As I can't review the agreement without either giving them a credit card number or committing fraud, I can't seem to find out.
Certificates do not have much value, especially for smaller firms. Say an app from a smaller vendor or an individual is signed, but turns out to be malicious. What's Apple going to do, other than revoke the cert and try not to give that vendor or individual a cert in the future?
That said, I'm glad it is possible to download Google Earth without enabling automatic updates. I downloaded GE in January and there was no way to run it without automatic updates running. I removed Chrome because it automatically updates. I need a bit more control over my machine than that.
There was discussion on Slashdot about the Soft Walls Project that did something similar for airplanes.
See the 2011, 2004 and 2003 discussions.
I believe that there was a demo involving an airplane at some point. It turns out that one of the interesting things is how to you define a blending function that makes it harder and harder for the device to fly in to the no fly zone.
Yeah, drones are different, and I'm not sure of the value of having no fly zones for drones, but it will probably happen some day.
In this case, a no-fly zone in DC might have prevented drunken late night operation and crashing of the drone and we would have some other news item to discuss.
Three prominent closed gravity minima along the south edge of
the study area may reveal underlying calderas, which are masked
by younger Tertiary rocks. The largest possible caldera is about 10.52
by 15.5 mi (17 by 25 km) in size, and, if the assumed underlying
tuffaceous sedimentary rocks are, on the average, 0.2 g/cm3 less dense
than the surrounding volcanic rocks, the caldera extends to a depth
of about 1.7 mi (2.7 km). The areas along the edges of the postulated
calderas are considered sites for possible future mineral exploration.
and
In the southwestern part of the Range, gravity and magnetic
anomalies of substantial size suggest the possible existence of a caldera
or buried pluton. The widespread geochemical anomalies in this area
are similar in size and magnitude to the mineralized McDermitt Caldera
approximately 82 mi (132 km) to the northwest in the Opalite
mining district. Whether a caldera or buried pluton is present in the
area, the geochemical data suggest that area C shown on figure 2
has a possible potential for concealed mercury and complex precious metal
sulfide deposits.
Right you are!
In my defense, I think contracting this out to Coverity was one of the rare things that the DHS did that was correct, or at least no horrifically incorrect.
I see the DHS as an overgrown bureaucracy that is antithetical to our constitutional rights, especially the fourth amendment (searches). Bureaucracies need to grow to cover up their inefficiencies. Don't get me started on the TSA...
Thanks for the correction...
I trust Coverity's Scan program far more than I'll trust the organization that continues to promote security theater. DHS has no business in this area. This is typical over expansion of a bloated bureaucracy.
In light of this impressive record, surely BLOODHOUND will return to the Black Rock Desert? Sadly, no. A lack of rain over the last decade, together with increasingly heavy use for the playa surface (principly by the annual Burning Man festival) has left the Black Rock surface in poor condition. It is bumpy, crumbly, rutted and uneven for much of its 140+ square mile surface and is not currently a suitable surface on which to run a car like BLOODHOUND. Hence an alternative surface is required – and we need to find one, wherever in the world it may be.
I was doing research earlier this year and needed a paper summarizing a taxpayer funded project from 1967. This paper was not to be found anywhere else but at the NTIS. Libraries listed the NTIS as the place that had a copy. If the NTIS was not able to sell me a copy of the paper, then I would not have been able to get the information. Closing the NTIS only makes sense if the entire contents of the NTIS's archives are made available on the Internet.
The problem is that the most popular NTIS stuff is already on the net, but the remaining 30% (the long tail) is not.
The NTIS had the paper in question, which I was able to get and confirm that the semi-circles were created as part of the test. There was no mention of the test in the local papers or anywhere else I could find. If the NTIS did not have the paper, then my only hope would have been to ask Aerojet, the company contracted to do the research. The odds of them having a paper from 1967 is pretty low.
