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  1. 85 upvotes?! on Microsoft Urged to Open Source Classic Visual Basic (i-programmer.info) · · Score: 1

    Stop the presses! 85 upvotes is MADNESS!

  2. If I were a 138lb pilot... on F-35 Ejection Seat Fears Ground Lightweight Pilots · · Score: 1

    If I were a 138lb pilot I wouldn't find this news troubling at all.

  3. Peak Load on The Groups Behind Making Distributed Solar Power Harder To Adopt · · Score: 2
    Utilities will have something real to complain about when solar generation surpasses peak and intermediate load usage. Until then, they're usually saving from distributed generation because the cost of spinning up more generation to meet peak load is much higher than that for base load generation which is always running.

    Also, the centralized grid system is an outdated liability. Decentralization is a good thing. Utilities rage on about decentralization hurting grid stability, but they've got better stability in Denmark & Germany where they use more decentralized renewables. In the US we have centralized plants that fail during extreme weather events when they're most needed, like heat waves or unseasonable ice storms.

    Now is the time to start planning for the future. Fossil fuels incentives, subsidies, and tax credits outweigh solar & wind 10 to 1. We need to stop investing in century old technology, and start investing in energy infrastructure that will serve us better in the future. It's clear which way things are moving. The smart utilities are embracing slow change & planning for it now. The ones that are dragging their feet should be taken behind the barn and shot dead for everyone's good.

  4. Re:Of course they have no concerns, they don't tes on Mad Cow Disease Blamed For Patient's Death In Texas · · Score: 2

    Does the US only slaughter 40,000 cows a year?

    From your link:

    'Additional concerns

    In The Lancet (June 2006), a University College London team suggested that it may take more than 50 years for vCJD to develop, from their studies of kuru, a similar disease in Papua New Guinea.[59] The reasoning behind the claim is that kuru was possibly transmitted through cannibalism in Papua New Guinea when family members would eat the body of a dead relative as a sign of mourning. In the 1950s, cannibalism was banned in Papua New Guinea.[60]

    In the late 20th century, however, kuru reached epidemic proportions in certain Papua New Guinean communities, therefore suggesting that vCJD may also have a similar incubation period of 20 to 50 years.'

  5. Of course they have no concerns, they don't test. on Mad Cow Disease Blamed For Patient's Death In Texas · · Score: 2

    'The Texas Department of State Health Services says there are no state public health concerns or threats associated with the case. State and federal health officials continue to investigate and are trying to track the source of the infection.'

    It's easy to say there's no concerns when it can take 30yrs to manifest, is eerily similar to Alzheimer's, and can't be diagnosed without a brain biopsy, which is rarely done.

    It'd raise the price of beef 1 cent per pound to test every cow slaughtered, but they obviously lobby tooth & nail against doing so.

  6. Just buy the older dirtier plants on Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry - To Shut It Down · · Score: 1

    You know, if they did targeted purchases of older, dirtier plants and got them shut down, it'd probably have a decent effect for the given investment.

    There are a bunch of dirty holdout plants that aren't upgrading, it seems like they'd be easy targets.

  7. Burden of proof of safety should be on mfgers on Whole Foods: America's Temple of Pseudoscience · · Score: 1

    Ignoring the homeopathy nonsense, "whole foods" as they're generally referred to have the benefit of proving themselves through selection over tens of thousands of years. They are the baseline that we're working from, and in general the burden of proof should be put on deviations from that baseline.

    Yes, there's been selective breeding, etc. But with the scale & pace of change in food "science" in the last 50 years moving at an exponential pace, there's little in the way of evidence that extremely processed foods are anywhere near as nutritious as "whole" foods.

    Instead, there's a ton of anecdotal evidence to the contrary. That food "scientists" don't have anywhere near as robust an understanding of what it healthy & nourishing, and that when they try to break foods down to their constituent chemical parts and build something else from scratch, you get Frankenstein foods that are at their core unhealthy and detrimental to those consuming them.

    To call the machinations behind modern food processing a "science" is woefully misleading. There are enormous gaps in knowledge, and if natural foods have proven themselves over a larger order of magnitude of historical time, we should be applying much more rigorous standards to deviations from animal-food relationships that have evolved naturally or at a much slower pace.

    And you get people saying, "why should we require GMO food to be labeled? Prove that it's harmful" you have to look at the unhealthy relationship between big agribusiness money and studies saying GMOs are safe. We thought Lead in paint & gasoline were safe, we thought asbestos was safe, we thought dioxins were safe to be used as pesticides & herbicides, we thought tobacco products were safe. Until people started developing horrendous diseases & birth defects, and we learned they weren't. And even then, the manufacturers of those products continued to fund studies & propaganda campaigns to the contrary.

  8. It probably wouldn't save money on Is It Time For the US To Ditch the Dollar Bill? · · Score: 1

    Planet Money did an analysis of the issue awhile back, and discovered that the habit of people to let coins collect in jars & drawers, while it would benefit the government, would alter the math and not end up saving us if we made the switch.

    http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2012/11/29/166103071/no-killing-the-dollar-bill-would-not-save-the-government-money

    http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2012/04/19/150976150/should-we-kill-the-dollar-bill

  9. Zero Emissions? on Tata Intends To Sell Air-Powered Car In India · · Score: 1

    Whoever has invented a perpetual motion air compressor has a Nobel in Physics coming their way soon.

