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User: weiserfireman

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  1. Re:Desparate Microsoft pulls a "Sun Microsystems" on Microsoft To Open Source .NET and Take It Cross-Platform · · Score: 1

    One of the early developers of Excel, retired recently and bought a large farm near my home town.

  2. Re: Desparate Microsoft pulls a "Sun Microsystems" on Microsoft To Open Source .NET and Take It Cross-Platform · · Score: 4, Informative

    The early Sherlock Holmes Novels, and the Character of Sherlock Holmes entered Public Domain in the past year

    It does happen, we just don't notice most of the time. I noticed this time because the Arthur Conan Doyle Family filed a big lawsuit to try to keep it under copyright and lost.

  3. Re:People buy stuff without understanding is... on Website Peeps Into 73,000 Unsecured Security Cameras Via Default Passwords · · Score: 1

    People want their computers to be like their cars.

    They don't want to know what is happening under the hood. They just want to drive it.

    I find most computer guys are like car guys, they assume that everyone should know how the engine works, or should at least care.

    Nope, they want it to turn on every morning, take them where they want to go, and shut down at the end of the night with out ever knowing what makes all of it work.

  4. Re:Did they have a warrant? on Is the Outrage Over the FBI's Seattle Times Tactics a Knee-Jerk Reaction? · · Score: 2

    They had a warrant. FTA " Furthermore and most importantly, the FBI obtained a warrant before executing these activities."

    It was more spyware than malware though, but that is a distinction without a difference in the minds of most people.

  5. I was just talking about this with my wife... on We Are All Confident Idiots · · Score: 5, Interesting

    She asked me, "how do you know you are a good computer technician"

    Me, "because I know how little I really know. When I was a good amateur, I thought I knew a lot, and was confident, but now, I know so much more that I know what I don't know. That makes me a good technician."

    She was confused, but I now I know there there is a scientific name for what I was trying to explain.

  6. Re:Hold on a minute on Developers, IT Still Racking Up (Mostly) High Salaries · · Score: 1

    The chart didn't say that those kinds of wages were common for programmers.

    It said for people in the $100-200k salary range, programmers were common.

    there is a big difference. $100k+ jobs aren't "common".

  7. Re:Hold on a minute on Developers, IT Still Racking Up (Mostly) High Salaries · · Score: 1

    Part of what determines pay is
    1. how difficult is it to find qualified people
    2. does the position help you make more money, or is it an expense

    Software developers help companies make more money. It is the Add in Value-Add. They are the equivalent of the machines in a machine shop. Without them, what is the point in being in business. If you are a software company you pay what you need to pay, to recruit and retain the best developers you can.

    Teachers work for a government agency. It won't turn a profit. The agency collect tax dollars for existing and teachers are an expense. There really isn't any competition to recruit the best ones. People pay lip service to the idea of recruiting the best ones, but they really don't. Education wise, it compares to nurses and architects. Benefit wise, it is one of the best in the country. Some parts of the country have trouble recruiting new teachers. But others don't . A school district will never pay more than required to have a teacher in the classroom, talent be damned. In fact, I think school districts would rather hire fresh young faces out of college, and pay them starting wages than experienced master teachers who will cost them 2x-3x as much.

  8. Re:Fission = bad, but not super-bad on Fusion and Fission/LFTR: Let's Do Both, Smartly · · Score: 2

    I have always felt the problem of fission waste disposal has been overblown.

    If the goal is "walk away safe", then fission fuel is walk away safe in about 300 years too. The high level radiation emitted by the fission products comes from cesium and strontium and in 300 years, it will all be gone. Leaving low level radioactives, Uranium and a tiny amount of plutonium. In 300 years, the used rods will emit the same level of radiation as the unused rods. Since plutonium is an alpha emitter, the used rod will effectively not emit any radiation from plutonium. You could store one under your couch and not suffer any ill effects.

    Reason why the US doesn't reprocess nuclear fuel rods anymore is that the Dept of Energy realized that as long as the fuel pellets remain intact, the uranium and plutonium is entrapped in the metallurgical structure of the fuel pellets. For the uranium and plutonium to be released back into the environment they will have to be melted down. If the pellets are unchanged, we could probably recycle them back into a new reactor in 300 years even.

