Slashdot Mirror


User: Red+Jesus

Red+Jesus's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
38
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 38

  1. Live theater is better. on Box Office 2014: Moviegoing Hits Two-Decade Low · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Once you've bought into the idea of watching recordings, it doesn't matter so much whether you watch them on an enormous screen in a theater or on a computer screen at home. Price and convenience then favor the computer screen.

    If you want to put the "human" back in humanities, try live theater. I never used to like live theater because the only options I thought I had were productions in high schools (which are sometimes pretty good but often not as good as films) and fancy travelling productions with hundred-dollar tickets in intimidatingly fancy theaters (which are good, but hardly as casual as a movie). Then I discovered the Shakespeare Tavern in Midtown Atlanta, which is a professional group that has cheap ($20!) tickets on Thursdays. Atlanta isn't an especially cultured city overall; if we have something like this, I suspect most other cities will, too.

    I've seen six distinct plays at the local theater (and rewatched all of them at least once) and films in movie theaters are no longer the same. Sure, I enjoyed Interstellar---that movie's attitude towards science would go over well on Slashdot---but it tends to use dramatic [manipulative!] music to make you care about the characters. But when you're watching a live production, you care about the characters because they're people---live people. not a hundred feet away! The exchange works both ways; the actors are more animated because they're presenting to a live audience instead of a camera. I tried watching three film versions of Twelfth Night after repeatedly watching it live; none of the film versions even came close to the live one. (Of minor note is that the theater in *my* town doesn't alter or remove anything from the original Shakespeare scripts; your town's troupe may do things differently.)

    This post isn't meant as an endorsement of Shakespeare in particular so much as live theater in general. Don't assume that live theater is either too expensive or poorly-done; in Atlanta, at least, you can watch professional actors for the price of two movie tickets. I would encourage everyone to take a look at what their cities have to offer.

  2. Re:Astronomy: Astrology for Physicists on Oldest Known Star In the Universe Discovered · · Score: 1

    Oops, correction to the car analogy: The rubber sheet is 6000 miles long when the car starts driving, is 46.6 billion miles long when the car stops driving, and the car itself thinks it has driven 13.7 billion miles relative to the sheet. (If space behind you expands, you don't have to redrive that extra distance.) Replace miles with light-years and we have a description of the photon traveling from this star to the Milky Way galaxy: they started 6000 light-years apart, they ended 46.6 billion light-years apart, and the photon thinks it spent 13.7 billion years in flight because it traveled 13.7 billion light-years with respect to the background of expanding space.

  3. Re:Astronomy: Astrology for Physicists on Oldest Known Star In the Universe Discovered · · Score: 2

    The phrasing is a bit misleading. The star was 6000 light-years away when it first emitted the light, but the empty space between stars (and galaxies, now) has been expanding continuously (but at a nonconstant rate) since then. Imagine a car driving along a rubber sheet that's stretching. The sheet *starts* 6000 miles long and the car drives at one mile per hour, but since the sheet is growing as the car drives along it's 13.7 billion years long by the time the car reaches the other end.

    So we're seeing the star as it looked 13.7 billion years, ago, not as it looked 6000 years ago, the current physical distance between us and the star is actually a whopping 46.6 billion light-years, and the 6000 light-year number corresponds to the distance between us and the star when the light was first emitted. (The universe was much smaller then.)

    Note that this goofy universe-expansion correction factor doesn't apply to such short distances nowadays. The center of the Milky Way galaxy is 30000 light-years away, but since space itself isn't expanding so rapidly today, we see the center of the galaxy the way it looked about 30000 light-years ago, as expected. The most ridiculous rates of expansion took place shortly after the Big Bang.

  4. It's not hard on 'Approximate Computing' Saves Energy · · Score: 1

    "If I asked you to divide 500 by 21 and I asked you whether the answer is greater than one, you would say yes right away," Raghunathan said. "You are doing division but not to the full accuracy. If I asked you whether it is greater than 30, you would probably take a little longer, but if I ask you if it's greater than 23, you might have to think even harder. The application context dictates different levels of effort, and humans are capable of this scalable approach, but computer software and hardware are not like that. They often compute to the same level of accuracy all the time."

    To determine if a/b is greater than 1, it is sufficient to check if a > b.

    To determine if a/b is greater than c, it is sufficient to check if a > bc.

    Multiplication already consumes less time and energy than division on modern computers. I do not see why they needed to modify their instruction set to realize such gains.

