Slashdot Mirror


User: mattmarlowe

mattmarlowe's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
118
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 118

  1. Re:This script is still running? on Toshiba's Fast-Charging Battery Could Triple the Range of Electric Vehicles (newatlas.com) · · Score: 2

    I'm not sure what the whole rush is to get rid of gas engine cars is about.....sure, most people drive commutes that can be more efficiently handled in plugin hybrid. Why do we need to go full EV? I'm perfectly happy with having both an electric and gas engine in my car, and the electric battery is big enough already to meet 99% of the daily drives I make. On the off chance, I go on a long trip or need power to go fast, I'm happy to have the gas engine kick in. As is, I only need to fill up the gas engine 2-3 times/year and I have a range of around 700 miles.

    I certainly don't want a huge expensive electrical battery that needs to be replaced every 10 years. And, I like the reliability of having two engines and two fuel supplies.

  2. Re:Still no good option on Tesla Discontinues Its Most Affordable Model S (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    Depends what you are looking for -- My oldest son will be driving soon. I wanted to get him something modern that he learn on and hopefully keep using for 15 years. Tesla's pricing puts them out of the picture.

    Ended up getting a Ford C-Max Energi Hybrid. Has both electric and gas engine. Electric engine has 20-35 mile range. Gas engine adds another 500-600 miles, but isn't really used unless one is taking a road trip or going over 55MPH on the highway. Most days only takes 2hrs of electric charging. Might need to refill gas tank only once/year for him. Feels pretty responsive and has lots of passenger/cargo room.

    Cost was only $24K after EV tax rebates.

  3. Re:Public Buses are different on Electric Bus Sets Record With 1,101-Mile Trip On a Single Charge (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    We don't need cars with huge batteries like tesla, nor should we want to move towards a world of swapping batteries. A proper hybrid car with a modest 10-25Kwh electric battery and a 10-20 gallon secondary gas engine with seamless switching will be the best path for most auto owners.

    Most days, the gas engine shouldn't be used except for brief additions of extra energy for big hills or speeds at or above 75MPH. Moderate sized electric battery can charge fast enough and provide 40-100 miles of range easily for speeds under 75MPH.

    When you take a road trip, just do a 5 minute fill up of the gas tank every 600-1,000 miles. Those who don't take roadtrips would only need to fill up their gas tank once/year. Otherwise, charging shouldn't be more than a 1-2hr process -- hopefully, technology could get it down to under 30 minutes eventually.

    Pipe dream? No, there are existing cars that already do most of the above...the Ford C-Max has a smaller 5-7Kwh battery and the MPH limit before the engine starts is in the 45-65Mph range, but it gets about 20-30 miles electric + 500-600 miles gas range when properly driven. I purchased one recently and am getting 52-100MPG most days. My daily driving isn't much so it generally takes under 2hrs to recharge at night. My understanding is that Ford also has a whole new generation of hybrid cars coming out between 2018-2020, and will be introducing hybrid versions of most of their heavier SUV's. Not sure how they can ever release a hybrid expedition...

  4. Re:yes we "all" have 4K tvs *sarcasm* on Sharp Announces 8K Consumer TVs Now That We All Have 4K (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    In 2006, I spent a pretty penny on a premium Panasonic Plasma 50" 720p/1080i TV......to be honest, with everything mobile on tablets/laptops these days, the TV is only for group viewing of Movies and the occasional TV show with 3-4 people at a distance of 5-10' perhaps once or twice/week. It's normally connected to an Amazon FireTV controller and has Plex installed to watch DVD's/Bluerays stored on the NAS.

    Short of the need for group VR or holograms 5-20 years in the future which somehow renders the TV viewing experience obsolete, this TV is never going to be upgraded. It's just not worth the cost given the viewing distance and frequency. Yeah, maybe 10-15 years in the future, the plasma tech inside will slowly dim it too much to be that watchable. But, I'll deal with that problem when it happens.

