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User: morethanapapercert

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  1. Re:May I be the first to say on North Korea Claims Archaeologists Have Found 'Unicorn Lair' In Pyongyang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Technically; the Korean war never ended, both sides are currently in an armistice, despite the fact that North Korea continues to commit provocative acts. Look up the sinking of the Cheonan sometime.

  2. Mardi Gras beads? on NASA: Curiosity Has Found Plastic On Mars · · Score: 1

    The accompanying picture to the article makes the find looks suspiciously like Mardi Gras beads. I know of the drunken revellers have bad aim, but I don't think anyone could have managed a toss of that magnitude!

  3. Re:Red Green solution on Space Station Spacewalkers Stymied By Stubborn Bolt · · Score: 1
    I wasn't thinking so much of the graphite or lithium boiling as I was the carrier solvents commonly in aerosol lubricants. For example, I have two cans of lube spray in my toolbox. Jigaloo graphite spray and 3in1 Lithium grease spray. Both have carrier fluids I am pretty sure would boil off almost instantly in a vacuum*, so the lubricant wouldn't stay fluid long enough to wick its way into the threads.

    If they can get the bolt to back out even a little bit, they could apply graphite or lithium in stick form, but from what I read in the article, the bolt is stuck in both directions.

    * According the MSDS sheets, those are primarily acetone and propane or petroleum solvent and propane respectively

  4. Re:Red Green solution on Space Station Spacewalkers Stymied By Stubborn Bolt · · Score: 4, Informative
    That leads me to an interesting question: Just how strong is capillary action in a vacuum? With the bolt blocking the hole, any lubricant has to have good wicking properties to get in around the threads. On the other hand, I'd imagine that anything with a low enough viscosity to wick well would also be something that would boil off pretty quickly in a vacuum. That would certainly rule out any of the aerosol graphite or lithium sprays.

    I know there have been experiments that included capillary action in micro-gravity, astronauts playing with a globe of water and a straw for example. But as far as I know, all such experiments were in a pressurized, shirt sleeve environment. I'm not aware of any similar experiments with fluids in microgravity *and* vacuum.

  5. Re:Not enough on Radioactive Decay Apparently Influenced By the Sun · · Score: 2
    Oh I dunno about that. It's been well established that large (in the astronomical sense) and dense rotating objects exhibit Frame Dragging . I believe that contractions and expansions of a stellar object are a possible source of Gravitational Waves

    Putting those two effects together, it is easy to imagine that some change in the make up of the sun as it evolves can also affect the nature of the gravity well around it.

  6. Somebody page John Ringo! on Police Probing Theft of Millions of Pounds of Maple Syrup From Strategic Reserve · · Score: 1

    This is CLEARLY the work of the Maple Syrup King! I warn you, this is just the opening shot in the interstellar war! Next we get blonds in heat thanks to some nifty bio-warfare, so perhaps it's not all bad....

  7. Re:"I like turtles" on New Face Paint Protects Soldiers Against Bomb Blasts · · Score: 1

    Just call them the modern Ghost Shirt society

  8. asked and answered N times already on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Securely Store Private Information For Posterity? · · Score: 1
    There is a time tested, safe,secure and above all inexpensive method for preserving all the data you heart desires.

    1. Plain-text hard copy of all your passwords, account numbers/locations etc. (in my case, my passwords change monthly, so rather than try to update the copy every 30 days, I would just detail the simple algorithm I use to create them, along with the password in use as of time of printing.)

    2. Place said hard-copy in a safety deposit box. Preferably a main branch, and not a mall or store-front mini-bank. (Which are more likely to close or relocate over the course of a decade or so.) The bank will give you a card where you can list the people you authorize to have access to the box if need arises, your executor or attorney can gain access if they provide a death certificate, this list is for people you might trust to replace the document with an updated copy.

    3. Inform your executor, family lawyer and perhaps accountant that this box exists.

    4. Relax.

    This method has been in use for easily 200 years, as far as I know, nobody has really improved on it.

