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User: snooo53

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  1. Re:But I want it to go away on Six Reasons Why Flash Isn't Going Away · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How true. Even Silverlight runs circles around flash for streaming video performance. I can watch Netflix movies stutter free on my netbook, but Flash videos on Hulu peg the processor and are almost unwatchable because of it.

  2. but it can still be distracting on Video Quality Matters Less If You Enjoy the Show · · Score: 1

    Video quality may not matter much if you're interested, but it can definitely be distracting. Just the other day I was watching a streaming video clip from a local cable news station that was very pixelated... it looked like it was encoded at about 160x120 resolution and I was watching it full screen. Even though I was really interested in the particular story, the entire time I was watching the jagged edges of everything and wondering why they didn't encoded it at a higher quality or at least apply some sort of smoothing algorithm to it.

  3. a fine example of that later in the comments.... on Buried By The Brigade At Digg · · Score: 1

    Speaking of spurious up-mods, I noticed further on down in the comments for this story there's a sub-thread with tons of highly rated comments that's entirely devoted to a debate about Civil rights legislation and Democrats vs Republicans. Every one of those is just screaming for Off-Topic moderation, but in practice it doesn't happen!

    The thing is, the whole policy of promotion instead demotion fails in practice because of situations like that. Do I just moderate the first post in a thread as off topic, or all of them? Frequently the first post is on-topic but then responses drift off into a political or ideological rant having nothing to do with the title of the story. So, like below, we end up with a series of highly rated comments having absolutely nothing to do with the story!

  4. meta-moderation on Buried By The Brigade At Digg · · Score: 1

    That is an excellent idea! In fact the whole Meta-moderation on Slashdot needs to be rethought. It's far too hard to effectively meta-moderate without seeing the context of a comment. One big advantage of Digg is that I'm right there in the thread, and I can see how other people have moderated and can immediately help try to control abuses. Despite some of the group-think tendencies, I don't think people give Digg enough credit on moderation. I've found them overall to be surprisingly effective at promoting reasonable comments, and demoting the jerks.

  5. Re:Effort does not guarantee originality on Why Recordings From World War I Aren't Public Domain · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Interesting! So that brings up the question: What is the threshold number of notes before a progression becomes a copy? Was that brought up in the case?

    Out of curiosity I googled it, and came up with this nice summary, however it's still not entirely clear what constitutes a copy.

  6. Re:I think we can time travel off of this but have on Coronal Mass Ejection Hits Earth · · Score: 1

    From watching TV, you would think that time travel is almost always guaranteed take you to one of the iconic eras of the 20th century

  7. Re:The biggest problem on Intuit Still Fighting Government Tax Software · · Score: 1

    Of course giving special favors to large corporations happens all the time and distorts the market. But to assume it's solely because they're greasing some politicians hand, and that all we would have to do to raise extra money is end that practice is a gross oversimplification of the problem. Every state has to worry about jobs and unemployment. When a company promising 5,000 jobs is choosing between your city/state/country and somewhere else for it's new HQ, you can bet they're going to give the company every allowance to ensure they choose them, and will reap the benefits from keeping those jobs close to home.

  8. key word is easy on Could Open Source Render Facebook the Next AOL? · · Score: 1

    I think you've hit on the right features Facebook provides, but the key word here in all of them is "EASY". That is the biggest hurdle for open source... providing an easy end user experience. That, and attracting developers.

  9. Re:How about... on School District Drops 'D' Grades · · Score: 1

    Funny you bring that up because I actually ran into the same issue in my college days. Some of my upper level math and science tests were such that 40-50% was the cutoff for F's and very smart people still regularly failed tests. I felt lucky when I was able to swing a C in some of those classes. Contrast that with courses outside those majors in which just showing up practically guaranteed a B or better. The thing that stinks is that this can hurt you when out looking for your first job if an employer has a GPA requirement.

  10. Re:Ideally the best metric would be on 4 Cores? 6 Cores? Do You Care? · · Score: 1

    True, there is magazine style benchmarking, but you still have to cross reference that with for the most part arbitrary processor numbering schemes, where a higher number doesn't necessarily mean it's faster. Which makes it really difficult to compare if you want to know what that extra % of performance is going to cost you.

    I honestly think this nonsense is hurting sales... I can only speak from my experience but personally I've passed up on an impulse buy for a motherboard/processor combo to do research only to end up reconsidering whether I even really needed it. Which was a good thing for me I suppose, but horrible for their sales if others are doing the same thing.

  11. Re:Batteries... on In Oregon, Wind Power Surges Disrupting Grid · · Score: 1

    But do you really need to store a day's worth? It sounds like the surge in the article only lasted about an hour so you really just need something to regulate the flow for a short time. An hour gives quite a bit of time to ramp down production elsewhere on the grid. I guess the question then is it cheaper to build more out of inter-regional line capacity and distribute it better, or to have a battery backup for the turbines.

  12. Re:Batteries... on In Oregon, Wind Power Surges Disrupting Grid · · Score: 1

    That would have to be a pretty large bank of batteries to store the power from a 1-2MW wind turbine. I'd guess maybe around a thousand(?) off the shelf deep cycle batteries for an hour worth of capacity. Not sure what's available in the commercial realm. A $200k system at least. My numbers are probably way off, but really that doesn't sound too bad when we're talking a million dollar wind turbine.