    As for laptop/computer screens, none of the ones here are yet 4K. Ultra crisp screens are nice, but not enough to force an early upgrade. I am at an age where I prefer a perfectly well done small screen at high DPI...... I'm more likely to buy screens in the 9.8" - 17" size range and 2.7K seems to be where most of those are at right now.

  5. This is what the Post Office should have done on Should The Government Fix Slow Internet Access? (fivethirtyeight.com) · · Score: 1

    At one time, there was a proposal that postal service would ensure every citizen in the USA would receive permanent free-for-life email address at @usps.us or whatever domain would make sense.

    Was a good idea.....free very basic level email (no frills)...the modern equivalent of the original postal service goal of ensuring a minimum ability for people to communicate within the country.

    Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo should have been focusing on enhanced premium email services just like FedEx and UPS do for overnight, business level, and important packages.

    I'm fine with that translating to internet service and/or healthcare too.

    Let USPS provide a simple 1Mbps service per household sufficient for 2-5 people to browse the web, read email, and download files....perhaps 2-3 Mbps for houses with several students or the elderly/very poor. It wouldn't be fast, and probably would have qos rules that moderately throttled video and high traffic apps...but I'm fine with ensuring every house, no matter what, has access to a very minimum level of access.

    On the other hand, I think government should ensure businesses can compete by not allowing monopolies to strangle new startups and new inventions, but otherwise...I'd like the government to have as little to do with the internet as possible. Certainly not censorship or defining hate speech or deciding winners and losers for premium services.

    Similarly for health care.....let the government provide a very basic level of care...but with some usage pricing like we do for postal mail. Just getting annual checkups, the occasional labs and generic meds...cost should be close to zero. Need some not that expensive meds on a regular basis to stay alive....government shouldn't absorb the entire cost, but it should give a good discount so that 60% of population wouldn't be spending very much at all.

    Now the remaining 40% of the population and the very sick or elderly...or those who want first class care....there should be lots of competition for their business, the government should ensure that no one is screwing everyone else over to raise prices or restrict supply/put others out of business and that the care meets a minimum level of professionalism/safety....but otherwise....the government should be out of it. It shouldn't be giving tax breaks for employer sponsored plans. Government employees shouldn't be treated any better than any other citizen, unless they are truly critical to the ongoing operation of the government. Everyone in the USA should be able to shop for the same plans regardless of which state they are in...perhaps states could add additional riders specific to their states which might increase costs, but competition needs to be vigourous and at a national level and the government shouldn't be that involved.

    Competition and fair rules and keeping the size of gov small is the only solution for healthcare that will keep costs down over the long term while ensuring politicians don't become the masters who lives or dies based on which minimum benefits are law or who contributed what to whose re-election campaign.

  6. Email Privacy/Security on Ask Slashdot: Advice For a Yahoo Mail Refugee · · Score: 2

    If all you care about is convenience and price, gmail is the best bet.

    However, gmail has a few weak points:
    - Governments and corporations assume you are using it, if you become a target, first thing they do is sue or force google to give them a copy of all your email. You may not find out about it until after the fact. Basically, using gmail/google means you are OK with the surveillance state being able to grab all the details about your digital life whenever it wants.
    - Hackers assume that getting access to email is the best path in social networking and they have put together an extensive trick list focusing on gmail since everyone uses it. And, if they gain access, are you sure you would know about it or even if google found out about it, that they would tell you? It's in google's interest that everyone forget about the security of their cloud data.
    - Gmail gets coordinated with all the other info that google knows about you and google sells info about you to their customers or targets ads for you on behalf of customers. Frankly, even without email, I think google knows enough already.
    - Gmail imap is _wierd_ and google will probably shut it down in favor of some google only protocol if they ever can.
    - Google is no longer a _good_ company, as it has become bigger, it has started to act more like a Monopoly and that combined with its ownership of android is pushing us more towards a closed internet. I honestly don't want to support Google's growth anymore.