  5. Re:Solved problem on Ask Slashdot: How Reproducible Is Arithmetic In the Cloud? · · Score: 2

    Not quite. IEEE754 mandates correct rounding for addition, subtraction, mutiplication, division, and square roots, but it only requires "faithful rounding" for the transcendental functions like sin, cos, and exp. That means that, for example, that even the floating point number nearest arcsin(1) is above it (i.e. correct rounding in this case requires that you round up), a math library that rounds arcsin(1) *down* is still compliant. The only requirement is that it round ot one of the two nearest floating point numbers.

  6. Re:You need to know some numerical analysis on Ask Slashdot: How Reproducible Is Arithmetic In the Cloud? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While that's true in many cases, there are some situations in which we need . Read Shewchuk's excellent paper on the subject.

    When disaster strikes and a real RAM-correct algorithm implemented in floating-point arithmetic fails to produce a meaningful result, it is often because the algorithm has performed tests whose results are mutually contradictory.

    The easiest way to think about it is with a made-up problem about sorting. Let's say that you have a list of mathematical expressions like sin(pi*e^2), sqrt(14*pi*ln(8)), tan(10/13), etc and you want to sort them, but some numbers in the list are so close to each other that they might compare differently on different computers that round differently, (e.g. one computer says that sin(-10) is greater than ln(100)-ln(58) and the other says it's less).

    Imagine now that this list has billions of elements and you're trying to sort the items using some sort of distributed algorithm. For the sorting to work properly, you *need* to be sure that a < b implies that b > a. There are situations (often in computational geometry) where it's OK if you get the wrong answer for borderline cases (e.g. it doesn't matter whether you can tell whether sin(-10) is bigger than ln(100)-ln(58) because they're close enough for graphics purposes) as long as you get the wrong answer consistently, so the next algorithm out (sorting in my example, or triangulation in Shewchuk's) doesn't get stuck in infinite loops.

  7. Your chances are pretty darned good on Ask Slashdot: How Reproducible Is Arithmetic In the Cloud? · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mathematica in particular uses adaptive precision; if you ask it to compute some quantity to fifty decimal places, it will do so.

    In general, if you want bit-for-bit reproducible calculations to arbitrary precision, the MPFR library may be right for you. It computes correctly-rounded special functions to arbitrary accuracy. If you write a program that calls MPFR routines, then even if your own approximations are not correctly-rounded, they will at least be reproducible.

    If you want to do your calculations to machine precision, you can probably rely on C to behave reproducibly if you do two things: use a compiler flag like -mpc64 on GCC to force the elementary floating point operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and square root) to behave predictably, and use a correctly-rounded floating point library like crlibm (Sun also released a version of this at one point) to make the transcendental functions behave predictably.

  8. Re:Pointless posturing on New Jersey Congressman Seeks To Bar NSA Backdoors In Encryption · · Score: 5, Informative

    Whoa, now. While it's true that the NSA has a history of disregarding the law, it's bad to fall into the trap of believing that there's no point to creating such laws at all.

    What do you want Congressman Holt do? Rip off his shirt and physically attack James Clapper? That's not going to help curtail the powers of the NSA and you know it. Congress creates laws. That's what they're supposed to do. If you think the law is a good idea, then proposing the law isn't "pointless posturing," it's Congress' job.

    It's easy to get so lost in cynicism that you stop believing that forward progress is possible. But it's an ugly fact that many of the NSA's recent activities have had explicit Congressional approval. Revoking that approval is an essential step to fixing the situation, and Congressman Holt should be applauded for attempting to do so.

  9. Pardon my troll, but... on Google Chrome 29 Is Out: Omnibox Suggestions, Profile Resetting · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I hate to troll what could be a pleasant discussion about a new release of a popular web browser, but Chrome sends lots of extra data to Google and Google sends lots of extra data to the NSA. I therefore do not trust Chrome.

    I understand that this is irrelevant to the current topic. If I don't want to use Chrome, I should just use another web browser, right? Like how I didn't want to use GMail, so I got a Lavabit account in 2009. (Seriously!) But Lavabit is gone now. And when I updated my friends with my new email address, I sullenly noted that well over half of them use GMail because the convenience outweighs the loss of privacy.

    So... I'm tired and afraid. Google is integrating more features into the browser that are based on the "recency of the websites visited"? That information will almost certainly be radioed back home to Google. And when the NSA is finally forced to answer for their sins before Congress, they'll point to how many people downloaded Google Chrome 29 and they'll say, "People don't mind being tracked! They sign up for this stuff voluntarily!" Regardless of whether that's a good reason for the NSA to be able to read my email, it's going to come up repeatedly in the inquiry, and that one fact might be enough to allow the program continue.

