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User: Max_W

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  1. Re:WHO World Health Organisation data on Chinese Tourist's Drone Crashes Into Taipei 101 Skyscraper · · Score: 1

    Cars are moving in 2D, UAVs - in 3D, so the risk of crossing, i.e. an accident, is times less. Besides, it is much easier to create a collision avoidance system in 3D.

    Significant part of cars are transporting paper documents and light parcels in a city. UAVs can do it much faster and with less energy consumption, freeing roads by this.

    What I meant is that cars with 400 horse powers and speed of 300 km/h, does not cause any concern, but light commercial UAVs do. Probably, military drones give a bad image to all UAVs, unfortunately.

  2. WHO World Health Organisation data on Chinese Tourist's Drone Crashes Into Taipei 101 Skyscraper · · Score: 1

    http://www.who.int/violence_in...
    Nearly 3 400 people die on the world's roads every day, it means more than a million per year. Tens of millions of people are injured or disabled every year.

    How many people are injured by the civil drones? One or two per year, if any? Still commercial drones can in perspective free roads in a city by carrying urgent documents and parcels, instead of delivering by cars.

  3. World Health Organization Traffic Accidents Data on Gun-Firing Drone Raises Some Eyebrows · · Score: 1

    About 1.24 million people die each year on the world's roads and between 20 and 50 million sustain non-fatal injuries.
    http://www.who.int/features/fa...

    If we compare injuries from consumer recreational drones with cars' accidents, tens of millions of them each year, the figure would be miniscule, almost nonexistent.

  4. It is not about petty criminals on Snoopers' Charter Could Mean Trouble For UK Users of Encryption-Capable Apps · · Score: 1

    Events like the one in France in 1789, or in Russia in 1917, etc. happen from time to time. And sociologists still do not know why. There are several conflicting theories, but nobody knows why exactly, and how to prevent it. Louis XVI, the king of France, even wrote in his diary on July 14, 1789: "Rien", what means in English "Nothing". And the storming of Bastille came from the blue sky on this very day.

    Such events bring countless tragedies to millions or even billions. And it is all about trying to understand nature of such events, what causes them, and how to avoid, or at least mitgate them.

  5. Wiretapism on Federal Wiretaps Down Slightly, Encryption Impact Decreases · · Score: 1

    Every state is based on the wiretapping. All humanity history is the history of wiretaps.

    Read book "The Code Book. The secret history of codes and code-breaking" by Simon Singh, ISBN 1-85702-889-9 (no affiliation).

    Practically any historical event has got a wiretapping background. This is what states do.

  6. Fear of the past on WikiLeaks: NSA Eavesdropped On the Last Three French Presidents · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read that US is afraid that the Nazism (or National Socialism) will again return to the Western Europe and the Communism (or the USSR) to the Eastern Europe, and that is why it has to watch the European leaders carefully.

    On the other hand, if we must follow this absurd logic, we could be afraid that the USA will bring back the Slavery into the world. Were not ancient democratic Greece and democratic Rome based on slavery after all? Were not Slavery rampant in the USA still in 19th century?

    In my opinion, it is not possible to enter into the same river twice. And it would be much better to worry about the real problems, - the global pollution, mass unemployment, the life extinction on the planet, etc. But not the ridiculous ghosts of the past.

  7. Re:15 years in the embassy on Julian Assange To Be Interviewed In London After All · · Score: 1

    This case is kind of returning to medieval practice of keeping people in dungeons. And it is not in obscure remote parts, but in one of the cultural capitals of humanity, in the spotlight of the international media.

    A tiny reliably fenced yard or a garden adjacent to the building where Julian could walk once a day is all that is needed. I do not believe that it is a unsolvable issue for the city of London municipal government.

    People do need outdoors exercise. It is vital for the biology and clear to anyone. He will get seriously ill otherwise before long.

  8. Re:15 years in the embassy on Julian Assange To Be Interviewed In London After All · · Score: 1

    If he chooses to do this then it is his call. But meanwhile he is sitting year after year in a tiny room of an embassy where he had demanded and got an asylum.

    De facto and de jure he is in this embassy room 24/7. Since he is a human I feel there should be still some minimum dwelling standard. I is not difficult for the city of London to arrange it. I do not suggest a park, but a small yard or a garden near the embassy is quite doable.

  9. Re:15 years in the embassy on Julian Assange To Be Interviewed In London After All · · Score: 1

    I do not argue about legal and political paradoxes of the case. What I wanted to tell is that it is not fair to compare the immense building of the US embassy in Budapest and a tiny apartment of the Ecuador embassy in London.

    If Julian is to spend more years in the Ecuador embassy, I would suggest that the London municipal council adds a small fenced yard to the embassy premises, so that he could walk outdoors for an hour or so.

    It is harmful to our common human dignity that a man cannot have a possibility to walk outdoors. Even in the notorious Alcatraz prison there was a yard for outdoors time.

  10. 15 years in the embassy on Julian Assange To Be Interviewed In London After All · · Score: 5, Informative

    Jozsef Mindszenty stayed in the US embassy in Budapest for 15 years, 1956-71. But it is a large building. He could walk around, climb stairs, etc. Julian is staying in a small room. Even in prison people are allowed to walk outdoors.

