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User: gafisher

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  1. The Performance Envelope Stops Here on German Foreign Office Going Back To Windows · · Score: 1

    "Users have, it claims, ... missing functionality, a lack of usability and poor interoperability.""

    Sounds familiar.

  2. Re:Actually PRO-Science on New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education · · Score: 1

    The law goes far beyond 5th hour biology at Ridgemont High, as any state-funded college is a public school. But even accepting your premise, should a High School science teacher be punished for contradicting an outdated textbook or for exposing her class to controversial new discoveries? That's currently possible.

    The real issue is not science but censorship.

  3. Actually PRO-Science on New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education · · Score: 1

    There is a very fine line between what is settled fact and what is merely dogma. Galileo is commonly presented as the "science vs. religion" poster boy, but what he was opposed for was teaching things which contradicted the accepted science of his day. Copernicus is an even better example, overturning a complete and accepted cosmology which had defined much of science for centuries. Boyle and Priestly were teaching "anti-science" when they disproved the well-accepted Phlogiston theory. In fact, virtually every advance in science has come at the expense of what had previously been accepted as true and, in most senses, settled.

    To be sure, many challenges to the accepted views of the world around us are likely to be spurious, and some may even be ludicrous, but to outlaw such challenges is precisely to outlaw true science by prohibiting the questions and hypotheses which define the scientific method. If the New Mexico law protects even one Einstein or, to be sure, a single Darwin, it will have advanced science more than a hundred laws which would mire us in a sea of "settled" but incorrect understanding.

  4. Promising on Magnetic Brain Stimulation Makes Learning Easier · · Score: 2

    TMS / TCMS has also shown promise in the treatment of migraine [ http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laneur/article/PIIS1474-4422(10)70054-5/abstract ] and a simple handheld device has been tested [ http://www.science20.com/news_releases/transcranial_magnetic_stimulator_claims_to_zap_away_migraines ] with positive results. The magnetic fields involved are much more intense than environmental magnetism, but the sensitivity of the brain to these effects raises questions about prolonged exposure to electromagnetic noise.

  5. Re:Rap? on The Continued Censorship of Huckleberry Finn · · Score: 1

    What it means is that if we want to preserve classic literature we'll have to rewrite it as rap.

  6. Re:I have a much more ambitious vision on The Continued Censorship of Huckleberry Finn · · Score: 1

    Without a past we can have no future. If I begin with the premise that "I am a good person" then not only will I have little incentive to say "I can do better" but in fact I won't have any idea what "better" really means. Conversely, if I can look back on my own or our collective past I may shudder in horror and say "I want to be as far from that as I can get."

  7. Overcomplicated on Reverse Engineering Doctor Who Into Color · · Score: 1

    All they really need to do is to give the prints to Turner.

  8. Busy Morning? on iPhone Alarms Hit By New Year's Bug · · Score: 5, Funny

    We've gotta nap for that!

  9. Voc-Ed or Navel Gazing? on Why Teach Programming With BASIC? · · Score: 1
    The perennial question ought to be "Why should we teach kids to program?" Was it the essence of the industrial revolution to teach every child to operate a spinning jenny or a steam engine? Society's goal ought not to be to make each student a master of the newest tool, but to teach them how to live in a society which that new tool has changed. Some will naturally gravitate toward the technological side, and may become invaluable for the abilities they develop, but the world does not need a population of composers, designers, writers, builders, leaders and more who are first of all amateur programmers.

    Certainly those of us who write code needed this vocational education, but it is shortsighted or arrogant to think everyone else does.

  10. Re:And so on Pickens Wind-Power Plan Comes To a Whimpering End · · Score: 1

    "Alternative Energy" of any sort is heavily subsidized. Pickens' problem was distribution -- he expected to generate power in the North Texas region and get it to the big demand centers by selling it into the existing grid at near retail rates; inconveniently the "existing grid" didn't amount to much in the desolate area where the wind towers were to go.

  11. Re:Who'll profit? on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    Pure science is generally defined as a process of studying what already is, such as energy, matter and scientific principles. The development of processes is an example of applied science, which manipulates or combines the discoveries of pure science into something new, something which did not previously exist.