  13. Re:My street doesn't exist on Catching Satnav Errors On Google Street View · · Score: 1

    As with many things in life! Especially when dealing with a mega-corp

  14. Re:What about... on 4 Cores? 6 Cores? Do You Care? · · Score: 1

    You can, but just as the processor capabilities of processors have become fuzzy, so have what is generally good enough to do a given task. For example:
    Video processing, animation/rendering... quad core unless you have tons of time
    Gaming... Fast dual core
    Video, multimedia, light gaming... slow dual core
    web browsing, email, older apps/games... single core

    If only the iPhone could replace a computer... But there are just too many limitations and restrictions on what it can do compared to even a netbook. Someday I think mobile devices will be to that point but not today

  15. I wonder how many other lost sales there are on 4 Cores? 6 Cores? Do You Care? · · Score: 1

    How true... I'm actually in the same boat where I've been thinking about upgrading for the last 2 or 3 years but haven't actually pulled the trigger yet. Sure I can look at charts and reviews and get a general idea of what's got the best performance for some tasks, and then try to cross-reference with the deals at different retailers but who has time for that? In some ways I miss the days 10 years ago when you went with AMD or Intel and got the fastest MHz you could afford (I certainly don't miss the prices though!)

  16. Ideally the best metric would be on 4 Cores? 6 Cores? Do You Care? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some combination that measures both how many operations per second, and how much power it's going to take to do said operations (i.e. Watts/computing unit). I don't know if even FLOPS is sufficient anymore to describe current computing tasks. Heck, I'd be happy with any sort of standardization.

  17. there is no shortage... on Feds To Help Train 50,000 Health IT Workers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I find it extremely hard to believe there is any shortage of IT workers capable of doing healthcare development/implementation. I've actually worked with development for the healthcare IT industry and I could explain to any reasonably intelligent IT person the compliance guidelines they need to follow in a couple hours. This stuff isn't hard if you know your way around a computer; it's requirements like any other project in the world has. This is a government handout, pure and simple.

  18. Re:Congratulations on Ikaros Spacecraft Successfully Propelled In Space · · Score: 1

    No kidding, an amazing accomplishment, and yet 95% of the comments in this thread are bitching about the units in the summary.

  19. apollo parts... on Senate Bill Adds Shuttle Flight, New Shuttle-Derived Vehicle · · Score: 1

    Well to be fair, they weren't just thrown away...some were used to launch Skylab and the Apollo-Soyuz missions, others were either shifted to earlier Apollo missions or not finished in the first place. Or are on display

  20. yet another Big Distraction... on Senators Want Big Rocket Instead of New Tech, Commercial Transportation · · Score: 1

    So the solution is to get people all riled up about a poorly chosen comment and beat this dead horse some more?? How many times has this already been brought up in the thread? Nothing like a Big Distraction to get people to stop focusing on the real issues and waste time and energy debating something as trivial as this...

    People say stupid things sometimes. So what?

  21. unstructured time and hacking on The Creativity Crisis · · Score: 1

    I agree with you on many points, especially the lack of unstructured time. I find that even now, the only times I really start feeling especially creative are when I'm stuck somewhere with nothing to do, like riding on the bus or out camping.

    I wonder if some of it too is that because there is no scarcity of cheap stuff, kids hardly have to "improvise" or fix things anymore. There's not as much of that hacker mentality since if something breaks, it's so cheap to get a new one. Same with free entertainment... there's no shortage of music, videos and reading material online so again, less downtime means less creative thinking time.

  22. Re:Why do you need cable? on Sidestepping A-to-D Convertors For Town Government's Cable TV? · · Score: 1

    I don't know about you, but I don't have a computer hooked up to every TV in the house, so streaming is not a solution. I mean yeah, if you want to spend hundreds of dollars per TV, DLNA is a great solution that completely misses the point of the problem. (and who still uses shoutcast anyway?) He wants to just be able to turn on the tv and watch something that will be interesting to him, without hauling DVDs all over the house or having to make "active" decisions. Same way TV and radio work now, only with more relevant content. I think it's an interesting and useful problem.

    It seems to me the simplest and cheapest solution to the problem is a random playlist on a PC, and a RF modulator to distribute it throughout the house. I don't know how one would make "stations" that you could change from a remote location but I suspect an RF remote to control the PC may do the trick.

  23. i'll believe it when I can buy one on Mobile Medical Lab — the $10 Phone Microscope · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Sounds like an awesome gadget for $10 if that's what it actually ends up costing to manufacture. But it remains to be seen if anyone will actually be able to buy one of these anytime in the near future. Hopefully whomever produces these has more business sense than Negroponte and the OLPC group. By the way, where is my $100 laptop?

  24. and 2 very important business traits on Zoho Don't Need No Stinking Ph.D. Programmers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I agree with you and also from a business perspective another large benefit is that by going through a college degree program, you have developed the skills necessary to be diligent at slogging through very mundane work and presumably developed intelligent communication skills as well. Probably the two most important things you will need in the white collar business world.

  25. Bring Back Apprenticeships on Zoho Don't Need No Stinking Ph.D. Programmers · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I admire what he is doing here. I think that any reasonably intelligent person who's willing to learn can do any job reasonably well, regardless of their background. I think too many HR idiots assume that someone gets far enough down a career path, they are incapable of doing anything else.