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User: jdray

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  1. Re:Really: launching is hard on Ask Slashdot: How Would You Build a Microsatellite? · · Score: 1

    Considering that a spare-time project to build a launchable satellite might take a couple of years, it's likely that within that time the landscape of launch companies will change. Somewhere along the way, he's going to figure out that the project is a go and a complete date is in sight. At that point, figuring out who will launch it for a price he can afford is going to be solvable (success = 0|1).

  2. Gizmag on Ask Slashdot: Gifts For a 90-Year-Old, Tech-Savvy Dad? · · Score: 1

    Poke around on this website: www.gizmag.com. It's mostly short articles announcing new or future products, but maybe you can find something you think he'd like that's been released and get it for him.

    They have sections, and some of these might be helpful:

    http://www.gizmag.com/aroundthehome/
    http://www.gizmag.com/electronics/
    http://www.gizmag.com/wearableelectronics/

  3. Re:Don't put things online you want to keep privat on Hacker Behind Leaked Nude Celebrity Photos Gets 10 Years · · Score: 1

    As I said, I don't defend the hackers. However, I think people who use tools should understand the scope of the tools they're using, in the same way that people who own and use firearms should be responsible to understand how they operate, what the risks are, and what safety measures need to be taken.

  4. Don't put things online you want to keep private on Hacker Behind Leaked Nude Celebrity Photos Gets 10 Years · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm not quite clear why anyone thinks that putting things online in any capacity is safe from prying eyes, particularly if they're a celebrity. I don't defend the actions of these "hackers" (pfft), but the photo owners should be smart enough to take some precautions or find someone that can help them do it.

  5. Re:Pay Us more! on Is Technology Eroding Employment? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Frankly, technology is a much safer bet than human capital. Capital tends to have a fixed investment base with a relatively well-known maintenance schedule. Labor, on the other hand, is fraught with pitfalls: changing laws, rising insurance costs, performance variances. Not to mention, it's rare that machinery gets poached by your competition.

    Creativity is the area that machines will suck at for the foreseeable future. Anyone in manufacturing should start looking toward a career in process design instead.

    I may sound callous with this, but those with the money (certainly not me) only care about growing the money with as much guarantee as they can. The rest is annoying details. Given their position, it's unlikely you can say with certainty that you'd act any differently.

  6. Re:The sane option... on Is Technology Eroding Employment? · · Score: 1

    Well, then, flipping burgers is out:
    http://www.gizmag.com/hamburger-machine/25159/

  7. Re:Apt-get install clue on How To Use a Linux Virtual Private Server · · Score: 1

    Why on Earth is this modded "Troll"? The first question is rhetorical, not trolling.

  8. Re:Do we need more Mars rovers? on NASA: New Mars Rover By 2020 · · Score: 1

    you have to be absolutely damned certain that there's no local life to screw up.

    Well, no you don't actually. We may want to, or choose to, but we don't have to. It's more likely that we'd find life there and use that as an argument in favor of moving there. If Mars is shown to support any kind of life, it will radically change the way we as a culture view our place in the universe, and likely touch off some sort of mass effort to spread ourselves around, alien bacteria, lichens, ichthyoids, and the rest be damned. It'll be Manifest Destiny all over again.

  9. Re:Look as much as I like Mars on NASA: New Mars Rover By 2020 · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but while your rudimentary concept is reasonable, one practicality stops it: at a certain point, the ice around the tether is going to freeze up, stopping the descent of the probe, which will end up hanging in its own little bubble of hot water. Now, studying that bubble might have some value, as we would probably find residue from whatever is in the ocean (if there's fish, we might find the up-welled bones and scales, for instance). Better to figure out some wireless communication technology that will work through several kilometers of ice without getting swamped in Jupiter's radiation output.

  10. Re:Recycle on NASA: New Mars Rover By 2020 · · Score: 1

    And how far apart are those existing vehicles? What's between them? How hard is the terrain to navigate? Are the components of one system compatible with another? It's cheaper and much more viable to just send fresh units, targeted for specific purposes and specific locations.