  9. Re:Let me get this right on Bill Gates: Piketty's Attack on Income Inequality Is Right · · Score: 2

    The subsidy is the thing I hate the most about Fair Tax.

    It perpetuates the myth that Money comes for free from the Government. Develops even more people that budget their expenses around their government check

  10. Re:credibility of article is doubtful on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    yes, 8, typo, 2 per engine room

    Part of that was for redundancy. They didn't know how reliable they would be long term. Over engineering at it's finest

  11. Re:credibility of article is doubtful on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    The Enterprise used very small reactors, which is why they had 9 of them.

    Nimitz and later classes used larger reactors, which is why they only have 2

  12. Re:Ugh blowhard city on Password Security: Why the Horse Battery Staple Is Not Correct · · Score: 1

    I agree with his contention that we need to start teaching people about password managers.

    I have been using one for 2 years, my wife just found out last week. She was furious. She struggles with trying to come up with good passwords all the time. Based on past experience, she does come up with good ones. The last one I know about is 13 characters long.

    Password managers make the process of having a different password for every website trivial. Some of them will generate random usernames too.

    Mine generates 10 character passwords, by default. Capitalization, Symbols, Numbers and lower case randomly throughout.

  13. In a National Sales Tax plan

    It doesn't matter how much Wealth someone has. Who cares how much wealth someone else has? We don't tax Wealth in the US. We tax Income

    Wealth doesn't matter with Sales Tax, because we would be taxing spending. That inherited wealth that moves from generation to generation? Who cares how much money someone has in the bank doing nothing. When they spend it and try to improve their quality of life, it gets taxed.

    It is a shallow and covetous person who cares about how big someone else's bank account is. What we really care about is how that person spends their money to give themselves a better standard of living than their neighbors.

  14. I've always said the exceptions in a National Sales Tax would be

    1. Food - All Food
    2. Health Care/Medicine, including OTC
    3. Clothing under $100
    4. Primary Residence - have to apply for refund, demonstrating it is primary residence, this one will get complicated

    Those things take care of the truly poor.

  15. Evergreen Supertanker 747 on A DC-10 Passenger Plane Is Perfect At Fighting Wildfires · · Score: 1

    This is an amazing water bomber. It drops from so high, the water just mists down like light rain.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E...

    Because it is a pressurized system, they can control how much they dump where.

    For example, maybe they do 4 drops from 1 tank load, 25% on each drop in 4 different locations

    Yes, I am a wildland firefighter, I have been on fires where these planes were working
    (Engineboss, Strike Team Leader in Training)

  16. hahaha on Court: Car Dealers Can't Stop Tesla From Selling In Massachusetts · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I love the courts logic.

    Dealer Franchise Laws were prevented to promote the Franchise model.

    If a car company sells franchises in the State, it can't then open Company Stores and undercut their Franchises.

    But if the Car Company has no franchises, there is no one being hurt.

    Car Dealerships can't sue because they don't like a new Car Company's Sales Model.

    Reality is the Franchise owners were licking their chops thinking of all the money they would make selling Teslas in their dealerships. They got butt hurt when they found out Tesla wasn't going to sell them Franchises.

  17. Re:Yeah right, "diability claims" on Social Security Administration Joins Other Agencies With $300M "IT Boondoggle" · · Score: 2

    I was in a meeting with our Workman's Comp Carrier recently

    A representative of the carrier said "If a person doesn't return to work in 6 months, the odds are they will never work again in their life".

    Made sense, 6 months is the disability term required to get SSI

  18. Re:Here we go... on MIT's Ted Postol Presents More Evidence On Iron Dome Failures · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Israel's pre-1960 borders? The ones were the West Bank belonged to Jordan and Gaza belonged to Egypt?

    If it brought a real chance at peace, I believe Israel would agree to that. But Jordan doesn't want the West Bank anymore. Egypt doesn't want Gaza. Israel's pre-1960 borders still would not create a country called Palestine.