I realize that this question is not a critical, life threatening question, but determining *why* the circles where there and dispelling rumors about nuke tests is useful. The pursuit of the truth is lofty goal. Those who do not know history are bound to repeat it. In the case of this study, it turns out that there was an inversion layer that prevented a bunch of the particulate matter from reaching the ground in the test site. Maybe this is a well know mechanism now, but if I were researching atmospheric pollution, then I would want to review a study like this. If this study is not accessible, then it is like it never happened.
If the NTIS is disbanded, then we are basically tossing a bunch of tax-payer funded projects in to the shredder.
Interestingly, Canada is going through a somewhat similar issue where libraries containing research materials are being closed. Here an article from 2012: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...
I'm no fan of big government, but if the NTIS is to be closed, then the entire contents of the NTIS library must be made freely available.
BTW - I thought that SS and Medicare are funded from payroll taxes, but apparently not . https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States) Wikipedia says: "Parts B and D are funded by premiums paid by Medicare enrollees and general fund revenue. In 2011, Medicare spending accounted for about 15 percent of the federal budget, and this share is projected to increase to over 17 percent by 2020."
Here's video of a similar device: SRL: Weird Weapons of WWII from History Channel's Weird Weapons of WWII featuring Survival Research Laboratories' (SRL's) demonstrating the "shockwave cannon.' "
The day after 9/11, my boss was scheduled to lecture undergrads. He talked about the idea of using terrain maps to prevent planes from flying in to buildings. The system is called Softwalls, which was discussed on Slashdot.
The really interesting thing about this is how strongly pilots and others objected. There is a FAQ that covers common objections.
This brings me back to the April, 1977 issue of (I think) Popular Electronics that had a recipe for creating solar cells at home using "3'7 Dimethylpentadecon-2-ol propionate". At the time, I was 13 and spent quite a bit of time bothering my science teaching trying figure out what 3'7 Dimethylpentadecon-2-ol propionate was and how to get some. Years later, I happened to look at the May issue and it turns out it was an April Fools' joke. Even at that time, I did laugh out loud. Anyway, if you want to see a description, check out Don Lancaster's "The worst of Marcia Swampfelder"
In addition, Marcia does have some suggestions about car stereo speaker orientation that are useful for winter driving:-^
A somewhat different question is: What helps acceptance of Academic Software.
Off the top of my head:
An open source license
High quality, readable code
An active community
Test cases and nightly builds
Regular releases
A faculty member who is a programmer, or at least was a programmer.
There are many other factors, does anyone have favorites?
Note that not all academic software is destined to be used outside of academia or to even survive past the end of the semester. That's ok.
I have 30874 on the Ptolemy II repository, see http://www.ohloh.net/accounts/cxbrx.
Hauke Fuhrmann put up Codeswarm videos of the software evolution of the Ptolemy II project. See Chaotic, Less Chaotic.
The number of commits is a poor measure though. I tend to make lots of small commits while cleaning code. A student doing a Ph.D., may make many fewer commits, but their commits have greater impact in the form of support for their Ph.D. We see software as a form of publication, see
Software Practice in the Ptolemy Project.
Sandia says "along a journey by train across Kazakhstan to Kurchatov; while it was at another interim storage pad there; and along a truck route to a long-term concrete storage pad in northeast Kazakhstan." Wiki says "In its heyday Kurchatov (which was known by its postal code Semipalatinsk-16) was a closed city, one of the most secretive and restricted places in the Soviet Union."
Agreed. When watching a presentation, I have a corollary to Moore's Law, where if a slide mentions Moore's Law and has "the graph", then it is ok to ignore that slide and the following two slides because no new information will be transmitted. It is like a nicer (and temporary) version of Godwin's Law.
I saw this great art car once, it had an immense amount of detail and was huge. There was not much clear space on it except in an area about 6"x8" that had a sign in the middle that said, "I made this while you were watching TV."
I've been thinking of updating the saying to "I made this while you were $^&*ing with FarmVille". FWIW, I built a Snail art car instead of watching TV of frobbing with Farmville. Now, if I could only get away from Slashdot . . .
