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User: CFD339

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  1. I guess that means Han Solo isn't dead.

  2. You need to get out.... on SETI's 'Strong Signal' Came From Earth (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 0

    The call is coming from inside the house.... well, planet.

  3. The numbers provided where estimates that purported to include vehicle costs. They may be a bit low or a bit high, but they're not too far off. Even in busy markets, you can earn money doing this. Driving a cab is never going to be a shortcut to wealth and an excellent lifestyle. Uber isn't going to change that.

  4. Not as bad as I'd assumed. I feel LESS guilty now on Leaked Docs Provide An Unprecedented Look At Income Of Uber Drivers (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1

    So this is meant to be an anti-Uber argument. To some extent it is because it suggests that Uber overstates what drivers can earn per hour.

    On the other hand, it indicates that in most markets Uber drivers can earn a living wage and even in the most competitive markets they can cover expenses and beat the minimum wage.

    I suggest this is a valid choice for Uber drivers. It doesn't suggest that you would leave a good manufacturing job with benefits to drive people around, but is that realistic in any case?

    I actually had a lower estimate on what could be made doing this, and would have bet that many drivers don't earn enough to cover the wear and tear on their vehicles. Clearly this isn't the case.

    I feel less guilty about using Uber after reading this.

  5. I think maybe you don't know how insurance works. on Will Self-Driving Cars Destroy the Auto Insurance Industry? (siliconvalley.com) · · Score: 2

    Let's start by saying that currently 12 states and Puerto Rico have no-fault auto insurance laws, and the car insurance business thrives there. Why? Because fault is really not the core important part of insurance. Insurance is there to cover the risk you cannot afford to pay for all at once if you have a problem. Regardless of who is at fault, if you're driving around in a 40,000 dollar car that the bank holds a 30,000 dollar note on, the bank is going to insist you carry insurance on the car.

  6. I'd actually like a more direct feedback approach on Facebook Might Finally Kill Clickbait With New Algorithm Tweaks (thenextweb.com) · · Score: 1

    I would love to see then surface an optional click layer when you return from an external article link, maybe as a strip across the bottom of the item panel that let you just with one click rate the link as interesting or not. It should be done in a non-model way, so it could be ignored by anyone who doesn't bother. Some way to punish clickbait directly would really help.

  7. Yes. I wish I had mod points to sprinkle on your post like magic "pay attention to this one" dust.

  8. Re:is this really still an OS anymore? on Microsoft Unhappy With Beta Testers, Demands Answers (computerworld.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How about, "But I like my Windows machine."

    Seriously. I know linux, and use it on servers. ChromeOS seems to me like a bad idea, just trading one giant corporation for another. Apple drives me crazy enough on my iOS toys, and I'd rather not pay their premium.

  9. Re:Car makers LOVE dashboards that go obsolete fas on Many Drivers Never Use In-Vehicle Tech, Don't Want Apple Or Google In Next Car · · Score: 1

    I predict that an "outdated" smart dashboard has a significant negative impact on the resale value over having equipment in the car that is relatively age insensitive. I won't be buying one (as long as I can avoid it reasonably)

  10. Car makers LOVE dashboards that go obsolete faster on Many Drivers Never Use In-Vehicle Tech, Don't Want Apple Or Google In Next Car · · Score: 1

    You replace your phone or tablet (on average) every couple of years. In two years, it's obsolete. Not fast enough, not enough storage, doesn't run the lastest apps or the latest OS updates.

    You replace your car far less often -- and as cars are lasting longer and longer (remember when 100,000 miles was end of life?) one of the ways to get your car to "need replacing" is to build in technology that looks ancient in 2 years. What do you suppose the resale value of a car is that is 3 years old, has less than 40,000 miles on it, but can't run the latest dashboard operating systems or applications?

  11. Re:As a firefighter, I am extremely skeptical. on Future Firefighters May Be Guided By "Robots On Reins" · · Score: 2

    Thanks for the nice feedback. I could get a lot more graphic, but I don't think people would really believe me. What you see on TV of firefighting is as unrealistic as everything else on TV. For good reason, I guess, since video of what goes on inside a real burning building would be very hard to watch. It would mostly be a dark or a white screen and a lot of noise. Not great television.

  12. Re:As a firefighter, I am extremely skeptical. on Future Firefighters May Be Guided By "Robots On Reins" · · Score: 1

    SCOTT offers a mask with a heads up TIC, and I'd imagine MSA does but I've never checked. The problem is, they're expensive. We can have one handheld TIC on each engine, ladder, and heavy rescue. If we were buying the masks with built in TIC units, we'd need to have one for every pack because they really can't be shared.

  13. Re:Question on Future Firefighters May Be Guided By "Robots On Reins" · · Score: 1

    Thank you. I commented at length about this already -- but yeah, this kind of robot would be very little help in any configuration I can currently imagine. Thermal imagine is commonly used, but handheld units are more common than the very expensive ones built into SCBA masks. You can't share a mask between crew members so you'd have to be one per firefighter rather than one per crew, and they're not cheap. Most departments have a hard enough time getting budget to replace worn out hose lines, let alone thousand dollar thermal cameras.

  14. Re:This is silly on Future Firefighters May Be Guided By "Robots On Reins" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thermal imaging cameras are quite common for fire crews. We have one on most of our engines, trucks, and heavy rescue units. They are available built into the SCBA masks but they are extremely expensive in that configuration and can't be easily shared between crews and crew members so you'd have to buy one for each firefighter rather than one for each crew. Remember, you can't just use an IR camera from best buy. They have to be waterproof, intrinsically safe (no sparking internally when switched on/off), impact resistant, heat resistant, and 100% reliable.

