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Comment Re:Some info belongs on a specialized wiki (Score 1) 533

Is Wikipedia running out of disk space all of a sudden? Why do topics have to be "notable" to be included? One of the great things about Wikipedia originally was that it wasn't limited to a certain number of pages, so finally there were articles on topics that never could have been included in a paper encyclopedia. Why is it the standard that topics have to prove themselves "notable" or die, given that it angers people that spent time and effort adding information to Wikipedia and often removes topics that people were interested in reading about? In effect, it seems like the Wikipedia organization is working hard to make Wikipedia less useful to many potential users and actively pushing away potential contributors.

From your post it sounds like you have inside knowledge about Wikipedia, so if you can help me understand this, I would greatly appreciate it.

Comment Re:Alternatives? (Score 2) 314

I've never understood why a virtual machine is, in any way, better than an intermediate language that can be compiled to native code for a particular platform.

Garbage collection. GC makes people angry for some reason, but I'm personally happy not having to malloc memory all the time. Also hardware and OS independence. It's nice to just open a file and read and write from it, and not really care what the OS is, or what filesystem it's using, and so forth. Same with inputs and outputs, memory management, thread handling, etc. You could add all of these things to your hypothetical intermediate language, but in the end you'd just be recreating the JVM.

A fair number of languages besides Java run on the JVM. Others have been "ported" onto the JVM. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_JVM_languages

I think the JVM is here to stay. We're moving more and more towards high-level, interpreted languages. Hardware is fast enough, and with things like JIT there's no real performance loss anyway. Why not write on a JVM, which does so much for you?

Comment Made for Crowdsourcing (Score 2) 94

I heard about this on RadioLab awhile ago - a trash dump full of fragments of old scrolls. I believe it was the "Detective Stories" episode: http://www.radiolab.org/2007/sep/10/

They were saying it would take centuries to match up all of the pieces, because they only had a few people working on it, and so many scraps to go through. My immediate thought was that they should scan them all and put them on the Internet, and some bored 17 year old would write a program in Scala that would run in the cloud and match everything up in a weekend. Sounds like somebody else had the same idea ...

Comment Re:Wealthy advice (Score 1) 202

Do you mean Dale Vince?

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/utilities/article5438441.ece

Assuming the article is correct, Mr. Vince built his first windmill himself like you said, and then borrowed money from a bank to build more, and now solely owns Ecotricity, worth 10M GBP. He seems like a neat guy, talking about how he absorbs good stuff from other company cultures "like the Borg." His favorite movie is Aliens 2.

Comment Re:Fahrenheit (Score 1) 443

Where in the world do you have access to either a well-stocked library, or some way to purchase books, but don't have any way to access the Internet? For a Kindle (current technology) you either need brief wifi access from a coffee shop or McDonalds or someplace, or you pay a little bit more to get ubiquitous 3G data access. I live in Chicago, but I've bought and downloaded books in Europe while on vacation without issue. You don't need to be "tethered" to anything to enjoy your digital books. And that's current technology, which will get replaced by devices and services we haven't dreamed of yet.

If you enjoy carrying around heavy, fragile paper versions of books, then more power to you, but you're on the wrong side of history. Before you know it you'll have to dig around in flea markets to find old paper books. Did you notice how fast VHS tapes disappeared? They technically still work, but they've been so completely replaced by DVDs and BluRay disks that you only see them at yard sales anymore. Paper books are up next.

Comment Re:10 base works fine (Score 1) 322

And more to the point, the rest of the world hasn't caught up with plain ol' Ethernet. Your home network is still a bit faster than what you can realistically get from your broadband supplier, so who cares? If somebody started offering 1 Gig download speeds, I don't think we'd still be happy with Ethernet.

Comment Re:No rage, just a lost customer. (Score 1) 722

Then wouldn't the price of the service go up some similar amount? It went up 50%

I think they were either underselling it, or the streaming portion has got more expensive since they started it, due to studios and networks trying to get paid more. Streaming is actually a weirdly weak spot for Netflix. Due to the way our content laws work, Sony can demand more money for the same product next year - the rights to stream. In the original model, Netflix could in theory buy DVDs from Walmart and start shipping them to customers, so there was always a constraint on the cost. It's gonna stay weird for awhile.

Comment Re:That's All? (Score 2) 220

What really pisses me off about this shit is it is preying on those weakest and least likely to understand they are getting ripped off...old folks. It is the grandma and grandpa out there with landlines, the little old lady that can't read her bill with her coke bottle glasses anyway whom they are screwing over.

Yup. Like the woman who paid $10/month for DECADES for one of those old black rotary phones? http://www.mergermonster.com/?m=2&s=111&id=106

Comment Re:Good mother! (Score 2) 1017

The pilots have a federally-issued ID, which they show at security. If the ID is good enough to get them into the cockpit, it should be good enough that they don't have to stand in the lines with the rest of us plebes and get scanned or patted down. The guy that scrubs the toilets doesn't go through the stupid scanners, I really don't understand why pilots do.

And really, if a dude shows up DRESSED in a pilot's uniform, but doesn't have matching ID? I think that dude goes into a back room for more questions.

Power

New Scottish Wave Energy Generator Unveiled 244

MikeChino writes "We've learned about Scotland's wave energy initiatives in the past, and just this morning the nation unveiled Aquamarine Power's next-generation Oyster 800 wave power plant. The new generator can produce 250% more power at one third the cost of the first full-scale 315kw Oyster that was installed in Orkney in 2009. The device's shape has been modified and made wider to enable it to capture more wave energy, and a double seabed pile system allows for easier installation."

Comment Re:Typical hype-behaviour (Score 1) 1223

Honestly, are there better uses of your time than keeping in touch with the various friends and family that you have? Sharing images of your life, and seeing other people's images? Sharing special occasions with people? You know, the things that humans have been doing and loving to do for millions of years?

You made a random prediction, I'll make mine. Social networks will be around forever. Facebook may go the way of MySpace and others, but there will always be something around. A safe bet would be it would be something better suited to a mobile experience, but there will always be something like it.

Comment Re:How effective are the restrictions? (Score 1) 258

I grew up in a tiny town in Africa. We barely had electricity (just for a few hours a day, sporadically) and definitely no video games or TV. My parents, being peacenik missionaries, never bought me any toy guns or knives or anything, opting instead for Legos and Construx and such. So what did I do? I made guns out of Legos and sticks and whatnot, and still played "war" and "cops and robbers" with my friends. It seems to be hard-wired into us, in some ways.

Personally, I would rather my kids (when I have them) take out their aggressive tendencies in the safe confines of a video game, rather than get into fights in the neighborhood because they're bored. Yeah, Manhunt is a ridiculous game, but as a parent I would be able to NOT BUY THAT for my kids.

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