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Comment Re:a better question (Score 1) 706

The compensation is deferred, but we already do pay students to do well in school. I had a full ride plus in college; that was a direct result of doing well in high school.

However, there's research[citation needed] demonstrating that the ability to defer rewards is an indicator of an individual's future success. You're surely familiar with the fable of the Ant and the Grasshopper, right? Right?

Comment Re:No (Score 1) 706

all that matters is RESULTS

Okay, yes, I agree: all that matters is RESULTS. But you're ignoring the other RESULTS you'll accidentally succeed in achieving, viz. teaching the kid that remuneration is the only acceptable form of reward.

I suppose that's acceptable if you're only interested in creating drones to staff your factories and offices, the kind of people who ARE "incentivized" by bonuses and pay raises. Personally, I'm interested in intelligent, creative kids - writers, poets, scientists, kids with real curiosity who want to do things because they love to do them, because the problem fascinates them, because they want to KNOW, goddamnit. Not because they're going to get a buck. That's a recipe for producing amoral scum.

Comment Re:If I could do it, I would! (Score 5, Insightful) 658

Yes, it IS good for them. And bad for you. You're talking about one of the most powerful entities in the world - Exxon Mobil is larger than most countries - with no accountability to anyone. The government that you hate so much is being steadily dismantled BECAUSE private tyrannies (i.e. corporations) are using their vast coffers to break and twist it into the form they desire. Why, exactly, do you think the government gives money to banks or the MIC?

The more power corporations have, the more they can resist the controlling influence of democracy, the worse off we are. Observe Exxon's use of their power to confuse the debate on global warming for years, assuring that nothing gets done to compromise their profits and that the planet continues to choke on the waste gases their products emit.

As someone who's been an anarchist most of my adult life, I find it bizarre when so-called libertarians cheer the destruction of democratic government and the increasing devolution of power into the hands of the people who have, for the better part of this past century, been largely in control of our society. If you're REALLY in the favor of liberty, why are you such a fan of enabling so much power going into such few hands?
Space

Is Mimas Hiding Pac-Man? 99

cremeglace writes "Shaped into the likes of the Death Star of Star Wars fame by the giant crater Herschel, 396-kilometer-diameter Mimas was expected to have its warmest surface temperatures on the equator, where it was early afternoon. Instead, it was warmest in the morning (all of 92 K), giving rise in the science team's temperature-calibrated color scheme to a very large Pac-Man."

Comment Re:Are they going to 'train' an algorithm? (Score 1) 110

I assume that they'd prefer to do this, but a supervised learning method that builds a classifier function requires that you have a training set that is already classified - a set of images that contain storms and a set of images that don't contain storms. My guess is, since this system just went online and started generating images, they don't really have a huge number of examples to draw from. And the data is pretty noisy, as you can see, so training a machine to be reliable would probably require a large input set. So they're counting on us humans being able to do the machines' jobs for a while, until there's enough examples that you can train your function. In addition, training the machine to spot "interesting stuff" is much harder, maybe impossible, depending on your definition of "interesting stuff". Human eyeballs are better in that regard.
OS X

Valve Confirms Mac Versions of Steam, Valve Games 541

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from Gamasutra: "Valve will release a version of its Steam digital distribution service for Mac next month, along with Mac-native versions of its own games, the company confirmed today after days of hints — and owners of Valve games will have access to both platform versions. The Source engine, which Valve uses to develop all its internal titles and also licenses to third-party developers, will incorporate OpenGL in addition to DirectX, to allow Mac support for all Source developers. ... 'We are treating the Mac as a tier-1 platform, so all of our future games will release simultaneously on Windows, Mac, and the Xbox 360,' said Cook. 'Updates for the Mac will be available simultaneously with the Windows updates.'"

Comment Re:Packages are the future (Score 1) 1051

I make a similar proposal here. Universities have used this model for years to share expensive content - digital library subscriptions for journals. Paysites could certainly arrange the same thing with digital library sites. If it becomes ubiquitous (which it probably should), then (a) everyone will pay for viewing content (indirectly, through their library subscription), and (b) linking won't be an issue, since everyone will be able to read behind most of the important paywalls. $10 a month seems more than enough - I can get a bunch of magazine subscriptions for that price, and there's a much lower distribution cost involved here.

Comment I have a solution (Score 1) 1051

I haven't thought this out fully, since I just came up with it, but here's an interesting idea for a business:

My biggest problem with pay sites is that most of the time, I don't really want to read the thing regularly enough to make it worthwhile. Some people like to read the NY times ever day; I don't, I'd rather just read it once in a while when someone suggests a good article to me. Many other people - probably the majority on the web - fall into this category. For people running a site, as with most things on the web, they need a way to catch the Internet's famous long tail.

So why aren't there digital library sites instead? You pay them a small subscription fee (say, $10 a month), and in return get access to any paysite you want - the site negotiates a revenue-sharing model with each paysite and takes a modest cut of the subscription for itself. Everyone wins: I get to browse the internet for a minor fee without being assaulted by ads or having to sign up on every damn site I want to look at, content providers have a way to make money without cutting people out. The only downside seems to be that as usual there's a damn bootstrapping problem...

Comment Re:So Much Evidence And Yet Business Interests Res (Score 1) 303

Past history suggests that if GW is not anthropogenic, it probably won't run out of bounds - the biosphere is pretty good at regulating itself when we're not mucking it up (see Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis).

However, you seem to be under the impression that "we shall overcome" as a species. There is no inevitable course of human history - extinction is a very real possibility. The fact that we have, so far, surmounted all obstacles that came upon us does not mean we can survive everything. We've had a pretty easy going. No comets have hit our planet, for example (Tunguska aside). Yes, we're incredibly powerful. We're also incredibly stupid and full of hubris. And the hubris gets us every time.

Comment Re:So Much Evidence And Yet Business Interests Res (Score 1) 303

Yes, and species go extinct all the time. While I agree that we probably won't be able to create an environment that destroys life on this planet, I really DON'T want the way things end up getting fixed by the rest of the biosphere restoring homeostasis after our unfortunate disappearance.

Meanwhile, Humans continue to become the most adaptable mammal on the planet.

Let me point out that in order to "adapt" you have to change, not keep doing the same damn thing and hoping it'll all get better, somehow.

Comment Re:Let me get this straight (Score 1) 303

Actually, not the ice cap, but clathrate hydrate crystals - methane hydrates that are frozen at the bottom of the ocean. Now that the Arctic is warming up thanks to Al Gore and his lies, those methane hydrates are being leaked into the atmosphere. This is what we call "negative feedback". Sound the gongs.

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