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User: pll178

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Comments · 26

  1. Duty to Disclose on Microsoft's Internal Advice About Patents · · Score: 1, Redundant

    "Generally, you want to carefully research licenses and copyrights (your contact in Legal and Corporate Affairs can help), and never search, view, or speculate about patents."

    The reason why patent attorneys recommend against searching for patents is that once you know about a patent that is relevant to the one that you are filing, you have a duty to disclose it. If you fail to disclose it, there are serious consequences (e.g., invalidity, etc.).

  2. Re:Gerbluh? on Venter Institute Claims Patent on Synthetic Life · · Score: 1

    It is not overbroad. Read the claims to the patent cited in a post below. They are claiming something very specific.

  3. Re:Spend the extra time and setup your biz correct on Small Businesses Worry About MS Anti-Phishing · · Score: 1

    Have you ever heard of a "close corporation" or "piercing the corporate veil?" Call up one of your lawyer friends and ask them how safe you really are...

  4. Re:RIAA says, "Muuahhahaha!" on RIAA Mischaracterizes Letter Received From AOL · · Score: 1

    The doctrine of First Sale would not apply if I let my friends download my copy of a legally-purchased MP3. This is the issue with digital media. You don't lose anything when you "give" it to someone else.

  5. Re:Tailgating on Detecting Tailgaters With Lasers · · Score: 1

    I usually pull over to the side if a car is coming up fast behind me (especially on mountain and country roads). The benefit is two fold:

    1. I can use the lights of the car in front of me to see even farther ahead
    2. No blinding lights in my rear view mirror.

  6. Re:Firefox fans, get a clue! on IE7 Released As High-Priority Update · · Score: 1

    After downloading the High Priority Update, you get this: "Microsoft recommends installing Internet Explorer 7... blah..." Buttons on the bottom are "Ask me Later", "Don't Install", "Install" You still have a choice not to install it.

  7. Re:Patent Solution -- 3 year limit on Life or Death for Tivo · · Score: 1

    It sounds like a good plan on paper, but unfortunately, in some technology areas such as computers, it currently takes three (or more) years for a patent application to be examined in the first instance. By the time the patent is issued (maybe in another year or two), the patent would no longer be enforceable.

  8. Plan on spending a lot of time reviewing... on Advice for Returning to School After Long Break? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Two years ago, I did what you did. I left my good paying job as a project manager at a high tech firm to go back to engineering school. It was scary but well worth it! To answer your questions:

    1. For graduate admissions, at least at Carnegie Mellon, they send the files over to the professors based on your interests. The professors then look at your background to see if you are a good fit. In my case, they considered both my academic background as well as my industry experience. In fact, my industry experience helped me.

    2. Not sure about US vs. UK vs. Canada, but what I can tell you is that a M.S. in engineering is more than sufficient if you only want to work in industry. A Ph.D. is good if you want to teach and if you want to lead a research team.

    3. The biggest problem I had was all in the mental realm. I forgot most of what I learned in undergrad (all that funky calculus stuff, physics, etc ;). I spent a few months doing a major review of everything I thought would be necessary to get me to the level where I should be if I were just coming out of undergrad. I also found that I wasn't as quick as some of the younger students in my lab, but what I lacked in speed, I made up in discipline and focus. :)

  9. Re:"Chips" on Hack Your Ride · · Score: 1

    Yup. It's a one day turn around, or in my case, a 5 minute turn around. :-) I got a chance to meet the people at Hondata and they reprogrammed the ECU on my car while I waited.

  10. Re:"Chips" on Hack Your Ride · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hondata (http://www.hondata.com) has been doing this for years on Hondas/Acuras. Ever since Honda started using flashable ECUs in the most recent generation of cars, reprogramming Honda ECUs is a piece of cake. Just connect an OBDII cable to your programmer, press a button and your ECU is reflashed. One caveat is that Hondata spent a year or two decoding the fuel map codes. Unfortunately, they have to decode each model's ECU, but from what I understand, they are fairly similar (plus they have years of experience in hacking ECUs).

  11. Re:Sheesh! on TiVo Will Die · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually, DirecTiVo service is $4.99.

  12. Re:Peace? on E.U. Agrees To Launch Galileo Satellite Location System · · Score: 1

    I'm sure it'd be much easier to just shoot down the satellites instead. ;-)

  13. Re:Bay Area on Nmap Featured in The Matrix Reloaded · · Score: 1

    Well, here in Pittsburgh, we didn't get any cheers for the hacking scene, instead, there were people laughing during the sex scene. I can't wait to get back to the Bay Area...

  14. Re:Sun would make sense to IBM on Available To The Right Buyer: Sun Microsystems · · Score: 1

    No. HP is an IT company which just happens to make some hardware. If you look at the distribution of people at HP doing real hardware design and compare it to the people in IT, the IT workers greatly out number the hardware designers...

  15. Re:I don't get it. on Al Gore Joins Apple's Board Of Directors · · Score: 1

    George Bush did not kill 100 people while he was governor, Texas did.

