Slashdot Mirror


User: CrazyJim1

CrazyJim1's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
1,754
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 1,754

  1. Has anyone talked about Robo-Rail? on 'Pocket Airports' Would Link Neighborhoods By Air · · Score: 1

    One reason cars took off and rail remained the solution for freight is that cars can drive to different locations. What if someone made a rail network where the switches to different rails was done completely by computer? You get in your mini rail car, program your destination... Then the computer routes you to your destination... Everyone talks about the self driving car, but that technology is at least 10 years down the road. We could technologically roll out robo-rail in a year or two. We have all the technologies for robo-rail. The problem is the infrastructure is all set up for cars. So you need to be creative on the roll out, maybe wire up a community with them so you park outside the city, but in the city, it is all robo-rail taxis.

    My question is: Why isn't the tech community talking about Robo-Rail a lot? All you hear about is self driving cars.

  2. Re:Future on The Year In Robot News · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With the advent of factories and outsourcing, it isn't a question of "Why work?" it is more of a question of "Why can't I get a job?"

  3. Re:Solar powered eh... on Scientists Discover Solar Powered Hornets · · Score: 1

    This one is buzz worthy.

  4. Re:I am an entrepreneur on 'I Just Need a Programmer' · · Score: 1

    Would anyone agree with me that programming might be one of the hardest mental tasks a person can do? I guess the only thing harder would be actually working at a burger joint and not being respected by your manager or customers day in and day out, letting your mind rot as you do a repetitive task anyone could do.

  5. I'm full of ideas, thats why I became a Programmer on 'I Just Need a Programmer' · · Score: 1

    Idea #1: Graphical MMORPG for PC on internet before UO came out. Even though I didn't finish, thousands of hours of code is always good for a man.

    Idea #2: An online auction site. I heard of people selling stuff on usenet and thought there's room for one online auction site.

    Idea #3: Instant messaging before it was on PC Internet. I was too busy writing a MMORPG to pause to do this.

    Idea #4: Looking at Slashdot and Fark, I figure theres room for a general news site with unlimited voting, I tried to code something like Digg for a while before I heard of it, then gave up when I found both Digg and Reddit.com

    I just assume most tech savvy programmers know stuff like this. I don't think I'm special to come up with multibillion dollar ideas and see them succeed under other people's development. I figure most people know what is gonna get big and just don't have the resources to code it all. Like I'm back on the horse to make a MMORPG, and I should have it done 2011. We're negotiating a contract with a publisher now for the single player version which is finished aside from a bug or two, and publisher requested changes. I'll be happy to post this free to play Flash game on Slashdot when we get it up on a publisher for January or February release.

  6. Re:Morons on Sahara Solar To Power Half the World By 2050 · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you look at his diagram, I think he is calling for teraforming of the desert to a forest of some sort. I think he's using solar arrays to desalinate water, and then use the electricity to irrigate the desert. I don't understand the whole thing, but teraforming the desert so there is no more sandstorms sounds more plausible than getting your equipment eroded by sandstorms.

  7. Re:I'm always intrigued by desert solar projects on Sahara Solar To Power Half the World By 2050 · · Score: 1

    Oh what I meant to say is,"Every solar attempt made brings us closer to realizing what is possible to do." It sounds ambitious for this guy to think he's going to solve desert solar, but I wouldn't want to stand in his way. Maybe he could help the pool of research in the field.

  8. I'm always intrigued by desert solar projects on Sahara Solar To Power Half the World By 2050 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The thing is, it doesn't cost much to try. And if this thing works, it could be a huge boon for the world. We definitely need to ramp up production on solar to get extra energy. Surplus energy could be used for electric cars of the future. Electric cars could then transport goods cheaper than they do now, allowing for people with low income to afford transportation & food.

  9. You don't have to listen to me, but I have an idea on Greg Bear, Others Cry Foul on Project Gutenberg Copyright Call · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think any book that you can put online should be free. This way we'd have an awesome Internet library so big it encompasses any piece of work that anyone has put online. Authors could still make money, but they'd have to be smart about it. Mainly the biggest boon from this is the cost of getting an education would be closer to 0. So when you do you're one Laptop per child, they could get every book ever known to man available to them. Also K-12 education would have their books for free. As education costs go down, the intelligence of society goes up! There might be a lull of book creation for a few years in protest, but when people start writing the books, they'll be much more educated and do a better job. There is a lot to it, but I am arguing that putting everything you can scan and put online to be free would result in a better educated society. We'd even be able to bring a 1rst world education into 3rd world countries.

    Regardless if the laws change or not, I'm making it a personal goal of mine to educate people better and cheaper through software. I'm not doing it immediately though. First things first, get my feet on the ground with some video games. If I can get a money machine through video games, I can then do more humanitarian projects. Cuz the thing is,"Even if they don't change the IP law, no one says you can't rewrite a ton of books yourself, and give it out for free."

  10. Re:How about planting a few trees? on Google Earth Adds 3-D Trees · · Score: 1

    Fruit trees in Haiti would be awesome. Haiti's intense poverty means a lot of their trees were cut down through exploitation. Now people are starving to death. Fruit trees would not be an immediate fix, but next year, you'd have lives saved and healthier people.

