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User: Tanman

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  1. Re:Can You SHow Me on Hobbit Film Underwhelms At 48 Frames Per Second · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A better word for "120hz interpolation" is "morphing" -- when these televisions do their thing, what they are really doing is morphing between frames. You have a 24 fps movie and want it at 120hz? Then the new in-betweens will be averages of the previous and upcoming frames until you hit the new frame.

    It is very, very different from filming at a higher frame rate. The best I can tell you is to film yourself smiling. Then, take the first frame (straight faced) and the last frame (smiling), then use a program to morph from straight-faced to smiling. You will see just how creepy it is.

  2. Re:Is it "too real"? on Hobbit Film Underwhelms At 48 Frames Per Second · · Score: 4, Funny

    No, he's frame-capped!

    ba-dum-dum! The next show's at eleven!

  3. Lyle Myhur said it best on House Passes CISPA · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "When they took the 4th Amendment, I was quiet because I didn't deal drugs. When they took the 6th Amendment, I was quiet because I am innocent. When they took the 2nd Amendment, I was quiet because I don't own a gun. Now they have taken the 1st Amendment, and I can only be quiet."

        -- Lyle Myhur

  4. So you CAN make money with bitcoin! on Bitcoin Mining Startup Gets $500k In Venture Capital · · Score: 0

    BitCoin is now worth five Hundred THOUUUUSAND Dollars! Muahahahahahahahahaahaaaaaaaaa!

    Oh, wait, no, it is still worthless but these people are now worth 500k. Congrats to them for finding an angle to profit off bitcoin other than stealing someone else's bitcoin and then not being able to use them anyway.*

    *I don't know if you can actually use bitcoin for anything other than claiming how much they are worth in news stories

  5. In other quantum news . . . on Quantum Experiment Shows Effect Before Cause · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nevermind -- why bother telling you if you already know :-(

  6. Computer Monitors as an attack vector? on Expect Hundreds of Thunderbolt Devices, Says Intel · · Score: 2

    With direct pci access, how does this open up computer monitors as a new attack vector? I can see it now:

    Step 1) Buy computer monitor
    Step 2) Modify and return said monitor
    Step 3) Someone plugs "open box" or "refurbished" monitor into their computer
    Step 4) Profit!

  7. They don't know the antivirus group inside apple? on Apple Snubs Security Firm That Spotted Mac Botnet · · Score: 1

    I don't know what they are talking about. What antivirus group inside Apple?

  8. Why is this news? on Google Actually Patenting Its April Fools' Joke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did people suddenly forget all of the news regarding Google self-driving car technology? Did people honestly think a company would be publicly spending millions of dollars doing something like this and not patent it?

    https://www.google.com/search?q=google+self+driving+car&tbm=nws

    Here is a bunch more "news" about google's self-driving cars.

  9. Lord of the Rings is a bad choice on Why Are Fantasy World Accents British? · · Score: 1

    Some things, like Game of Thrones on Another Planet are a good focus for the article. Lord of the Rings, however, is not. That series was written to establish British mythology because Tolkien wanted his culture to have stories to tell like Greek culture. Ergo, it is going to be with British accents.

  10. Re:Bundy on Japanese Court Orders Google To Turn Off Auto-Complete Function · · Score: 2

    No, this is not similar.

    The burned bodies were *at the resort* because there had been a huge explosion there that killed many people. The resort was trying to censor history of the event because, much like a house in which the previous occupants had all been murdered, it was affecting their business.

  11. People don't realize doctors can be sued for . . . on Doctors "Fire" Vaccine Refusers · · Score: 5, Informative

    . . . patient stupidity.

    If a doctor recommends a vaccine for a child, and the parents refuse the vaccine, then the child catches the flu and dies. Guess what? The doctor is open to litigation. It is a sad state of affairs, but the end result of that lawsuit is probably either settlement out-of-court or a judgment against the doctor. After all, why didn't the doctor educate the parents how they were wrong about autism risks? Why didn't the doctor show studies to the parents so they could have made a more educated decision? The fault will not be on the parents' heads -- at the very least the doctor will have to pay an attorney to defend from the inevitable lawsuit.

    Why should a doctor saddle up with 1) Patients that refuse care and 2) Legal risk. If I were a family physician and I had people putting themselves or dependents at risk against my medical advice (A.M.A.), I would "fire" them, too. In the end, we aren't talking about emergency care here. We are talking about medical maintenance, and they can find someone else.

  12. Re:If selling is legal.. on Selling Used MP3s Found Legal In America · · Score: 1

    Have you ever seen the headache that ensues when your raid controllers realize that only one of your drives has a file? Eee gads.

    Let me tell you, RAID 1 just means that you are twice as likely to be fucked and files cost 2x as much to store.

  13. Re:Have you been living under a rock for the last on Defendant Ordered To Decrypt Laptop Claims She Had Forgotten Password · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of one day, my brother and dad went up to Fort Campbell in Kentucky to play some paintball. The only people playing were them, one 13-year-old walk-on, and a squad of troops. Now, my brother and dad have a lot of experience. So they took the walk-on and let the 8 troops play on the same team.

    3 v 8

    The 13-year-old was eliminated every match. So were the 8 army guys. Neither my brother nor father was ever hit.

