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User: MuChild

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  1. MacBook Air 13 Inch on Ask Slashdot: What Tech Products Were Built To Last? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have had my MacBook Air running almost continuously for three years. Almost no hiccups. That's about it!

  2. Re:Eh on Comparing Today's Computers To 1995's · · Score: 1

    Sing it! I mean, when they wanted to make a reasonable operating system for a personal computer, they had to go back to Unix! Really?!? Nothing better was invented in the, what was it, 40 years of computer science? I know, I know, this is a simplification, and to some degree the 40-year-history was one of the reasons to use it, but you get what I'm saying.

  3. Re:Considering how often Adderall is abused... on Aderall Or Nothing: Anatomy of the Great Amphetamine Drought · · Score: 1

    Don't get me wrong. I sure do know how bad addiction can get. I also know, though, that it's not a problem in and of itself. Plenty of people are addicted to stuff all the time and feel it's for the best. If I ran the world, I would try harder to accommodate differences in people's psychological makeup rather than just medicating the crap out of them.

  4. Re:Considering how often Adderall is abused... on Aderall Or Nothing: Anatomy of the Great Amphetamine Drought · · Score: 2

    Well, I'm a project manager for the media section of a text-book publisher. It's the project management that I am bad at, so I'm going to find a job where project management isn't the primary job skill. I like computers and media and education, so I may stay in this industry, but move into a position that's more about problem-solving or working directly with content (more editor-y or programmer-y). Something that would let me work at my own pace more.

    Sales is a great place for people with ADD as they are often personable and funny (perhaps I'm projecting ;) ). Attention and follow-through, and detail-oriented work are part of any job, but there are some that are "better" than others for people with ADD. Like, if you're good at sales or writing, or whatever, you can often hire an assistant to handle the attention-heavy stuff. ADD types often do well in creative fields, too, as the "creative" thought process seems to be similar to the ADD thought process. So much so, in fact, that a recent study has shown that ADD drugs can eliminate people's ability to have "AHA!" insights when trying to solve puzzles. This has been documented by researchers and I can personally report it's true for me.

  5. Re:Considering how often Adderall is abused... on Aderall Or Nothing: Anatomy of the Great Amphetamine Drought · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, well, it's not that they need it to function DISCLAIMER (I am presently on a similar medication), it's that they need it to function in the highly structured, monotonous "farmer" style society that we find ourselves. If there was a way for many of these people (and many people with ADD do fine without meds) to make a living that didn't rely on organization, attention to detail, etc., then we wouldn't need the meds. I myself am trying to transition myself away from my concerta-requiring job and into a non-concerta-requiring job as we speak.

    As far as addiction goes, what of it? People are addicted, physically addicted, to coffee, and other substances all the time. It's not the addiction but the psycho-physico-emotional harm that it might do that is the problem. No one worries that people with bipolar disorder are "addicted" to their meds.

  6. Re:It's not all the Textbook publshers' fault on Apple Intends To 'Digitally Destroy' Textbook Publishing · · Score: 1

    The double-bind that publishers are in, however, is that the people who choose books for their classes (sometimes individual professors sometimes committees) will refuse to buy a book that is cheaply made because they fall apart and students can't re-sell them. Also, a lot of the cost comes from the fees we pay for rights to those glossy photos and not really the production cost of the physical book (which is why eBooks for these $150 texts are often still over $50 and why that Bangladeshi copy still cost $50).

    I agree, though, that the situation we have in textbooks is sort of the same as the one in American automobiles: an oligopoly where a few competitors offer roughly the same product with roughly the same prices. Add in the fact that all the add-ons and online content is almost never revenue-bearing and the price of the textbook isn't going to drop very far. Change is coming, though. I can feel it in my bones! Flat World Knowledge, Inkling, and now Apple are going to get it right pretty soon and change the way the whole industry operates. I'm just glad I work in the media department and not print!

  7. It's not all the Textbook publshers' fault on Apple Intends To 'Digitally Destroy' Textbook Publishing · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I work for a major textbook publisher that makes some of (albeit the cheapest) those textbooks.I admit that the system is broken, but the impression that the publishers are gouging the students is not entirely fair. The bookstores on campus with monopolies on their local markets and used book sales through nation-wide aggregators are a large part of the problem. All that is before we even get to piracy.