    Another option is office 365:
    - Microsoft has its issues, but it realizes it really needs to compete in the cloud space.
    - Microsoft email integrates well if you have a mobile hardware device like a Surface Pro/Surface Book.
    - Exchange sync for contacts/calendar/groupware is hard to compete with.

    That said, MS has its own security issues....so the best solution is likely hosting your own email....and for those who don't have the time to be constantly updating, find a good mail software suite that does get updated automatically and which has a good security history. Zimbra might be a good example - there are many others.

  7. Depends on Organization on WSJ: There's An 'Inexorable' Trend Towards Working Remotely (foxbusiness.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Smaller companies designed for a large percentage of their critical employees being offsite can work great. This also has the advantage of being very contractor friendly...however, expectations have to be set and in person meetings should be used when possible to build better teamwork. This system works better for older employees.

    On the other hand, I've seen that the bigger the business, the more difficult it is to sustain a telecommuting culture. At the very least, you end up with a system where those who are onsite tend to slowly be promoted and replace those who are offsite. Employees that are junior and needing mentoring also benefit more from being onsite. And, unless management really pushes a telecommuting culture, or has a firm policy that every works x% onsite/y% offsite - being offsite is just too risky for long term career growth of senior staff.

  8. Fake News on FCC Considers Fining Stephen Colbert Over Controversial Trump Joke (rollingstone.com) · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Technically, the FCC opens a case whenever a complaint is filed.

    In any case, I have no sympathy. Angry millenial democrat bots have been filing complaints or resorting to violence for anything that offends their tender beliefs (see Berkeley).

    Much of the fake news/hate speech that fans these ignorant fanatics comes from Colbert and gang.....the ones who masqueraded biased propaganda in the form of comedy for long enough to mislead a generation.

    The good news is that most of their viewers will eventually get educated and change their views...likely at or before their 40's.

  9. Re:A solution without a problem on Surface Laptop Can Be Switched To Windows 10 Pro For Free Until 2018 (cnet.com) · · Score: 1

    Unsure of the pricing Surface Laptop versus Pro 4 on higher end models, at launch the SP4 i7/16GB/512GB was around $2,700 and the similarly configured Surface Laptop seems to be around $2,100.... Unless one is getting the performance base, there isn't much advantage to the dedicated GPU in upgrading to a SB - the intel IRIS pro gpu in the SP4 is relatively fast....not sure about the new builtin GPU of the surface laptop (i7 variant).

  10. Re:Not a big deal on Microsoft's Surface Revenue Drops By $285M (26%) (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes, I suspect those who have had experiences with the SP4 didn't try out the higher end models. The i7/16GB RAM/512GB SSD is certainly the sweet spot, and the i7 has a much much faster built in gpu. I use mine as my primary PC, having thrown away the desktop model that I had used for 20+ years. Instead of needing a separate tablet for entertainment, phone for mobile communication, desktop computer for main work, and laptop for travel/meeting customers -- I now can get by with a single device. The skype + office 365 e5 subscription generally replaces my cell phone. I've purchased a third party 5 yr warranty on the pro 4.

    There isn't much need to upgrade, but when I do - what I'll look for is:
    - LTE builtin
    - 2TB SSD
    - Faster builtin GPU, don't see the need to ever buy another nvidia card....no I can't play the latest games, but the pro 4 gpu plays the games I care about fine at excellent resolution and frame rates and it's very fast for the business apps and videos I normally encounter at 1080P, which is more than enough for the 13" screen.
    - Longer battery life, the current one lasts 3-5 hours which is acceptable....but ideally I want to see 8-12hrs.

  11. Not a big deal on Microsoft's Surface Revenue Drops By $285M (26%) (computerworld.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Someone is making a mountain out of a mole hill.