  11. Re:In other words... NASA (and Uncle sam) says... on NASA: New Mars Rover By 2020 · · Score: 1

    Just to clarify, 2020 is only eight years from now.

  12. Nuclear Program Reducing Plate Tectonics? on Other Solar Systems Could Be More Habitable Than Ours · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    FTA:

    But the core isn’t our only heat source. A comparable contributor is the slow radioactive decay of elements that were here when the Earth formed. Without radioactivity, there wouldn’t be enough heat to drive the plate tectonics that maintains surface oceans on Earth.

    I wonder... if we're pulling uranium out of the ground and refining it, are we slowly pulling out the fuel that drives our plate tectonics?

  13. Re:Do we need a new Mendeleev? on Large Hadron Collider May Have Produced New Matter · · Score: 1
  14. Re:No comments, then a flood of experts on Large Hadron Collider May Have Produced New Matter · · Score: 1

    So, can you fill us in? What are the implications of such discoveries? Or is this another one of those things that happen (a happy accident) with no real consequence besides filling up a few research papers?

  15. Re:How is AI on the list? on Cambridge University To Open "Terminator Center" To Study Threat From AI · · Score: 1

    Right. And ultimately, the benevolent overlords that we give complete control of our society to will be the sizes of cake tins with no capability for self mobility. That will be left to the robot butlers that carry the overlords on neck chains, looking like diminutive versions of Flavor Flav. Bi-di-bi-di...bi-di-bi-di.

  16. Re:How is AI on the list? on Cambridge University To Open "Terminator Center" To Study Threat From AI · · Score: 1

    I find it more likely that, from the point in time that a computer achieved sentience to the time we were outmatched, we'd have time to realize we were screwed. Of course, I'm not the first one to think this.

  17. Re:How is AI on the list? on Cambridge University To Open "Terminator Center" To Study Threat From AI · · Score: 1

    I suppose that sooner or later we'll invent the next big thing that could kill us all. Even if in the study of how to deal with it, we accidentally invent it, at least there's a reasonable chance that, in the act of creation, we will have discovered a solution to the new problem. Like where the off switch is for the gone-mad computer.

  18. Re:Easy on With Pot Legal, Scientists Study Detection of Impaired Drivers · · Score: 1

    The only thing indisputable is Congress' right to ban marijuana for the purposes of interstate commerce. Everything else is a matter for the Supreme Court. Unless, of course, they deem it a matter of national defense. Tough case, that, when the drug is being produced domestically.

  19. Re:Individual Song Downloads on Highway To Sell: AC/DC iTunes Snub Finally Over · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Furthermore, he doesn't seem to object to radio play of single songs. Consumption is consumption.

  20. Re:I really hope... on What "Earth-Shaking" Discovery Has Curiosity Made on Mars? · · Score: 2

    Well, there's always the Sabatier process, which requires hydrogen (found in the coal) and some heat, combined with some chaperoning from Auntie Ruthenium under lots of pressure, to produce oxygen and methane, which can in turn be burned to produce carbon dioxide and water, the former being vented to atmosphere and the latter being retained for drinking, watering plants, etc.

  21. Re:I really hope... on What "Earth-Shaking" Discovery Has Curiosity Made on Mars? · · Score: 2

    Maybe they found the other end of Archimedes' lever.

  22. Re:What would motivate me on Ask Slashdot: How To Make a DVD-Rental Store More Relevant? · · Score: 1

    6) Vudu

  23. Re:That's all well and good on Open Compute Wants To Make Biodegradable Servers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because someone had a "brilliant" marketing idea, no concept of the technical viability, and no interest in doing proper research. Instead, they get something up on Slashdot and let us tell them whether it's a good idea or not.

  24. Re:The stench is strong with this one on Open Compute Wants To Make Biodegradable Servers · · Score: 2

    That may be the decomposing server chassis. The heat generated by a rack full of them would probably start the composting process.

  25. Re:We should probably hurry and try to get there on Super-Earth Discovered In Star's Habitable Zone · · Score: 1

    Giving us the opportunity to ruin it shortly after we arrive.