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Comment Re: 14th Amendment (Score 5, Insightful) 284

Why? The free market applies. If you don't like the goods one merchant supplies, find another. It is not as if search engines are state licensed or limited. It seems to me that by your logic, you can sue any publisher who decides not to publish your crappy book on the ground of inhibiting your free speech.

Comment "The Robot Did It" is no excuse. (Score 1) 153

We just need to be clearer where we allocate blame. If I launch a robot, and the robot kills someone, the responsibility for that killing is mine. If I did so carelessly or recklessly, because the robot was badly programmed, then I am guilty of manslaughter or murder as the courts may decide. Bad programming is no more an excuse than bad aim. A robot that I launch is as much my responsibility as a bullet that I launch, or a stone axehead that I wield.

So the three laws, present or absent, are a problem for the launcher of the robot weapon. We don't need complex international laws about AI, we just need a wholehearted implementation of "You broke it, you pay for it".

Which is just as well, because by and large attempts to ban "immoral" weapons have failed. The only fairly successful instance is chemical warfare, which has succeeded because chemical weapons are actually rotten weapons, far too likely to misfire or backfire. Whatever rules are made, automated weapon systems will come in. In fact, they have: what is the significant difference between a mine which explodes when it detects a man, tank or ship, and a gun which fires when it detects a man, tank or ship?

Comment Re:Small Connectors (Score 1) 408

In part, Ethernet uses 4 balanced pairs to get 10 Gbit/s, so only 2.5 Gbit/s per pair; USB3 gets 4 Gbit/s over one balanced pair so is achieving more data per pair. Then again, USB2 has lower cost targets because it is intended to be on many low-cost devices (keyboards, cheap memory sticks etc) leading to many endpoints whereas generally there are only two Ethernet endpoints per computer (on on the computer, on on the switch it is connected to) so a higher per endpoint cost is supportable. Ethernet is single minded: do one job well. USB is trying to be all things to all men: a cheap low cost interface for mice and keyboards, while also supporting high performance disks. If you want an interface the only does high speed transfers to an expensive device at the other end, you could probably do much better.

Comment Separate markets (Score 2) 453

The desktop/laptop PC market has always been two separate markets. One it the office, workplace, market. The other is the internet access market.

The standard PC was made for the office market. Both the office productivity market using the standard wordprocessor/spreadsheet/presentation apps, and all the various kinds of design and simulation software used by umpteen varieties of designer.

The standard PC was also sold for the internet access market - mainly web browsing and email, because initially it was the only device that could do it. But it wasn't actually optimised for these uses - is just did them because it was a good general purpose device. You could say that it was mis-sold for these uses: it was over complex for the simple uses people needed. When smartphones and tablets came along, they were actually designed to do the job these users wanted. Naturally they captures the market.

The PC market peaked at about 180 million devices. I reckon that was about 30 million work devices ("Sit forward" devices, as I think of them) and 150 million net access devices ("sit back" devices), The 30 million sit-forward market is still there, and growing at a reasonable rate. The 150 million "sit back" market is evaporating fast as people who want that switch to purpose-built devices.

Who is buying your product? Look at how they are sitting. If they are sitting forward, stay with the PC: you are selling to a steady segment of the market. If they are sitting back (or trying to), jump ship, because that is what your customers are doing.

Comment Re:Happily parked? (Score 1) 293

There was certainly a case of it some years ago in the UK. A spate of a single model (a Ford again, IIRC) bursting into flames while quietly parked at a particular motorway service station. The particular model was a favourite with sales reps, who would drive from London with pedal to the metal, then stop at this particular station for a break. A plastic fuel pipe ran above a bit of the engine which got very hot under this form of heavy usage. with essentially no cool-down mileage after the high speed run. Round about the time the rep was finishing his coffee, the plastic melted and poured fuel onto the overheated engine. Whoof!

So it can happen. Maybe this scenario, or one like it, has replayed.

Comment Hardly new (Score 1) 50

I have to say that this is hardly new: people have been modelling archaeological reconstructions for quite a few years now. This may be larger than many, but it is hardly /. novel. Not that I am suggesting that it is not worth doing, or that the professor has not done well. But it is news for archaeological students and educators, not computer geeks.

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