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  1. They need to name the final rule on FAA Wants Your Opinion On Commercial Space Rules · · Score: 1

    The Space Precautionary Act.

    And they need to delay the damn hearing 4 weeks, until there will be, I dunno, *one million plus* people on that coast, for the last Shuttle launch?

    Eeediots.

  2. CSS FAIL on Slashdot Launches Re-Design · · Score: 2

    Congratulations.

    1) Launch Firefox
    2) Go to home page.
    3) Ctrl-+ 5 times to make body copy large and bold enough to actually read on 1024x768 12" laptop screen at age 45.
    4) Note that, as on so many other websites, page flies apart in pieces, left topics sidebar *covering the body copy*.

    Come *on* people. I expect this stupid horseshit from CNN or the Superficial.

    I do *not* expect it from geeks.

    GET THIS FIXED. PROMPTLY.

    That is all.

  3. Ham Radio is dying about as fast as on NASA Seeks Ham Operators' Help To Test NanoSail-D · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Usenet.

    Which, by the way, *still* isn't dead, thank-you-very-much smb and tomt.

    The Eternal September, BTW, finally ended.

  4. Re:Nice story submission! on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    Better be; the truth sure ain't...

  5. Re:Traversing the sky? on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    Indeed; the spacing on the belt is determined by the frequency band, and the minimum acceptable size of the uplink dishes; Ku and moreso Ka band birds can be quite a bit closer together than C band ones.

  6. Re:Out of control from April 5th to Dec 23rd? on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    Correct: the baseband control processor was what froze; the bent-pipe transponders remained active, as did the sun- and earth-pointing subsystems.

    When the batteries finally drained far enough, the BBE reset itself, and the next time the panels had sun, it came up *just* long enough to let them upload the patches, and reenable the sunlocker.

  7. Re:Nuke it from the ground on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    They tried:

    "On May 3, an attempt at a very momentary series of strong pulses intended to cause a power system malfunction were sent to Galaxy 15. Unfortunately, this did not have the desired effect of causing a power system overload and subsequent shut down of the active transponders." --wp

  8. Re:Does this mean on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    PS: congrats for having the sense to use HTTPS to access all possible websites. :-)

  9. Re:Does this mean on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    <nit>
    Please don't refer to Wikipedia as "wiki"; that's a common noun for a particular category of content management software. Thanks.
    </nit>

  10. OT: Geosat on 'Zombie' Satellite Returns To Life · · Score: 1

    I've just gotten a new gig at a network that feeds via AMC1, and I'm trying to find the TV satellite cabal on the web.

    Any pointers?

  11. Ruh roh. on Why Published Research Findings Are Often False · · Score: 0

    Given the political environment of the last residental administration, and what it did to science, this is much worse than it might initially seem.

  12. Re:What the hell on FCC To Allow Texting To 911 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, only if you're hunkered down behind a desk, hoping the gunman won't notice you used Old Spice when you showered this morning.

    Oh, and don't forget to turn your ringer off...

    This will fail on false alarms, just as would the slightly more intelligent "provide a mobile-friendly webpage" idea. Also no way to tag the GPS location on it.

  13. Re:LTE either? on Why Unlocked Phones Don't Work In the US · · Score: 3, Interesting

    [ reads piece ]

    Oh: "Andy Seybold Guesses".

    Got it.

    Hey, Andy? LTE *isn't* 4G; ITU says so.

    Andy underrates RF technology; if Vzn can deploy LTE robustly, things will get very interesting.

  14. LTE either? on Why Unlocked Phones Don't Work In the US · · Score: 1

    I dunno; with the 2 clauses Google got the FCC to wire into the license terms, I had high hopes for LTE... Any app, any device; you can go far with that...

  15. Re:Another day on iPhone Alarm Bug Leads To Mass European Sleep-in · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Hey, you might be late to work and get fired next Monday cause you have poor taste in cellphone manufacturers" is a ridiculous story?

  16. Good to know. on Why Apple's iPad Has Been Good For Sprint · · Score: 2, Informative

    Now, of course, Sprint's WiMAX network is *not* 4G; the ITU said so, last month, in an announcement covered here.

    But whatever it is, it's good to know people like it better than AT&T's... cause I'm getting an EVO in a couple weeks.

    Anyone using Sprint "4G" in Tampa yet?

  17. Re:Republicans are in the lead... on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    > There's a certain group of people who likes to see a conspiracy between Republicans and Diebold, which may or may not exist, I dunno.

    "Deliver the state of Ohio for the Republican Party"?

    Yeah, that sounds like a conspiracy to me.