  9. Re:What a waste of time on Charles Carreon Drops Case Against the Oatmeal · · Score: 1
    It's certainly true that being a lawyer, as a profession, has among the worst possible reputations as far as the general public is concerned. It's guys like Carreon and Thompson that do that. I know from personal experience that there *are* good lawyers out there, men and women who genuinely motivated by a desire to seek justice. Our own family attorny is an excellent case for that. He specializes in family law, usually custody cases and I happen to know that he does easily twice the amount of Legal Aid and Pro Bono work the Bar Association urges on it's members.

    Here on Slashdot, NewYorkCountryLawyer is also well respected for being "one of the good guys", but being a good guy, he doesn't get nearly the media attention nutjobs like Thompson get.

  10. a few ideas on Ask Slashdot: Ambitious Yet Ethical Software Jobs? · · Score: 1
    I have a few suggestions:

    First is weather/climate modelling. If you include planets other than earth, there are a number of organizations doing climate models. Based on the news articles I've seen, lots of them are doing their sims on cheap clusters and/or GPUs. In the US, the first two places that come to mind are NOAA and NASA. For both groups, there are several agencies under their umbrella, each agency having more than one project on the go.

    The second is working on a render farm. There are several game companies, CGI and computer animation companies that are getting into very intensive crunching for their modelling and simulation work.

    Third, what about very large engineering firms? The kind that build damns, the Chunnel or other huge scale projects. They do a fair bit of modeling, both the structures they build and the environment interactions with that structure require some fairly heavy number crunching.

    Fourth, don't be so quick to dismiss Pharmaceutical companies. Yes, virtually all of them do animal testing and yes, a small number of trials are test-to-destruction or test-kill-dissect, requiring numerous lab animals to be sacrificed. However; I have a couple of things to think about regarding that.
    1) First, the reason why pharmaceutical companies are getting into the kind of stuff that interests you is so they can reduce, maybe some day eliminate animal testing. If you worked for them, your contribution would help them reduce the need for such tests.
    2) Are you a strict Vegan? If you are willing to eat meat, wear leather, use antibiotics or vaccines to save your life, you are already on the same moral level as the researcher who induces cancer and/or tests drugs in lab rats. You are benefiting from the exploitation and deaths of animals every day. I grant you that taking a medicine to save your life is rather different than accepting a pay cheque, but I submit that the person willing to take the medicine while looking down his moral nose at those whose work made it possible is in fact on a lower ethical level than the researcher.
    3) I certainly agree that an animals life has value and that we have a duty to preserve the health and welfare of the animals who rely on us for their very existence. However; I value human life even more. I would willingly kill a room full of adorable kitties and puppies if it saved the life of even one child. And the inconvenient fact that the anti-testing crowd likes to ignore is that animal testing saves FAR more lives than it costs. Banting and Best sacrificed numerous dogs, but I'll wager Leonard Thompson thought it was a worthwhile trade. (Insulin saved his life until pneumonia cut him down and pneumonia is, today, also a treatable condition rather than a death sentence thanks in part to animal testing.)

  11. Voyager uses RTGs on Voyager and the Coming Great Hiatus In Deep Space · · Score: 1
    If I recall correctly, the Voyager probes both use a Pu powered "nuclear battery" with a half life of roughly 87 years. Just off the top of my head, that means dropping to half of the original output somewhere around 2025, not 2022. That's just nit picking though. What is of more interest is the fact that it means a drop to half power level, not a total loss of power as TFS implies.

    The ground teams have already disabled several instruments, either because their purpose has been fulfilled or to save power. Presumably they can disable still more, eking out the scraps of power the RTGs put out for a few more years. Unfortunately, as far as i know, the Voyagers don't have anything like a bank of capacitors or secondary batteries that can be slowly recharged with the diminished output of the RTGs while the rest of the system sleeps until it has enough power to wake up and phone home again.

  12. Re:We sure don't make stuffs like they used to on Voyager and the Coming Great Hiatus In Deep Space · · Score: 1
    If Apple was allowed to use radioisotope thermoelectric generators like the Voyager series did, then yeah, it could probably run for more than 5 years. Of course the size of the device, combined with a minimal 5mm sheathing of lead would drastically cut the portability of the IPad.