    Also, textbooks these days come with a wide range of additional print and on-line resources like study guides, course management and homework systems, videos, etc. that are usually bundled with the book for "free." (I'm not going to insult you and suggest these add-ons don't effect the price of the book, but their value generally far outweighs the price)

    If you want someone to blame, talk to the people who run your local bookstores.

  8. Tachyon Pulse on Glory Satellite Lost To Taurus XL Failure · · Score: 1

    This disappoints me greatly. Why didn't they just reconfigure the deflector dish when they realized there was a problem and reduce the mass of the rocket with a tachyon pulse?

    Seriously, though, we need a better system. Modern rocketry is almost 100 years old and we haven't come up with anything better?

  9. The Only Successful Model.... on Should Wikipedia Just Accept Ads Already? · · Score: 1

    that I know of to run an organization with a purpose other than making money is to have it run, as much as possible, by non-professionals and user donations. Otherwise, the amount of bloat within the organization goes nuts and, of course, the money starts influencing the editorial process. Just look at the difference between traditional AA-like programs vs. the Catholic Church. How much of what a cardinal or whatever does is about helping people with their spiritual lives and how much is meta-crap about the organization itself? Whereas, in AA, all of that shit is kept to a bare minimum since there's very few people who are part of AA infrastructure professionally. And yet, there are millions of AA members in hundreds of countries.

  10. Cool, But true 4D? on Gaming in the 4th Dimension · · Score: 0

    As someone pointed out in the YouTube comments, and in the above reply, this doesn't really offer freedom in the 4th dimension, or even an accurate way of looking at the 4th dimension. It's analogous to two 2D mazes stacked on top of each other with the ability to jump between the two. The overall puzzle exists in the third dimension, but not in a "life-like" way.

    Another problem with this type of representation of the 4th dimension is scale. If the 4th Dimension is time, and you want to move in the 4th Dimension to a point at which the object you're trying to circumvent, say a wall, doesn't exist, you have to go back to before it was made or forward to when it decays away. In a lot of places, any wall you're likely to encounter is older than you are which, you might suppose, would mean its size in the 4th dimension would be bigger than you. I suppose if a wall were new, you would be at one edge of it 4th dimensionally-speaking.

    Anyway, I know that this game is just using the 4th dimension as a way of spicing up a puzzle game, for which I applaud them, but I would love to see a real mind-warper out there sometime. There used to be a 4D rubiks cube program, for instance that used to really tweak me out.

  11. Re:The Real Issue on School Spying Scandal Gets Even More Bizarre · · Score: 1

    I am glad to hear a lawyer say that these buffoons should be smacked for this.

    Their whole policy, requiring students to use only the school's computers, not allowing them to access or disable the webcams, makes no sense to me. It smells like someone trying to limit their liability, you know? Like trying they are terrified of what these students might do with these computers. Sex-picture viewing, president threatening, etc, but not in a rational risk-management way. It feels more like a witch-hunt.

    Why is our culture ever more terrified of our teenagers?

  12. The Real Issue on School Spying Scandal Gets Even More Bizarre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As someone pointed out on another site, there are two big problems with the school's position:

    1.) Just because they told the kids that they might activate the web cam to find it doesn't give them the right to do so. If the activity is illegal, telling someone you are going to do it beforehand doesn't make it legal. IANAL, but this one sounds pretty shaky.

    2.)Even if they had the legitimate authority to use the web cam, once they realized that the laptop was in the hands of the right person, they would have been legally obliged to stop spying. Any information they gleaned from that spying would have been inadmissible in court.

    From the posting at that link it looks like the school is on a serious freakout powertrip. Requiring the students to have one of these computers, requiring them to use them to the exclusion of all others and then spying on them periodically even if there was no report of the laptop being stolen.

    The school board and school administration of that town should be burned to the ground with metaphorical salt sown in their professional fields.

  13. Re:Ugh. on Amazon Surrenders To Macmillan On eBook Pricing · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Exactly. I don't see how publishers are the bad guy here. Everyone seems to think that every form of intellectual property should be free or what they perceive as low-cost regardless of the costs to produce it. That's why the music industry shrank by 2/3 in the wake of the MP3 "revolution." What people don't see is all the amazing music that they could be enjoying but there's no one to sign the band, record and promote them so they languish in their hometown and you never know they exist.

    If it's too expensive, don't buy it. Just like any other product. I could buy $150 balsamic vinegar, but I don't think it's worth it even though it is tasty.