  12. Re:Who'll profit? on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    I'm not so sure, Hesiod, but I should be clear that I'm distinguishing "pure" science from "applied" science. Applications of pure science should be patentable, of course, just as applications of unpatentable things like steel, wood or aluminum are patentable, but in my opinion pure science is more like a raw material than a product.

  13. Re:Who'll profit? on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    Why should pure science be patentable?

  14. Re:Who'll profit? on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    The best "prize" system for encouraging innovation already exists, and you named it: "... inventing applications for it will make you rich." The patent system as it exists today functions almost exactly opposite to what it was intended to do, which was to share knowledge and ... encourage innovation. One severe failing in that system is the tolerance of preclusive patents, those filed specifically and only to keep a discovery off the market or to keep others from applying concepts which might compete with the patent-holder's core business. To end this practice patents should expire if they aren't developed into marketable form -- and actual products -- within, say, five years.

  15. Re:Sweet on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    Unless we find enough applications to make graphene really useful, it would just be an expensive way to store carbon. It would almost certainly be cheaper to turn pollution into pencil lead.

  16. It's about time on Graphene Can Be Made With Table Sugar · · Score: 1

    Finally -- a useful application for table sugar!

  17. NACK on In Florida, a Cell Phone Network With No Need For a Spectrum License · · Score: 2, Informative
    While these phones may very well scan for channels not being used at the moment by baby monitors and cordless phones, said baby monitors and cordless phones etc. aren't as accommodating, meaning your pseudo-cell call could presumably be interrupted at any moment by the sounds of a crying baby or a pizza order. Cheaper isn't always better.

    (I'll stick with my modified 10-meter 1KW CB radio ...)

  18. Art, not History on All Your Stonehenge Photos Are Belong To England · · Score: 5, Informative

    Stonehenge as we know it is a fairly modern structure, almost completely disconnected from what existed prior to what can only be called an "artistic" reconstruction in the early 1900s. Here can be found a fairly good summary of the story, which shows that "[Stonehenge] has been created by the heritage industry and is NOT the creation of prehistoric peoples." An online search for "Stonehenge rebuilt" brings up other articles, including (while they last!) photos, showing that commercial interests like English Heritage have a far better claim to Stonehenge than archeology or history. One more quote summarizes the issue: ""The instigators of the English heritage landscape were essentially amateurs, working by trial and error."

  19. Technical Manual on The Rise and Fall of America's Jet-Powered Car · · Score: 1

    Here. Pictures and everything for the curious.

  20. Re:Turbine - How noisy were they? on The Rise and Fall of America's Jet-Powered Car · · Score: 1

    Eerily quiet. Someone had one around my Michigan home town; the loud muffler crowd I hung out with was quite disappointed. Hear a "close-up" sample here.

  21. Forget CTU ... on Ideas For a Great Control Room? · · Score: 1

    ... what you're asking for sounds more like Dr. Strangelove.

  22. Job Security Expectations? on The Last of the Punch Card Programmers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    John Leavers invented those machines in 1812 and they're still in use. If two hundred years isn't job security, I don't know what is!

  23. Re:Computer programming via punch cards is useful on The Last of the Punch Card Programmers · · Score: 5, Funny

    I well remember punching decks of cards for my Computer Science classes, then "submitting" them to the guy behind the bank-teller window in the Mainframe Suite and waiting for my job to finish so another guy could hand me a thick stack of folded paper from the LinePrinter so I could see if my program had worked. I always got a laugh out of waiting an hour or more for my printout, which proclaimed on the second page that I had consumed .00058 seconds of CPU time -- talk about a responsive user interface!

  24. Re:So, how do one extract the energy? on New Material Can Store Vast Amounts of Energy · · Score: 1

    The end product, stored in vast underground reserves, is then recovered by drilling and refining, transported in liquid form, and converted back to energy through a process referred to as "combustion." The developers are certain there can be no negative impact and envision safe, clean "filling stations" someday dotting the landscape.

  25. Give it to Goodwill on What To Do With Old 802.11b Equipment? · · Score: 1

    Your local Goodwill will take it, clean it up and either find a good home for it or dispose of it responsibly. They might even come and pick it up if you've got enough stuff, and in the process you'll be helping the folks who Goodwill helps. I'd call it a Win-Win-Win if it didn't annoy the Mac users.