Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:HÃ? (Score 1) 419

Yes there was. Every RTG launch causes a few nut jobs to come out and protest at the Cape. BTW I live and grew up near the Cape so it always makes the local news.
For Philia you might be correct about it not being an option. Too bad because they could have done a lot more science if they had built one big enough for an RTG.
However the anti-nuclear protests for RTGs are absolutely universally unjustified and frankly stupid. Most people are very dumb when it comes to risk. They live in terror of a nuclear power plant but will drive a car.

Comment Re:HÃ? (Score 1) 419

"So it's not completely insane to be concerned. They figure your personal odds of dying because of it to be one in a trillion, which most of us would say is too low to think about. But I can understand why a few people might say that even one-in-a-trillion (especially since it's repeated for everybody on the planet) is worth considering."

But it is insane to get into a car and drive to the protest since you are far more likely to die or cause a death then the launch...
In other words yes it is insane to worry about it.

Comment Xbox One went from a nope to probably nope (Score 3, Interesting) 193

I've had a 360 since launch (technically three if you count the replacement motherboards) and I would have got the One if it had backwards compatibility, even to the standard that the 360 could play original Xbox games by using most of the on disc assets but having a recompiled native engine for the PPC chip in the 360. This doesn't look quite like that unfortunately but I'll watch with interest as I'm not sure how much longer my 360 will survive and there are still games on it I would like to play through again. If it does support enough of the games I already own (the list currently has none) then I may well add an Xbox One to go with my PS4.

Comment Re: One more in a crowded field (Score 1) 337

Yes and no. If you only include a basic "standard" library you are pretty much going to make the language useless. If your "standard" library includes things like widgets then it is a lot more likely to be useful.
Java had Swing which will not perfect worked as a cross platform gui.
For Swift on linux the best bet would probably be QT bindings so you can have a cross platform SDK.
Will QT make the effort to port to Swift?
Who knows.
Swift is not likely to flourish on systems besides IOS and OS/X who should do what really does not matter. Now if Apple had ported Cocca to the Linux and Windows you would have had something really interesting.

Comment Re:replacement = $2 mill? (Score 1) 456

simple
Things where simpler back then. a system to control all this was not in place a the time they made this. Some teacher had a bright kid and said, "let's see if we can have a computer control all the HVACs.
They had an Amiga which for the time was a very powerful computer "much more so than an x86 dos box running at best a 286" so they did it.
I would love to know how they are using radio links for this. DTFM over audio?
Today if they wanted to roll there own they could use some cheap wifi routers and maybe some aurdino clones and use a VPN to keep it all secure.

Slashdot Top Deals

Real Programmers don't eat quiche. They eat Twinkies and Szechwan food.

Working...