    As far as the textbook industry is concerned, I know a thing or two about it's inner workings and, let me tell you, there is a big difference between a free textbook and a $80-$130. There are a lot of people working behind the scenes to make sure that it's useful to you, well written, up-to-date and error-free.

  14. Michael Moorcock's Jerry Cornelius Quartet on What SciFi Should Get the Reboot Treatment Next? · · Score: 1

    I say this knowing that it would really make a great film(s) if they re-worked the characters and plots of at least the Final Programme. I have seen the original '70's version and, while it has it's upsides, it could really be done much better today.

    It's got sex, drugs, humor, rock and roll, time-travel, hermaphroditic super-beings...you name it!

  15. Re:Is drugs the answer? on Sedate Your Kids While They Play · · Score: 1

    That's why I say the drugs should be enough. And IANAD, but nitrous really isn't dangerous in a medical setting when compared to the other options in the pharmacopia.

  16. If you're giving the kid nitrous.... on Sedate Your Kids While They Play · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...why do they need the video game? Once it kicks in you could amputate at the knee and recieve only chuckles in response.

  17. It Infected My Company's IT Department.... on Conficker Worm Strike Reports Start Rolling In · · Score: 1

    ....it made them stay at work late into the night last night freaking out and running around. It also made my Inbox swell with useless warnings about how to surf the net safelyl

  18. Re:Yes, go for it. on With a Computer Science Degree, an Old Man At 35? · · Score: 1

    Actually, while one's raw processing speed (fluid intelligence) begins to decline in one's 20's, what's called crystalized intelligence continues to grow. That is, one's overall store of knowledge and ability to use that knowledge peaks in one's 60's.

    That means while someone may not be able to figure out the solution to a problem as fast as they age, they may not need to because they remember the solution from the last time it, or something similar happened.

    I'm in psychology, not IT, so I don't know which would be more valuable.

  19. Ground Effect on Flying Car Passes First Flight Test · · Score: 1

    From the videos, it looks like it never gets that high off the ground. Just like the Spruce Goose, this thing might only be flyable due to ground effect. Until they have videos of it getting above 40 feet off of the ground, I will remain skeptical.

  20. Mere Exposure on Young People Prefer "Sizzle Sounds" of MP3 Format · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is due to what psychologists call the "mere exposure" effect. People like things more that they have experienced before. It's one of the driving forces behind advertising.

  21. Memory Stick would be Easier on Tips For Taking Your Laptop Into and Out of the US? · · Score: 1

    You could offload all your photos onto a memory stick. I doubt they would search that. Especially if it's not in your carry-on.Encrypting is pretty darn easy, too. Although if they give you a hard time, you'll just have/want to decrypt it for them to take a look. Otherwise it looks real suspicious.

  22. Re:hmmm on Ancient Yeast Used To Brew Modern Beer · · Score: 1

    Aha. Thanks. I saw the "spore" wikipedia article, but didn't drill down to "endospore." Your response fills in the missing gaps as to why spores can survive so long in amber while, say, dinosaur DNA in a mosquito trapped in amber, has not.

  23. Re:hmmm on Ancient Yeast Used To Brew Modern Beer · · Score: 1

    I don't doubt you, but I am under the impression that molecules like DNA are not as stable as all that. Seed banks, for instance, periodically germinate and replenish their stock. Seeds can stay dormant for, perhaps, thousands of years, but I'm still impressed by 45 million. Any ambient energy would, I would think, contribute to the degradation of the DNA inside the spores. DNA in other organisms trapped in amber have certainly become useless to scientists.

  24. Re:hmmm on Ancient Yeast Used To Brew Modern Beer · · Score: 1
    Yeah, sure, but 45 MILLION years is more than "extended" periods of time. Even by seed/spore standards. That article doesn't at all explain HOW it survives, either.

    It's like saying "a mountain bike is a bicycle that allows riders to travel over rough terrain" and it turns out the mountain bike in question can travel over land, sea, the vacuum of space, and the semi-liquid/semi-gasseous atmosphere of Jupiter.

  25. Re:If good gfx is all you have to offer on Will Modern Games Stand the Test of Time? · · Score: 1

    I gotta agree with you on this. There are some games, though, that I bet will be fun enough despite the distracting soon-to-look-cheesy "realistic" graphics. Games like Portal, for instance, whose enjoyment are entirely predicated on the mechanics and story will do fine.

    Even games like Crysis, will soon look dated. The story line and its delivery is OK, but ultimately it's just a FPS.