    But as for "cannot trust a computer", as I've noted elsewhere: if the ballots are both machineable and human-readable simultaneously (IE: no barcodes or anything; just make the computer read the text, which is pretty frickin easy these days), then everyone who's interested can bring their own counting machine along, and count each batch of ballots.

    It all comes down to transparency.

    As long as the *process* is explicitly transparent at each stage -- *anyone who wants to* can watch, or audit, any part of the process -- then enough people *will* do that to keep things honest.

  18. Re:In other words on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    Therac-25.

    Now that we're over that... Open-Source is, indeed, not-sufficient.

    That doesn't mean that it's not *necessary*.

    The entire process design has to be such that a person of reasonable intelligence (ie: not Ron Rivest or Rebecca Mercuri) can follow along with the entire process, and see at each step what the possible subversions are and how the system prevents them from having a negative impact.

    Open source isn't enough... but it's a start.

    As I note elsewhere, though, the counting machinery is the most important part, and there's no reason why -- if your ballots are OCRable -- each interested party could not run parallel counts on the same ballots, and compare their answers, which would make it possible not to care whether a given program is subverted: if 3 or 4 different ones give the same answer, you're done.

  19. Re:Alternatives? on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    +5; this covers nearly *everything* necessary to understand the problem, and the solution.

  20. Re:Common misconception on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    "A Ballot is a Physical Object".

    Are you happy now?

    Everybody else involved seemed to know what I meant.

  21. Re:Common misconception on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    How you prevent the Thompson hack is simple:

    Change of Domain.

    If your electronic terminals do no counting, but only ballot display, vote collecting, and printing, then they are off of *most* of the critical path -- if people are bringing in a marked Sample Ballot, they will likely notice if their preferred candidate is *missing*, and that's the only fraud you can commit there: add or delete a possible vote-choice.

    Once you have a locked box full of serially numbered votes, and a companion locked box full of serially numbered spoils (that is; the pair of boxes, together, should comprise a complete serially numbered set of votes from TERMINALNUMBER-1 through TERMINALNUMBER-TOTALVOTES, which can be checked, and TERMINALNUMBER and TOTALVOTES are written by hand on multiple separate poll-worker and poll-watcher count sheets, and you have those votes for all machines in a precinct, you can then run them all through the counting machines.

    That's a PC, with an ADF scanner, running any damned software you like...

    because the election officials count them one way, and the party watchers each count them with something different, and the counts had *better* all match.

    If they don't match, you can pretty easily find out why, by putting all the bodies in a room, and passing them all along past people with tally sheets.

    My point is, and remains, that it is demonstrably possible -- for elections held solely in precincts -- to satisfy *every* constraint about a plebescite that doesn't have to do with Arrow's theorem, or getting actual bodies to the building (registration issues and the like), WITH CURRENTLY AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGY, NONE OF WHICH EVER HAS TO BE ON THE VOTE-COUNT-CRITICAL PATH.

    You just gotta *wanna*.

    But, as Carlin observed: "Wanna is a sin all by itself. Thou shalt not *wanna*."

  22. Re:Common misconception on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    You won't get an answer to this one, cause you've finally popped his balloon. :-)

    Thanks for the help.

  23. Re:Common misconception and "open source" on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    You're correct, and I don't like mailin/internet voting for precisely this reason.

    And the "well, only the people who want to" counter-argument isn't pertinent here, since it's the *system* that's being protected.

    But at least, a voter can avoid "might be invalidated" by getting off their fucking ass and voting on election day.

  24. Re:Common misconception on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    The question is: "how do you design the entire system so that subverting it requires the largest number of individual people, preferably partisan observers of different parties, *all* to cooperate?"

    And the answer is, "that's not all that hard".

    *Every single objection raised* in your posting, and every other posting I've see on this thread, *has been answered*, in one part or another of the conversations about vote-counting-system design I've followed in the last 12 years.

    All of them.

    Sometimes you have to read the PDF white papers to find them, but they're all in there.

    And yes, statistical analysis of voting patterns is a useful tool for spotting *possible* fraud.

    Note, that I didn't say "for spotting fraud". But when 3407 rich people in Palm Beach County vote for Pat, there is *something* going. See the Volusia Anomaly, also, linked somewhere else here.

  25. Re:Common misconception on US Elections Dominated By Closed Source. Again. · · Score: 1

    Well, when 3407 Jews in Palm Beach County vote for Pat Buchanan, yeah, in fact, there's a pretty good bet there's something wrong (I have *read* the statute. The "butterfly ballot" *violated the letter of the statute, on its face):

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Buchanan#2000_presidential_campaign

    Even Buchanan didn't believe it.