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User: Fuji+Kitakyusho

Fuji+Kitakyusho's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 99

  1. Re:Everybody needs a little revolution now & a on Iran Slows Internet Access Before Student Protests · · Score: 1

    This time around, the revolution WILL be televised (but apparently, just not in web-streamed 1080p).

  2. A patent may not be the best course of action. on Should I Publish Or Patent? · · Score: 1

    Here's why: Your patent only protects you in the country in which you register it, meaning that to retain control of your product you may need to file separately in each jurisdiction - Canada, USA, UK, etc. Also, it is a common misconception that a patent protects you from someone stealing your idea and using it commercially. This is not the case. What the patent does, is afford you legal standing so that when you happen to discover someone who has stolen your idea and used it commercially, you can subsequently sue them for compensation. Not only does this necessitate being proactive in researching possible violations on a continual basis, but should you discover an infringement, the subsequent process in the courts is generally much more expensive than the cost of the patent, and these costs must be considered in any cost/benefit analysis of a patent application. Having a patent without the resources or the means to enforce it is as good as not having the patent at all. Finally, your patent remains valid for a definite time period, after which time the intellectual property of the patent falls into the public domain. The idea here is to give an inventor a reasonable opportunity to recover development costs and make some money on a commercial implementation of the patent material, but to eventually let the intellectual property into the public domain in order to further the sum body of knowledge and technological development. By contrast, if the details of your invention can be obscured in a manner that prevents reverse-engineering, retaining your invention in the form of a trade-secret is often a better choice, as the secret lasts indefinitely - providing you with the opportunity to profit from the invention for as long as you can successfully keep the details out of the public domain.

  3. Re:Awesome. on Ex-Astronaut Developing Plasma Rocket To Revitalize NASA · · Score: 1

    Orange Soda? This is rocket science, they use Tang.

    Don't we all...

  4. Missing the point. on "Right To Repair" Bill Advances In Massachusetts · · Score: 1

    Why does a "lucrative service business" exist at all? Is it naive of me to think that the effort that the car manufacturers put forth in lobbying for the protection of proprietary service might be better spent on developing vehicles which don't break down? Walking looks better every day.

  5. A possible solution on Taking Showers Can Be Harmful To Your Health · · Score: 1

    is an entirely new shower head design which incorporates a Venturi tube drawing from an antibacterial cleanser reservoir. Clean and decontaminate without having to store bottles / bars within the stall. As an added bonus, if you formulated the cleanser correctly it could also act as a hands-free shower stall cleaner.

  6. So SPAM isn't really SPAM. It's terrorism. on Terrorists Convicted With Help of NSA E-mail Intercepts · · Score: 1

    If email SPAM is really terrorism in disguise, does that give us any more teeth with which to pursue spammers? I have this dream where busloads of Viagra and mortgage spammers are unceremoniously dropped off at Gitmo pending "further investigation".

  7. Why not send convicts? on Sending Astronauts On a One-Way Trip To Mars · · Score: 1

    Take a bunch of death row inmates or lifers and seed the new martian prison colony. Henceforth, you eliminate the capital punishment debate - just give them a one way ticket to Mars. (Calling Snake Pliskin?)

  8. This is just software, correct? on Protesting China's Required Censorship Software · · Score: 1

    As software, and not on-chip instructions, (ROM firmware or BIOS), is this not trivial to defeat? Or do I misunderstand? Also, is this going to be deployed for all architectures and operating systems, or do users working with more esoteric hardware / OS combinations get a pass? Also, why do this at the user level at all, when any filtering could be enforced at the ISP level? How effective are Tor, proxies and encryption at evading filtering measures in China? Is there any access (via satellite or other source) to internet feeds outside of Chinese government control?

  9. Fascinating stuff on Voyager Clue Points To Origin of the Axis of Evil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have been following the Voyager updates with some interest over the past couple of years. I find it astounding that we are still managing to get useful data from these vehicles which were launched back in the 70's. Certainly, they have exceeded their design mission, and only advances in large aperture radio coverage here on earth have allowed continued communication. To put this in perspective - the one way light time from earth to both vehicles is now on the order of about 30 hours! Interestingly, the vehicles are adorned with a message to prospective lifeforms who would encounter the spacecraft long in the future - a "golden record", which is technology long since obsolete here on earth during only the short 30 year span of the mission. Food for thought.

  10. Duct tape is only half of the equation. on Ultra-Dense Deuterium Produced · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it doesn't move and it should: WD-40. If it moves and it shouldn't: duct tape.