    As far as I know, Pu 238 creates very little radioactive emissions, but even so, I think that the radioactivity from the nuclear battery itself would be of more hazard to the electronics than the cosmic rays would. (Less energetic sure, but more of them and emitted right beside the vulnerable chips.)

  13. postal codes should be public domain on Canada Post Files Copyright Lawsuit Over Crowd-sourced Postal Code Database · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Postal codes were created by Canada Post for its own convenience in sorting and delivering mail. On that level, the data belongs to Canada Post and only they can change it. However; Canada Post is a crown corporation, all the data it generates is done using a mixture of public funds and postage revenues. Just as with scientific research results, I argue that the use of public funds mandates that the resulting data be freely accessible to anyone. Canada Post can not stop anyone from publishing this data, even for profit. I note that in my province, and presumably all the others, there are phone books other than the one published by Bell. These local phone directories include postal codes as part of the address listings as a vale-add to differentiate themselves from the more well known Bell phone directories.

    Canada Post hasn't sought to stop these directories from including the postal codes, so I don't believe it should seek to stop an online publication either.

    In other respects, Canada Post has shown itself to be a fairly forward thinker for a government operation. To me, the fact that Geolytica has created their website is proof that there is a market opportunity there that Canada Post has overlooked. Canada Post could; and I dare say should, simply out compete Geolytica by creating a more comprehensive and easier to use web page of its own. Canada Post might not be able to compete with the US listings Geolytica also has, but I think there is much room for improvement on the look and feel of the web page itself. (How many run of the mill users even know the difference between HTML, XML and JSON let alone *care*? geocoder.ca uses google maps, but it doesn't look as if they took any design ideas from Google)

  14. marketers tell lies, in other news, water is wet. on Ask Slashdot: My Company Wants Me To Astroturf, Should I? · · Score: 1
    Have they made it known that they will be checking on you to see if you have told enough lies and to their satisfaction? Is there going to be quality control of some kind? "Gee Johnson, you posted a lovely review on your Facebook page, but it just seems, I dunno, kind of phoney. I'm going to need you to go ahead and rewrite that lie over the weekend."

    My take on this? Fuck'em. If you need the job and you feel your job is on the line over this, then feel free to lie to them. Tell them you made all kinds of wonderful comments about them. If they find out you didn't, what are they going to do? Fire you for lying about telling the lies they asked you to say? I personally think that astro-turfing, since it is a published act by a paid employee of the company, to run afoul of the truth in advertising laws. As far as I know, in most of the developed world, a company cannot require you to act in an illegal manner as part of your job. (lord knows it happens anyway all too often)

    Let them fire you and then sue them for it.

  15. Re:Mark Advertisements as Such on On Slashdot Video, We Hear You Loud and Clear · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Speaking only for myself, the only time I ever want to hear Product X does Y is when it is some unique and new gadget. If it's been around for awhile, or has competitors, I don't want anything like that. No; not even comparative reviews of Product X versus it's competitors A, B and C. I get enough of that elsewhere thank you. The Plantronics video is an a, pure and simple. Maybe /. didn't get paid, but it is exactly the kind of useless puff piece I hate. Many of us here have the engineering mindset, being exposed to a sales pitch in any media is usually boring at best, possibly torturous at worst. For a shallow piece, I want to know the product specs and I'm quite comfortable with a plain, unadorned table of raw numbers. For a more in depth piece, I want to know how it was made, what new principles or problems the engineers dealt with to make it. (examples below)

    1) Current hard drives are using perpendicular magnetic domains, something I think Samsung was the key researcher in developing. All the major major hard drive companies are doing it now, so it really isn't a trade secret. Get me an interview with the engineering team that figured out how to lay down the media on the disk substrate in such a way to create those perpendicular domains.

    2) Interview the guy who runs the computer system(s) at some observatory. Palomar, Mauna Kea, W.R. Keck, some place like that. I want to know how he got the job, how much data a typical nights viewing produces, how many Universities get that data, what about his job *he* thinks is cool, that sort of thing. 3) I hear James Cameron is sponsoring a dive to some new record depths. Don't do a piece on him! Do a piece on the submarine he and his team will be using, For the tour guide, use the guy who built it, someone who drives it. Pretty much anyone directly involved, knows what they are talking about, but are not someone who would usually appear on camera in some run-of-the-mill documentary.