    I have no choice but to see the existence of Google Chrome 29 as a threat to my freedom. I wish I could be more reasonable about it, or at least keep my stupid opinions to myself, but being reasonable about Snowden wasn't enough to save my email account.

    *sigh*

  10. Too late on Obama on Surveillance: "We Can and Must Be More Transparent" · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I want my email back. Show me a plan that restores my Lavabit access and I'll take this effort seriously. This isn't a game.

  11. Re:Concrete reality on Encrypted Email Provider Lavabit Shuts Down, Blames US Gov't · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've been modded up, which is fantastic, but to be honest I was hoping to provoke discussion.

    What I was thinking when I wrote the above post (and was more sober) was that this issue is affecting regular people. I'm a real person! I live in an apartment in midtown Atlanta! I have a trilobite collection and I like to take long walks. I'm preparing dinner for some friends tomorrow evening. I'm a savvy Internet user, like the rest of you, who reflexively discounts conspiracy theories. But my email provider was just taken down because it provided too much privacy.

    Godwin's Law prevents me from typing many of my thoughts right now. I know from experience that everyone's weary from constant political combat. I was even in Washington D.C. (well, Richmond; the DC subways weren't working that day) for the Stewart/Colbert Rally to Restore Sanity, which emphasized the importance of getting along with your neighbors, even if they disagreed with your politics. And besides, I didn't do anything about the Snowden revelation, even though I consciously understood it was a Bad Thing.

    But here I am today with no email because (we assume) the Federal government presented Ladar Levison with an ultimatum: either break his own security and tell nobody, or stop providing the service altogether. (Fortunately Levison did what I paid him to do: he stood up for my privacy and let Lavabit go down.) But we can't be sure that this is what transpired because of Levison has been under a gag order for six weeks. This is a terrifying concept.

    Has anyone on Slashdot watched Babylon 5? It had a long story arc in which the Earth government gradually became more and more repressive. There was an episode in the middle of Season 3 called "Severed Dreams" in which the Interstellar News Network (ISN) was forcibly brought offline by the military. Right before they went off the air, an anchor came onscreen, apologized for interrupting, reported that some colonies had declared independence and that the president didn't want that information let out, and that many things had been going on for a year that ISN was not allowed to report. Some explosions damaged the building, ISN went offline, and a week later, it came back with a new (completely unfamiliar) news anchor who calmly explained that terrorists had faked the previous broadcast.

    That's how I feel about Lavabit right now. I've been watching the Snowden news for months. Then my email went down... And then suddenly I'm hit with this speech that for the last six weeks, Lavabit's founder has been fighting to protect my privacy while under a gag order, and twice has tried to get that order lifted. But he failed and now I have to go change my email address everywhere it's used. Wow! I never imagined that the drama on the news, where the United States tried to promise Russia that we wouldn't torture one of our own citizens were he extradited, would have a direct impact on my insignificant life! But it did. And apparently Lavabit has been fighting for the last six weeks, while I've been going to work, trying to talk pretty girls into dinner, and going jogging around the neighborhood. This is real! These issues aren't going away. I ignored them and I lost my email account. What will I lose next?

    Please, Slashdot. Please, please, please take this seriously. This isn't just another petty Internet squabble. This is serious business. I got caught in the crossfire early because I cared enough about my privacy to use Lavabit. Other people got caught in it earlier---Manning and Snowden because they had both moral courage and access to incriminating information, and probably many other people of Pakistani descent because that's just how things go. I got caught in it today. When will the rest of you get caught? GMail users are safe from shutdowns because even in 2009 we knew that Google didn't care about your privacy, but I wouldn't be surprised that the stakes will continue to increase as time wears on.

    Maybe I deserve to be alone in this mess because I left Manning, Snowden, and probably untold others in the lurch when they needed support. Yes, I probably do...

  12. Concrete reality on Encrypted Email Provider Lavabit Shuts Down, Blames US Gov't · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My name is Anthony Coulter. I signed up for Lavabit on October 5, 2009 with the address anthonycoulter(at)lavabit.com. I chose Lavabit very consciously. My university email address was about to expire and I had concerns about Google's privacy policies. Lavabit was created specifically for privacy-conscious people. They offered server-side encryption to paying customers; when I became a paying customer a year or two later I decided to check that box because, hell, why not?

