If he's already got the patent, publishing after the fact doesn't matter at all. And there's a certain grace period if you publish and then file the patent (1 year?). Publication by another party prior to his/her patent filing would invalidate the patent.
A "Process" is slightly more concrete than an algorithm. An algorithm is pure computer science without the context of a use case. Software patents on a general purpose computer are too close to algorithms because a general purpose computer is a tool designed to convert any algorithm into a process for use in a particular domain. So once an algorithm is described, putting it on a computer is too "obvious" under patent law.
A patentable process was originally a physical process, frequently an industrial process.This was then expanded to include business processes ( 1997?). Software patents snuck in under the business process domain as more and more business processes were computerized.
Regardless of the power output, covering parking lots with solar panels at about a 70-80% coverage rate is a win-win. Provide weather coverage and shade for the parking lot patrons, harvests energy that would otherwise heat the asphalt. and the incomplete coverage allows enough light through to avoid the need for artificial lighting during daylight.
Plus, once you are able to prove the type of fraud/abuse described, it would be easy to get the contracts thrown out as invalid and regain control over the powerplant. OTOH, if this occurred several years ago, you're probably too late.
Yeah, this is the biggest fly in the ointment for me. He obviously has some investors to produce the devices that are being tested. If the investors were legit and not in on the scam, the best way for them to recoup their investment would be to fund building around 100 of the devices and actually put them to commercial use at a rate that undercuts electricity costs in Italy by a significant amount (say 20%).
There's a small possibility that he doesn't have enough investors/funding to pull this off, but I'm an engineer. If the device can't be produced and sold at a reasonable price, it isn't commercially feasible -- even if it turns out his device can make energy.
Finally, someone either knew it or bothered to look it up. The work on the photoelectric effect was what paved the way for e=mc^2, quantum theory and (less directly) most of the other stuff in modern physics. The photoelectric effect was unexplainable by Maxwell's equations because the relationships between the energy and frequency of the impinging light and the energy and quantity of electrons emitted didn't match what was predicted under Maxwell's laws. This was because Maxwell's formulas had no concept of the quantum energy states for electrons in an atom (or atomic matrix).
Technically, libel and slander are grounds for a civil suit, not criminal. Death threats and impersonation/identity theft are criminal but can be pursued civilly as well. Victims need to start lawyering up and getting rulings that bankrupt the trolls, and put them under restraining orders for their internet activity. If they persist put them under court orders barring them from accessing the internet, and throw them in jail for criminal contempt if they violate the court orders.
The standard of proof for civil suits is significantly lower than beyond a reasonable doubt, so the main barrier is getting internet sites and ISPs to release information that can identify the anonymous offenders.
And once again, this is not a feminist issue. Doxxing an SWATting are rampant against males as well. From Wikipedia: * In the past, there have been swatting incidents at the homes of Ashton Kutcher, Tom Cruise, Chris Brown, Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Clint Eastwood.
Basically once you reach a certain level of fame or notoriety on the internet, you are likely to piss off someone who thinks it's fun to engage in these kinds of activities.
Did you even read the main story. It cites the SWATting of Chris Kootra, who is a male gamer. Regardless of whether you think that women suffer disproportionately from this kind of crap, the trolls are out of control.
and ironically enough we still have plenty of Chinese graduate students and post-doc researchers attending schools in the US. If the post-doc situation is so dire, ship 'em back.
That depends on how you define the labor market for these jobs. Until salaries rise in India, China, etc. get close enough to US levels, the cost of local US labor will be higher than the average price in the global market.
I'm not saying that protectionist immigration policies are a bad thing (I'd be pretty poor without it), but in a true free market there wouldn't be any immigration caps and wages would have equalized long ago. Right now the immigration policies for tech workers seem to (try to) run a fine line between pulling enough workers out of BRIC to increase labor costs there without causing US salaries to free-fall.
Yeah, if all the ads were limited to an image, maybe some text and clickable links, it would make everybody happy except the most hard-core advertisers looking for the next big thing and the poor slobs who actually click on the ads.
Yeah, just on off-the-cuff calculations, say 30 million copies across all platforms,could be as high as 40 M, but PC is only 16-17 M. I'm not sure what cut Mojang gets from the non-PC versions after you take out the development costs and Xbox/PS platform royalties, but let's say that Mojang grossed about $20 per copy overall. This includes he alpha and beta sales that were for under $20 averaged with the higher costs now.
