Same as with candy bar machines. They frequently fail to give you your candy bar, but they almost never accidentally give you 2 candy bars. They're obviously engineered to "fail" in a way that benefits the "house"....
Dwyer hopes his sensor aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, will provide more data."
The "sensor" referred to in the article appears to be the main instrument on board the Fermi spacecraft: the not very imaginatively named Large Area Telescope, or LAT. This was developed by a very large international team, including NASA and the DoE in the US. However, Dwyer, as far as I know, was not a member of this large team. (And I don't think the article or Dwyer actually claim this.) The data obtained from the LAT are made public as soon as possible, usually within much less than 24 hours, after being obtained. Anyone in the world is free to download and analyze these data. http://www-glast.stanford.edu/ http://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/ The Fermi satellite also carries the GBM - gamma-ray burst monitor, which has provided the majority of the results on gamma-rays from lightning. The data from this instrument are also immediately public. http://gammaray.msfc.nasa.gov/gbm/
Are you saying "head down the road apiece until you git to where the old Johnson place used to be, then stay on that road until you git to the oak tree- no wait, they cut that down- tell you what, you just go for about 10 minutes until you see a guy on a thresher and ask him," isn't good information?
It would be if I could get even that. But everyone was just totally clueless, not even any map. When I worked in a petrol station in the UK (when I was a student) we had a local map pinned to the wall because we had so many people stopping and asking for directions.
These days like everyone else I just rely on my phone for navigation, of course.
up with inordinately complex solutions to everyday problems... it's like guys who insist on not stopping for directions... they'll drive in circles for hours when all it would have taken was to walk into a gas station and ask where to go.
Off topic but: When I lived in the UK I used to ask for directions at petrol stations very often and always got good information. But, when I moved to the US I tried asking for directions at gas stations and never got any useful help at all. So, asking for directions at gas stations is not useful, based on my research...
That seems better. "More than a decade" sounds too short term of an investment.
According to the NY Times, the overall gas available may be more like 100 years' worth:
Jogmec estimates that the surrounding area in the Nankai submarine trough holds at least 1.1 trillion cubic meters, or 39 trillion cubic feet, of methane hydrate, enough to meet 11 years’ worth of gas imports to Japan.
People who know the point they want to make use profanity, people who are to stuck up / proper try to talk around the use of swearing and usually end up sounding like a complete idiot.
Personally, I find I'm often more influenced by whether by a native speaker makes frequent basic grammatical errors or not. (e.g. "to" vs. "too").
(And by McKean's law I must have several errors in the sentence above of course.)
Apparently, the logs also showed he took a lengthy detour through Manhattan, rather than a direct route.
According to the reporter in a subsequent followup: Mr. Musk has referred to a “long detour” on my trip. He is apparently referring to a brief stop in Manhattan on my way to Connecticut that, according to Google Maps, added precisely two miles to the overall distance traveled from the Delaware Supercharger to Milford (202 miles with the stop versus 200 miles had I taken the George Washington Bridge instead of the Lincoln Tunnel) http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/?hp
Coming to the US with a green card is very difficult. I know of nobody who did that where I work (federal government science lab). I have a PhD in physics, I came to the US on an H1B visa (as did many of my colleagues). Then, after several years, I got a green card, then a few years after that I became a US citizen. That path (H1B -> green card -> citizen) has been followed by very many of my scientist and engineer colleagues. I'd like to think that we make a strong contribution to the US scientifically, economically, and culturally.
You're totally off-base. At least in that a few thousand people is not sufficient to give a large likelihood of a match. If it did, it would mean that DNA databases would be useless for solving crimes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_profiling
Even though my linux desktop machine runs for long periods without needing rebooting, there are exceptions: My several year old Pioneer television runs linux. It crashes and reboots if I change HD channels more than 5 or 6 times. My roku box needs to be rebooted from time to time. So does my android phone.
is the psychological technical term for what often happens I believe...
The classic deindividuation experiment concerned American children at Halloween. Trick-or-treaters were invited to take sweets left in the hall of a house on a table on which there was also a sum of money. When children arrived singly, and not wearing masks, only 8% of them stole any of the money. When they were in larger groups, with their identities concealed by fancy dress, that number rose to 80%. The combination of a faceless crowd and personal anonymity provoked individuals into breaking rules that under "normal" circumstances they would not have considered.
WTF? Go cry me a river. Since when does a company ( that isn't a monopoly ) have to be fair and charge 'reasonable' prices? Especially to the competition...
Here's one example: Reasonable and non-discriminatory terms (RAND), also known as fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms (FRAND), are a licensing obligation that is often required by standard-setting organizations for members that participate in the standard-setting process. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reasonable_and_non-discriminatory_licensing
The problem is that at least the vast majority of religions come with "standard" texts that contain explanations for where, for example, humans and the Earth came from ("creation myths"). When science discovers information that conflicts the these texts, the texts are not typically discarded or revised, as would be the case in science. This sets up an automatic potential conflict between science and any religion that claims to provide real information about the physical world. (Except if a case was found where the "standard texts" of a religion actually were actually confirmed from genuine scientific research.)
