For those who actually want to know, its name came from 1984 and Big Brother. It serves as a reminder that with great power comes great responsibility. 20 years ago when created, Vern Paxson was not thinking about or anticipating fraternity culture connotations.
Every University, business and organization that receives grants has overhead rates. These vary from reasonable to ridiculous based on the organization.
These overhead funds then typically go into a larger, not grant specific, fund that is fungible. The spending out of that fund is then restricted not by grant guidelines, but by the general rules of the institution. Usually that is still somewhat restricted at a University, for example, that usually won't allow alcohol. However, businesses receiving grants generally have fewer restrictions.
If you want to look at how overhead is used out of those general funds, I'm certain you will find this at any recipient organization. I am in fact surprised this is all they found. The fact that they are only looking at NSF and focusing on politically controversial topics for their specific party is very suspect. Should we start looking at how defense contractors spend all of their overhead for DARPA awards? Would they even share that information like NEON did?
There is likely to be something similar to a placebo effect (in addition to confirmation bias and other psychological pitfalls) that will reinforce the idea that this works for officials there. If they believe it works, it is likely at least some bombers will, too. So it has a deterrent effect that is likely measurable. Therefore if they do some correlation studies later, they are likely to find places that do use these will have lower rates of incident (as long as you don't compare to places with actual bomb detection).
I have lots of email addresses, but I have never used a Comcast email address even though they are my ISP. I wonder how many customers would even get these messages.
I do research in the field of anonymization and can say that I agree with a lot of his points, but he takes each of them too far and sounds very alarmist. He seems to see things in a very binary way. One can have anonymization that is effective at preventing reversal for 99% of indviduals or certain types of attacks. For example, I may be able to release a data set that has almost a 0% chance of revealing any particular user but a 100% chance that someone could be revealed.
Anyway, one of the good points he brings out is how stupid the requirements in HIPAA are. One can anonymize with the safe harbor rules (from EU I think) which basically destroy information needed for most kinds of analysis, or they can get a statistician to certify that it has been statistically de-identified without any specific standard for what that means. So in practice you can get anything released if you hire the right statistician.
I see OCZ already released some sort of garbage collection tool, but it only works on Windows. Kind of annoying since I bought their "Mac Edition" drive for my MacBook. Hopefully they'll put this in a firmware update, too, and hopefully I won't have to boot DOS on my Mac to update the firmware with a utility that blows over my partition table this time. That was a lot of fun going from version 1.10 to 1.30 firmware.
1. Cut the wire where it is soldered to the speaker. You just need a second phone for your child porn.
2. Use a small digital camera and not a cell phone. Just remember to turn off the flash.
This is kind of like putting up a 10 mile long wall along the Mexican border to stop illegals. You can pretty much guarantee they won't go over the wall, but that is a pretty useless guarantee.
Man, I have been very disappointed with the switch from INsight to COmcast in Illinois. Even though they are using the same hardware locally, upload speeds (and download to some extent) have been severely reduced---over an order of magnitude. I don't run a server, but I sync my home and work computer with rsync scripts nightly, and it takes forever now. I am guessing they are doing a LOT more filtering and traffic carving which has screwed with throughput.
Look at the Cree XR-E (R2 flux bin) or the SSC P4 (V flux bin). They are pretty much there at around 120 lumens per watt, and these are in regular production. Hell, I have flashlights with these in them. And prototype LED's are getting up to 300 lumens/watt of visible light.
I forget the reference, but there is a paper from a few years ago that essentially proved nothing can ever beat a P-N junction in efficiency. LED's are the future.
And I won't buy one until my TV dies and I get an HD one. The majority of Americans still do not have HD TVs, and until they do, BR will still be small compared to DVD.
It seems the simplest explanation is one of the estimates or both have a large error. Measuring the mass and volume of things like this isn't easy, especially when it is so far away. I wouldn't be surprised if one of them is off by 50%. For example, they measure the mass by the effect of its gravity. This could be perturbed by another object(s) in the vicinity yet undiscovered. That seems more probably than a planet made of a compression resistant spongy material IMHO.
For those who actually want to know, its name came from 1984 and Big Brother. It serves as a reminder that with great power comes great responsibility. 20 years ago when created, Vern Paxson was not thinking about or anticipating fraternity culture connotations.
Every University, business and organization that receives grants has overhead rates. These vary from reasonable to ridiculous based on the organization.
These overhead funds then typically go into a larger, not grant specific, fund that is fungible. The spending out of that fund is then restricted not by grant guidelines, but by the general rules of the institution. Usually that is still somewhat restricted at a University, for example, that usually won't allow alcohol. However, businesses receiving grants generally have fewer restrictions.
