Slashdot Mirror


User: kylemonger

kylemonger's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
481
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 481

  1. Re:Great!!! on Launch Your Own Nanosatellite Into Space · · Score: 0

    Anything we might do by accident a terrorist can do on purpose. Imagine a satellite sized object launched into orbit whose sole purpose is to detonate and disperse 100,000 ball bearings. Even more fun if a high inclination or retrograde orbit is used. Still, space is pretty big so shotgun blasts like this could probably be dealt with like we deal with the Van Allen belts--- just make a run for it and get out of the danger zone as fast as possible.

  2. Re:Valid point on Stephen Hawking Looking For Personal Techie · · Score: 2

    Maybe you're right about the career opportunities, but for proof I'd want to know what the last guy who maintained Hawking's rig is doing now. Is he launching his own company or did he just get sick of the job and go back to mending broken appliances? Also, Hawking is pushing 70 years old and he still has ALS. Would you bet on his lasting another five years, with your livelihood hanging in the balance?

  3. Re:Wow on Do You Have the Right Stuff To Be an Astronaut? · · Score: 1

    Well, NASA used to be the only game in town, unless you were a Soviet. Now, a bright and motivated person can choose to cobble together the $200K for a Virgin Galactic flight. It's not orbit, but you can be sure that if they take your money you're going, unlike at NASA where even if you're hired you never know.

  4. Re:Physical requirements... on Do You Have the Right Stuff To Be an Astronaut? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but if they hired you today, you're not going into space tomorrow. You're at the back of line, leaving plenty of time get into shape. Like most want ads, this one was written by someone at a desk, someone with an ass every bit as wide as yours, who is relying on folklore and inertia as much as actual experience in crafting the requirements.

  5. Re:Someone correct me if I'm wrong but... on Quantum Entanglement of Macroscopic Diamonds · · Score: 1

    Heh, no, I don't want to return to a classical universe. I like computers too much for that. I just wish there was some way quantum theory could make intuitive sense. Besides enabling the construction of modern computer hardware, quantum theory has firmly poked its head into the bailiwick of even software types like me in the form of BQP and what other NP problems it might contain, so I can't really ignore it. But at the same time, whenever I read a description of superposition I feel like a rube being enticed to play three card Monty.

  6. Re:M-O-O-N on Paper On Super Flu Strain May Be Banned From Publication · · Score: 1

    Yah. King has already inspired copycat school shooters with his fiction, and then there's that "fly an airliner into a skyscraper" thing from Running Man. Dude should start keeping his nightmares to himself.

  7. Better late than never on Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Google Chase 'Got Milk?' Patents · · Score: 1

    I'm glad phones are finally getting smart. I've been waiting for years for my phone to be smart enough to turn itself off when I go into a theater, and more importantly, turn itself back on after I leave. That someone can patent ideas as simple as this is proof that the patent system needs large bombs dropped on it until there is nothing left.

  8. China has hacked Google before... on China Building Gigantic Structures In the Desert · · Score: 1

    ... so maybe we're still finding out all that they corrupted. Or maybe this is the Chinese equivalent of crop circles.

  9. Re:Identifying what exactly? on Anonymous Takes On a Mexican Drug Cartel · · Score: 1

    yeah. That's similar to what we've been doing so far with WikiLeaks, right?

    Not exactly. Lying consistently is coNP-hard. We should be dubious of a flat list of names dumped onto the net. But if someone dumps a huge trove of correlated information like those diplomatic cables, having the trove be both a convincing and a false narrative is exponentially more difficult for them to execute... assuming P != NP :-).

  10. Re:Price Spikes on Retailers Respond To HDD Squeeze By Limiting Purchases, Raising Prices · · Score: 4, Informative

    Using disks for backups is fine, using RAID is not. It's not a very durable backup if an errant delete command / virus / lightning strike would wipe both copies your data at the same time.

  11. Re:So snakes suffer from on Scientists Discover Mechanism That Gives Shape to Life · · Score: 1

    Tail recursion.

  12. shorten the duration on Apple Tries To Patent 3rd Party In-App Purchasing · · Score: 1

    Maybe we should let companies have these patents, but drop the protection time down to a few years. That way you can stall innovation, but not for long, which gives incentive to set reasonable licensing terms.

