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User: Aargau

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  1. Don't have to throw out your old MB/CPU you know on Sandy Bridge Motherboards Dissected, Compared · · Score: 2

    The DRM issue is easily worked around: all you need is one un-DRMed version out in the wild. In fact, Sandy Bridge is facilitating non-DRMed video anywhere. Their Quick Sync technology allows you to take your base video and transcode for all your devices very quickly with high quality. I plan to grab blu-rays and transcode to the kids iPad much more often now. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odyl6952aRg

  2. Re:Job security on Study Says Software Engineers Have the Best US Jobs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I gather you're not in Silicon Valley? My small startup is having a really hard time the last 6 months competing against Facebook, Google, Zynga, Apple in hiring quality developers, even just out of college. Thanks to goldman sachs, we've also got 2000 people about to move into the real estate market with $10 million in fungible stock options as well.

  3. Richard branson on Sciencey Heroes For Young Children? · · Score: 1

    Owns his own cola, music, airline, and private island, bonks supermodels, and about to commercialize LEO travel. Does his own extreme sport stunts as well.

  4. Interview with question/answers on Preserving Memories of a Loved One? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd go with a formal interview to complement the daily life recording, to preserve for the kids a sense of how she felt on major issues, philosophy, personal achievements, things that might not come up when recording a daily routine.

  5. Sometimes I think apple has it right vetting s/w on How Viruses Evolve Into All-Purpose Malware · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Our immune system has an advantage over virii and bacteria due to our greater cell specialization and intelligent response. The problem with modern botnet malware is that the infecting agent can actually be more intelligent and reactive than the host it's infecting.

  6. Yes, coincidence, and much worse than spam on Source Code To Google Authentication System Stolen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Targeted zero day attacks to steal source code are worth 1000x more than an account to send spam on. Root at google? This is actually a big deal, above the realm of small bot shops, this is superpowers in a cyber arms race. Very strong implications on the security of cloud computing as the provisioning company can be the vector of attacks to any company it hosts.

  7. Gardening can be a thought job on How Many Hours a Week Can You Program? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm biased because it's a hobby of mine, but yes, I could see doing that if the break allows for thinking about drought resistant perennials, planning so that the garden has some interesting blooms each month, and thinking about how to get rid of some bugs that other gardeners are succumbing to. Then again, gardening is a pretty good activity to think while working. As an aside, and it may be observation bias, but I do know quite a few long time programmers who do get into gardening for the mental challenges (we had some folks at the Tech Shop/Maker Fair working on wireless soil sensor equipment).

  8. Doesn't space travel need masturbation rooms? on ISS To Get Man Cave · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure, I can hold out for a few days but there' no way I'd last over a month in space without a little private time.

  9. Mod Parent up on Open Source Alternative To Google Earth? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do work on optimization of large datasets, such as mapping all streets ala street view. KML files are a wonderful standardization, but they can be huge. In fact, a lot of geographic data is voluminous. There still is a niche for actual client apps that are not running JSON for speed reasons when crunching large datasets.

  10. Re:Let me take a pro-expensive wine position on Carbon-14 Dating Reveals 5% of Vintage Wines May Be Frauds · · Score: 1

    Diminishing returns are a good metric for return on investment, but there's something unique about the best you've ever achieved. I guess a good analogy is (the obvious one, of course) women. Some people would never make the calculus that it's worth it to spend 5x as much effort chasing a 10 as an 8 (relative to one's rating system).

  11. Let me take a pro-expensive wine position on Carbon-14 Dating Reveals 5% of Vintage Wines May Be Frauds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's always more interesting when there are multiple viewpoints on an issue, and I'm happy to take the contrary one. I've tasted 2 buck Chuck (quite good), and tasted $100-$1000 dollar bottles. There is actually a difference that's discernable by I'd guess at least 40% of wine drinkers, and while I'm open to the idea that we can replicate some of the properties of the top wines cheaply, and that certain top wines are counterfeited, I still posit that the top, expensive wines are an experience that are worth paying for, at least once or twice in one's life. To test, I'd recommend splitting among a few friends an Opus One from Costco for around $100, which can be 40% of the retail price. It's consistently a top wine and will enlighten you if you're in that sad, obsessive, minority of folks who care enough to spend crazy money on good wines :)

  12. Government inefficiency vs. Corporate malfeasance on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    Why do you believe corporations have a better track record regarding your interests? They don't. Money is power (re gaming using Markov processes to examine probability of success). Why wouldn't you want an advocate for your rights?

