Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Picky about my news... (Score 1) 250

Have you come across information clearing house? I've been looking for reliable, independent news media for a while and while I've found a few good sources I like I'm kind of on the fence about this guy. He is very open about what he does and why he does it, and he manages to dig up a lot of well-cited stories that I wouldn't hear about elsewhere. The editorial bias is thick, but he's upfront about it and seems to provide a good service simply because he's passionate about it.

Thoughts?

Comment MIL-SPEC (and butane irons) (Score 1) 321

I voted for competent and clean but not beautiful, mostly because I am very out of practice. I've seen MIL-SPEC mentioned a few times in this thread, so I figured people might be curious about the military standards for soldering. In the USAF we used TO 00-25-234, and it covered all of the basics for learning good soldering techniques.

On a slightly different topic, what do you think of butane-powered soldering irons? I saw one for the first time a few days ago and my pal seemed quite pleased with it... are they generally regarded as better than corded or battery powered?

Comment Get involved with your local pirate party (Score 4, Interesting) 162

The mirror they maintain at is yet another reason to get involved with your local pirate party. There website indicates that they can use assistance from UK residents who want to help with:

IT Team - Code
IT Team - Other
Campaigns - Design
Campaigns - Content
Campaigns - Local
Campaigns - Events
Campaigns - Candidates
Campaigns - Coordination
Campaigns - Newsletter
Treasury - Finance
Secretariat - Administration
Press - Pressteam
Leadership - Policy

Comment Piracy = Profit (Score 1) 179

I don't understand the headline.

How does the fact that Canada is a global leader in music sales imply that they are not a "pirate nation"? Has any credible study shown that one would expect that to be the case? The studies and surveys that come to mind all indicate that those who pirate the most media also spend the most...

Comment The virtue of Humility (Score 1) 402

Humility, it's a virtue.

...apparently one that has fallen out of fashion. Most functional adults interact with people who are less 'intelligent' than them- both in terms of having more knowledge and being more creative/insightful. That shouldn't be a barrier to empathy or communication. It is sheer arrogance when someone who is more knowledgeable or more capable at a particular task than someone else allows that to get in the way of caring about others and forming social relationships. I decided to comment on this story rather than moderate because so many of the commenters here seem to be wallowing in their own misery, lamenting about how smart they are and how lonely they are as a result.

Sure, those at the top .01% of whatever intelligence scale you choose to measure by have a different experience of things. Their skills may allow for a level of self sufficiency but "no man is an island" still applies, and if people isolate themselves from others then it is easy to fall into self-destructive patterns. With some mental disorders there is a very fine line between learned/self-induced behaviors and biological causes... I'm sure someone will throw up a snarky [citation needed] reply, but working to keep oneself involved with a community and investing the time and effort to develop genuine friendships can do a lot to ease the "burden" of intelligence.
Businesses

Do Headphones Help Or Hurt Productivity? 405

Hugh Pickens writes "Derek Thompson writes that there is an excellent chance you are wearing, or within arm's reach of, a pair of headphones or earbuds. To visit a modern office place is to walk into a room with a dozen songs playing simultaneously but to hear none of them. In survey after survey, office workers report with confidence that music makes us happier, better at concentrating, and more productive. But science says we're full of it, writes Thompson. 'Listening to music hurts our ability to recall other stimuli, and any pop song — loud or soft — reduces overall performance for both extroverts and introverts.' So if headphones are so bad for productivity, why do so many people at work have headphones? The answer is that personal music creates a shield both for listeners and for those walking around usm says Thompson. 'I am here, but I am separate. In a wreck of people and activity, two plastic pieces connected by a wire create an aura of privacy.' We assume that people wearing them are busy or oblivious, so now people wear them to appear busy or oblivious — even without music. Wearing soundless headphones is now a common solution to productivity blocks. 'If music evolved as a social glue for the species — as a way to make groups and keep them together — headphones allow music to be enjoyed friendlessly — as a way to savor our privacy, in heightened solitude,' concludes Thompson. 'In a crowded world, real estate is the ultimate scarce resource, and a headphone is a small invisible fence around our minds — making space, creating separation, helping us listen to ourselves.'"

Comment Re:Why delete the recordings? (Score 1) 306

Visible firearms do cause a disturbance, and it makes perfect sense that they can make an officer feel uncomfortable, because they are an existential threat to the officer

I don't think that word means what you think it means...

I think it comes down to a lack of courage. The reason people who open carry might be treated differently than people who don't is fear. Courage is not a trait that is particularly valued in the law enforcement community, and it's becoming less valued in the military as we change the way we fight wars. It's *hard* not to respond with aggression when you feel threatened, and due to the nature of most interactions cops have with the public they do feel threatened- whether or not it's justified by the particular open-carrying person they are interacting with.

It may make sense that openly worn weapons can make an officer feel uncomfortable, but when that officer responds by breaking the law and disregarding someone's rights the cop is in the wrong.

Security

DHS X-ray Car Scanners Now At Border Crossings 295

OverTheGeicoE writes "CNET has a story on DHS' whole car X-ray scanners and their potential cancer risks. The story focuses on the Z Portal scanner, which appears to be a stationary version of the older Z Backscatter Vans. The story provides interesting pictures of the device and the images it produces, but it also raises important questions about the devices' cancer risks. The average energy of the X-ray beam used is three times that used in a CT scan, which could be big trouble for vehicle passengers and drivers should a vehicle stop in mid-scan. Some studies show the risk for cancer from CT scans can be quite high. Worse still, the DHS estimates of the Z Portal's radiation dosage are likely to be several orders of magnitude too low. 'Society will pay a huge price in cancer because of this,' according to one scientist."
Censorship

Have Walled Gardens Killed the Personal Computer? 848

theodp writes "Harvard Law School Prof Jonathan Zittrain explains in The Personal Computer is Dead why you should be afraid — very afraid — of the snowballing replicability of the App Store Model. 'If we allow ourselves to be lulled into satisfaction with walled gardens,' warns Zittrain, 'we'll miss out on innovations to which the gardeners object, and we'll set ourselves up for censorship of code and content that was previously impossible. We need some angry nerds.' Searchblog's John Battelle, who's also solidly in the tear-down-this-walled-garden camp, adds: 'I'm not a nerd, quite, but I'm sure angry.'"

Slashdot Top Deals

U X e dUdX, e dX, cosine, secant, tangent, sine, 3.14159...

Working...