A "religion" might exist without physical world predictions, but then it would probably be much more of just an ethical movement (e.g. such as vegetarianism) than a real religion. Possibly Unitarian-Universalism and some types of Buddhism could be such "light" forms of religion.
After the announcement, Nokia stock price has gone down 15 % from yesterday's closing value at OMX Helsinki. So, not the kind of announcement the market was expecting, it seems.
WRONG. There was NEVER consensus as to the cooling. Not ever. In fact, it was never more then a tiny percent of climatologist.
You can try to pretend that cooling was "never" predicted. However, the inconvenient truth is that the seminal, and highly cited, work of Strummer et al. (1979) clearly predicted an incipient increase in ice coverage. As they stated (repeatedly): The ice age is coming, the sun's zooming in Meltdown expected, the wheat is growing thin
At least, that's the only work I know of from that era that predicts another ice age soon...
So in the future I should have super docile, conformist babies that fit the cookie cutter notion of how a baby should look? No thanks, I'll just stick with chance.
But people don't usually stick with chance. In general, they prefer to very carefully choose who the other provider of 50% of the DNA of their child will be.
Same as with candy bar machines.
They frequently fail to give you your candy bar, but they almost never accidentally give you 2 candy bars.
They're obviously engineered to "fail" in a way that benefits the "house"....
Dwyer hopes his sensor aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, will provide more data."
The "sensor" referred to in the article appears to be the main instrument on board the Fermi spacecraft: the not very imaginatively named Large Area Telescope,
or LAT. This was developed by a very large international team, including NASA and the DoE in the US. However, Dwyer, as far as I know, was not
a member of this large team. (And I don't think the article or Dwyer actually claim this.)
The data obtained from the LAT are made public as soon as possible, usually within much less than 24 hours,
after being obtained. Anyone in the world is free to download and analyze these data.
http://www-glast.stanford.edu/
http://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/
The Fermi satellite also carries the GBM - gamma-ray burst monitor, which has provided the majority of the results on gamma-rays
from lightning. The data from this instrument are also immediately public.
http://gammaray.msfc.nasa.gov/gbm/
Are you saying "head down the road apiece until you git to where the old Johnson place used to be, then stay on that road until you git to the oak tree- no wait, they cut that down- tell you what, you just go for about 10 minutes until you see a guy on a thresher and ask him," isn't good information?
It would be if I could get even that. But everyone was just totally clueless, not even any map. When I worked in a petrol station in the UK (when I was a student) we had a local map pinned to the wall because we had so many people stopping and asking for directions.
These days like everyone else I just rely on my phone for navigation, of course.
up with inordinately complex solutions to everyday problems... it's like guys who insist on not stopping for directions... they'll drive in circles for hours when all it would have taken was to walk into a gas station and ask where to go.
Off topic but: When I lived in the UK I used to ask for directions at petrol stations very often and always got good information. But, when I moved to the US I tried asking for directions at gas stations and never got any useful help at all. So, asking for directions at gas stations is not useful, based on my research...
Many phones can work with T-mobile's service over wifi. For me that's at least as good as having a local cell extender.
http://t-mobile-coverage.t-mobile.com/4g-wireless-broadband-service
However, it appears the iPhone may not be able to use this initially.
http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/26/t-mobile-iphone-no-wifi-calling-feature-enabled/
Perhaps a great day for democracy, but not liberal democracy.
(USAians may need to look up the definition of that.)
That seems better. "More than a decade" sounds too short term of an investment.
According to the NY Times, the overall gas available may be more like 100 years' worth:
Jogmec estimates that the surrounding area in the Nankai submarine trough holds at least 1.1 trillion cubic meters, or 39 trillion cubic feet, of methane hydrate, enough to meet 11 years’ worth of gas imports to Japan.
A separate, rough estimate by the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology has put the total amount of methane hydrate in the waters surrounding Japan at more than 7 trillion cubic meters, or what researchers have long said is closer to 100 years’ worth of Japan’s natural gas needs.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/13/business/global/japan-says-it-is-first-to-tap-methane-hydrate-deposit.html?hp
People who know the point they want to make use profanity, people who are to stuck up / proper try to talk around the use of swearing and usually end up sounding like a complete idiot.
Personally, I find I'm often more influenced by whether by a native speaker makes frequent basic grammatical errors or not. (e.g. "to" vs. "too").
(And by McKean's law I must have several errors in the sentence above of course.)
Isn't there a fundamental law that says that if you critique somebody's grammar and/or spelling, you will make a glaring mistake yourself?
Which is why it was a good idea for the GP to restrict themselves to a single emoticon!
Apparently, the logs also showed he took a lengthy detour through Manhattan, rather than a direct route.
