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User: A+Rabid+Tibetan+Yak

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Comments · 26

  1. Re:One of the most useful applications... on Canadian Surgeons Perform Telerobotic Surgery · · Score: 1

    Consider I am driving down some back woods road and have my accident...

    You're right. In an A&E situation like that, with no other option to save you from an almost certain death, it would be irresponsible not to use a robotic surgeon if available - the principle of non maleficence ("first, do no harm").

    However, my earlier post was with regard to more routine 9 till 5 procedures -- for example, it would be better to ship an otherwise healthy transplant patient who has been on a waiting list for months, to another hospital to undergo the procedure, rather than go for robotics to save the journey. Sure, it might even be more expensive, but again ethical principles would caution against taking unnecessary risks.

    One thing I considered before was borderline cases like the scientist in Antarctica who got breast cancer, and had to have an airdrop of supplies before being evac'd when the weather changed. While not strictly applicable, in a borderline case would you want to hold out for transport or go for a robot? You can't really answer that generally, only on a case by case basis, but I think that this robotic tech is good if only it gives healthcare staff more options in cases where there were previously one or none (A&E for example).

    And as for usage in training, I can't see it. The only real theoretical advantage over a regular videotaped operation would be the interactivity of a simulator, at which point you might as well use a model/cadaver/etc anyway. And why would you need to run a simulation over a WAN? A regular computer with a decent 3D card and whatever special input device they're using would be fine.

  2. One of the most useful applications... on Canadian Surgeons Perform Telerobotic Surgery · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From the article:

    Using telerobotics will enable patients living in remote locations to be able to undergo procedures they would normally have to travel to city locations to receive, Dr. McKinley said. Telerobotic surgery will also assist with medical training, enabling experienced surgeons to assist from a distance those who are still learning.

    This is probably the killer app. Being a med student myself (and having just watched Scrubs) I think the ability to have someone watching over your shoulder during an important operation would greatly assist confidence during learning surgical procedures -- especially during unusual times of the morning when the hospital is understaffed etc., and you're the house surgeon lumped with everyone walking in the door.

    However, allowing dangerous operations to be undertaken in remote locations is probably not a great idea... without qualified staff physically on hand, I don't think you'd want to trust someone's life to an IP connection; otherwise, the next time some DDoS or Outlook worm strikes, servers aren't the only thing we lose.
  3. Two points in reply to this... on Benford on Space Exploration · · Score: 1

    1) You can't really compare the race to human powered flight with the race to space when it comes to private enterprise. It's a lot harder, more expensive and a heck of a lot more dangerous to get into orbit than it is to do a powered glide down a beach.

    Also, NASA and similar goverment bodies can allocate billions of dollars into researching new materials and methods... hundreds of independent contractors cannot manage those levels of funding. Finally, you're assuming space travel is economic for private enterprise -- aside from the occasional tourist there is as yet no valid business reason to develop space facilities (look at how little use the ISS is being put to by private enterprises). While I'd like to see more space exploration as much as anyone, I think large manned missions will remain in the domain of "because we can" type Government policy in the near future at least.

    2) Likewise, your comparison to the American settlers ("entire colonies were lost...") doesn't stand up in today's CNN-ised world. Back then, if a disaster befell the other side of your continent, you heard about it months later and its impact was diluted; the culture accepted these kind of losses as it came with the territory, so to speak. These days, a single tragedy like the Space Shuttle gathers instantaneous, international media cover, and a disaster of colony-sized proportions would probably break the entire space programme, due to a public unwilling to accept those kinds of risks and casualty rates.

  4. One thing you should read on Benford on Space Exploration · · Score: 0

    Kuro5hin is hosting a story on the topic of response to tragedies like this now -- A Heartbreaking National Tragedy.

    Well worth a read.

  5. 2 hours uptime before recharge? on Mitsubishi Robot - Watchdog, Nurse, Annoying Friend · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hmm, you think they might want to improve that a little before releasing it to the public.

    Of course, it depends on how long the recharge takes -- the robot wouldn't be much of a helper for the elderly if recharging takes another 2 hours, meaning the robot spends 50% of its time tied to the wall, but it wouldn't be so bad if it can recharge itself rapidly or perhaps even swap batteries somehow. Does anyone here know the average running time lengths for the current crop of personal robots?

  6. Hey, that's my neighbourhood :). on Kiwi Flight Before the Wright Brothers? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I live a few tens of kilometres from the site of the flight -- Pearse is something of a local celebrity/historical figure, some (funny) pictures including an impression of the original plane.

    A replica of his plane is on display in our local museum, sadly it's not online but it's mentioned at the bottom of this article, with the original at the Museum of Transport in Auckland (NZ's largest city, at the top of the North Island, we're in the middle of the South Island's east coast).

    As the article states it's hard to verify his accomplishments, and for that reason I believe that the Wright brothers will hold their record for a while unless any stunning new evidence arises. Still, good on Pearse, one of aviation's original hackers :).

  7. Re:Astrology? on Jupiter Forecasts 50% Increase In Spam · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK, you can make planet jokes, but please -- no cracks about Uranus...

  8. Re:Different applications of the same concept on Farscape Fans Produce Commercial · · Score: 1

    I'm sitting here, commenting on the parent poster sitting there, and you're sitting somewhere else, reading Slashdot.

    Anyone else see the problem?

  9. Re:BBC and spyware on Slashback: Mutuality, Transport, Spyware · · Score: 2, Interesting

    At the moment, I'm posting with Crazy Browser. It's free but not Open Source, and it's a small wrapper for the IE rendering engine that does tabbed browsing and popup killing all in one.