    [Note that I never did ask how server-side encryption worked. They said that things were rigged up so that they could not decrypt my on-server email even if they were coerced into it. My guess was that they used a hash of your login password to decrypt your email. I didn't know whether it was true or not, but I didn't think it really mattered. Apparently it did matter.]

    I use my Lavabit account for everything. My bank statements are mailed to it. Most of my internet login IDs created since 2009 depend on it. All of my friends use it. And now it's gone.

    I last checked my email around 9pm on Tuesday, August 6. When I woke up the next morning my connection attempts to the Lavabit server timed out. That was inconvenient; I had to send some information to my parents about an upcoming family reunion, so I sent them a text message promising to email it to them when the service was restored Wednesday night. It wasn't; I finally sent the email from an old family account I used back in the late 1990s. When I woke up *this* morning and Lavabit was still down, I did a couple of Google searches to see if anyone else noticed that an email provider had been gone for twenty-four straight hours. I found this discussion, which I quote for the benefit of people who will read this post long after the forum has ceased to exist:

    RobertPaulsen
    Junior Member
    Join Date: Aug 2013
    has anybody considered that if edward snowden did use lavabit then the Gouvernment is maybe interested in his mails which he wrote and sended to Glenn Greenwald. Maybe they seized the server and waved with a national security letter. just a thought !

    This was posted at 10:55pm last night; when I saw it this morning I instantly dismissed the poster as a childish Internet revolutionary. The idea that the Federal government would clog up Lavabit for an entire day and a half just to get at Snowden is silly! They can't disrupt business like that!

    Then I ran another Google search for "lavabit down" before getting off work today, and... here we are. Emails sent to my lavabit account still don't get bounce warnings, so noone who's emailed me since 9pm on Tuesday will know that I didn't get their email, or that I never will. I also have to go through the long and tedious process of reassociating all of my Internet accounts with a new email address. But which provider will I choose? I still don't trust Google. I don't know what I'll do yet; it was only two hours ago when discovered that my four-year-old email address had been taken down by the Federal government.

    I just donated two thousand dollars to Lavabit's legal defense fund. (The confirmation email from Paypal just arrived in my old Cox account.) I cannot prove this to the Internet, and it's debatably silly for someone so privacy-conscious to want to do so. But at some point we will have to take this issue seriously. I watched the Snowden news from a distance; I didn't say or do anything about it because it wasn't really my problem. Now I lost my email, and if I had used IMAP this would have been a tragedy of enormous proportions.

    --Anthony Coulter, a.k.a. Red Jesus

  13. From Isaac Asimov's "Foundation" on Could the US Phase Out Nuclear Power? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And you men and half of the Internet as well are just as bad. We sit here, considering Wikipedia the all-in-all. We consider the greatest end of science is the classification of past data. It is important, but is there no further work to be done? We're receding and forgetting, don't you see? Here in the America they've lost nuclear power. In Japan, a power plant has undergone meltdown because of poor repairs, and the Chancellor of the Empire complains that nuclear technicians are scarce. And the solution? To train new ones? Never! Instead they're to restrict nuclear power.

    --Salvor Hardin, paraphrased

  14. Re:Still think Wikileaks knows what they're doing? on Leaked Doc May Have Forced US To Speed Up Bin Laden Raid · · Score: 5, Informative

    The interrogation file was dated "10 September 2008." Is someone seriously claiming that the military was willing to wait more than two years to conduct the attack but then had to rush things by a couple of weeks because of this leak?

    WikiLeaks released the report last week, prompting speculation that the US, afraid that its planned raid might be pre-empted, brought forward its attack.

    Apparently so. We have an article using the passive voice to indicate that someone somewhere is speculating that the military did in fact cut a two-and-a-half year delay down to just 2.5 years minus a week or two because they were worried about the consequences of this leak.

  15. Moving, not fixing, the problem on When Mistakes Improve Performance · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The "robustification" of software, as he calls it, involves re-writing it so an error simply causes the execution of instructions to take longer.

    Ooh, this is tricky. So we can reduce CPU power consumption by a certain amount if we rewrite software in such a way that it can slowly roll over errors when they take place. There are some crude numbers in the document: a 1% error rate, whatever that means, causes a 23% drop in power consumption. What if the `robustification' of software means that it has an extra "check" instruction for every three "real" instructions? Now you're back to where you started, but you had to rewrite your software to get here. I know, it's unfair to compare his proven reduction in power consumption with my imaginary ratio of "check" instructions to "real" instructions, but my point still stands. This system may very well move the burden of error correction from the hardware to the software in such a way that there is no net gain.