    - The Surface Line is more about making windows trendy and sexy in an era of iPads and multifunction laptops.....The surface line has pushed other manufacturers that sell windows machines to innovate and deploy more modern products (even Asus has been experimenting with combining tablet display technology and form factor with windows, Dell has been investing more in their small tablet line).

    - Since the whole point of the surface line is to cater to Microsoft's affluent customers and push the state of windows mobile computers, it is more important that Microsoft deliver new products well and perfectly than to delivery frequently. The last several refreshes of the line have gone well....the Surface Studio, Pro 4, and book have all done their job....if there is any complaints, it is that Microsoft pushed releasing the hardware before all the bugs were worked out or before newer hardware could be slimmed down enough in size. And, the book has already gotten a modest boost with the recent performance base release.

    So what if sales for the current quarter are trending down as a result of Microsoft taking longer to release a Surface pro 5 or book 2? Isn't waiting until they can deliver properly what we want them to do?

  12. Re:Long-term broad market net of inflation on Most Millennials Have an Unrealistic View of Their Retirement Prospects, Analysts Say (hsbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Unless there is a drastic change, I think the era of 7-9% stock market average returns is over. The GDP of the USA has been declining on average over the last 40-50 years....2% growth used to be horrible, now it is just average.

    Even John Bogle who founded Vanguard is suggesting only 6% returns before inflation over the next 10 years....so perhaps 3-4% return after inflation - and that is for an ideal diversified portfolio.

    I've started to include more international stocks and real estate in my portfolio...but who knows how that will end up long term.

  13. Re:Logic and Reason, or lack thereof on CIA, FBI Launch Manhunt For WikiLeaks Source (cbsnews.com) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is no such thing as separation of church and state in the constitution. There is just a provision blocking the creation of a government run church, e.g. the founders didn't want a Church of the USA and in the same amendment, another provision preventing the government from interfering with citizens practicing religion.....afterall, many of the original colonists left Europe/England because of state run churches like the Church of England forced people to become members or prohibited the practice of other religions. These colonists were still very supportive of government and the church working in tandem, and religious values being imposed via law, and expected prayer to happen at school. They just wanted to be able to choose the religion and not have forced membership or have government interfere with their religion.

    The fact that most American Citizens believe the constitution meant something completely different is more a result of who controls the instruction at public schools than the actual truth.

  14. Three Types of Personality in the Workforce on If Humble People Make the Best Leaders, Why Do We Fall for Charismatic Narcissists? (hbr.org) · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's just me, but I've come to group most workers into three categories:
    - Manipulators - Those good at generating images, focusing attention, turning strangers into friends, and figuring out exactly what others want. These are the perfect sales, marketing, and investor relations workers. Given that sales, marketing, and investor relations are so critical to future business projects and the ability of companies to survive....they're who you generally find as CEO's.
    - Planners - Those who can concentrate and focus on the bigger long term picture, discerning truth from advertising, and who can imagine new solutions for existing problems, and deal with very sophisticated technical projects. These make good engineers and who you may find creating new business startups. Much of the slashdot audience would probably categorize themselves into this group. However, at a certain point, most businesses find that they can't grow enough revenue, attract enough new investors, or keep employees happy with these people in charge. So, they end up hiring the manipulators into the top jobs.
    - Followers - For whatever reason, there are a lot of people who don't really care so much about their job or what it accomplishes, as long as they can feel good about themselves and have good friends and a life outside of work. These people would refuse any major leadership role if offered. Work is just a way for them to accomplish other things. You'll find a lot of high end service people in this category - doctors, etc.

  15. Increasing Economic Stagnation - Much wider issue on US College Grads See Slim-to-Nothing Wage Gains Since Recession (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1, Interesting

    As I've watched American prosperity and society change over the last 30-40 years, I've come to believe the following are the cause of the economic stagnation/depression that just gets worse each decade:

    - Americans went gung ho into promoting cultural and ethnic diversity wiping away the uniformity of the 50's/60's replacing it with gigantic mess where no one talks to each other any more because they have nothing in common. Many recent research studies suggest that culturally/ethnically diverse societies find it much more difficult to unify or agree on common values or solutions to national problems. Is diversity good? Yes.... Was it in the long run good for America, maybe not.