    4) if you cover a gathering, convention or conference, at the end include links to the people and organizations involved.

    5) For that matter, maybe /. can do a table at a con or sponsor a con. (It'd be great to see /. sponsoring some Maker Faires or RapFab meets)

    6) I'd like to see a video tour of the facilities well known websites are hosted at.

    7) Once you have arranged to record some video with someone or somewhere, do what you do with the text based interviews. Ask us what parts we want to see, what questions we might like to ask. Use our input to help shape the direction and depth of the piece.

    Frankly, when it comes to consumer products, all I really care about it the kind of stuff the PR, Marketing and Legal departments probably don't want me to see.

  16. Re:To stop child pornographers and organized crime on Canadian Govt To Introduce Massive Internet Surveillance Law · · Score: 2, Informative
    Actually; the sharing of intelligence is already required between the USA and Commonwealth nations under the UKUSA treaty. Officially, under the terms of that treaty, Canada is assigned the duty of spying on large chunks of the now former Soviet Union and shares all results with the US while the US does Latin America, and large chunks of Asia and likewise shares. However; it is commonly believed that one of the primary signals intelligence systems (Echelon) operated by the signing countries has not been limited to foreign powers.

    As a result, this bill will change nothing new on that front. It can be assumed that the US has been spying on Canada extensively and sharing almost everything it gathers with Canada since 1947. (And vice versa)

    What I believe it will achieve is a dramatic increase in the size of the intel databases, allowing intel to go from detective-style work to wholesale data mining.

  17. Re:Two edged sword (+1 informative) on The Science Fiction Effect · · Score: 1

    replying to undo accidental moderation

  18. Re:Regulations... on Credit Suisse Traders Manipulated IT Systems To Hide $500m Losses · · Score: 1
    I have no ethical objection to the concept of the death penalty. I just don't see it as being of any value in deterring crime by others the way most countries practice it now.. There is that whole out of sight, out of mind problem. Your average street thug a) Doesn't think he'll get caught b) doesn't think the crime he intends to commit warrants the death penalty anyway. He's not thinking about what's gonna happen if he gets caught by the home-owner and kills him or her in a panic, he's thinking about not getting caught period and whether this place has enough loot to make it worthwhile. It's a basic psychological principle, death or any other seriously bad thing is something our minds are convinced happens only to other people. (Seriously, how can you live in New Orleans and NOT be convinced you need flood insurance? Who in their right mind buys a home in tornado alley that doesn't have a storm cellar and shelves for stored food?)

    We don't need still more laws, I don't think we even need more cops. What we need are better funded crime labs so that a DNA test doesn't take months to wind it's way through the backlog. Better trained police. I remember Illinois State Troopers were a model police force, as are my own countries RCMP, but that was for the uniformed patrol. Is there such a organization that is the model for the plains clothes detective divisions other than the FBI? What sort of training can we provide the average vice or fraud detective to make him or her a smarter, better organized catcher of criminals?

    Better punishments. Not harsher punishments, better ones. For guys like these? lets bring back the stocks or pillory. Let them be publicly "named and shamed", let the bilked investors pelt them with rotten refuse. More to the point, if their pillories are set up in a well travelled section of the financial district, you give a VERY visible reminder to all the others in the industry of the price of fraud. Whether you're wearing a stained hoodie or a tailored 3-piece suit, if it is *easy* to commit a crime and you think the odds of getting caught are very low (regardless of the actual odds), then there is a much higher risk that you will commit the crime.

    Perceived risk has to outweigh perceived reward

  19. Re:Does this mean... on Graphene Membranes Superpermeable to Water · · Score: 1

    Which is why the guys who seriously try to invent such devices in their garage or basement often use the term Over Unity. There are things that many people might consider perpetual motion, certain for any considerations within a human lifetime, such as two bodies in orbit around each other, a single body travelling through space and so on. The thing is; they can't be harnessed for energy. What the people with the shaky grasp of physics are trying to do is create a device that outputs more energy than it took to get going/takes to keep going.