    It is hard to express how important experience is. In combat, it's strategy and nerves. I have no doubt that a bunch of 60-year-old vets would wipe the floor with 20-year-old people with less experience. They would have their shit together and would out-think and out-maneuver their opponent.

  14. I guess the DHS . . . (sunglasses) . . . on DHS Sends Tourists Home Over Twitter Jokes · · Score: 1, Funny

    . . . destroyed their vacation

    WAAAAaaaaoaooooooh!

  15. Re:What is this? on MIT Media Lab Rolls Out Folding Car · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is this car a part of the Volkswagen Center for Drivers Who Can't Park Good and Wanna Learn to Drive in the City Too?

  16. Re:What would be the libertarian solution? on Amateur UAV Pilot Exposes Texas River of Blood · · Score: 1

    Then you wake up and realize that Libertarianism is great in theory, but completely untenable in the real world.

    Kind of like communism, democracy, socialism -- in truth, all 'styles' of government end up being a hybrid that can function In The Real World. Even in America, the bastion of democracy, we really live in a semi-socialist republic, but the basic ideals are /based/ on democracy.

    LIbertarianism is no different -- it would not be a /pure/ libertarian government, but rather a government based on the tenant that the rules apply to everyone, and that individuals still have rights.

  17. Re:3d is not important on Makers Keep Flogging 3D TV, Viewers Keep Shrugging · · Score: 1

    You just said that HDTV was an improvement over NTSC, but then said that Blu-Ray, which is an even greater improvement than HDTV over the same resolution (DVD/NTSC), is not enough of an improvement.

    Most HDTV is 720, some over-the-airwaves is 1080i. BluRay is 1080p and has uncompressed audio. It's dramatically better. I don't understand the contradiction in your analysis.

  18. Re:Tech in schools is such a waste on Teachers Resist High-tech Push In Idaho Schools · · Score: 1

    I wonder what percentage of students in college today can calculate sine/cosine in radians without a calculator to give them the answer. I bet it is very few because most of them were raised thinking that using a calculator to get the answer right was important. To understand theory, someone needs to work through it. They need to prove the theory. You don't do that plopping answers in a calculator -- you do that by going through and manually examining the mechanics of the problem. You show your work.

    In the real world, once someone is supposed to know their stuff, sure use a calculator. It would be foolish not to. But the point of school is not to get the answer right. The point of school is to 1) Teach people how to learn to understand issues, and 2) Teach people basic theory in different subjects. Having a computer spoon-feed answers in math is a bad idea.

  19. Tech in schools is such a waste on Teachers Resist High-tech Push In Idaho Schools · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The best math teachers I ever had shared one thing in common -- they disallowed calculators in their class. And as fun as a kindle or ipad may be, I'd wager a hefty sum that reading a novel in paper is (at least currently) more intuitive and less of a barrier to the material than reading it electronically. I hate to be a "get off my lawn" type, but I feel that schools should be actively resisting any technological "aid" to teaching that is not something directly taught by the class.

    Math classes should be "show your work."
    Language, history, and Literature should be "show your notes."
    Intro to programming should be "show your algorithms" -- more switch design and less "hello world."

    I can see benefit to computers in more advanced programming courses, as well as in history courses that want to include videos and/or art. But really, there is very little place for a computer in sub-college school work. People need to learn to think on their feet.

    Just my $0.02.

  20. That isn't what increases autism rates on Could Assortative Mating Explain Autism? · · Score: 1

    What increases autism rates is an increase in the diagnosis of autism.

    I don't know if people have realized this, but nobody is an asshole anymore. Now people are 'borderline personality disorder' or 'aspergers' or 'bipolar' -- but people haven't changed, just diagnosis.

    Personally, I still think some people are still just assholes. Not that I don't ascribe to mental illness -- I most certainly do believe people can have those aforementioned conditions -- but I think problems are over-diagnosed and over-medicated.

  21. large storage of energy, huh? on Building Material Absorbs and Releases Heat · · Score: 1

    How does it react to common hazards ... such as fire? Boom? If it goes up like a pine tree then it isn't very good, imo.

  22. Re:Why take a slice from the developer . . . on Chinese Firm Launches Cloud-Based Mobile OS · · Score: 1

    I was more referring to the actual service. I figure most news-worthy chinese companies are probably quite well-established. Regardless of how much tech they export, though, it's still startup for cloud hosting.

  23. Why take a slice from the developer . . . on Chinese Firm Launches Cloud-Based Mobile OS · · Score: 1

    . . . when you can just take the development! Really, who is going to trust a:

    1) Free
    2) Chinese (with all the IP protection that supplies!)
    3) Cloud
    4) Startup

    service with their lifeblood development work? Anyone?

  24. Re:a shame on Judge OKs Wiretap Lawsuit Over Google Wi-Fi Sniffing · · Score: 2

    Even more than this, if you use a wireless phone then someone with simple radio equipment could easily listen in. Guess what? Still illegal.

    What Google did is wrong. I wonder if they were also logging SSIDs for networks with SSID broadcast off? It's trivial to still obtain that SSID, but wouldn't that be circumvention of protection?

  25. What about vs. inertial bombs? on Boeing's Enormous Navy Laser Cannon · · Score: 1

    Do lasers have any effectiveness vs inertial bombs? there are no combustibles to detonate.