    - Education became politicized and focused on test scores and indoctrinating rather than teaching thinking and self sufficiency, partly this is a result of the widespread adoption of public schools and the removal of educational choice for families...local communities used to determine educational standards and parents used to have the primary responsibility for teaching their kids, not lowest common denominator schools that politicians manipulate the educational standards to ensure future generations will be one gigantic monolothic low paid workforce that can't provide for itself and yet will continue to vote for the polticians ruining the education of their kids.

    - Lawyers -- there is a reason everyone hates them, but 40-50 years ago there were much fewer of them....legal crap everywhere began to spread in the 80's and now nearly anyone in power has a law degree, a degree which trains them to think not as engineers/doers but in terms of win/lose where one's only responsibility is to take care of oneself and his/her client.

    - population growth -- yes, there are many states in the country that are underpopulated...but the areas where everyone wants to live are vastly overcrowded and the resources/environment are suffering greatly....it's not healthy for the mind or body...constant stress and overworking. Back when things were much more rural and there was a smaller population, people naturally cooperated with each other more.

    - Public Debt -- whatever you think about the threat of future fiscal collapse, every $ removed from the economy for debt or interest payments is one less $ that goes into the broader economy to stimulate business or invest in infrastructure. We're on collapsing spiral here on way or another.

    So, short of everyone suddenly deciding to handle all these big issues much differently than we have the last 40 years, I don't have much hope of any significant improvement. Technology and productivity increases help...but we've been relying on them for too long and if the pace of technological improvement slows down - our economy will get much worse.

  16. Democrats on US Congress Votes To Shred ISP Privacy Rules (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 1, Troll

    Yes, Republicans will allow individuals to sign contracts that allow ISP's to rape their privacy - believing that people should pretty much be able to do what they want as long as they are willing to pay the consequences.

    Democrats on the hand, want everyone except for the rich to be able to avoid all negative consequences -- afterall they can always find someone other than themselves to blame, and democrats are sure happy to rape anyone except the poor or illegals for anything that makes them feel good. They even get a thrill out of making nuns pay for medical insurance that covers abortions.

    They both suck, but I know which one is worse.

  17. Public Education can do whatever the hell it wants on Australia To Ban Unvaccinated Children From Preschool (newscientist.com) · · Score: 1

    I homeschool my kids. I also vaccinate them.

    I couldn't care less what requirements public education has, here or elsewhere. Just don't make me pay twice to educate my kids and stop letting local politicians be selfish bastards about public resources. The local park won't let a group of homeschooling parents setup a PE program w/o paying a $500/year annual fee for park permit....yet the public school kids get to throw everyone off part of the park during school hours.

  18. Western Digital Still in Business? on Western Digital Unveils First-Ever 512Gb 64-Layer 3D NAND Chip (betanews.com) · · Score: 2

    Maybe I'm just not keeping up, but Western Digital seems to have been on a downward path for quite a long time....I'm not sure why they are still in business.

    Back in the early 90's, WD drives were OK, but seagate had a better reputation for anything important. Since then, they seem to have just languished - acquiring other companies products. Their enterprise/datacenter drives aren't that bad, but seagate still seems to rule the roost. On the consumer end, quality control has been quite hit or miss and despite their making ever larger drives at cheaper prices, I would never trust their drives with anything important.

    As for SSD's, their competition has really been for the last several years between intel vs samsung versus 3rd parties (kingston/seagate/etc). Does WD sell a lot of SSD's comparatively?

