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User: Noose+For+A+Neck

Noose+For+A+Neck's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 184

  1. Re:Turn the damn thing off on DVRs, Cable Boxes Top List of Home Energy Hogs · · Score: 2

    Wow, you seriously didn't even glance at the article, did you? STBs in "idle" mode aren't any less energy hungry than when they're "on". The only way to turn most of them "off" is by unplugging them.

  2. What about free services? on Fourth Amendment Protects Hosted E-mail · · Score: 2

    Let's say you use a Gmail address as your primary email instead of whatever's provided by the people who provide your internet connection. Do they count as an "internet service provider" here, or is this decision as narrow as it sounds?

  3. WTF is an 'ATM machine'? on ATM Hack Gives Cash On Demand · · Score: -1, Troll

    Ass-to-mouth machine? Why would it have cash? Do people pay for that??

  4. Wow, that actually sounds pretty righteous on US Senate Passes 'Libel Tourism' Bill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So I've got to ask: how many libel suits must be pending overseas against BP America/Monsanto/Dow Chemical/United Healthcare/Disney/et al to get Congress to get off their butts and act?

  5. Re:Noise Complaints on MIT Designs Aircraft That Uses 70% Less Fuel Than Conventional Planes · · Score: 1

    I've come across this very topic in the course of my work (I'm an aerospace engineer) and the general consensus on the issue (at least for the Hybrid Wing Body) is that having the engines mounted above the wing like most proposed designs currently do results in a drastic reduction in engine noise in an airport setting.

  6. OMG! MIT just invented the Hybrid Wing Body! on MIT Designs Aircraft That Uses 70% Less Fuel Than Conventional Planes · · Score: 1

    Wait, no, the HWB has been an ongoing project for years. Nothing to see here, just another bullshit MIT PR release.

  7. Re:HP on The Twelve Most Tarnished Brands In Tech · · Score: 1

    Polaroid was responsible for designing and building the camera that went into the U-2 spy plane back in the mid 1950s. They certainly did more than cheap little instant-develop cameras.

  8. Re:And the wings might not even fall off in flight on Boeing's 787 Dreamliner Takes Flight · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure you wouldn't be able to fly in it until it's certified for commercial operation. Unless you're way better connected than I am. It's a pretty silly point to make.

  9. Re:Yawn. on Boeing's 787 Dreamliner Takes Flight · · Score: 1

    Given that this is a jet and not a piston-powered aircraft, that would be "one continuous controlled flame". No explosions involved, sorry.

  10. Why does Slashdot give voice to this moron? on The Space Garbage Scow, ala Cringely · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Does Cringely have some kind of seedy business relationship with Slashdot's parent company?

  11. Re:Conservation of Energy on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 1

    Another issue to consider would be the differences in digestion efficiency between the digestive tracts of different people. People who have trouble losing weight might just be much more effective at extracting usable calories from food consumed.

  12. Re:But it's all physics? *snark* on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 1

    Are you suggesting that the human body somehow violates the laws of thermodynamics? Because that would be much stupider than what you seem to be mocking.

  13. Wrong audience on What Happened To the Bay Bridge? · · Score: 5, Funny
    Slashdot is a great engineering community; what other insights do you have on the bridge situation?

    No, Slashdot is mostly made up of computer janitors; the greatest insight you'll get out of most of the posters here is, "hurrr durr, the bridge must've been running Windoze! LOL!", with maybe a little "omg the twin towers were collapsed by EXPLOSIVES!!!!"-style conspiracy theory and "THE GOVERNMENT IS BAD!!!" braindead libertarianism thrown in for color.

  14. Re:Modeling cooperation as laminar flow on Obstacles Near Emergency Exits Speed Evacuation · · Score: 0

    Laminar flow? Where do you see boundary layer phenomena here? And tripping "boundary layers" of people into "turbulent flow"? Do you even think about things before you just blurt them out on the internet?

  15. Re:Is it like aerodynamic spoilers on cars? on Obstacles Near Emergency Exits Speed Evacuation · · Score: 1

    Absolutely not. Next question.

  16. Re:Just what we need on Airborne Laser Successfully Tracks, Hits Missile · · Score: 1

    Which UAV? There isn't just one design of UAV, there's a whole slew of them in service, on the market or in design. Some of them are rather large, think roughly the size of an A-10. There's no fundamental reason that something the size of a 747 cannot be flown in an unmanned configuration.

  17. Re:Dumb. on Will Your Credit Report Disqualify You For a Job? · · Score: 1

    who mails cheques these days, cheques died out ten years ago

    Clearly, you've not been to the United States in the past ten years. We still make almost all of our non-retail payments with checks here in the financial Third World. My company, for example, still issues checks for expense reimbursement.

  18. Re:Sigh on British Start-Up Tests Flying Saucers · · Score: 1

    Yes, but your assumption (CPU speed is no object) is ridiculous.

  19. Re:It will be a very difficult project on Copyright Status of Thermodynamic Properties? · · Score: 1

    All of those can be accomplished in Fortran 90/95. There is even direct language support for the third requirement (private members of derived types), and I do it all the time; it works just like other public/private declarations, just placed inside the type definition. Inheritance and polymorphism (I'm guessing this is what dynamic binding means from a quick look at Wikipedia) are a bit trickier, but the techniques have been worked out and documented by these fellows (Viktor Decyk's page is also quite helpful). If you prefer to avoid typing out a certain necessary amount of boilerplate to do this, you could use Drew McCormack's forpedo preprocessor (described in detail on MacResearch). So, it's not necessary to wait for 2003, and in fact, many people haven't but have managed to write and maintain very large codes in Fortran 90/95. Good luck!

  20. Re:Government interfearence screws up everything on Paper Companies' Windfall of Unintended Consequences · · Score: 1

    You don't even know that there were two presidents named "Roosevelt"? I hope you're not American, because that would be shockingly stupid.

  21. Re:Blowing doors of competition on Intel Takes SATA Performance Crown With X25-E SSD · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't you mean the door population?

  22. Impressive. on Chandrayaan Enters Lunar Orbit · · Score: -1, Troll

    It's only a matter of time now before Indians discover Lawn Darts and color television!

  23. Oh really? on It's Time for Social Networks to Open Up · · Score: 0, Redundant

    My impression of social networks is that too much information is already available to everyone. The privacy concerns created by Facebook et al. are staggering; I can't believe that someone in the open source community seriously supports making such information even more easily available.

  24. No. on Dell To Sell Advanced Server Cooling Systems · · Score: 1

    No, this has nothing to do with heat pipes.

  25. Re:H.264 isn't a codec, it's a standard on In-Depth Look At Video Codecs · · Score: 1

    Yes, thank you for pointing that out. I was referring to encoders in this instance.