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  1. Cooking with Potential Energy on Ask Slashdot: Geekiest Way To Cook a Turkey? · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised no one has mentioned this oldie but goodie from university research labs in 1987: Cooking with Potential Energy: http://www.ohio.edu/mechanical/thermo/Intro/Chapt.1_6/energy/CookingPE.pdf.

    Someone else did the math to try to figure out how high you would have to drop a turkey so it would be cooked by the time it got to the ground: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/12/cooking-a-turkey-by-dropping-it/ (answer: between 72Km and 142Km).

  2. Re:Trust?? on Conservatives' Trust In Science Has Fallen Dramatically Since Mid-1970s · · Score: 2

    Neil DeGrasse Tyson is right. Also here is the obligatory Asimov quote:

    “Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'”
      Isaac Asimov

  3. De facto government spending: on What's Wrong With the US Defense R&D Budget? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "...very expensive gadgets that are often based on unsound technology and frequently fail to perform as required..." Somehow this reminds me of the new TSA budget too.

  4. Re:Chatbots... on Chatbot Suzette Wins 20th Annual Loebner Prize, Fools One Judge · · Score: 1

    > I'd be much more excited about a program that genuinely understood just one concept. Red, or liberal or whatever.

    I'm not sure this is an AI or programming problem. How would you explain the color red to someone who has never seen anything (say, someone who was born blind), so they would genuinely understand it? Or, how would you explain how an apple smeels, feels, and tastes when you crunch into it, in software, so that a program would genuinely understand it?

  5. The cable networks have seen this coming... on One In Eight To Cut Cable and Satellite TV In 2010 · · Score: 1

    My parents live in Rural Florida (not a big city) and have DSL from a local ISP and SkyAngel, which is an IPTV provider. SkyAngel uses hardware and software from Neulion, and Neulion's stuff all seems fairly clever to me. The Discovery Channel is recently no longer available on SkyAngel. The reason for this is quite interesting!

    My take on it is that the big cable and TV networks might have figured out that IPTV might be a threat to their business model and they have to try to pre-emptively put the IPTV providers out of business before they really catch on. My guess is that Discovery Channel, which makes most of its money from the big cable TV networks, was probably "told" to discontinue offering their programming on IPTV networks such as SkyAngel. I bet it was an offer they couldn't refuse, or something like that.

    The official information is in press releases such as the one at http://www.skyangel.com/discovery . They paint it as a contract dispute. Of course SkyAngel has filed a complaint with the FCC or FTC or some regulatory agency. The legal battle is described on various blogs which you can find by googling "SkyAngel Discovery"

    It will be interesting to see if the cable TV networks prevail on this one, and if they succeed in putting the upstart IPTV providers out of business before it catches on.

  6. Re:Translation: on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Further to that:

    The perpetuation of organized religion depends on 2 things: 1. ignorance; and 2. lack of critical thinking skills. The internet is the enemy of ignorance because of the openness and availability of information. Education teaches critical thinking skills.

    The pope is just doing his job. They've identified that the fully open internet is a threat to the perpetuation of the church, and they have to take steps to discourage it or encourage limits on it.

  7. When one of those hits your windshield... on Radio-Controlled Cyborg Beetles Become Reality · · Score: 1

    ...look out! I lived in west Africa for many years and I'll never forget what it's like for one of those to hit the windshield while driving at night at 120Km/h. I was hoping to never see one again.

  8. Another switch the US needs to make.. on US Switch To DTV Countdown Begins · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Could we get going on the switch to the metric system now please? It would require about the same amount of effort and consumer education. Yards, acres, miles, feet - come on people, this is not the 1800s.

  9. Seems obvious they got a whiff of H2S... on Rotten Office Fridge Cleanup Sends 7 To Hospital · · Score: 1

    H2S (hydrogen sulphide) is produced when organic material decomposes in the absence of air. It smells like rotten eggs. Actually it would be more nearly correct to say that rotten eggs smell like the H2S they produce...

    If a sealed container of food was allowed to rot long enough it could produce noticeable quantities of H2S. All of the symptoms I read about were consistent with mild H2S exposure. It takes very little H2S to kill a person, so they're lucky that they only got sick!

  10. Your boss is a dumbass.. on Handmade vs. Commercially Produced Ethernet Cables · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ask him how the premise wiring in every commercial building in the world is installed. They order patch cables from some commercial patch cable vendor for every run, riiiiiiiight.

    Also, CAT5e is fine for what you are doing. I agree with the previous poster that you could practically use tin cans and a string for this.

    These special dies, jacks, and connectors are called "CAT5" parts and you can buy them at Home Depot I think. Does that make them "special" ?

  11. Maybe do a google search... on Using Linux To Make a Slow, Awful WAN Connection · · Score: 1

    ... and you might find out about NISTnet, which has been around for YEARS... NISTnet does the same thing as this, on Linux, and also includes a statistical latency delay model which simulates real world conditions.

  12. Bad summary including a Word document?? on Massive, Coordinated Patch To the DNS Released · · Score: 2, Informative

    What a terrible summary. What would be really useful and news worthy would be a link to a web page with some information about the vulnerability. The links in the summary included: 1) a WORD DOCUMENT? WTF? 2) a PDF, 3) a podcast?? WTF? and 4) a link to a slashdotted DNS checker. How about a link to the CERT vulnerability web page which describes the problem?

    http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/800113

    Now THAT would have been much more useful. Do people who work as sysadmins actually have time to sit around listening to a podcast? Especially when there are DNS servers to patch?

  13. Re:Nothing inconvenient about the results on An Inconvenient Truth · · Score: 1

    Actually I have it on good authority that global warming is caused by the decline in the number of pirates in the world... You should look into that too. :)

  14. terminated employees still get Amazon spam! on Handling Spam from Large Commercial Entities? · · Score: 3

    I'm an IS guy for a small company. Recently a key employee employee quit, but since she was a key employee we could not just bounce all e-mail sent to her e-mail address. So, I receive it, and if it's important I relay it to the correct person.

    She is on AMAZON.COM's spam distribution list. I contacted Amazon.com customer support no less than ten (10) times in my quest to get her e-mail address removed from their spam list. I was roundly defeated in every attempt; I did not know her password; I did not know her credit-card number; I did not know what book she bought recently; and I was not her; so, they CONTINUE to send their spam which arrives at my address!

    I find this to be apalling, because I am now the owner of this e-mail address, but there is NO WAY for me to get that address removed from their spam list.

    How rude!!! If anyone from AMAZON.COM is reading this, you should know that I discourage everyone I know from doing business with you as a result of this fiasco.

    I totally empathize with the author of the original question.