See also this Good Samaritan Cartoon:
Guy in street, prone man at his feet:
"Oh, Great, as if I have the time or inclination to help a dying homeless man"
Same guy in front of computer:
" What's this?!! Sally needs a bag of fertilizer for her FarmVille Farm? I better get right on it."
"Indeed, to the uninitiated, scholarly publishing is a curious enterprise. Simplified, it works something like this: universities or the government subsidize a professor's research. The professor, who is required to publish frequently for professional advancement, gives his research to a scholarly publisher, usually for little or no money. That publisher, who adds value through editing, peer review, and production, assumes the copyright, packages, and sells the research back to the university at a markup. And those mark-ups have proven significant over time, especially as the digital age has fostered an explosion of new databases and resources."
In my department (Electrical Engineering), new faculty are offered a support package to get started and then the faculty go out and get funding. At least 51% of the funding they find is paid to the University as overhead. It is difficult for faculty who don't have external funding to attract grad students or pay for computers. The funding comes from the Government, but much of it comes from corporations.
In my experience, publishers no longer do any editing. I had an expensive text book on "Quality" and the author misquoted John Kennedy. How could this get by an editor? Authors submit camera ready text to academic publishers.
In my experience, peer review is managed by an unpaid faculty member who distributes material to other unpaid faculty members who distribute the material to unpaid students who do the review and pass the review back up the chain. This is actually very good because it gets students to review the work of others.
The reality is that academic publishing is a dead-end. Journals are in trouble. Conference proceedings and self-publishing of text books are on the rise. Recently, he only thing that I've heard faculty say that publishers provide is that publishers sometimes show up at conferences with a table of books which faculty browse. This seems like a weak basis for a business.
Reading the TFA, it seems like the publishers should just settle. Georgia changed their ways.
I'm the original submitter, so mea culpa. What I did was search for "password" and did not find the earlier article. After I submitted, I searched for "Herley" and found the original article. I then tried to kill my own posting, including commenting that it was a Dupe. It was not apparent how to kill my own article, but I did not look harder. So, my feedback is: it would be nice if there was a really easy way for users to mark their submission as a dupe. Sorry about the dupe, I don't like them either.
Most of the steampunk hardware is DIY. It is not like one can go down to Home Depot and buy a steam engine. Vintage steam hardware requires rehabilitation, including fabrication of impossible to obtain parts. I participated in making a Snail Art Car, which we wrote up for the DYI website Instructables. Another car, the Wrecker, is an electric carriage with hand-built wheels. Yah, he did not mine the lead for batteries and the differential came out of some old car, but the vast majority of this car is DIY.
Will Wright (creator of the Sims and Spore) has a think tank called Stupid Fun Club, which has a fridge with a personality module that recognizes
you by name and then gossips about you with the microwave. So, if you are mean to the fridge, then it will rat you out to the microwave, who will then burn your food.
- BBC article (with a link to video. More about Stupid Fun Club (2007 Gadgetoff video).
Thanks, I'll be here all night.
Heck, even reviewing the agreement is difficult.
Does the Mac OS License include the onerous section that is in the IOS developer agreement about making public statements? See the EFF All Your Apps Are Belong to Apple: The iPhone Developer Program License Agreement page.
As I can't review the agreement without either giving them a credit card number or committing fraud, I can't seem to find out.
Certificates do not have much value, especially for smaller firms. Say an app from a smaller vendor or an individual is signed, but turns out to be malicious. What's Apple going to do, other than revoke the cert and try not to give that vendor or individual a cert in the future?
That said, I'm glad it is possible to download Google Earth without enabling automatic updates. I downloaded GE in January and there was no way to run it without automatic updates running. I removed Chrome because it automatically updates. I need a bit more control over my machine than that.
Total disclosure: I've worked on Soft Walls.
There was discussion on Slashdot about the Soft Walls Project that did something similar for airplanes. See the 2011, 2004 and 2003 discussions.
I believe that there was a demo involving an airplane at some point. It turns out that one of the interesting things is how to you define a blending function that makes it harder and harder for the device to fly in to the no fly zone.
Yeah, drones are different, and I'm not sure of the value of having no fly zones for drones, but it will probably happen some day.