  15. As a firefighter, I am extremely skeptical. on Future Firefighters May Be Guided By "Robots On Reins" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The article gets right that visibility is limited. Let me be more clear. Visibility is often zero -- as in you may as well close your eyes. If you get there before the engine crew is actually putting water on the fire and the smoke layering is still undisturbed, you may have visibility at floor level, but often not. The minute water gets to the fire -- or a heating pipe solder joint melts and the pipe sprays water -- the building fills with steam and the layering is disturbed and conditions are zero visibility. It's also very loud, between the sounds of the fire and the sound of your breathing through the respirator mask.

    Now, imagine what's on your living room floor, or your kids rooms, or blocking your hallways. Imagine you don't know the layout of your house and you're blindfolded. Try searching under those conditions, keeping in mind that seconds count as your knees are sticking to melted plastic toys and you're feeling ahead of you to make sure there's no open hole in the floor, stairway, or other hazard, and you're checking to make sure that the engineered joists holding the floor you're crawling across haven't become weakened by the heat to the point where you'll fall through into a burning basement. While doing all that, you've got one hand on the person's gear leg ahead of you (or perhaps a hose line being led by someone ahead you can't see) and your other hand is trying to sweep the floor around you with your tool, and a third hand may be trying to look around with a thermal imaging camera to find a patient on the floor, under a bed, or in a closet. You've got 20 minutes to find what you need before your low-air alarm starts going off and you've got to head out with your crew while another comes in. Meanwhile other crews are banging around trying to put the fire out before the house comes down around you.

    Call me skeptical, but I don't see any current robot technology that can do all those things -- let alone do it in several hundred degree heat.

  16. Re:Welcome to the new America on How Police Fight To Keep Use of Stingrays Secret · · Score: 2

    but you have to burn the village to save it.

  17. Some answers to the know-it-all comments: on 65,000 Complaints Later, Microsoft Files Suit Against Tech Support Scammers · · Score: 4, Informative

    MS didn't sue earlier because it's really hard to find a legal entity to sue. When you get one of these calls, the thing calling you is not directly attached to a land line. It's a software pbx system that may be running on a compromised machine in some part of the world. The call only gets connected to the person you talk to after you connect and the system determines you may be a real person willing to talk to someone. The calls get routed through compromised voip service providers, compromised pbx systems, or termination lines leased with false id and credit cards. By the time the provider knows what's happening, tens of thousands of calls have been made and the front end system just moves to another provider. As to "opting out" -- only legitimate telemarketing organizations bother with do not call lists. These asshats just random dial. It's cheaper.

    To figure out who to sue, you have to participate in the scam long enough to have an actual transaction processed and then follow the money -- but that's not so simple now. Most of these particular kinds of scams don't accept payment at the telecenter you're talking to. They just install the ransomware on the pc. Then once you're already compromised you have to pay someone else -- through a web site, a wire payment, or some other mechanism that's much easier to hide than just a credit card transaction.

  18. Re:How about someone who groks the math, comment? on Quantum Physics Just Got Less Complicated · · Score: 1

    Thanks, but the only person to quote for that one (including the poor grammar) is me. I'm glad you enjoyed it. As I just said to someone else who disagrees, "If you put some steel across a span with lots of triangle shapes to it, intuitively you may look at it and say "should hold". I'd probably walk across it willingly. I would not, however, want to count on driving trucks over it regularly without someone with engineering training and rigor applying math and proven science to the problem first."

  19. The difference between obvious and proven... on Quantum Physics Just Got Less Complicated · · Score: 1

    If you put some steel across a span with lots of triangle shapes to it, intuitively you may look at it and say "should hold". I'd probably walk across it willingly. I would not, however, want to count on driving trucks over it regularly without someone with engineering training and rigor applying math and proven science to the problem first.

  20. How about someone who groks the math, comment? on Quantum Physics Just Got Less Complicated · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd love to read a real comment (yeah, I know, it's almost like I'm new here) from someone who is actually capable of understanding the math here. It would be great to see a reasonable discussion on the actual implications here.

    As to people saying "that's obvious" -- what you can intuit and what you can prove are not the same thing. The only thing prove by a "that's obvious" comment is that the person posting it doesn't have a clue.

  21. Re:People are the problem on "Ambulance Drone" Prototype Unveiled In Holland · · Score: 4, Interesting

    actually, many many people are saved by AEDs every day. I've seen it done. In one case at my daughter's school a kid's grandfather dropped during a drama production. A student ran and got the AED our department had placed in the school, a parent used it on the floor of the auditorium. The man WALKED to the ambulance when it arrived a few minutes later.

  22. Re:8.0 percent? on "Ambulance Drone" Prototype Unveiled In Holland · · Score: 2

    But an automatic defibrillator will not shock an arrested rhythm. The machine can only shock specific kinds of fibrillation -- where the heart is fluttering in a disorganized way that doesn't pump blood the way it should. A fully arrested heart wouldn't be detected by the machine. You'd need a trained medic to manually shock in those cases.

  23. Re:If only I could get away with that with clients on Miss a Payment? Your Car Stops Running · · Score: 1

    Yeah, except that I get hired to write the code that other people sell as software as a service. I need to invent software as a service as a service services.

  24. If only I could get away with that with clients... on Miss a Payment? Your Car Stops Running · · Score: 1

    Miss a payment and that fancy application code I built for your website that you run for a huge corporation stops working.... hmmmm.... if only I wasn't so damn ethical...

  25. Flag on the play on Microsoft Paid NFL $400 Million To Use Surface, But Announcers Call Them iPads · · Score: 1

    Flag on the play.
    Anonymous Coward 1 minute ago
    Flag on the play.
    Multiple mis-identification of a sponsors product.
    Defense.
    5 Yard Penalty.
    Automatic FIRST down.