  13. Re:Other reform options on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    I've dealt with the cash side of the American system since I'm in a startup at Stanford and we can't get insurance until we draw salary. We've had a few folks in recruitment turn us down because they need coverage. Advantage large corporation. There are very few unaffiliated care centers in the Bay Area, and most have prenegotiated fee structures that jack up the price for cash customers, since they are the minority here. We've tried to negotiate, but for large scale health situations (like surgery) you will not have any chance to ask for the anesthesiologists rates (both time and materials), the use of hospital facilities and materials. No joke, we got charged $500 for the hallway we were wheeled into before surgery, and nowhere did we get a preview of that cost. So perhaps you haven't experienced the awfulness of larger health issues. I've been lucky enough (or perhaps unlucky) to use healthcare in various countries (Japan, Taiwan, New Zealand, Palau, various South Pacific islands). Japan was great care, small bill. Taiwan was not covered by insurance, but it cost the equivalent of $8 to remove a pencil eraser from our toddler's ear. Palau's health care didn't even have a thermometer when I came down with a jungle infection. Given a choice I'd take Japan and Taiwan over the US until the US has a true disclosure and competitive system.

  14. Re:Other reform options on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    Hope you like shoe, you're going to have to eat it. Paying out of pocket can triple the cost because of a little game of negotiated rates - we know this isn't the real price, so when we reduce it it makes both sides look good, even though it's horribly overpriced. Cash only patients have no leverage since there is no competition based on price.

  15. Re:A false choice, of course... on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    If forcing insurance to pay for preexisting conditions is theft, allowing an insurance company to arbitrarily raise rates to cover inefficiencies is graft. Our current system is not a free market system. I'll tell you the secret of creating a real capitalist health care system: require doctors and hospitals to publish their fees and compete on value and pricing. Till then, you've got a collusive system that removes consumer power.

  16. Two problems on Could the Tumbleweed Rover Dominate Mars? · · Score: 1

    One, inability to use feedback to direct it towards interesting phenomena. Even if you can stop it, it doesn't mean you can get close enough to anomalous features on the surface. Two, lack of ability to escape local minima. I don't know how much of a problem this would be on mars, but I just went to death valley in February and saw the rows of tumbleweeds stuck on the fences and in crevices (useful if you plan to sprout and reproduce).

  17. Having traveled to lots of small Pacific islands on Fuel Cell Marvel "Bloom Box" Gaining Momentum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's a decent market for low-pollution electricity generators for cells and transmission towers in the small archipelagos to serve small villages.

  18. Another way to make harder than normal diamonds on Harder-Than-Diamond Natural Carbon Crystals Found · · Score: 4, Informative

    One can also make diamonds harder by isolating and using heavier isotopes. A diamond of purified carbon-13 is harder than a mix of 12,13,14. Man-made diamonds can actually be harder than naturally occurring ones.

  19. Re:Copyright or "cultural heritage"? on Mexico Wants Payment For Aztec Images · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ask Mexico to pay Israel (or would it be the Vatican) for any Christian icon, including crosses, Virgin Mary statues, and patron saint candles, and see what the response is.

  20. Re:Pandering to the Vagina Vote on McCain Picks Gov. Palin As Running Mate · · Score: 1

    It's so sad that so many Americans will fall for this trick.

    What's sad is that when Democrats run women, it's looked at as somehow genuine but when Republicans run a woman it's looked at as pandering.

    Sure, Republicans aren't pandering. Professional women love nothing more than to be well-qualified, experienced, hard working and then get passed over for a younger, hotter, and far less experienced woman selected by an old guy in charge.