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  1. Steorn and Voodoo Science on 1 MW Cold Fusion Plant Supposedly To Come Online · · Score: 1
  2. 5% on Moon Younger Than Previously Thought · · Score: 1

    Just to put it into perspective, 200 MY younger would be a little less than 5% younger than previously theorized.

  3. Re:Hmmm on 8 Grams of Thorium Could Replace Gasoline In Cars · · Score: 2

    From the Wikipedia article quoted: "Sylvania was experimenting with large-scale production of thorium metal from thorium dioxide. Part of the process of shutting down this experiment was the reprocessing and burning of thorium metal powder sludges that went unprocessed during the experiment. It was during the incineration of this material that the explosion occurred."

    Emphasis on "large-scale" and "burning". Chemical combustion of 8g of thorium is NOT going to get your car very far.

    As has been mentioned more than a few times already, this is either a scam or delusion. See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steorn

  4. Re:Where we should have been years ago already on China Starts Molten Salt Nuclear Reactor Project · · Score: 1

    This almost makes me cry:

    http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/12/ff_new_nukes/all/1

    "Weinberg and his men proved the efficacy of thorium reactors in hundreds of tests at Oak Ridge from the â(TM)50s through the early â(TM)70s. But thorium hit a dead end. Locked in a struggle with a nuclear- armed Soviet Union, the US government in the â(TM)60s chose to build uranium-fueled reactors â" in part because they produce plutonium that can be refined into weapons-grade material. The course of the nuclear industry was set for the next four decades, and thorium power became one of the great what-if technologies of the 20th century."

  5. Microsoft Spokesman: "We are winning!" on Microsoft Ups Online War, Says Google's 'Failing' · · Score: 1
  6. Re:Aero on Ubuntu Moves Away From GNOME · · Score: 1

    >> what more do you want?

    > Amiga OS. I miss it. Or if I can't have that, a clone of the Windows OS so I'm no longer locked into the Microsoft Monopoly when running MS software. Something like Wine but bigger.

    Aside from the fact that it is still in alpha 12 years after it was started, what you're describing is ReactOS: http://www.reactos.org/

    But FYI, so long as you need to run apps designed for "the Microsoft Monopoly", you will always be locked into it in.

  7. Re:blah on Churchill Accused of Sealing UFO Files, Fearing Public Panic · · Score: 1

    Please see

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pledge_of_Allegiance#Addition_of_the_words_.22under_God.22
    and
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elk_Grove_Unified_School_District_v._Newdow#Quotations_and_legal_detail

    Quotations and legal detail From the 9th circuit hearing:

            * Decided - the 1954 insertion of "under God" was made "to recognize a Supreme Being" and advance religion at a time "when the government was publicly inveighing against atheistic communism"--a fact which (according to the court) the federal government did not dispute. The court also noted that when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the act which added the phrase "under God," he also announced "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our Nation and our people to the Almighty."

            * Judge Alfred Goodwin from the 9th Circuit remarked: "A profession that we are a nation 'under God' is identical, for Establishment Clause purposes, to a profession that we are a nation 'under Jesus,' a nation 'under Vishnu,' a nation 'under Zeus,' or a nation 'under no god,' because none of these professions can be neutral with respect to religion."

  8. Re:How secure on Bitcoin Releases Version 0.3 · · Score: 1

    They can be washed...

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/bizarre/7095561.html

    "Low-denomination U.S bank notes change hands until they fall apart here in Africa, and the bills are routinely carried in underwear and shoes through crime-ridden slums. Some have become almost too smelly to handle, so Zimbabweans have taken to putting their $1 bills through the spin cycle and hanging them up to dry with clothes pins alongside their sheets and clothes."