  11. Re:When I worked for UPS on Which Shipping Company Is Kindest To Your Packages? · · Score: 1

    Yah I worked for UPS too when I was commuting 45 minutes each way to Carnegie Mellon. I respected people's packages there as do most. No one wants to lose their job. And you'd lose your job the instant anyone sees you seriously mishandling a package. The worst I ever did at UPS was not check mistakes so sometimes I sent the wrong package to a different hub down the road.

    I do like your notion of why long cylindrical objects get hurt. It makes perfect sense that it has more angles of attack and its also like a lever in itself so it can exert extra pressure on itself if packed incorrectly.

    In a down economy, if you can't get a job, there's no shame in doing some UPS for a while. The way I always looked at it was,"4 hours a night where I get paid to be at a gym." It isn't that bad of a deal for some. The only problem is if you start doing the math of how many years you need to work there before you pay off your student loans, then you can become defeatist easily.

  12. Re:Huh? on What To Load On a 4-Year-Old's Netbook? · · Score: 1

    I first played Pac-man at age 3, and the experience stayed with me. I had a computer when I was like 4-6. I was copying from a book coding before I knew what any of the things I typed did. One of the programs I ran was a fun math game for adding/subtracting on TI-99. It is my strong opinion if someone would write a chain of computer math games from K-12, and then distributed them for free, there could be the start of a revolution in education. I actually plan on doing this if I get a gaming company running well so I have the resources and time to dedicate to a project for the world.

  13. teach yourself how to think on Traffic Jams In Your Brain · · Score: 1

    For most practical think on your feet applications, multiplying numbers should be done by rounding them to close approximations. So you have 357 and 289. 357 is close to 350. 289 is close to 300, the difference of rounding is good because you're going up in one and down in another. So now you're looking at multiplying 300x350. 100x100 is 10,000, so 3*3 =9, so 300x300 is 90,000. now you just have the trivial matter of 300x50. 3/2=1.5, so you're looking at 10.5 * 10,000. So you have the answer is 10500. With the aid of a calculator, I got 103,173 so it isn't far off. It is real easy to think about this way.

    If you think on your feet and you try to do stuff like,"Carry the 1, remember a number in a short term memory cache, and then do another multiplication and try and remember again, by the time you do your new calculation, you probably forgot your short term." I'd hazard a guess(this is all conjecture from now on) that brains like to use the same variable over and over again to store data, and when you start doing a complex calculation it could rewrite the same memory location. I don't know about your brain, but I budget between processing and memory. If I'm constantly thinking about stuff, my memory goes and I need an external aid. If I'm just memorizing stuff, my processing goes. Try doing 357x289 and use a notepad to record your states and it is easy(memorization). Alternatively you could use a calculator and do 357x9 then memorize the result, followed by 357x80 then memorize result followed by 357x300 and memorize the result. Then you use your memory to add the three numbers in your head. If you can be pure memory or processing, the task doesn't get difficult.

  14. I love robots on US Robots Win Big Down Under · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Anyone remember the early 80s where there were basic video games, calculators in the department stores, and computers were terribly expensive? You think to yourself,"Maybe someday there will be more computers and video games around." And before that computers were rarer still and more basic. And now we're living in a world where computers are everywhere and are pretty satisfactory. You gotta think maybe in 30 years the world will be populated with decent AI robots of various types. Just like I couldn't conceive of all the types of video games possible in the future then, I can't conceive of all the types of robots possible in the future now. This feeling of,"Anything is possible in the future" brings a warm feeling into my heart. I just hope robots don't become cheap soldiers that any rich guy can own his personal army.

  15. Screenplays with Moderation? on Amazon Launches Online Movie Studio · · Score: 2

    So you can read screenplays of other people? Are you allowed to moderate them up or down? If so, Hollywood could just buy the highest moderated screenplay :P What could possibly go wrong?

  16. Re:Who cares about action games? on Video Games Found To Enhance Visual Attention · · Score: 1

    I forgot to add the hilarity of running really low on food. So instead of dying, you start eating all sorts of deadly enchanted mushrooms, drink potions, and even read scrolls in hopes of finding a satisfy hunger scroll. If you run low on light things are better, because you can start conserving on light and only using light when you need it, still things are rough. Also you don't just have unlimited identify scrolls, so you tend to save them for the best things you can find. If you get a ton of identify scrolls, you can start iding some potion stacks. If you're daring, you can just drink potions as you find them. Or you can tactically just drink potions in dire situations in hopes you get a lucky effect that will stave of sure death.

    When you play regular non ironman Angband, you miss out on all the little things that make it a great game. In case you're wondering, the rules I use for ironman are: A one time run to town is optional depending on how you feel like playing. Then you cannot ever take stairs up or use a town recall scroll. If you see down stairs, you don't need to take them, it is just an option. Your choice of character is up to you. Don't ever reroll your stats, just go with the first roll.

    Its sometimes fun to optionally go Random Race/Random class, but after you die enough, you might get annoyed at having to run a class you don't want on the next run.