  13. Re:*sigh* Not Again... on Man Charged in Model Airplane Plot To Bomb Pentagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When the FBI is involved, it always turns out to be some disgruntled sad sack or sad sacks who they talk into some terrorist act. There is an endless supply of such broken-down, weak-willed people, which gives the FBI a steady stream of good PR to keep their budget fat. I'll hold my applause until they catch someone smarter than I am.

  14. Re:Say WHAT? on Ask Slashdot: Best Copyright Terms For a Thesis? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With Google around, plagiarists would have to be idiots to try it at this point.

    What I want to do when I read a paper is learn something I can use to make my code better, or to learn that the problem is way harder than I thought and I need to find a workaround. The problem these days is actually being able to read papers without being affiliated with a university, because so many papers are behind publisher paywalls or trapped on internal-only university servers. Someone having to pay what a textbook costs to read a ten year old paper is probably not what the author had in mind when they wrote it.

    Please whatever copyright you use, post the paper online so bright but indigent students can read it.

  15. Re:Star Trek on William Shatner On Star Trek Vs. Star Wars · · Score: 1

    If NBC thought they were getting Wagon Train to the Stars, then they were hoodwinked. The first Battlestar Galactica was the real Wagon Train to the Stars. Star Trek was more like Have Gun, Will Travel or Bat Masterson.

  16. Re:Maybe transparent aluminum will be next! on Algorithm Predicts New Superhard Materials · · Score: 2

    Or Sinclair molecule chain.

  17. good on Scientists Plan "Artificial Volcano" Climate Experiment · · Score: 2

    I'm glad scientists are working on ideas like this. The reality is that we, the human race, are not going to stop burning fossil fuels. We'd best get on with figuring out how to deal with the resulting problems rather than continue dreaming that everyone is going to agree to stop.

  18. Re:Interesting on Training an Immune System To Kill Cancer · · Score: 1

    Nope. It was bacteria in the awful novel, a gengineered virus in the Will Smith movie.

    These T-cells shouldn't be a threat to you unless you, in a fit of stupidity, injected yourself with them. Or through a medical error the doctor somehow injected you with someone else's T-cells. Oops.

  19. Re:Turing test was passed long ago. on Has Cleverbot Passed the Turing Test? · · Score: 1

    You still don't get it, do you? That's what he does! That's ALL he does!

  20. Re:I call shenanigans. on Find My IPhone Used To Locate Plane Crash In Chile · · Score: 1

    Not after the crash; the phone managed to connect to a data network sometime before the plane crashed. I've (accidentally) left my phone on and later noticed that it connected to a cell network somewhere over the midwest during a coast-to-coast flight. So it's possible even at cruising altitude.

  21. Re:Law of unintended consequences on Will Climate Engineering Ever Go Prime Time? · · Score: 1

    Yes, there will be unintended consequences but if they aren't worse than the situation you're trying to prevent, you win. Tackle the next set of problems. That's what humanity has been doing since the start of civilization.

    The tricky bit isn't coming up with a plan or even implementing it. Rather it's getting everyone with a stake to agree on it. Climate change might be a boon instead of disaster where you live. In that case, you might consider attempts to slow global warming an act of war.

  22. spyware on Turning Chinese Piracy Into Revenue · · Score: 2

    The "data collecting" code isn't just collecting data from unlicensed users but licensed users as well. So in exchange for paying the license fee you get software that phone's home about how you use it. In other words your computer now works for them in addition to working for you.

  23. Re:...And? on Linux Support Fades For 3Dfx Voodoo, Rage 128, VIA · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Explain to me why Win2k with Opera 10.5 would be insufficient to browse the web?

    It would become part of a botnet within hours, that's why. Once your OS and web browser stop getting security updates, the clock starts ticking on the bad guys finding some unpatched vulnerability and your wandering into some trap they've set for you on the net.

  24. Re:And all of this effort will not protect you fro on Protecting a Laptop From Sophisticated Attacks · · Score: 1

    Federal judges can jail you forever. Terms vary in state courts.

  25. Re:And all of this effort will not protect you fro on Protecting a Laptop From Sophisticated Attacks · · Score: 1

    To jail you they will have to charge you with something, typically contempt of court or obstruction. Neither of these is a felony where I live and the prison terms are modest. Meaning that once released you'd still be young, able to vote, carry a firearm and get a job. Plus by standing up for your privacy you might help change the society we live in.