This comes out to $600-$800 M before taxes, so after you factor in Minecraft Realms monthly fees and any income from Scrolls, you're probably somewhere around $1B in sales. I'm pretty sure there are more than 2 employees with equity in the company, and when you factor in Swedish income taxes, Notch is clearly not a billionaire in dollars.
It's worth $2B to Microsoft, because they can milk the Minecraft cow for at least that much by merchandising paraphenalia and movies, Minecraft Realms is also an ongoing cashflow. Oh, and I bet they institute a monthly fee for Minecraft Server.
Apart from the money, I think Notch is really selling because he's sick of the BS of running a company: Bethesda suing them over scrolls, parents suing them over exploitative MC servers....etc.
Bad move when Mojang is finally making progress on their own Mod API.
The other way to make this legal is to change the license on Bukkit/CraftBukkit to something more liberal. They won't be able to do this retroactively, so someone may decide to pursue this idiocy on a back-level GPL-based fork, but at least the main project could legally license under CC by-sa, BSD, Apache or possibly even LGPL.
In other words, some idiot is trying to blackmail Mojang into open-sourcing Minecraft server by linking to Mojang's non-Open code into a GPL licensed product and then claiming that Mojang needs to release the source code to be compliant with the GPL? I know that the GPL states that all code needed to compile and link a GPLproduct must be available, but this is backwards. If there is Minecraft server code linked in CraftBukkit, that just means Craftbukkit and anything that links to it can't use GPL. You can't use the GPL to force open a non-open product that you elected to link to in your code. That just means you've misused the GPL in your own code.
Didn't someone already try this with proprietary graphics drivers in Linux?
But OBS (open broadcaster software) does a good job of video mixing/overlays greenscreening. https://obsproject.com/
Corel Video Studio isn't quite free, but you can get it for around $50 on sale (or less if you go with a backlevel version 3 or 4) and it is pretty full-featured. It's not designed for full blown professional use because the front-end does more hand-holding than a pro would want, but the key features are all there.
Actually, this is probably the main reason MS is defying the US court order. If they give over the info without getting permission from the Irish government, they are likely to be in violation of Irish or EU laws on data privacy. They have some ground to defer the compliance with the US court during the appeals process, so they are deferring the risk of violating the EU laws until absolutely necessary. Or they may elect to take contempt charges in the US over greater charges in the EU, and reap the PR benefit. It definitely isn't a purely altruistic "defend the consumer" action, even if they choose to play it that way.
On the other hand, it does defend their customers against overreaching by the US, so more power to them.
Yeah Java is the COBOL of the 21st Century. It's the lowest common denominator, almost every programmer knows at least the rudiments, and the tool and support ecosystem around it is huge.
More politely - if these guys spent as much (re)training each US worker as they spend on lawyers, visa fees and other costs related to bringing in the replacements, they wouldn't have a problem.
One reason I route all email from my company's PAC to my junk folder. Why should I help fund legislation against my own interests as well as those of the country.
Now if there was a permanent residence visa program, I might go for it. The foreign workers would have more bargaining power over their salaries/benefits and they would be long-term paying payroll taxes and other things that would help the US economy and budget.
Walmart used to do (and probably still does) this to their suppliers. The only difference is the consumer never knew their was a coercive price negotiation going on because the product simply never appeared on store shelves, and usually there was a substitute from another vendor.
but his history is pretty weak. Up until the rise of the internet in the '90s (or possibly the "Weird Science"/"Revenge of the Nerds" era in the 1980s), nerds/geeks/otaku were right up there with gays, women and ethnic/religious minorities for being bullied, harassed and abused by the crueler edges of the mainstream. And this kind of harassment still goes on in certain areas/communities - try being a geek in a gang-ridden slum sometime.
That certainly doesn't justify a nerd perpetuating the cycle of abuse onto women or any of the other groups. But it does mean that there are better ways to engage the "nerd community" than by claiming that they aren't the subjects of abuse themselves.
If he's already got the patent, publishing after the fact doesn't matter at all. And there's a certain grace period if you publish and then file the patent (1 year?). Publication by another party prior to his/her patent filing would invalidate the patent.
