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Comment Is it any sort of bottleneck? (Score 1) 279

Is computing geodesic distances any sort of bottleneck for anyone? I find it hard to believe that it would be. If that's the case, then you may have a hard time getting it published. Amdahl's law and all, a 10x speedup in something that represents only 1% of the total time of an algorithm gives you less than a 1% speedup of the overall system. The other point I haven't seen anyone make, is that if it's a common problem, then chances are the math for the proper solution is already known (especially if you really are just talking about finding the shortest distance between two points on a sphere). It's very unlikely that you've invented a new way of doing something as common as computing distance between two points on a sphere. You should talk with some people who do geology or geostatistics or oceanography or the like to check if what you've done is really novel.

Comment Re:Since that is a false statement... (Score 1) 422

It doesn't sound to me like Apple wants people to jailbreak their devices. Apparently it says you are a criminal if you do so.

Anyway, you are being pedantic. Clearly there are risks and inconveniences associated with running a jailbroken phone. I'm guessing once you restore your device to the factory defaults you will no longer be able to run all those great jailbreak-only apps you bought, and you'll have to go reinstall them again later after you re-install the jailbreak patch. If Apple hasn't figured out a way to disable jailbreaking altogether, that is. Hardly a level playing field with apps from iTunes.

Thinking about it, part of the reason it annoys me is because Microsoft was declared a monopolist simply for including a browser with their operating system. This basically hurt no one except other browser makers. So if you're going to call that anti-competitive then you've got to call Apple's cornering the market on the sale of all types of apps to be anti-competitive too. But I honestly don't really think Microsoft deserved to be penalized for trying to give their users a better experience than they would have with a browser-less OS. Like the Apple apologists here are saying, if the market didn't like what Microsoft was doing, they could have bought Macs or used Linux instead.

Comment Re:Just as there are other sources for iPhone apps (Score 1) 422

In one sense Apple is doing much the same thing as HP only allowing you to buy ink from HP, or Gillette only allowing you to buy blades from Gillette, or Nesspresso only letting you use Nesspresso pods in their coffee machines. I'm not really wild about those monopolies either. But to me this feels more like Panasonic not letting you buy food for your Panasonic microwave from anyone but them. It just seems wrong. At least for the microwave example I would hope people would have the sense to complain and not buy such a product. Anyone know if Android apps be gotten from anywhere you like? And anyone know what Windows Phone 7 will do about apps?

Comment Re:Just as there are other sources for iPhone apps (Score 1) 422

I may have this wrong -- I'm not an iPhone owner -- but I was under the impression that the only way to get apps (real apps, not browser-based apps) on the iPhone was to get them from iTunes. Only if you jailbreak your phone (which Apple says is illegal) can you get apps from other sources. Is that not correct? I looked at saurik.com but it does not look like software aimed at normal users (it mentions in the FAQ that most of the software there is commandline tools or development libraries).

Comment Re:Good analogy (Score 1) 422

They are like a grocer who has a monopoly on where you can buy your food. I would be perfectly happy with Apple being as autocratic as they like with their app store if it weren't the *only* source for apps for their platforms. It seems blatantly anticompetitive to me. Consider if Microsoft decided you could only buy Windows apps through them. It would never be allowed. Apple is seriously strolling right down the path toward a massive DOJ action against them.

Comment Re:Works for one person... (Score 1) 197

You just track more than one pair of eyes. I believe the device is capable of displaying more than 2 views. There's sure to be some limit, though. Probably won't ever be able to have the whole extended family crowded around the screen with tech like this. But 4 or 6 eyes shouldn't be too much of a problem.

Comment Re:No current OS is "right for a slate" (Score 1) 467

You can use a pen input if you really want to and the touch screen has a fairly high resolution sensor grid

That's a crap experience and I'm sure Apple knows it. I'm betting next rev of the iPad will have a stylus. They just didn't have a chance to getting working along with everything else they had to make happen to get the iPad out in a reasonable time frame. So it got cut along with the camera. It'll be there in a future version.

Comment Sounds like X-files and Twin Peaks (Score 3, Insightful) 955

Both The X-Files and Twin Peaks used this formula of just throwing more and more weird riddles and sci-fi mysteries at the viewer with answers always seemingly to come in just a few more episodes. I never saw Lost, but it sounds like a repeat of that. The Matrix series was a condensed movie version of this phenomenon. I wish writers would just come up with a story that has an ending and tell it. Joss Whedon seems to be the only TV writer who can actually manage to do that.

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