In this case, a no-fly zone in DC might have prevented drunken late night operation and crashing of the drone and we would have some other news item to discuss.
There is Soft Walls FAQ that covers common objections for airplanes.
and
Also, the link to the McDonalds reference is: http://www.datapointed.net/201...
The area is near where the Yellowstone hotspot was over 16 million years ago.
Also, this area was the furthest from a McDonalds in 2010.
South of the swarm area, in the Black Rock Desert, was a suspected impact crater.
Sounds like the start of a bad horror movie.
Right you are! In my defense, I think contracting this out to Coverity was one of the rare things that the DHS did that was correct, or at least no horrifically incorrect. I see the DHS as an overgrown bureaucracy that is antithetical to our constitutional rights, especially the fourth amendment (searches). Bureaucracies need to grow to cover up their inefficiencies. Don't get me started on the TSA... Thanks for the correction...
I trust Coverity's Scan program far more than I'll trust the organization that continues to promote security theater. DHS has no business in this area. This is typical over expansion of a bloated bureaucracy.
The problem is that the most popular NTIS stuff is already on the net, but the remaining 30% (the long tail) is not.
The federally funded research was about these large (miles in radius) circles found in Nevada. There was conjecture that they were from a nuclear test. It turns out that they were from a toxic cloud test that was done using a solid rocket engine treated with beryllium. See http://pacaeropress.websitetoo..., http://aair.smugmug.com/Aviati... and http://blackrockdesert.org/wik...
The NTIS had the paper in question, which I was able to get and confirm that the semi-circles were created as part of the test. There was no mention of the test in the local papers or anywhere else I could find. If the NTIS did not have the paper, then my only hope would have been to ask Aerojet, the company contracted to do the research. The odds of them having a paper from 1967 is pretty low.
I realize that this question is not a critical, life threatening question, but determining *why* the circles where there and dispelling rumors about nuke tests is useful. The pursuit of the truth is lofty goal. Those who do not know history are bound to repeat it. In the case of this study, it turns out that there was an inversion layer that prevented a bunch of the particulate matter from reaching the ground in the test site. Maybe this is a well know mechanism now, but if I were researching atmospheric pollution, then I would want to review a study like this. If this study is not accessible, then it is like it never happened.
If the NTIS is disbanded, then we are basically tossing a bunch of tax-payer funded projects in to the shredder.
Interestingly, Canada is going through a somewhat similar issue where libraries containing research materials are being closed. Here an article from 2012: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...
I'm no fan of big government, but if the NTIS is to be closed, then the entire contents of the NTIS library must be made freely available.
BTW - I thought that SS and Medicare are funded from payroll taxes, but apparently not . https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States) Wikipedia says: "Parts B and D are funded by premiums paid by Medicare enrollees and general fund revenue. In 2011, Medicare spending accounted for about 15 percent of the federal budget, and this share is projected to increase to over 17 percent by 2020."
Here's video of a similar device: SRL: Weird Weapons of WWII from History Channel's Weird Weapons of WWII featuring Survival Research Laboratories' (SRL's) demonstrating the "shockwave cannon.' "
The day after 9/11, my boss was scheduled to lecture undergrads. He talked about the idea of using terrain maps to prevent planes from flying in to buildings. The system is called Softwalls, which was discussed on Slashdot. The really interesting thing about this is how strongly pilots and others objected. There is a FAQ that covers common objections.
In addition, Marcia does have some suggestions about car stereo speaker orientation that are useful for winter driving :-^
There are many other factors, does anyone have favorites? Note that not all academic software is destined to be used outside of academia or to even survive past the end of the semester. That's ok.
I have 30874 on the Ptolemy II repository, see http://www.ohloh.net/accounts/cxbrx. Hauke Fuhrmann put up Codeswarm videos of the software evolution of the Ptolemy II project. See Chaotic, Less Chaotic. The number of commits is a poor measure though. I tend to make lots of small commits while cleaning code. A student doing a Ph.D., may make many fewer commits, but their commits have greater impact in the form of support for their Ph.D. We see software as a form of publication, see Software Practice in the Ptolemy Project.