    Jordan and Egypt don't want to deal with the Palestinian problem anymore than Israel does.

  19. Re:Remote Kill Switch. on The First Person Ever To Die In a Tesla Is a Guy Who Stole One · · Score: 1

    Since GM runs ads about how they can remotely kill OnStar equipped vehicles, I am sure that if the capability exists in Tesla Cars, they wouldn't need a warrant to do it. They would only need authorization from the owner. Only time Tesla would need a warrant from the police is if the police are chasing the Owner and the Owner won't grant authorization

  20. Re:Jurisdiction on The Government Can No Longer Track Your Cell Phone Without a Warrant · · Score: 1

    I believe that this is a split from the 5th Circuit who ruled warrants are not required for this data because 3rd party doctrine. It can''t be a search of your private information because it isn't your information, it is Verizon's or AT&T or Sprint. It is about you, but it isn't yours.

    Thereby increasing the likelihood that this will eventually make its way to the Supreme Court

    It may be time for the Supreme Court to address this issue directly. But they ruled just a few years ago that pager records didn't require warrants.

  21. But this is a light fire year on Studies: Wildfires Worse Due To Global Warming · · Score: 4, Informative

    Every year there are devastating fires somewhere. But we have to look at the acreage and number of fires.

    Last year was a light fire year. About 20% lighter than the 10 year average.

    So far this year, we are about 15% behind the 10 year average in the number of wildland fires. And we are about 50% behind in the number of acres burned.

    http://www.nifc.gov/fireInfo/n...

    Honestly, I still expect overall the world's climate will be getting wetter with global warming. There might be some regions that will get drier, but warmer oceans mean more evaporation. Warmer temperatures mean the air can hold more moisture resulting in higher humidity. Eventually that higher humidity has to result in more rainfall somewhere. But even if higher humidity doesn't result in rain, higher humidity does result in less aggressive fire behavior.
          I am not a climate scientist. I have a lot of people scoff at me when I say this, but they never explain how I am wrong. I can read the projections but the projections never seem to include the increased levels of ocean evaporation that I expect.

  22. Re:now I never looked into it on California City Considers Restarting Desalination Plant To Fight Drought · · Score: 1

    yes, this is true. The Pacific ocean off the coast of California is cold. The water has to be preheated. Using your outgoing warm brine, and pure water, to preheat the incoming water is just good sense.

  23. Re:Distillation versus Reverse Osmosis on California City Considers Restarting Desalination Plant To Fight Drought · · Score: 1

    Flash type vacuum distillation plants are very common and very well understood technology.

    I can just about guarantee the desalination plant that Santa Barbara built 20 years ago was this type. Reverse Osmosis plants were brand new cutting edge technology back then.

  24. Re:lol, wut ? on California City Considers Restarting Desalination Plant To Fight Drought · · Score: 1

    I was a nuclear technician in the Navy. We used Pressurized Water Reactors. My understanding is that most US commercial reactors are pressurized water reactors too.

    Primary coolant loop is pressurized water. Primary Loop is pressurized and never boils, never produces steam. Pressurized so it can carry lots of heat without boiling. Water transports the heat to a Steam Generator in a secondary cooling loop. The water in the secondary loop boils and produces steam. The steam is used to spin steam turbines attached to generators and main engines.

    Lots and lots of steam.

  25. Re:And with that yoiu get POWER! on California City Considers Restarting Desalination Plant To Fight Drought · · Score: 4, Informative

    Their mothballed desalination plant won't be a reverse osmosis system. It will be an older flash distillation plant.

    Probably steam powered. I ran and supervised the operation of 2 multi-stage 100,000 gallon per day flash distillation plants in the Navy. They have very few moving parts and were very reliable. They just took a ton of steam to operate. Steam for the ejectors that pulled the vacuum, and steam for the heating elements. Lots of electricity for the pumps.

    But they are talking about a plant that can produce millions of gallons per day of fresh water. It will be very clean and soft too. Expect 0 hardness on the output. They probably will be adding minerals so the output has good flavor.