  11. Re:HS chem may be a fading memory but... on Lithium In Water "Curbs Suicide" · · Score: 1

    Came here to say exactly this. Although, IIRC, Lithium reacts, but not explosively. As you go down in the alkali metals (lithium's column in the periodic table), the violence of the reaction increases. Lithium --> Sodium --> Potassium --> Rubidium --> Cesium --> Francium. I think you can get a violent explosion at Sodium or greater.

  12. You can power down my PC over my dead body on Why IT Won't Power Down PCs · · Score: 1

    You'd need to, to get the key to my office to do so. Ordinarily, that wouldn't have been an issue, but for the fact that the engineering simulations I had to run needed to process overnight, what with the lack of an office supercomputer and all. At first, I thought it was just bad luck that my default desktop was showing - that somehow, the simulator had crashed and dumped to the desktop. That is, until I noticed the correlation between this event and the fact that my carpet was clean and trash emptied every time. Now, with the door securely closed and locked, I don't have to worry about losing work, but I do have to clean my own goddamned office. If shutdowns were IT policy, common sense would dictate that there would be some sort of user consultation first - ergo, heed my warning and lock your offices now.

  13. point of law question on Appeals Court Says RIAA Hearing Can't Be Streamed · · Score: 1

    Is there such thing as Amicus Curiae after the fact?

  14. Re:News in english about the trial: on Pirate Bay Operators Stand Trial On Monday · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but there is a widely held misconception about double jeopardy being functionally equivalent to immunity. This is not the case. An offence comprises both an action and a time of occurence. As an example, if you are tried and falsely convicted of murder, serve your sentence until release and subsequently murder the person whom you were accused of murdering, that constitutes a wholly separate offence for which you can be further prosecuted. In the case of ongoing activity, there are a plethora of offences one may choose to prosecute.

  15. I don't understand all of the fuss about this. on Miscalculation Invalidates LHC Safety Assurances · · Score: 1

    Everyone is talking about giant black holes that will swallow the earth as if that's a bad thing.

  16. re: gridlock in the sky on FAA Greenlights Satellite-Based Air Traffic Control System · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What good does it do to reduce gridlock in the sky if you can't simultaneously reduce gridlock in airport security?

  17. think tactically on How To Cut In Line and Not Get Caught · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have always found that the best way is to carry two cups of coffee, looking for someone near the front of the line who looks like they could use a cup (helps if it is cold out), offer them the second cup, strike up a brief conversation and slide through.

  18. Re:Just A thought. on US No Longer the World's Internet Hub · · Score: 1

    Regime change in China? Seriously? Where, precisely, do you expect the US to get the money to fund the necessary military expenditure? Borrow it from China again?

  19. Re:Get your affairs in order, people on Large Hadron Collider Goes Live September 10th · · Score: 1

    I still can't believe I did that, but nevertheless, replace all instances of C with O, replace 12.011 with 15.9994, and recompile.

  20. Re:Get your affairs in order, people on Large Hadron Collider Goes Live September 10th · · Score: 1

    Holy brain fart. That'll teach me to post after working all day...

  21. Re:Get your affairs in order, people on Large Hadron Collider Goes Live September 10th · · Score: 2, Informative

    7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 atoms (7E27) / 6.0221E23 atoms/mole = 11623.85214 moles of atoms. Using the oversimplification of the body being entirely water, you have a 2:1 ratio of hydrogen atoms to carbon. Thus, 11623.85214 / 3 = 3874.617382 moles of water molecules. 3874.617382 x 12.011 g / atom C (46538.02937 g C total), + (3874.617382 * 2 * 1.00797) g / atom H (7810.996164 g H total) = 54349.02553 grams, or 54.34902553 kilograms, or 119.8190911 pounds (* 2.20462262 lbs / kg) - approximately two-fifths of the weight of a 300 pound American. Stick that in your pipe and --induce high energy collisions with-- it.

  22. Re:The suggestions from TFA on ABA Judges Get an Earful About RIAA Litigations · · Score: 1

    Isn't that copyright infringement?

  23. A slightly more indirect solution on Best Way To Get Back a Stolen Computer? · · Score: 1

    Upload terrorism plans against US targets to the machines (along with a bunch of child porn just for good measure), and set the wheels in motion to have the theives disappeared in Gitmo.

  24. Re:So let me get this straight... on WTF? NC Offers to Replace 10,000 License Plates · · Score: 2, Funny

    Serously - who gets offended by random letter combinations? Now KMA, STFU and GBTW.

  25. Re:Marketing on First Caller-ID Spoofers Punished · · Score: 1

    It never occurred to me that a telemarketing call could lead to a physical encounter with an associated person. Despite the fact that I am generally a law-abiding professional with a strong sense of ethical responsibility, I'm not sure I could pass up the opportunity to lay a beating on such a person and leave them broken and bleeding in an alley somewhere. Human nature is a funny thing.