  16. Re:My psychic prediction on Martian Microbe Fossils, Not So Debunked Anymore · · Score: 3, Informative

    near complete annihilation of Drake's equation

    Whoa, there! Drake's equation has quite a few terms in it and only two of those terms are subject to reevaluation: the average number of planets per star that are suitable for life, and the fraction of planets which are suitable for life that actually have life. The other numbers, speculative as they are, should remain unchanged by the discovery of microbial life on Mars.

  17. Fourmilab on How To Build a Quantum Propulsion Machine · · Score: 5, Informative

    John Walker called such a device a vacuum propeller. He didn't have any particular ideas about how the device would work, but he does have a nice analogy involving propellers.

  18. Re:Obama - A template for future US politics? on Discuss the US Presidential Election · · Score: 1

    FWIW, the reason Obama wasn't that directly critical of the Republicans was because their failures are so manifest after 8 years of a Bush presidency.

    OK, fair enough. So why didn't he sling mud at Hillary?

  19. Re:what? on Telco Sues Municipality For Laying Their Own Fiber · · Score: 5, Informative
    FTFA:

    Bridgewater Telephone argues that the city cannot use tax-exempt bonds to "enter into direct competition with incumbent commercial providers of telephone, Internet, and cable television services."

    The city decided to lay cable. Bridgewater Telephone interrupts, "Too bad, because that would put you in direct competition with our cable. The word `incumbent' is probably the reason this argument won't work. Bridgewater's cable did not exist at the time of the city's decision and, in fact, it does not exist now. But according to TFA you say you've read, that's the legal basis of the claim.

  20. Hot? Cold? on One of the Coolest Places In the Universe · · Score: -1, Troll

    [T]he Large Hadron Collider is... being lowered to a temperature of 1.9 Kelvin ... -- colder than deep space.

    The LHC aims to re-create the conditions just after the Big Bang...

    Focus your eyes between those two excerpts and cross them slightly. A big "WTF?!" seems to appear six to eight inches in front of the screen. But it's just an illusion. The latest physical theories suggest that the universe was absolute zero at the instant of the big bang, heated to 1.9K during the inflationary epoch, and is now at about 2.7K. We aren't sure how to extrapolate this into the future. One theory predicts that the temperature will keep increasing until the universe experiences a "heat death." Another is that it will stabilize at 491K and God will put in His baked potato. Gravity Probe C is testing for other evidence of The Divine so we could know the definitive answer as early as 2017.

  21. Re:Shut down before it could damage itself? on Mars Lander's Robot Arm Shuts Down To Save Itself · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wait, does this mean that the Mars Lander was programmed to comply with the Three Laws?

    No. The second law translates to "Follow orders." The third law is "Don't get hurt (unless it conflicts with the second law)." If the lander had followed Asimov's laws, it would have followed the order and hurt its wrist.

  22. Obligatory Ballmer Ref. on MySpace's Melting Makes Murdoch Mad · · Score: -1, Troll

    I'm going to fucking bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I'm going to fucking kill Facebook!

  23. The submitter says it all... on Lost Infocom Games Discovered · · Score: 4, Funny

    Submitter's name: "I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property"

    Summary of summary: Some people got ahold of someone's hard drive and published the contents online.

    Yeah.

  24. Re:Another waste of money on Computers May Thwart 2010 Census · · Score: 1

    You can really just say "nine people live here, go away" and they will.

    All that information IS necessary for the government to provide all the services they provide today in a reasonable and efficient manner.

    Really? The government can make reasonable and efficient decisions without knowing statistics about its own citizenry? I realize that police can keep people safe without knowing what's in the trunk of my car, but that doesn't mean Congress can make sweeping decisions for a country of 300 million people without knowing large-scale trends that you don't get just by walking the streets of your constituency. Many Americans are concerned that the lowest income quintile keeps getting poorer. If the Federal government is going to do anything to help these people along, it needs to know a little more about them. How well-educated are they? Which regions do they live in? Are they predominantly of a particular ethnicity? Asking Congress to make decisions about America's future without letting them know about America's current state is like asking an engineer to build a bridge without telling him the strengths of the materials he has to work with.

    If you think Congress makes dumb decisions, then complain about the dumb decisions. But don't cut off their access to information that could help them make better decisions.

  25. 1% error on Computers May Thwart 2010 Census · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He also said the computers actually are easy to use, with a failure rate of less than 1 percent when tested in the field.
    One percent of three hundred million is three million.