Sandia says "along a journey by train across Kazakhstan to Kurchatov; while it was at another interim storage pad there; and along a truck route to a long-term concrete storage pad in northeast Kazakhstan." Wiki says "In its heyday Kurchatov (which was known by its postal code Semipalatinsk-16) was a closed city, one of the most secretive and restricted places in the Soviet Union."
In a few months, when new satellite data is uploaded to your favorite map site, these should be fun to find. http://www.sandia.gov/LabNews/110128.html says "transport nuclear materials 1,860 miles by train across the Central Asian country of Kazakhstan". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_stations_in_Kazakhstan has two maps of railways in Kazahkstan. The Sandia site also has pictures.
Agreed. When watching a presentation, I have a corollary to Moore's Law, where if a slide mentions Moore's Law and has "the graph", then it is ok to ignore that slide and the following two slides because no new information will be transmitted. It is like a nicer (and temporary) version of Godwin's Law.
See also this Good Samaritan Cartoon:
Guy in street, prone man at his feet:
"Oh, Great, as if I have the time or inclination to help a dying homeless man"
Same guy in front of computer:
" What's this?!! Sally needs a bag of fertilizer for her FarmVille Farm? I better get right on it."
In my department (Electrical Engineering), new faculty are offered a support package to get started and then the faculty go out and get funding. At least 51% of the funding they find is paid to the University as overhead. It is difficult for faculty who don't have external funding to attract grad students or pay for computers. The funding comes from the Government, but much of it comes from corporations.
In my experience, publishers no longer do any editing. I had an expensive text book on "Quality" and the author misquoted John Kennedy. How could this get by an editor? Authors submit camera ready text to academic publishers.
In my experience, peer review is managed by an unpaid faculty member who distributes material to other unpaid faculty members who distribute the material to unpaid students who do the review and pass the review back up the chain. This is actually very good because it gets students to review the work of others.
The reality is that academic publishing is a dead-end. Journals are in trouble. Conference proceedings and self-publishing of text books are on the rise. Recently, he only thing that I've heard faculty say that publishers provide is that publishers sometimes show up at conferences with a table of books which faculty browse. This seems like a weak basis for a business.
Reading the TFA, it seems like the publishers should just settle. Georgia changed their ways.
I'm the original submitter, so mea culpa. What I did was search for "password" and did not find the earlier article. After I submitted, I searched for "Herley" and found the original article. I then tried to kill my own posting, including commenting that it was a Dupe. It was not apparent how to kill my own article, but I did not look harder. So, my feedback is: it would be nice if there was a really easy way for users to mark their submission as a dupe. Sorry about the dupe, I don't like them either.
Most of the steampunk hardware is DIY. It is not like one can go down to Home Depot and buy a steam engine. Vintage steam hardware requires rehabilitation, including fabrication of impossible to obtain parts. I participated in making a Snail Art Car, which we wrote up for the DYI website Instructables. Another car, the Wrecker, is an electric carriage with hand-built wheels. Yah, he did not mine the lead for batteries and the differential came out of some old car, but the vast majority of this car is DIY.
Kepler is a tool for managing workflows that has been used for physics, see Plasma Edge Kinetic-MHD Modeling in Tokamaks Using Kepler Workflow for Code Coupling, Data Management and Visualization. Disclaimer: I contribute to the Kepler Project.
Will Wright (creator of the Sims and Spore) has a think tank called Stupid Fun Club, which has a fridge with a personality module that recognizes you by name and then gossips about you with the microwave. So, if you are mean to the fridge, then it will rat you out to the microwave, who will then burn your food. - BBC article (with a link to video. More about Stupid Fun Club (2007 Gadgetoff video).
There was discussion on Slashdot about the Soft Walls Project that did something similar. See the 1/04 and 7/03 discussions.
What I find interesting is just how vehement software engineers and pilots are about the idea, and yet everyone seems to trust fly-by-wire.
There is Soft Walls FAQ that covers common objections.