  17. Re:Who cares about action games? on Video Games Found To Enhance Visual Attention · · Score: 1

    My favorite thing about Angband is ironman mode. No town, no going back up stairs. Just you and 100 level dungeon. It took me hundreds of tries, but I did beat it once with a Troll Warrior. Its soooo fun. You need to first manage your food and light. If you lose your food or light, you die. But if you dive too fast you die. So you need to dive at just the right rate to get food and light. If you get excess food or light, you can stay on a dungeon level longer for monsters to spawn and get you more exp+equipment. But if you linger on a level too long, your food or light might dwindle. On the other hand comes in the doom dive. This is when you have enough food and light, but bosses or troublesome zones force you to take down stairs as an "escape". But since you were having troubles on the last level, getting to a harder level means its more likely you'll run into that situation again! Which means you dive faster! Which means stuff gets tougher! Oh I love me some Angband. I have a rare build with an autosquelcher if anyone wants to try it without having to fight with the interface looking at drops at higher levels. Just let me know in a reply, and I'll upload to a server.

  18. Re:More useful... on Toy Robots Can Guard Your Home · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, but if you want to mount a machine gun to all your cameras, you'll have to buy multiple guns. With just one robot that patrols, you save a load on weaponry. Oh... who am I kidding. Once you get one robot with weaponry, it just becomes an addiction to buy more.

  19. There's only one way you get me to buy Game Boat on Failed Controller-Free Gaming Devices of the Past · · Score: 1

    And that if they made Knight Boat.

  20. Re:Stuck in the past for ten years! on 10th Birthday of ASIMO · · Score: 1

    Yeah calling ASIMO "the most advanced robot" is going to get a lot of laughs 50 years from now. Maybe some people played Atari 2600 and thought,"This is the most advanced video game console". They may have been technically right at the time, but don't act like it is not going to get much better.

  21. This is cheesy to put ads in what you read. on Free E-Books, With a Catch — Advertising · · Score: 1

    Books should be free if they're in e-format. Trying to charge for them when they can be distributed for free is cheesy. This is Cheetos cheesy, with one crunch you can't get enough, so stick a cheetah in your mouth. If books were free, education would be cheaper. I'm talking as cheap as Natural Light Beer. A cheaper education would mean more people would be educated. They'd be educated more than Leap Frog ever did with all their proprietary hardware. Look we got the hardware, because Intel, AMD and Apple are awesome inside. So the software should be free. People think things wouldn't be created anymore, and we fret that that another great song from Justin Bieber wouldn't be released. Yet if someone discovers something new like Newton, of Fig Newton fame.*end cheesiness* Who are going to keep the information to themselves? People are going to share new knowledge and become famous. And if they want to be as much of the corporate shill as the people trying to make the laws today, they can use their fame to make money. But I think the future is bright for people who share information and make it free. If education was free, the world would be vastly smarter. A smarter world researches diseases better. The downside to a smarter populace is they don't buy into corporate BS. There are people with a large amount of wealth to be lost if books were all free. This is the only reason it doesn't happen. Because some people are greedy. People don't say all books are free because there is a minority who wants to oppress the majority. Sure free books and free software would let 3rd world countries have education on par with universities, but greedy people would rather make money on their books. And a lot of the money isn't on innovations. This isn't really a rant as much as this is reality. We can change the future by donating time and money to free software. We can change the future by writing our own books and giving them out for free. This is my plan. I plan on making a couple bucks on Flash games, then I'll move on to re-writing books (similar books, just not plagiarized completely) for education. Finally I'll write custom software to help people learn.

  22. And then the umpire probably calls you out on Rounding the Bases Faster, With Math · · Score: 0

    If you leave the accepted line of travel too far, they call you out. Its a judgement call, but I wouldn't want to push my luck if I was a player.

  23. Yes, the future of education can start now on What If We Ran Universities Like Wikipedia? · · Score: 1

    If I had funding, I'd be changing education now. First step is getting the Intellectual Property to create your own books(they say the same as other books, but not exactly the same to avoid plagurism). Once you have your own books, you do cyber courses. These are video lectures. You have many and redundant videos in case someone learns from different angles. Then people wanting to learn can just read your books and watch lectures. Throw in some people to field live questions if people have them, and you have courses. If you want to get really high-tech, add in software that teaches you too.

    Right now the way things stands, education is expensive. If you can lower the barriers to entry to getting an education, you'll have a smarter world.

  24. Anyone ever use LULU.com? on The Ease of Publishing an Ebook · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just wrote a book which is compilation of the blog/articles on my website over the past years. By going through LULU.com, we were able to publish the book for free when no other people wanted to publish our book. My family members who don't use computers got to read what I wrote and they enjoyed it. If you ever have some information available to you, put it in book form, maybe someone will want to buy it. Like I said,"You can do something as simple as compile all your blogs/articles over the past few years, and turn it into a book!"

  25. Yep on Technological Genius Is Timeliness, Not Inspiration · · Score: 1

    I've had lots of ideas I couldn't implement become multimillion or multibillion dollar companies under someone else's hand. And for Facebook, wasn't Classmates.com trying to do the same thing before them, only Classmates.com was trying to charge a subscription fee right?