  19. Re:I really don't understand on Amazon Japan's Manga-Ready Kindle Has 8 Times the Storage (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    The Kindle DX was awesome....Whoever discontinued it in order to promote Amazon's tablets instead made a huge mistake - A high end modern Kindle DX could easily justify a very high price. My DX lasted 4+ years in which time I read a few thousand books...but eventually the keys stopped working (I even used crazy glue for a bit to keep it working).

  20. Wolfram is the best choice for Education on Code.org Disses Wolfram Language, Touts Apple's Swift Playgrounds (edsurge.com) · · Score: 1

    The answer depends on your goal.

    If you want to teach kids so they can get a job, any popular coding language will do.
    If you want to teach kids what programming is about, any teaching focused language (such as pascal) might be appropriate.

    If you want to teach your kids how to incorporate math, electronics, robotics, and computing into the rest of their lives...than I think a computational computing focused language and tools such as Wolfram Framework and Mathematica makes sense. The problem will be that there are very few teachers or parents able to teach it properly.

    I'm homeschooling my kids and I've bought Mathematica for each of them. I'm reading the various howto guides and textbooks now to figure out how to teach it properly. We will be incorporating arduino type coding and using mathematica to supplement their math and science classes too.

  21. parent post deserves mod points.

  22. Honestly, if the USA ever gets into a serious war where it's survival is at state, I wouldn't count on the Europeans to help in the slightest....they are part of NATO, but don't even meet the minimum obligations for membership (2% of budget for military) nor do they have much of a recent record for sending more than token forces to help allies (and, then, only if they're promised that their is little risk to their soldiers).

    Economics wise, the European Union and China are both trying to replace the United States....I'm not sure if Europe would be that sad if something bad happened to the USA.

    So, yes, I think the USA should quit NATO - especially since the UK will no longer be inside the EU.

    In the last 50 years or so, the USA has only had a few countries that it could count on at all for more than token help....England (UK), Japan (although it's had limitations on its military), and perhaps South Korea. I'm not sure if Canada has provided any significant assistance (their was noise about them sending troops to Iraq, but given the size of Canada's population - I'm not sure if it was a significant number).
     

  23. Re:Unintended concequences on 10 Years in Prison For Online Pirates a Step Closer in the UK (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 2

    Not to be pedantic but I hate that the creation of Linux is being used above to promote piracy.

    Yes, part of the motivation for the creation of Linux was to save $ on software - but it was more than that.

    - The UNIX most people used (SunOS) was only available on Sun Workstations which were wickedly expensive dedicated hardware found only at universities or corporations that could afford them.
    - The BSD community at the time had some ports to the x86 platform but their developers didn't really get along with many in the open-source community.
    - Tanenbaum had proven that x86 hardware (still new to critical tasks) could run UNIX, but his operating system was more of a teaching tool than software that was designed to run GNU/Open Source Software or even be used in production systems.

    So, Linux succeeded and was created not just because it was cheaper, but because it really filled a need that other solutions hadn't met yet.

  24. Re:Not a surprise... on Energy Prices Skyrocket in South Australia (yahoo.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    California still has an energy crisis, at least in SoCal...just no one talks about it because there is no evil corporate villain to blame... electric costs are still 12-24 cents/kwh depending on time of day and which utilization level one is placed. Water rates are also getting quite high...Unfortunately, the solutions (controlling imigration/total population, overall development density, and using nuclear or low-cost fossil fuels energy go against the orthodoxies of the prevailing ruling class)...so we will be stuck with 3-6% energy inflation for as long as the eye can see.....naturally, everyone is getting taxpayer funded solar panels to minimize extortionate rates.

  25. Limiting providers fine - kickbacks no on Landlords, ISPs Team Up To Rip Off Tenants On Broadband (backchannel.com) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There may be situations where a landlord has a good reason to limit who is accessing and modifying the cable/wire infrastructure of a property - so, a blanket ban on such is probably not a good idea.

    On the other hand, I don't have any problem with banning the kickbacks/payments that encourage the practice at the cost of renter choice.