  11. a professional attitude on Indicted Ex-FIFA Executive Cites Onion Article In Rant Slamming US · · Score: 1

    Jack Warner's job was actaully organizing the World Cups on the ground. For him it is not a joke. Like, as there is a saying in a military: "Who served in the army does not laugh in a circus."

  12. sold online in Russia in abundance on Hacked Emails Reveal Russian Plans To Obtain Sensitive Western Tech · · Score: 2

    Strange. I just made a search and found literally hundreds of high-ent thermal-imaging devices in Russian Internet shops: http://www.4glaza.ru/katalog/p... http://tut.ru/PNV

  13. Re:is there a simple android edit/add client? on Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team Responds In Nepal · · Score: 3, Informative
    The best OpenStreetMap editor in my opinion is JOSM https://josm.openstreetmap.de/ . I think it is not only the best mapping application, but one of the best computer program in existence.

    I know that many people use Vespucci on Android http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/... for mapping. I personally worked a lot with the OsmPad http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/... for collecting addresses during on the ground survey.

    I work with many computer maps. The OSM is one of the best, if not the best.

  14. Anti-drone net over the building and the garden on Drone Flying Near White House Causes Lockdown · · Score: 1

    It is becoming obvious that there should be an anti-drone net over these premises.

  15. Re:See it before on Ask Slashdot: What's the Future of Desktop Applications? · · Score: 1

    With the new Internet access speed the PC's hard disk is practiacally just a part of the cloud anyway.

  16. unshakable physical laws security on Poor, Homegrown Encryption Threatens Open Smart Grid Protocol · · Score: 1

    It is easy to sneak a back door into a complicated mathematical algorithm. Most people do not understand how it works anyway. And as we know it does happen on an epic scale, from many sides.

    But there are impregnable physical laws, which all people understand. Still this type of security is neglected by hardware producers. For example, why there is no a light physical plastic lid, which can be used to close web-camera on a ultra-book physicaly? Why the web-camera lenses are always open? Why people shall use a messy scotch tape to close it? Or rely just on a dubious software security.

    Why where is no a similar lid to close a microphone and a web-camera on a smart-phone? If a web-camera is closed by a physical lid it is closed. This is it. And it is not difficult to make a convenient design so that it is opened and closed easily.

  17. Re:Bet I can guess the solution on Pentagon Discloses Network Breach By Russian Hackers · · Score: 2

    This may have an appearance of being updated. But by what and by whom? It is obvious that if a "Windows OS" costs USD 0.- it is not the Windows as we know it.

  18. Re:Bet I can guess the solution on Pentagon Discloses Network Breach By Russian Hackers · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...attacks from Russian IP's...

    One should realize that there are a lot "pirated" Windows OS installations in Russia. I would guess more than 90%.

    These PCs do not have Windows Update, since the OS is not authentic. And consequently hoards of different viruses, trojans and bot-networks run on them. The masters of these malicious networks could mount cyber activity from the IPs' of unsuspecting owners.

    I would advise a Pentagon delegation to visit a Russian megalopolis for a cultural exchange trip and learn the real situation on the ground, before retaliating with cyber campaigns on poor people.

  19. B.C., A.D., ... on Except For Millennials, Most Americans Dislike Snowden · · Score: 1

    We may dislike or like E.Snowden. But there is no denial, there is the world Before Snowden and After Snowden. I am not sure which one is better, the same as the Dark Ages could be not better than Pax Romana. But that is what happened, and it is impossible to put toothpaste back into the tube.

  20. Re:What the fuck is "Periscope"? on Twitter Moves Non-US Accounts To Ireland, and Away From the NSA · · Score: 2

    ...China, or maybe Russia ... are nothing more than a 3rd world country trying to hide that fact...

    China and Russia adopted the metric systems still in the early 20th century. Printing press, periodical system of elements, space flight, and many other significant humanity-scale scientific and engineering breakthroughs were made in those parts.

  21. Where are the photos of these tools? on World's Oldest Stone Tools Discovered In Kenya · · Score: 1

    Why there are no photos of the found tools in the article? Do not archeologists have a photo-camera, or at least smartphone with a camera?

  22. Re:Same as Columbus on Multi-National Crew Reaches Space Station · · Score: 1

    Or a nature of gravity is understood.

    <quote>... until something like a space elevator comes along....</quote>

  23. Re:inbuilt scrap capabilities on The Largest Ship In the World Is Being Built In Korea · · Score: 1

    I looked up the shipwrecks statistics of recent years and I do not see that there is an issue with the hull strength.

    Besides, the modular design could be as rigid and strong as necessary. Instead of torch cutting the old ships they could be disassembled, and the separate modules could be used as houses. In about the same way as old shipping containers are already being used in construction.

  24. Re:inbuilt scrap capabilities on The Largest Ship In the World Is Being Built In Korea · · Score: 1

    I saw how they break ships in a documentary. It is not a ecologically safe process. There is a lot of oxy-fuel cutting, burning, dumping, etc.

    I watched and thought: "This is wrong. Why not use some module architecture?"

  25. inbuilt scrap capabilities on The Largest Ship In the World Is Being Built In Korea · · Score: 1

    Ship breaking is very tedious process:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_breaking

    Why no to build-in capabilities for a ship to break itself easily?