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User: Metteyya

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Comments · 128

  1. Horowitz, Hill - try them on Methods of Learning to Build Electronic Circuitry? · · Score: 1

    Try the famous P. Horowitz & W. Hill "The Art of Electronics". Great amount of theory with emphasis on UNDERSTANDING how circuits work and DESIGNING them, without counting every single possible value on your calculator. First book covers the basics and analog electronics, the second one covers logical circuits and digital electronics in general.

    Oh, and even if You want to program microcontrollers, you'd still need at least some theory to really understand what you're doing.

  2. Re:They find an axion?? on Tiny Particle With No Charge Discovered · · Score: 1

    About the same requirements as the US military then, eh?

    That'd be about two zeros more, AND Large Earth Collider does guarantee the effect.

  3. A trap? on Microsoft Looking to Run Windows on OLPC · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Bundled with level of corruption in OLPC-buying countries it seems pretty scary.

  4. Re:anything special? on Laser Turns All Metals Black · · Score: 2

    Yes. It is the TRUE BLACK METAL \m/, i.e. ist Krieg.

  5. Re:Isn't this axiomatically impossible? on Physicist Trying To Send a Signal Back In Time · · Score: 1

    I don't find separating "as wave" and "as particle" situations satisfying.

    I think the experiment is just supposed to be a beefed up Bell-test experiments, i.e. an experiment to check (and exploit) validity of quantum entanglement and solve EPR Paradox (if anyone doesn't follow, wikipedia has it explained in a pretty understandable way).
    The "beefing up" here is placing two detectors in different distances (SR intervals) from the source - and check whether the change in corresponding wavefunctions really occur faster than c would allow.

    And no, it can't be used to transmit information faster than light, because you can't make two entangled photons when they're separated - so even if you entangle them, "information" still can spread at their speed.

    (I'm sorry if I dumbed the explanation to the level unsatisfactionary for Ph.D's in physics - I'm just a mere undergraduate in physics)

  6. Re:Isn't this axiomatically impossible? on Physicist Trying To Send a Signal Back In Time · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually the experiment is designed properly. The thing is, they are already going to misinterpret the results. Quantum entaglement means that at the moment of setting wavefunction of one of the particles, the wavefunction of second particle is immediately changed to "second" possible state.

    The key word here is "immediately". Special relativity redefined "the same moment" as "the same interval", i.e. line of constant t^2 - (x/c)^2 instead of plain ol' time t. Entangled states are able to react in classically understood "same moment", without regard to c and limitation of transmitting the signal at most at light speed. Which, by means of special relativity, means travelling back in time (as any transmission of signal or matter with speed greater than light).

    If I did any spelling or grammar error, excuse me, I'n not a native English speaker.

  7. Re:Sound quality on AnalogWhole, an Alternative To FairUse4WM · · Score: 1

    So the signal is "intercepted" in its original digital format, before ever passing throughan D/A converter, and is not actually taken through the sound card?

    Exactly :) The name AnalogWhole may seem confusing, because I think they wanted to show analogy to "plugging" everything in and out.

  8. Re:Sound quality on AnalogWhole, an Alternative To FairUse4WM · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bullshit. Or, if you like it that way, you're right, but that's completely not applicable here. It's just that signal - still in digital form - is received by another app, that's all. Sort of like JACK works - manages exchange of many (digital) audio "streams" between applications. So it's something completely different than "physical" loopback, like plugging your card's line-out to its line-in. Some audio apps already work that way (mentioned JACK for Linux, for example), the only new thing here is automatisation of the whole process and using already available players in the system.

  9. Re:Bias on The Perception of 'Random' on the iPod · · Score: 1

    iPod shuffle (which the article is about) does not have hard disk, it has solid-state memory.

  10. Re:Or... on Microkernel: The Comeback? · · Score: 1, Troll

    Who the hell modded you Funny?

  11. Re:So uh... on ODF Plugins and a Microsoft Promise of Cooperation · · Score: 1

    Did Microsoft take the time to clarify exactly which features their Office suite offers that Open and Star offices don't?
    They don't have to, there is a bit of them that John Doe will never use, but bother some more advanced users. Like plotting experimental data with different error (uncertainity) value for each measurement. In OOo it's possible to do just the basics - i.e. same error (+/- value or percentage) for each measurement.
    This of course could bring questions like what sick people use Excel for plotting experimental data - well, believe me, there are faculties where such methods are taught.

    Personally, to be system-independent I've searched and found GnuPlot, which is plain great for what I wrote above, but a lot of fellow students just stick with MS Office.

  12. Re:Sun going suprnova?! on McNealy Created Millions of Jobs? · · Score: 1

    And I thought this /. meme is dead since at least a year. Come on, let's revive the "imagine Beowulf cluster" and "does it run linux" too!

  13. Re:Dvorak: wrong, again. on Apple to 'Switch' to Windows? · · Score: 1

    Dvorak is a troll, as he proved many times last year. He certainly does NOT deserve /. news about every single editorial of his. Actually he doesn't deserve any attention in world of IT nowadays.

  14. Re:dear god, make it stop on First Impressions Count in Website Design · · Score: 1

    Just treat this /. topic as "Web Developer's Daily Reminder", it helps.

    Slashdot - because you can't afford forgetting.

  15. Re:Autocad on Autodesk Embracing Open Source · · Score: 1

    It is damn sad that parent has been moderated "Funny".

  16. Re:Darwinism? on Blizzard Sued for Death of Gamer · · Score: 1

    This comment made my day. Such gems are worth reading /. comments for! :)

  17. Re:Obligatory on Google Base Launches · · Score: 0, Redundant

    All your base are belong to Google!

  18. Re:stored procs and triggers, finally on MySQL 5.0 Now Available for Production Use · · Score: 1

    Because it's easy to deploy, easy to manage and - because not feature-bloated - easy to learn and use. Is that enough?

  19. Re:Slashdotting In Action on When to Leave That First Tech Job · · Score: 1

    There is something like that. It's called mirrordot.org , you just have to know about it and use it.

  20. Re:Let the IE/FF comparisons begin on IE Flaw Exposes Users To Spoof-Based Attacks · · Score: 3, Funny

    As with IE - these are not bugs, these are features. You know, Internet Explorer enables browsing the Internet from user's computer and the other way too.

  21. Re:hashtrust on Practical Exploits of Broken MD5 Algorithm · · Score: 1

    No, it's extremely hard. Probability of collision AND valid code is too damn low. Although this article proves that, with little social engineering, you can "emulate" (or cheat) a valid-code collision.

  22. Re:KDE != filesystem on KDE Running on Mac OS X · · Score: 1

    But it lets you browse & mangle your filesystem. Sheesh, even reading summaries became less popular ;>

  23. Re:With AJAX, you know you've got on Better Web Apps With Ajax · · Score: 1

    Hey, that'd mean AJAX compiles every code to WhiteSpace! Kewl!

  24. Re:He mixed up hacking and cracking on The Six Dumbest Ideas in Computer Security · · Score: 1

    How can you write a secure program if you don't know what a buffer overflow is?

    I know what a buffer overflow is. I can read C standard lib documentation. I know what "designed with security in mind" means.

    Yet still, I work as "junior programmer" (21yr old student of physics) and don't consider my apps "secure".

    And I don't know how to crack. I'm not a script-kiddie and don't want to become one. If you don't know what a buffer overflow is, you are not a programmer.

  25. Re:They forgot the most important feature of all on 6.8GHz 1TB RAM and 2TB HDD Laptop? · · Score: 2, Funny

    And it runs Longhorn!
    And comes with Duke Nukem Forever preinstalled!