, the way to force the best young researchers in the US to go overseas.

    You subsidized it with a loss in stature of hard science in the minds of US school children. Like the space program before it, the SSC could have been the motivation for a generation of school children to study science and technology. Lacking this symbol, clever students who might have made significant contributions in many technical fields have instead drifted off to other things.

    The per-capita cost to build the SSC, in round numbers, was $40 in 1993. Wouldn't it have been cheaper to pay $40 then, than the above subsidies now?

  17. Airport traffic patterns? on Sandia's Floating, Dust-Free, Spinning Heatsink · · Score: 1

    Was it this feature that lead to the standard of airport traffic patters being left-turn only? Did that convention start as a military requirement in WWI, and then move into civil aviation after the war, even though rotary engines were obsolete by then? Wikipedia states that this convention developed "because most small airplanes are piloted from the left seat (or the senior pilot or pilot-in-command sits in the left seat), and so the pilot has better visibility out the left window"; while that's no doubt true, one wonders whether this is an incorrect historical rationalization after-the-fact, or a conscious decision made independently, at a later meeting of some international regulatory body. When was the left-hand traffic pattern standardized?

  18. Contrarian thinking on Sandia's Floating, Dust-Free, Spinning Heatsink · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm reminded of the rotary engine, used in some WWI aircraft. The crankshaft was stationary -- attached to the plane's firewall -- and the entire engine block, including the cylinders, rotated around it. (The propeller was attached to the engine block.) In this way, no flywheel was necessary (the block was its own flywheel), saving weight, and the engine was cooled naturally, by the air flow over the moving cylinders. I don't know how the engines were balanced.

    In a similar manner, the Sandia Cooler moves the heatsink through the air, rather than the air through the heatsink. It's solving a different problem, but I've always been fond of contrarian thinking like this.

  19. Atmospheric optics info source on The Dry Ice 'Snowflakes' of Mars · · Score: 4, Informative

    The most useful, entertaining, and educational source, IMHO, for all things optical and atmospheric is the Atmospheric Optics site of Les Cowley. Originally built to support HaloSim halo simulation software (developed in collaboration with Michael Schroeder), the site now includes photos and physical explanations of everything from green flashes and other refractive phenomena to glories, ice halos (including the types that may form on other planets), and rainbows.

    It's the kind of site that nearly everyone finds interesting and, if they're not careful, learns something from.

  20. Re:Translation please? on New Signs Voyager Is Nearing Interstellar Space · · Score: 1

    Interesting. Compare my data 4 high-energy nucleons w V1's That increase is attracting attention!

    translates to

    Interesting. Compare my data on high-energy nucleons, received from Voyager 2, with that received from Voyager 1. That sudden increase in the rate of high-energy nucleons received by Voyager 1, compared to both the historical levels at Voyager 1 and the present level at Voyager 2, is attracting attention!

    which translates to

    Woo-Hoo! Graduation! At last!

  21. My biggest surprise on Adjusting Your PC Set-Up To Cope With Sudden Sight Loss · · Score: 5, Funny

    The thing that surprised me most about TFA was that the author was able to find some feature that wasn't in MS Word. It always seems to have every feature known to man, except the feature I want, when I use it.

    Look for Fookes Software to be purchased any day now. . . .

  22. Seems like they're on schedule on TSMC To Spend $10B Building Factory for 450mm Wafers · · Score: 1

    "Intel Corp., Samsung Electronics and TSMC today announced they have reached agreement on the need for industry-wide collaboration to target a transition to larger, 450mm-sized wafers starting in 2012." -- 6 May 2008.

  23. The impressive thing about a 450-mm wafer. . . on TSMC To Spend $10B Building Factory for 450mm Wafers · · Score: 1

    . . .is that it's cut from a single silicon crystal (called a boule), two meters long, weighing several hundred kilos, with a defect density so low that it is commercially useable to make chips 25 mm on a side, 0.5 mm thick, with 20 nm feature size.

  24. Take 2 on Ask Slashdot: Ambitious Yet Ethical Software Jobs? · · Score: 1

    . . . the seeds are in fact the children.

    . . . that's if you believe life begins at conception. The OP is clearly one of those that believes life begins at implantation.

    I hate screwing up a good punch line.

  25. Couldn't resist on Ask Slashdot: Ambitious Yet Ethical Software Jobs? · · Score: 2

    . . . the seeds are in fact the children.

    . . . that's if you believe life begins at conception. The OP is clearly one of those that life begins at implantation.

    (Sorry, it was too good to pass up.)