A "Process" is slightly more concrete than an algorithm. An algorithm is pure computer science without the context of a use case. Software patents on a general purpose computer are too close to algorithms because a general purpose computer is a tool designed to convert any algorithm into a process for use in a particular domain. So once an algorithm is described, putting it on a computer is too "obvious" under patent law.
A patentable process was originally a physical process, frequently an industrial process.This was then expanded to include business processes ( 1997?). Software patents snuck in under the business process domain as more and more business processes were computerized.
Regardless of the power output, covering parking lots with solar panels at about a 70-80% coverage rate is a win-win. Provide weather coverage and shade for the parking lot patrons, harvests energy that would otherwise heat the asphalt. and the incomplete coverage allows enough light through to avoid the need for artificial lighting during daylight.
Plus, once you are able to prove the type of fraud/abuse described, it would be easy to get the contracts thrown out as invalid and regain control over the powerplant. OTOH, if this occurred several years ago, you're probably too late.
Yeah, this is the biggest fly in the ointment for me. He obviously has some investors to produce the devices that are being tested. If the investors were legit and not in on the scam, the best way for them to recoup their investment would be to fund building around 100 of the devices and actually put them to commercial use at a rate that undercuts electricity costs in Italy by a significant amount (say 20%).
There's a small possibility that he doesn't have enough investors/funding to pull this off, but I'm an engineer. If the device can't be produced and sold at a reasonable price, it isn't commercially feasible -- even if it turns out his device can make energy.
Finally, someone either knew it or bothered to look it up. The work on the photoelectric effect was what paved the way for e=mc^2, quantum theory and (less directly) most of the other stuff in modern physics. The photoelectric effect was unexplainable by Maxwell's equations because the relationships between the energy and frequency of the impinging light and the energy and quantity of electrons emitted didn't match what was predicted under Maxwell's laws. This was because Maxwell's formulas had no concept of the quantum energy states for electrons in an atom (or atomic matrix).
Technically, libel and slander are grounds for a civil suit, not criminal. Death threats and impersonation/identity theft are criminal but can be pursued civilly as well. Victims need to start lawyering up and getting rulings that bankrupt the trolls, and put them under restraining orders for their internet activity. If they persist put them under court orders barring them from accessing the internet, and throw them in jail for criminal contempt if they violate the court orders.
The standard of proof for civil suits is significantly lower than beyond a reasonable doubt, so the main barrier is getting internet sites and ISPs to release information that can identify the anonymous offenders.
And once again, this is not a feminist issue. Doxxing an SWATting are rampant against males as well. From Wikipedia:
* In the past, there have been swatting incidents at the homes of Ashton Kutcher, Tom Cruise, Chris Brown, Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Clint Eastwood.
Brian Krebs has suffered various harassments for several years now, as documented here: https://krebsonsecurity.com/20...
Basically once you reach a certain level of fame or notoriety on the internet, you are likely to piss off someone who thinks it's fun to engage in these kinds of activities.
Did you even read the main story. It cites the SWATting of Chris Kootra, who is a male gamer. Regardless of whether you think that women suffer disproportionately from this kind of crap, the trolls are out of control.
and ironically enough we still have plenty of Chinese graduate students and post-doc researchers attending schools in the US. If the post-doc situation is so dire, ship 'em back.
That depends on how you define the labor market for these jobs. Until salaries rise in India, China, etc. get close enough to US levels, the cost of local US labor will be higher than the average price in the global market.
I'm not saying that protectionist immigration policies are a bad thing (I'd be pretty poor without it), but in a true free market there wouldn't be any immigration caps and wages would have equalized long ago. Right now the immigration policies for tech workers seem to (try to) run a fine line between pulling enough workers out of BRIC to increase labor costs there without causing US salaries to free-fall.
...and if you conspire to commit a felony, it isn't a conspiracy until the felony is actually committed?
Yeah, if all the ads were limited to an image, maybe some text and clickable links, it would make everybody happy except the most hard-core advertisers looking for the next big thing and the poor slobs who actually click on the ads.
Also of note, zedo.com shows up in NoScript as a site that has javascript awaiting permissions on the /. home page.
Yeah, just on off-the-cuff calculations, say 30 million copies across all platforms,could be as high as 40 M, but PC is only 16-17 M. I'm not sure what cut Mojang gets from the non-PC versions after you take out the development costs and Xbox/PS platform royalties, but let's say that Mojang grossed about $20 per copy overall. This includes he alpha and beta sales that were for under $20 averaged with the higher costs now.