  20. Obligatory car analogy (bad as usual) on What Happens To Your Files When a Cloud Service Shuts Down? · · Score: 1
    If I hand my car over to a shady back alley "garage" for repair because he is the cheapest in town, especially in replacement parts, and the local LEOs come along and shut him down, every car, every loose part on that property is evidence and would probably be held until well after the court case. Where I live, the laws allow for me to petition the judge to have my car released IF a) I can prove I have genuine need of it (commute) b) the investigators have determined that my car hadn't been worked on yet, so therefore there were likely no stolen or counterfeit parts in it. c)the investigators are willing to tell the judge that I myself am not a potential suspect as the investigation uncovers further criminal acts. d) I have or will pay the impound lot fee

    Having my car seized would be, in the eyes of the court, part of the risk I knowingly or unknowingly accepted when I dropped my car off. I believe that the US feds would use similar logic in regards to the data they impounded. Places like megaupload are generally known to host damn near anything and everything. It's my understanding they are pretty good at self policing at taking down CP when it's found, which in the Feds eyes is proof that they could also be self policing in regards to copyright infringement if they chose. Thus; if someone posts infringing material on MU and it doesn't get taken down, then MU is at fault. If I then upload some non-infringing material of my own and it gets caught in the dragnet, that is part of the risk I knowingly or unknowingly assumed when I chose MU as my filesharing host.

  21. Re:speak for yourselves.... on Nanocoating Waterproofs Any Gadget · · Score: 1
    Pardon me for asking; but what the hell was an open can of paint doing in the same room as your keyboard (and presumably computer, monitor etc)???

    When I painted my home office, I couldn't get all the furniture out ( no room elsewhere for the items) but I made damn sure my computer was shut down, draped in old sheets and put in another room, away from foot traffic.The furniture got draped with cheap vapour barrier grade plastic sheeting.

    That's not being anal either; like removing the outlet and light switch covers, that's just doing house painting properly.

    For what it's worth; I'm hard on keyboards as well. In my case it's because I learned to type first on a manual and then later an IBM Selectric, so my fingers are well trained to press a key more firmly and far more deeply than modern keyboards require. I'd break down and buy one of the Model M based designs if I could find a vendor that also a) Used double shot keycaps, b) has greater stagger between rows than the 1-5 mm I usually see c) the keys are mounted on a slight curve, not a straight plate d) has media and common shortcut keys e) (optional) backlit letters. I have given serious thought to building my own keyboard from scratch, since it seems no one makes keyboards with all 5 features.

  22. Re:Jumpgliding? on Experimenting With Robotic Movement · · Score: 1

    alone or in pairs....

  23. Re:So let me get this right on Justifications For Creating an IT Department? · · Score: 1

    Suddenly I feel all cold shivers, nauseous and a creeping sense of horror, like someone has opened the eldritch tomes...Dude, please don't do that over the holidays...

  24. Re:Ethanol-fueled on LAPD Surveillance Cameras Go Unused · · Score: 1
    mmm, I certainly agree that a high UID is not proof of a new member, but I have to disagree that a UID is arbitrary. For it to be arbitrary, a new sign-up might get awarded an abandoned and now recycled low UID.

    To me, a low UID is proof that a member created an account a long time ago*, but doesn't mean they are a long time slashdotter, since they could well have signed up years ago, forgot all about the site until recently and been able to log in using that old account.

    Similarly, a high UID to me is proof that their account was created recently, note that this says nothing about when the person first discovered the site, if the person had been a regular reader prior to creating that account. It certainly doesn't rule out the possibility of the member having multiple accounts with a range of low and high UIDs. When all is said and done, no a high UID is not proof of recent membership, but I think it is fair to say that it is highly suggestive

    * I seem to recall that a while back there was a charity auction where one item up for bid was a low UID. The winner of that auction would be an obvious exception to the rule of UIDs being created and assigned in strict numerical order. As far as I know however; that would be the only exception.

  25. Re:It's not the last on Television White Space Spectrum Approved For Use By FCC · · Score: 3, Funny

    You. Should. Bemoreunderstanding. Shatner Syndrome is a...crippling disease.