  9. Re:Inertial Dampeners??? on Inertial Mass Separate From Gravitational Mass? · · Score: 1

    Forget "cosmic dust"; at near-light speeds, even the occasional hydrogen atom becomes a menace. An excerpt from http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/02/17/star_trek_scuppered/

    ---
    Professor William Edelstein of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine explained to New Scientist that while interstellar space has just a couple of hydrogen atoms per cubic centimetre, as the crew of the Enterprise hit the gas pedal, a compression effect would greatly increase the number of atoms hitting the spacecraft.

    As the spaceship reached 99.999998 per cent of the speed of light, "hydrogen atoms would seem to reach a staggering 7 teraelectron volts", which for the crew "would be like standing in front of the Large Hadron Collider beam".

    This is a very bad thing, because humans in the path of this ray would receive a dose of ionising radiation of 10,000 sieverts, and as Bones McCoy would doubtless confirm, the lethal dose is 6 sieverts.

    The result? Death in one second.
    ---

  10. Re:Pentium 90 for sale on The Big Technical Mistakes of History · · Score: 1

    FWIW, I note that some of the Atom-based motherboards seem to be fanless, e.g. Intel BOXD410PT:

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813121398

    And its WAY faster than a Pentium 50! :)

  11. Re:In other news on File Sharing Remains a Perk of College Life · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Copying is not theft.
    Stealing a thing leaves one less left
    Copying it makes one thing more;
    that's what copying's for."

    Source: http://questioncopyright.org/minute_memes/copying_is_not_theft

  12. Re:Not an April Fools' on "Install Other OS" Feature Removed From the PS3 · · Score: 1

    Can't; the link I was going to use was 404...

  13. Collapse on Modeling the Economy As a Physics Problem · · Score: 1

    The ghost of Christmas future?
    http://www.collapsemovie.com/

    So if "Energy conservation or efficiency doesn't really save energy, but instead spurs economic growth and accelerated energy consumption." then the trick would be to create conservation/efficiency without spurring economic growth... so compensate with a tax at the same time?

    e.g. mandate more fuel efficient cars and increase the tax on gasoline at the same time to make the average cost of driving cost/km the same in the future as it does now...

  14. Its ok if you have a prostate... on Pornography Outlawed In Ukraine, Unless It's "Medicinal" · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn3942-masturbating-may-protect-against-prostate-cancer.html

    "A team in Australia led by Graham Giles of The Cancer Council Victoria in Melbourne asked 1079 men with prostate cancer to fill in a questionnaire detailing their sexual habits, and compared their responses with those of 1259 healthy men of the same age. The team concludes that the more men ejaculate between the ages of 20 and 50, the less likely they are to develop prostate cancer."

  15. Re:Oh noes! on Secret EU Open Source Migration Study Leaked · · Score: 1

    As the dad of a four year old who uses flash in Ubuntu Linux, I have to ask, what distro/version are you running?

    In 9.04 (and for the last few releases as I recall), when Ubuntu encounters a flash file in Firefox for the first time, it *offers* to install Flash.

    When you set up the system, you could install the flashplugin-installer package which downloads and installs it for you. If you enabled the Canonical Partner repository when you set it up, you can install adobe-flashplugin and then its all done.

    Xvid would require a codec download; similar to the flash plugin, Ubuntu will offer to do that when you try to run an Xvid-encoded video file without the codec installed; alternately just installing a big batch of gstreamer plugins when you first set up the system will ensure you don't have to install codecs later (I would recommend: gstreamer0.10-ffmpeg, gstreamer0.10-plugins-bad, gstreamer0.10-plugins-bad-multiverse, gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly, gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse).

    DVDs are almost all encrypted and its a little more work; you need to add a suitable repository (Medibuntu) and install the libdvdcss2 package.