  16. Pressure Monitors on Michelin to Include RFID Transmitter in Every Tire · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can already buy pressure monitors for your tires. It's not as cool as an embedded pressure gauge, but it does the job and it's wireless so you can get realtime data.

    http://www.tirerack.com/accessories/smartire/sma rt ire_all.jsp

  17. Re:OBD is an interface standard on Automakers to Make Diagnostic Codes Available · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, if you buy the OBDII reader and a factory service manual you have enough information to understand what the code is and how to fix it. You can buy factory service manuals from www.helminc.com. These two resources are indespensible for a DIY mechanic.

  18. Re:I rather not have Intel. on Pentium-Based Macs The Future of Apple? · · Score: 1

    At the core of Intel and AMD's chips is a RISC processor. They just have instruction translators from CISC to RISC. So technically, both AMD and Intel make RISC processors.

  19. Re:You are a little Myopic my friend. on More on MIT OpenCourseWare · · Score: 2

    I agree with Keebler71. For anything other than IT, you really need to be at a university. When I started college 8 years ago, I studied Physics. Sure, you could pick up some introductory books in physics and teach yourself the basics, but, once you get past the basic freshman and sophomore physics, you WILL need some instruction from sources other than books. Have you ever tried to read a book on statistical thermal dynamics or quantum mechanics? I guarantee that unless you are at the level of Einstein or Feynman, you would not be able to learn these topics on your own for the first time.

    Another thing is that many technical fields outside of IT and CS actually require equipment or expensive software in order for you to learn the topics. For instance, when was the last time you bought a spectrum analyzer or a logic synthesis tool like Synopsys Design Compiler?

    What people seem to forget is that a college education gives you a broad background to think critically about the world. You don't have to study an area that relates to your current job. You just need a good background to help you through life.

    After college, I worked for 2 years in the EE field and whenever we hired people, we only hired people with BS in EE or a BS in CS. We would not even look at a candidate with just certifications. When I went to work for the corporate arm of the company, it was very IT focused, but even then, when we were hiring, we never even called back a candidate unless they had a bachelor's degree.

    I just went back to college (CMU) to get my Masters degree in Electrical Engineering. I can tell you that there is no way that I would have been able to learn what I am learning now without being at a university. I know that when I graduate, I will have more options open to me than if I stayed in my previous job. So all you people who think you can get by with certifications, please keep pushing forward on that path. That will help me get a job more easily after I graduate. ;-)

  20. Re:This is new? on Analog & Digital Chips On The Same Silicon · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're confusing the transistor devices with the circuit topology. You can build analog circuits from NMOS and PMOS transistors (CMOS process), in fact, when I took an analog circuits class at Berkeley, we only used NMOS and PMOS transistors, no bipolar transistors at all. We were able to build almost any analog circuit that we wanted. If you put a NMOS and PMOS in an inverter configuration to get a switch, but you can play some tricks to make the same transistors produce a current source or an op-amp.

    On a side note, in a CMOS process, you can create crappy NPN and PNP transistors called lateral NPN or lateral PNP. It has horrible gain, but if you needed to build a bandgap voltage source (or some other bipolar-like device), you can use this transistor.

  21. Re:MIPS is beauty in simplicity. on Hope for MIPS, From Toshiba · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you are interested in MIPS you can get an assembler here. I used this assembler in my intro to computer architecture class.

  22. Re:Red Herring Article on Fiorina Says HP May Get Out Of The PC Business · · Score: 1

    Carly did not get rid of the test and measurement organizations (Agilent). The previous CEO, Lew Platt, spun off Agilent. You can blame her for the rest of the troubles.

  23. Re:Oh, Heavens No! on TiVo To Support RealNetwork Formats · · Score: 1

    I agree. I have one of the DirecTivo boxes and it records the MPEG stream from the satellite straight to the hard disk. Because of this feature, I hope Tivo will not mess with the DirecTivo boxes. But, I have this horrible feeling that some suit might force a Real encoder to be placed between the satellite stream and the hard disk.

  24. Re:Kudos to China on Can China Pull An India? · · Score: 1
    I heard a story on NPR about how India trains people for call centers. They can take a $35,000 job from the US and turn it into a $4,000 job in India. So what happens to the person making $35,000 over here? Should they take a pay cut to $4,000?
    How about getting an education so that you don't have to work in a call center? Oh but I forgot, people in the US are lazy and would rather complain about foreigners taking jobs rather than taking responsibility for their future ;)
  25. We shouldn't care... on 64 Mbyte Write once CMOS Chip from Standard Fabs · · Score: 1

    Write once will only be useful for shipping prerecorded songs for the record companies. I like my SmartMedia cards and they cost about $0.50/MB today. When this company started work on these chips, the cost of flash memory was $2/MB or more. I can get a 64MB SmartMedia card for about $35-$40 depending on the brand I buy. The key thing here is that I can keep reusing the chip.

    With my 4Mpixel digital camera, I can fit about 80 pictures in high quality JPEG format. I can transfer them to my computer, then I can reuse it again. I can keep doing this over and over again. And after I use it 7 times, my 64MB SmartMedia card will break even with the $5 64MB MatrixSemi card. I don't know about you, but I like the fact that I can rewrite.

    And guess what? If DRAM is any example, flash memory cards will keep decreasing in price. MatrixSemi is in a niche market and their product will probably never catch on unless they can make their anti-fuse technology rewritable.