If you want to look at how overhead is used out of those general funds, I'm certain you will find this at any recipient organization. I am in fact surprised this is all they found. The fact that they are only looking at NSF and focusing on politically controversial topics for their specific party is very suspect. Should we start looking at how defense contractors spend all of their overhead for DARPA awards? Would they even share that information like NEON did?
And where's my limelight?!?
It doesn't give you cancer, it makes it more virulent and harder to stop.
People forget that heat loss isn't an energy loss if you are heating your home already.
Maybe he just has Aspergers like half the great mathematicians and doesn't want to go to an ceremony or talk to any people.
Aren't we going to die from solar activity in the 2012 apocalypse anyway.
There is likely to be something similar to a placebo effect (in addition to confirmation bias and other psychological pitfalls) that will reinforce the idea that this works for officials there. If they believe it works, it is likely at least some bombers will, too. So it has a deterrent effect that is likely measurable. Therefore if they do some correlation studies later, they are likely to find places that do use these will have lower rates of incident (as long as you don't compare to places with actual bomb detection).
I have lots of email addresses, but I have never used a Comcast email address even though they are my ISP. I wonder how many customers would even get these messages.
probably a lot more than $58,000.
I do research in the field of anonymization and can say that I agree with a lot of his points, but he takes each of them too far and sounds very alarmist. He seems to see things in a very binary way. One can have anonymization that is effective at preventing reversal for 99% of indviduals or certain types of attacks. For example, I may be able to release a data set that has almost a 0% chance of revealing any particular user but a 100% chance that someone could be revealed.
Anyway, one of the good points he brings out is how stupid the requirements in HIPAA are. One can anonymize with the safe harbor rules (from EU I think) which basically destroy information needed for most kinds of analysis, or they can get a statistician to certify that it has been statistically de-identified without any specific standard for what that means. So in practice you can get anything released if you hire the right statistician.
I see OCZ already released some sort of garbage collection tool, but it only works on Windows. Kind of annoying since I bought their "Mac Edition" drive for my MacBook. Hopefully they'll put this in a firmware update, too, and hopefully I won't have to boot DOS on my Mac to update the firmware with a utility that blows over my partition table this time. That was a lot of fun going from version 1.10 to 1.30 firmware.
This is likely quite a load of bullshit.
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=73
That being said, we are still behind much of Asia and the EU in this area because of the restrictions for the past 8 years.
If it is as big as Stephen's ego, then it might beat Google.
1. Cut the wire where it is soldered to the speaker. You just need a second phone for your child porn.
2. Use a small digital camera and not a cell phone. Just remember to turn off the flash.
This is kind of like putting up a 10 mile long wall along the Mexican border to stop illegals. You can pretty much guarantee they won't go over the wall, but that is a pretty useless guarantee.
THe 2 disc set called Origins, a Nova special hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson
Man, I have been very disappointed with the switch from INsight to COmcast in Illinois. Even though they are using the same hardware locally, upload speeds (and download to some extent) have been severely reduced---over an order of magnitude. I don't run a server, but I sync my home and work computer with rsync scripts nightly, and it takes forever now. I am guessing they are doing a LOT more filtering and traffic carving which has screwed with throughput.
Look at the Cree XR-E (R2 flux bin) or the SSC P4 (V flux bin). They are pretty much there at around 120 lumens per watt, and these are in regular production. Hell, I have flashlights with these in them. And prototype LED's are getting up to 300 lumens/watt of visible light.
I forget the reference, but there is a paper from a few years ago that essentially proved nothing can ever beat a P-N junction in efficiency. LED's are the future.
And I won't buy one until my TV dies and I get an HD one. The majority of Americans still do not have HD TVs, and until they do, BR will still be small compared to DVD.
How ironic, because, the University of Illinois where I work just banned Orcs after an long and tenuous debate.
It seems the simplest explanation is one of the estimates or both have a large error. Measuring the mass and volume of things like this isn't easy, especially when it is so far away. I wouldn't be surprised if one of them is off by 50%. For example, they measure the mass by the effect of its gravity. This could be perturbed by another object(s) in the vicinity yet undiscovered. That seems more probably than a planet made of a compression resistant spongy material IMHO.
Or unless you use the same password for myspace and a bunch of other places
The plant just south of Byron, IL is clear as day. The only obstruction is the steam cloud from the colling towers.
THey did this with DAT years ago. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_Home_Recording_ Act
:-)
It worked great for that technology.
Add porn, and it will take another order of magnitude more storage!