This comes out to $600-$800 M before taxes, so after you factor in Minecraft Realms monthly fees and any income from Scrolls, you're probably somewhere around $1B in sales. I'm pretty sure there are more than 2 employees with equity in the company, and when you factor in Swedish income taxes, Notch is clearly not a billionaire in dollars.
It's worth $2B to Microsoft, because they can milk the Minecraft cow for at least that much by merchandising paraphenalia and movies, Minecraft Realms is also an ongoing cashflow. Oh, and I bet they institute a monthly fee for Minecraft Server.
Apart from the money, I think Notch is really selling because he's sick of the BS of running a company: Bethesda suing them over scrolls, parents suing them over exploitative MC servers....etc.
I was wondering the same thing. AFAIK, HP isn't even involved in the case, so it borders on libel to link their logo with this story.
So they're blackmailing Mojang...
Bad move when Mojang is finally making progress on their own Mod API.
The other way to make this legal is to change the license on Bukkit/CraftBukkit to something more liberal. They won't be able to do this retroactively, so someone may decide to pursue this idiocy on a back-level GPL-based fork, but at least the main project could legally license under CC by-sa, BSD, Apache or possibly even LGPL.
In other words, some idiot is trying to blackmail Mojang into open-sourcing Minecraft server by linking to Mojang's non-Open code into a GPL licensed product and then claiming that Mojang needs to release the source code to be compliant with the GPL? I know that the GPL states that all code needed to compile and link a GPLproduct must be available, but this is backwards. If there is Minecraft server code linked in CraftBukkit, that just means Craftbukkit and anything that links to it can't use GPL. You can't use the GPL to force open a non-open product that you elected to link to in your code. That just means you've misused the GPL in your own code.
Didn't someone already try this with proprietary graphics drivers in Linux?
Oh great, now when your family sets fire to their farts, they'll blow up the whole block instead of just scorching the carpet.
But OBS (open broadcaster software) does a good job of video mixing/overlays greenscreening. https://obsproject.com/
Corel Video Studio isn't quite free, but you can get it for around $50 on sale (or less if you go with a backlevel version 3 or 4) and it is pretty full-featured. It's not designed for full blown professional use because the front-end does more hand-holding than a pro would want, but the key features are all there.
Actually, this is probably the main reason MS is defying the US court order. If they give over the info without getting permission from the Irish government, they are likely to be in violation of Irish or EU laws on data privacy. They have some ground to defer the compliance with the US court during the appeals process, so they are deferring the risk of violating the EU laws until absolutely necessary. Or they may elect to take contempt charges in the US over greater charges in the EU, and reap the PR benefit. It definitely isn't a purely altruistic "defend the consumer" action, even if they choose to play it that way.
On the other hand, it does defend their customers against overreaching by the US, so more power to them.
Yeah Java is the COBOL of the 21st Century. It's the lowest common denominator, almost every programmer knows at least the rudiments, and the tool and support ecosystem around it is huge.
More politely - if these guys spent as much (re)training each US worker as they spend on lawyers, visa fees and other costs related to bringing in the replacements, they wouldn't have a problem.
One reason I route all email from my company's PAC to my junk folder. Why should I help fund legislation against my own interests as well as those of the country.
Now if there was a permanent residence visa program, I might go for it. The foreign workers would have more bargaining power over their salaries/benefits and they would be long-term paying payroll taxes and other things that would help the US economy and budget.
Walmart used to do (and probably still does) this to their suppliers. The only difference is the consumer never knew their was a coercive price negotiation going on because the product simply never appeared on store shelves, and usually there was a substitute from another vendor.
but his history is pretty weak. Up until the rise of the internet in the '90s (or possibly the "Weird Science"/"Revenge of the Nerds" era in the 1980s), nerds/geeks/otaku were right up there with gays, women and ethnic/religious minorities for being bullied, harassed and abused by the crueler edges of the mainstream. And this kind of harassment still goes on in certain areas/communities - try being a geek in a gang-ridden slum sometime.
That certainly doesn't justify a nerd perpetuating the cycle of abuse onto women or any of the other groups. But it does mean that there are better ways to engage the "nerd community" than by claiming that they aren't the subjects of abuse themselves.