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User: Liquidity

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Comments · 31

  1. Software Patents on Patent Office Admits Truth — Things Are a Disaster · · Score: 1

    He had part of the answer in there: "drop technologies like software patents"

  2. Physics Today, MIT Technology Review?!? on Cold Fusion Back From The Dead · · Score: 1

    Physics Today and MIT Technology Review are not leading science journals. I may be drunbk, but I am still right... err correct.

  3. Re:conditions on Is A Catch-All Address Worth The Spam? · · Score: 2, Funny


    I think foo@bar.org might get even more.

  4. Eat your Heart out Carmack! on Delta 4 Inaugural Launch A Success · · Score: 5, Funny

    Boeing:1
    Carmack:0

  5. Is this the terrible secret of space??? on Radio Waves Employed in Space Construction · · Score: 1

    I am the Pusher Robot: I use radio waves to shove around the blind people.

  6. Magnetic Sensors Can't See my Plastic Pontiac on Sensors Gone Wild · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hahaha! I am a ghost in their system with my virtually invisible Plastic Pontiac...

  7. Magnetic Sensors? on Sensors Gone Wild · · Score: 1

    "...passing vehicles could be identified by their magnetic signatures."

    How long before Glock starts making cars?

  8. The Neanderthals on Europe Goes To Venus; Mars Comes to Us · · Score: 5, Funny
    "This apparently is the first time it's been this close since the Neanderthals"

    Yeah, and look what happened to them!

  9. How it works on The Casimir Effect · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In simplistic terms this works because photons of certain wavelengths are excluded from the space between the plates. This doesn't happen on the outer faces of the plates, and the difference in the vacuum energy inside versus outside leads to an "attracting" force.

    It only works on uncharged plates.

  10. Evolutionary design methods on Self-Organizing Circuit Reinvents Radio · · Score: 1

    This stuff turns out to work in many complex applications with many variables. For instance, it is also used in metallurgy to find super-alloys: See G.H. Johannesson et.al., Physical Review Letters, 24 June 2002

  11. Re:Slashdot... on AMD Opteron "Hammer" Preview · · Score: 1

    What the hell is a gibabyte??!?!?!? :)

    (Man, you asked for that one!)

  12. Wow, the "forth quater", huh? on AMD Opteron "Hammer" Preview · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    How hard would a little editorial oversight be?

  13. Re:Cornea on Taiwan and South Korea's LCD Market-Share Battle · · Score: 0

    You must have enormous sunglasses to cover that new eye!

  14. Brought to you by.... on NASA Plan to Read Brainwaves at Airports · · Score: 2, Funny

    the same people whose $160,000,000 space probes split in two when their rockets fire.

  15. New Orleans + Microsoft on Microsoft Sinks Teeth Into New Orleans · · Score: 1

    And what should we call this combination? Perhaps "The Big Sleazy"?

  16. Re:Science is like any other business on Moving from Corporate IT to Science? · · Score: 1

    One thing you have to understand about scientists is that if they are any good, then they generally won't care about "newer and better" if what they do now works OK. The goal is science, not cool new software. The time spent migrating code from c to c++ is better spent working on the real problem.

  17. Re:The politics of Academia on Moving from Corporate IT to Science? · · Score: 1

    There is no way he is going to move into faculty position from being a sysadmin somewhere. You need a PhD + post-grad experience for this (modulo how crappy the school is).

    He could be a department sysadmin, though, and in this case, most of the politics will be irrelevant to his work.

  18. Re:Speed... on The Coming of Serial ATA · · Score: 1

    You are right about single drive throughputs, they are way below the interface throughput. In fact, very few ATA drives can actually hit 40 MBps, and those only on the outer tracks.

    However, you want your interface to have several times the throughput of a single drive. This is because you can have more than one drive operation ocurring at a time. In other words, you want to be able to pull 30 MBps from one drive while pushing 30 MBps to another drive, while scanning a third drive, etc.

    This really helps when you are doing something like RAID0.

  19. To build your own Tesla Coil on Build Your Own Tesla Coil · · Score: 2, Informative

    Look here, and at the links within:
    http://www.hills2.u-net.com/tesla.htm

  20. Check out the time frame on Atomic Scale Memory · · Score: 2, Informative

    At the bottom of the story, a key factoid: "Timeline: > 20 years" Holographic memory at 1 TB/cc will give this technique a run for its money on density and will probably be ready first.

  21. The best junk faxes on [Junk]Fax.com Fined $5.4 Million · · Score: 3, Funny

    My favorite is the one where there is some product information printed out, as if from internal company report or something Then, there are some lines underlined or circled and a note written in the margin somewhere which says something like: "Jim, this is the one I told you about!"

    I guess you are supposed to grab this off the incoming queue and think, "AHa! I've intercepted a confidential memo! Now I, too, will reap the benefits of this secret deal!"

  22. Re:depends on whether math is a science on Edsger Wybe Dijkstra: 1930-2002 · · Score: 1

    I'd say mathematics is a class unto itself. If anything, it has more to do with philosophy (think analytical philosophy) than science.

  23. Re:Another great quote on Edsger Wybe Dijkstra: 1930-2002 · · Score: 1, Troll

    "Computer science is as much about computers as astronomy is about telescopes."

    And it doesn't have anything to do with science either. Funny, huh?

  24. Hello? on Perl + Python = Parrot · · Score: 1

    This is another joke, guys. Ala the DALnet story.

    News releases don't come out on Sundays, you know.

  25. Re:Environmental Effects -NOT! on NASA Launches Largest Single-Cell Balloon · · Score: 2

    These balloons carry multi-million dollar payloads of scientific instruments. Loosing one in the water would be a huge deal, and would be avoided at all costs. There are generally not that many flights per year, so you are completely off base.

    As for them coming down on your house, that isn't an issue for these ULDB flights which will go around the polar regions. But for shorter flights, which go out of the southwest (and Canada), it is a real concern during cutdown. Generally it comes down to a fight between NASA voting for safety and the scientists who built the instruments voting to risk it for more data.

    Another tidbit: there was a malfunction with a payload called ISOMAX last year. Generally, the payload is cut away from the balloon and it has a parachute to bring it down. The parachute is cut away once the payload is on the ground to prevent it from being dragged, etc... Unfortunately, there was a vessel failure and loss of GPS tracking, and the parachute was cut while the payload was still X thousand feet in the air and the whole thing went splat out in Manitoba. In NASA's book this qualified as a the same level incident as the shuttle explosion. With the splat went many tens of man-years of work and several million dollars.