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Comment It was a tie... (Score 2, Interesting) 104

It was a tie...

In football, I can see how a 20 second difference makes the difference between winning the superbowl. In a contest like this that took thousands of man hours of some brilliant people, calling Ensemble "second place" due to a 20 second difference is just wrong. I don't know if there was a better solution, but something just seems wrong about it all.

Comment Re:Really? (Score 2, Informative) 108

See http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-temperature-in-space.htm

It says that space is ridiculously empty *on average*, so a molecule floating around in the middle of nowhere probably has virtually no energy (except the cosmic background radiation). This is why the average temperature of space is so low.

On the other hand, a molecule in our solar system gets hit by all sorts of radiation if it had direct line of sight with the sun, heating it to >40 kelvin.

Comment Re:thousand million? (Score 4, Informative) 186

A thousand million is probably the most correct term for international understanding.

There is no world standard term for one thousand million. In the US and most of the UK we call it a "billion", but in several countries a billion means a million million. In these countries, a thousand million is usually called "a thousand million" or a "milliard", but I've never seen "a million thousand".

Comment Re:Correlation does not equal Causation (Score 1) 176

Yes, the article goes into this on page 6. "There are at least two other possible explanations. One is "homophily," the tendency of people to gravitate toward others who are like them." They go on to explain that many scientists think the study did not properly account for this.

I agree with you; I generally do not hang out with fat people, people who smoke (other than socially), or people who are not generally happy. I remember in College I briefly tried hanging out with a group that was generally medicated (a lot of them were depressed), smoked a lot, and was largely overweight. They never understood me, and we eventually drifted apart. Meanwhile, my core friends, who I still associate myself with, are all similar to me.

Comment Re:News? Where? (Score 1, Insightful) 403

I think this case is semi-interesting because it conveniently parallels the slow death of the media as we know it. The idea is that people used to look to newspapers like the New York Times for trustworthy news; now, these sources mislead (lie?) to their users and mess up their expensive computers in the process.

Of course, I agree with you that it is misleading to accuse just the NYT - 1000s of sites run these misleading ads, and many probably don't mean to (including the NYT, I'm sure). I would call this a non-story - the obvious reaction from the NYT will be "we did not mean to run these ads, it's the online ad providers' fault, and we have made sure the ads won't be run again." And then no one will care anymore. Yawn.

Comment Nice comparison there... (Score 3, Insightful) 362

Interesting how in the before/after diagram, they zoomed out the old item page to make it look less clear. Also, they chose a crappier picture (and an entirely different product).

This is the kind of sloppiness/deviousness I expect fat-burning pill advertisements, not a big corporation like eBay. They should have shown the same product at the same resolution so people could objectively see the differences.

Comment Who's to blame? (Score 1) 86

I had one, and it was a great system, RIP.

But I dislike how this guy tries to shift the blame throughout the interview - the Dreamcast was a lot like the PS3 of this generation - too ahead of its time. It's not that it was overpriced like the PS3 was, but developing for it was a big pain in the ass (although there were some great games because of its powerful hardware). When the PS2 came out soon after, it had a DVD player and truly felt next-gen. The modem this guy pushed for was a pretty crappy feature compared to a fully-featured DVD player.

Comment Re:Do people still argue Hubble is a waste? (Score 2, Interesting) 129

I agree with you, but keep in mind that it hasn't been cheap. A lot of liberterian types probably don't like the Hubble's cost.

The Hubble has cost at least 5-7 billion dollars now (http://www.spacetelescope.org/about/faq.html). It has directly led to 4,000+ papers (source: Wikipedia), and a lot of new discoveries. It is hard to quantify the value of the Hubble, but one way of putting it is the mean cost per academic paper is about 1.5 million dollars. Of course this is a terrible way of putting it, because the Hubble produces some awesome images. Also, many of those papers have had a big impact on several academic fields, and are highly cited.

Comment Re:Colors in photographs (Score 1) 129

The answer is some images are close to true, while others are totally different from what our eyes would see. Every Hubble photograph we see is actually a composite of 3 gray-scale images with different filters attached. In general, they color the image with the highest wavelength filter red, the lowest blue, and the middle green.

This page (http://www.hubblesite.org/gallery/behind_the_pictures/meaning_of_color/eso.php) gives a pretty good illustration. You can click on several images and see a map from where the three filters exist (on a wavelength axis). Some images, like the Galaxy ESO 510-G13 I linked you to, are close to true color. The image of Saturn (http://www.hubblesite.org/gallery/behind_the_pictures/meaning_of_color/saturn.php) is stretched from a pure infrared to RGB.

Comment Re:Bad summary (Score 1) 187

Why not, if it helps them do their job?

I feel like there is an implicit assumption on Slashdot that government agents don't know how to do their jobs properly, even though we know very little about what they do.

And then we complain when lay people assume tech/IT people don't know how to do their jobs correctly.

Comment Re:data connection? (Score 3, Interesting) 194

Amazon presumably pays Sprint for the service connection too. My guess is Amazon pays per byte, because they charge to wirelessly transmit books to the kindle (unless you buy the book from Amazon, in which case that's baked into the price).

If my guess is true, using it purely as a browser could cost Amazon a decent amount. Fortunately for them, the browser is terrible and the screen is too slow to browse quickly.

Comment Re:Push for proper patent reform (Score 1) 495

As it is, at least at my company, if I apply for a patent my name is on it. This obviously furthers my career - I don't care about the 500 dollars, but having a useful patent in my name is great for the resume.

But I wouldn't expect ownership for several reasons. First, the company puts about 10,000 dollars worth of a lawyer's time into each patent. I'm guessing they would expect me to pay for that myself if I were to own it. Second, my company would probably fire me if I spent dozens of work hours applying for a patent that they couldn't own or use for free. Third, it would create a huge conflict of interest if I start licensing the patent out to my company's competitors for personal profit.

There's just too much wrong with not allowing a company to profit off its own investments.

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