    Now, if you can't be bothered to act as the OEM for your sons or invest a couple minutes figuring out how to help them, that's one thing, but this isn't 1999; Linux in general, and Ubuntu specifically, is easy to use and there's quite a lot of help available, e.g. http://ubuntuforums.org/

  16. Re:Well, not quite... on Shuttleworth Says Ubuntu Can't Just Be Windows · · Score: 1

    This, BTW, is why Windows systems are sometimes less expensive than their Linux counterparts; Windows is adding negative value to the system, while Linux can only hope for a $0 cost ;)

  17. Re:Krang on Device Keeps Lungs Breathing Outside the Body · · Score: 1
  18. This was already known on What Bird Feathers and Beer Foam Have In Common · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Unlike with most colors in nature - which are produced by pigments - the bright blue colors of Bluebirds and Blue Jays are actually produced by sponge-like nanostructures. These structures are formed in quite the same way as beer foam."

    This has been known for some time; sufficient quantities of beer can lead to pink elephants. There's some documentary footage here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nwNPaYoTY8

  19. Re:Obviously.... on MS Confirms Six Different Versions of Windows 7 · · Score: 1

    I wish we had fewer distros of linux. And, irony of ironies, probably the same people going HAHAHAHA here are to be found in the recent post where prophet Linus declared that billions of distros were greatest thing around on the monkeysphere.

    The thing with Linux distributions is that while there are a huge number of them, there are only a few major ones (note how the 'popularity' rapidly drops off on DistroWatch). In fact, there are probably no more major Linux distros than Vista/Win7 versions. And even among those, they aren't all equally popular; see Google Trends There has basically been a single distro leading the pack since mid-2006: Ubuntu. So without forced interference, a single distro has emerged as the leader. A positive feedback loop with OEMs (e.g. Dell) should keep it in first place unless there is a major disruption. Now as for Vista/Win7... Really, all there is is Ultimate and various crippleware versions of it.

  20. Re:Obviously.... on MS Confirms Six Different Versions of Windows 7 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    if M$ used the Linux kernel for Windows [...] What sort of effect would that have on the OS?

    It would have the effect of all existing Windows software not working anymore.

    So basically indistinguishable from a regular new Windows release? ;) Simple joking aside, I wonder how good a 'Mojave Experiment' using Linux+Wine would be in terms of fooling average Vista users... Based on reactions I've seen from simply showing people Ubuntu, I imagine pretty good.

  21. Helium-3 Harvesting? on Pieces Coming Together For NASA's New Spacecraft · · Score: 1

    "The space agency is offering about $1 million grants under the Ralph Steckler/Space Grant Space Colonization Research and Technology Development program that has been established to help support a broad range of human activity in space that, for the most part, is not reliant on Earth's resources NASA said."

    I wonder if that will include harvesting lunar Helium-3 for fusion research...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3

  22. Re:Finally.. on BMW Introduces GINA Concept Car, Covered In Fabric · · Score: 1

    My gas tank? You mean your liquid hydrogen tank? Or batteries? ;) Metallic hydrogen fuel cells. Duh! ^_-
  23. Linux makes things even easier! on FBI Wiretapping Audit Secrets Uncovered Via Ctrl+C · · Score: 2, Informative

    In Ubuntu if you use the default PDF viewer (Evince), you can see the "sensitive information" in the tables by simply HIGHLIGHTING the text.

    No need to even use the keyboard to copy/paste the data! ;)

  24. Re:but... on First Release Candidate of Wine 1.0 Released · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've actually tested to see if Wubi can start in Wine (the answer is yes, though it depends on the version; rev 507 from http://wubi-installer.org/devel/minefield/ starts) I didn't push the install button though...

  25. Re:serious question on First Release Candidate of Wine 1.0 Released · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Why would I want to use Wine when I can just run windows in a virtual machine?"

    You don't have a lot of spare RAM? (e.g. using VirtualBox requires enough RAM for the host OS + the RAM for the virtualized OS + the RAM for the app running in it; with Wine you eliminate the need for the virtualized OS)

    You don't want to buy a Windows license/pirate Windows for a single app? (or more generally, you don't want Microsoft code on your system if you can help it? :)