    Hope you guys find it useful :). Otherwise, I also use Phoenix, similar with Mozilla.

  10. Three Words on IBM Wants CPU Time To Be A Metered Utility · · Score: 1

    Distributed Dot Net.

    Seriously, with people like Google rolling distributed computing into the next version of the Google toolbar, and the success of the various @home projects, I can see a better business model based around using people's hardware that is already in existence -- no need for a 10 billion outlay.

    After all, who would mind leaving their Athlon/P4 on overnight to crunch some numbers, perhaps for a rebate on their connection bill or a similar reward system? That money could buy an awful lot of idle LAN boxes... and funding schools etc. like that would be great publicity.

  11. Re:Soon there will be nothing left on Phoenix 0.3 Is Out · · Score: 5, Informative

    (mousegestures, prefbar...no uninstall yet)

    I'm posting from Phoenix 0.3 now. Check the release notes before posting -- Extension Uninstall is included in this new version. To find it, Tools->Preferences->Themes and Extensions, click on the "Extensions" tab and you can disable or uninstall your extensions quite happily.

    Overall it's a great browser, it really shows off what Mozilla can do. I'm recommending it to friends, it can tempt them with all the speed of IE, the features of Mozilla, and the bloat of neither :).

  12. Even More Blatant Karma Whoring on Slashdot Turns 5 · · Score: 1

    Here's the Google cache of the site ;).

  13. Re:A little history... and a further resource on Air Force to Test Aeroelastic Wings · · Score: 1

    I s'pose you could say Orville was wright all along, then...

  14. It has been brought to my attention... on The First Smiley :-) · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...that no-one has mentioned the Denoser project.

    Simply put, if your website is smiley-heavy, you can achieve up to a 33% reduction in bandwidth costs simply by removing the nose from your smiley :).

    OK, that's my contribution to Ancient Geek studies over with...

  15. Re:What some guys do for the kick... on P4 2.80GHz Overclocked to 3.917GHz · · Score: 1

    Liquid nitrogen to cool beer? Blegh!

    Everyone knows that you use a jet engine to cool your beer :).

  16. That is nothing compared to... on P4 2.80GHz Overclocked to 3.917GHz · · Score: 1

    Project E.U.N.U.C.H - The "Extreme Use of Nearly Universal Cooling Hardware" ;).

  17. Perhaps at last... on Beginnings Of The Metaverse For The Gaming World · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...we can make those Counter-Strike campers listen to Reason (tm).

  18. Exactly how would these prevent "9/11"? on A Look Into National ID Cards · · Score: 2, Interesting

    By all accounts the last batch of terrorists had basically good documentation -- arrived with proper visas, dotted their I's and crossed their T's. So how exactly would national ID cards stop this kind of attack happening again? "Smart Visas" would probably make a heck of a lot more sense.

    I'm getting a bit sick of "The War On Terrorism (tm)" being trotted out as an universal excuse. If they want to bill the cards as cutting down on bureaucracy and red tape, or catching convicted fraudsters/thieves/etc, so be it, but otherwise, it's a bit late for kneejerk reactions.

  19. This is above and beyond reasonable... on UK Prepares Own Version of the DMCA · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If you try and circumvent any the copy protection (or, in the case of computer programs, explain how to do so to anyone else), you can be punished as much as if you were pirating the data yourself... Heck, if you even try to remove any of the tracking spyware, you'll be in equal amounts of trouble.
    While the DMCA-like first provision is as bad as the U.S. law, what the heck give content producers the enforceable legal right to spy on me 24/7?

    Bear in mind that - just like RIP - our poor legislators are hurrying this through by Christmas. They'll consult, but be done by October 31. To save time, they won't listen to any complaints about the original EUCD document. And the raft of provisions that they've chosen to omit (like the generous but eminently ignorable list of fair use rights in the original directive) aren't up for discussion either.
    That's nice. We've let countries get into a game of one-upsmanship over the strictness of their fair-use-prevention laws, and they're not even going to let their citizens have a say in the process. What do we do when we wake up in 2003 and find it's 1984?
  20. Re:My solution on Some Spammer Has a Crush on You · · Score: 1

    I'm at a college and lots of other people here receive mail from "FunnyCard" / "Mr Smiley" etc. along these lines. I always advise them to fill in:

    admin@thiswebsite.com
    root@thiswebsite.com
    web master@thiswebsite.com
    postmaster@thiswebsite.com

    et. al., until they supply as many as they need to view their card/crush/whatever cheesy thing you can't convince them to delete. Seems to work -- if they're not sending on random spam email then they've got nothing to worry about, if they are, then they reap the benefits :).

    On another note, I recently got mail from Crush007 which is another kettle of fish entirely :). Luckily I figured this one out before filling in any details... have a read of their front page for a laugh.

  21. Well... on A Humanitarian Engineering Problem · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...there's always this.

  22. Re: Electrics? on Construction Begins on Beagle 2 · · Score: 1

    Please tell me it doesn't use Lucas electrics.

    Please tell me that NASA's been learning its metrics...

  23. Better not use a compass to orientate the lander.. on Amateur Mars Satellite · · Score: 1

    ...with all those magnetic bacteria kicking around Mars these days :).

  24. Re:Counter on Dungeons and Dragons Knowledge Compendium · · Score: 5, Funny

    You hit the counter with your +1 "HTTP GET". The counter is still standing, and glaring in your direction. The gazebo next to it isn't looking happy, either.

  25. From the Yak department on NASA Plans On Bringing Back Martian Rocks · · Score: 1

    We sent an explorer to Mars,
    The maker of chocolate bars.
    They returned one day
    With rocks and a sway
    Of budget boosts beyond par.