  10. I've never understood... on New Study Suggests Wind Farms Can Cause Climate Change · · Score: 1

    I've never understood why this issue is never discussed. You're taking energy out of the system, and wind from people downstream. Local weather patterns aren't closed systems.

  11. Open Design Engine? on Ask Slashdot: Best Open Source License For Guitar? · · Score: 1
  12. TurnItIn profits of others' Intellectual Property on Turnitin's Different Messages To Students, Teachers · · Score: 1

    Teachers submit students' papers to turnitin, those papers are checked against their database of essays then added to the cache of essays to check future papers against. Given that they make people pay to increase their stockpile of documents to check against, I'm not surprised they're playing both sides. It's a pretty simple way to make easy money off other people's work.

  13. Re:WikiDB on Fluidinfo, Wikipedia For Databases · · Score: 1

    Well if you're creating a db of measurements or values, like dimensions of various objects, or automobile specifications, there's much less bickering to be done. If the nature of the DB isn't open ended && subjective, you avoid lots of landmines.

  14. WikiDB on Fluidinfo, Wikipedia For Databases · · Score: 1

    I've had some ideas for wiki-like databases for awhile now, if this were open people could create some really cool open information sets

  15. Re:People use traffic congestion maps on GPS Maker TomTom Submits Your Speed Data To Police · · Score: 1
    In bigger cities/metro areas, they'll use those cameras to keep tabs on traffic from a command center, but oftentimes the speed data is collected by antennas near the cameras that track the times that people with EZ-PASS/EZ-TAG/RFID toll passes go by each point.

    Anonymized RFID data is analyzed to see how long it takes for a vehicle to move from one sampling point to the next, giving avg speed for each segment, and this data is aggregated to give average traffic speeds.

  16. People use traffic congestion maps on GPS Maker TomTom Submits Your Speed Data To Police · · Score: 1

    Where do they think the information on real time traffic speeds for various commuter routes comes from? People also complain about governments not addressing congestion issues at certain locations, this sort of data, along with average speeds is how municipalities make determinations on what sort of road construction to do "The sat-navs in TomTom's Live range all feature built-in 3G data cards, which feed location and route information back to a central server, which allows TomTom to create a map of congestion hotspots. It's now emerged that this data, however, along with a user's speed, is being made available to local governments and authorities."

  17. Medical Research Doesn't Scale... on Former Intel CEO Rips Medical Research · · Score: 1

    At least not yet, it doesn't. But there are many aspects of it that are emerging that come closer to approaching the rate of progress you see in the tech industry. The pace of technological advancement in recent decades has been facilitated by Moore's Law. Only recently has the medical community been able begin taking advantage of this. Now there are advancements like imaging/MRI systems doubling the number of "slices" they can scan simultaneously, every so often, use of microchips to detect cancer markers, etc. Andy Kessler wrote a book about this convergence called The End of Medicine: How Silicon Valley (and Naked Mice) Will Reboot Your Doctor. http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/17/1623217&from=rss http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/006113029X/andykessler-20

  18. itslifejimbutnotasweknowit? on US Scientist Creates Artificial Life · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I sometimes wonder if people who come up with pithy tags realize they're totally useless. How many posts do people expect to fall under itslifejimbutnotasweknowit & notlifefromnonlife?

  19. 5 Months? on Microsoft Extends XP's Life By 6 Months · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Jan 1 -> June 30? Isn't that 6 months?

  20. 64bit Linux Version on Flash Player 9 Gets H.264 Support · · Score: 1

    I'd be happier if they'd get up off their asses and finish a 64bit linux flash player.

  21. Aren't People Who Block Ads... on A Campaign to Block Firefox Users? · · Score: 1

    Generally the kind of people who are less likely to click and/or buy from ads in the first place? If people aren't seeing ads who wouldn't be susceptible to them in the first place, it's not a real loss. They should simply think of it as saving bandwidth.

  22. ATI? Hopefully Broadcom as well. on Dell Asking ATI For Better Linux Drivers · · Score: 1

    Dell AMD notebooks generally come with ATI graphics cards, and Broadcom based wireless cards which are poorly supported for Linux (except by the reverse-engineered bcm43xx, which is making decent progress).

    So far the only Dell Linux notebooks are E1505s, which ship with more linux friendly intel wireless & nvidia graphics cards.

    Hopefully if Dell is trying to influence ATI for better drivers, they'll be pushing Broadcom for better wireless drivers as well.

  23. Is it so hard... on AT&T CEO Attacks Network Neutrality · · Score: 1

    To post news without editorializing in the post? Slashdot loves net neutrality, we all know. Even if I agree it's a good idea, I can still do without the "More information on AT&T's attitude problem..."

    Makes me wish you could moderate OPs or at least give some sort of direct feedback of the same sort.

  24. File Sharing Software Doesn't Install Itself on File Sharing — Harmful to Children and a Threat to National Security · · Score: 1

    If government workers "installed file-sharing programs that accessed classified information without their knowledge" then file-sharing isn't the threat to national security, it's government workers who recklessly install things like file-sharing software on gov't computers.

  25. Re:What more could they explain? on Google Earth and "Collateral Damage" · · Score: 1

    "They certainly could explain more."

    And say what, exactly? Terrorists also use cars, do we ask carmakers to explain? Google earth is just a very nice fancy map, do we ask cartographers to explain?

    What a pointless article. As the sole global purveyor of maps and satellite images, they damn well better be able to explain things. Like how their maps got on those terrorists' walls!