According to the reporter in a subsequent followup:
Mr. Musk has referred to a “long detour” on my trip. He is apparently referring to a brief stop in Manhattan on my way to Connecticut that, according to Google Maps, added precisely two miles to the overall distance traveled from the Delaware Supercharger to Milford (202 miles with the stop versus 200 miles had I taken the George Washington Bridge instead of the Lincoln Tunnel)
http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/?hp
Coming to the US with a green card is very difficult. I know of nobody who did that where I work (federal government science lab).
I have a PhD in physics, I came to the US on an H1B visa (as did many of my colleagues).
Then, after several years, I got a green card, then a few years after that I became a US citizen.
That path (H1B -> green card -> citizen) has been followed by very many of my scientist and engineer colleagues.
I'd like to think that we make a strong contribution to the US scientifically, economically, and culturally.
Citation?
Teenager faces prosecution for calling Scientology 'cult'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/may/20/1
UK teenager arrested for anti-war Facebook post
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/232192.html
April Jones: Matthew Woods jailed over explicit Facebook comments
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/oct/08/april-jones-matthew-woods-jailed
You're totally off-base. At least in that a few thousand people is not sufficient to give a large likelihood of a match. If it did, it would mean
that DNA databases would be useless for solving crimes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_profiling
Even though my linux desktop machine runs for long periods without needing rebooting, there are exceptions:
My several year old Pioneer television runs linux. It crashes and reboots if I change HD channels more than 5 or 6 times.
My roku box needs to be rebooted from time to time.
So does my android phone.
burning old platform in the North Sea
should be
burning oil platform in the North Sea
My cell phone and google voice numbers certainly aren't in the phone book.
Also:
India 1947
South Africa 1994
U.S.A. 1964 (Civil Rights Act)
This is sort of like the idea that there are temperatures less than absolute zero. These would be negative kelvin temperatures.
The idea being that 0k means 0 energy, you would then have anti-energy, possibly anti-matter, and anti-physics.
Of course it's all just hokum, but hey, it's fun to theorize.
Negative absolute temperatures are fine. You just get a population inversion, such as in the case of lasers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_temperature
is the psychological technical term for what often happens I believe...
The classic deindividuation experiment concerned American children at Halloween. Trick-or-treaters were invited to take sweets left in the hall of a house on a table on which there was also a sum of money. When children arrived singly, and not wearing masks, only 8% of them stole any of the money. When they were in larger groups, with their identities concealed by fancy dress, that number rose to 80%. The combination of a faceless crowd and personal anonymity provoked individuals into breaking rules that under "normal" circumstances they would not have considered.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jul/24/internet-anonymity-trolling-tim-adams
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deindividuation
WTF? Go cry me a river. Since when does a company ( that isn't a monopoly ) have to be fair and charge 'reasonable' prices? Especially to the competition...
Here's one example:
Reasonable and non-discriminatory terms (RAND), also known as fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms (FRAND), are a licensing obligation that is often required by standard-setting organizations for members that participate in the standard-setting process.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reasonable_and_non-discriminatory_licensing
Dimming incandescent bulbs does not save a significant amount of electricity.
Yes it does, but it's not a 1:1 reduction. Here's a detailed analysis from, where else but, Poultry Housing Tips (University of Georgia).
http://www.poultryventilation.com/sites/default/files/tips/2009/vol21n14.jpg
The problem is that at least the vast majority of religions come with "standard" texts that contain explanations for where, for example, humans and the Earth came from ("creation myths"). When science discovers information that conflicts the these texts, the texts are not typically discarded or revised, as would be the case in science. This sets up an automatic potential conflict between science and any religion that claims to provide real information about the physical world. (Except if a case was found where the "standard texts" of a religion actually were actually confirmed from genuine scientific research.)
A "religion" might exist without physical world predictions, but then it would probably be much more of just an ethical movement (e.g. such as vegetarianism) than a real religion. Possibly Unitarian-Universalism and some types of Buddhism could be such "light" forms of religion.
After the announcement, Nokia stock price has gone down 15 % from yesterday's closing value at OMX Helsinki. So, not the kind of announcement the market was expecting, it seems.
"Buy the rumor, sell the fact"
e.g.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_market#Market_psychology
WRONG. There was NEVER consensus as to the cooling. Not ever. In fact, it was never more then a tiny percent of climatologist.
You can try to pretend that cooling was "never" predicted. However, the inconvenient truth is that the seminal, and highly cited, work of Strummer et al. (1979) clearly predicted an incipient increase in ice coverage. As they stated (repeatedly):
The ice age is coming, the sun's zooming in
Meltdown expected, the wheat is growing thin
At least, that's the only work I know of from that era that predicts another ice age soon...
So in the future I should have super docile, conformist babies that fit the cookie cutter notion of how a baby should look? No thanks, I'll just stick with chance.
But people don't usually stick with chance. In general, they prefer to very carefully choose who the other provider of 50% of the DNA of their child will be.