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Comment Oppo WHO? (Score 1) 82

How unfortunate that this outfit has the same name as the Oppo that makes the BDP line of pioneering universal disc/media players. (That's the guys at oppodigital.com.) Lots of unnecessary confusion will ensue, fostered in part by the telecom Oppo's own inclusion of a BDP review in the Press tab at the site linked to here.

Comment The question that isn't being asked... (Score 1) 663

...is: "What are the kids being taught prior to taking the test?"

Are they being shown the analytical techniques needed to answer these questions, or otherwise being given a frame of reference within which the questions make sense? A colleague's 7-year-old, for example, recently asked him to help the kid with his math homework. When he couldn't make heads or tails of the questions (despite an EE degree), he Googled the context, figured out how the teaching model worked and within 15 minutes, knew how to explain the material.

Here, the author has an agenda and doesn't ask questions that don't support the agenda. It's possible that this article may itself make a good Common Core question, should Analytical Rhetoric be deemed part of the curriculum.

FWIW, having never had kids, I have no friggin' interest in the Common Core debate one way or the other. But looking through the sample test, I found it pretty interesting and definitely capable of being a valid teaching tool. But the bottom line, as usual, is context. The text can only be evaluated in light of the aspects of the instructional method that complement it. The fact that some jerkoff journalist and his wife can't answer a question in a topic in which they haven't received instruction is irrelevant, and the journalist's assumption that the problem lies with the test, and not with his and his wife's ignorance of the subject matter, may be an example of the arrogance of not knowing enough to know what one doesn't know.

Comment I've beem doing this for years (Score 1) 362

By using a Firefox plug-in called NoScript (there are others). Pretty interesting being able to view and manually kick adware to the curb. By globally revoking permission to scripts from domains like atdt, it's possible to greatly clean up your browser experience. And you always have a half-decent idea what's going on. I think this is a great idea on Mozilla's part, although it would certainly be appropriate to make this an opt-in feature.

Comment Critical question for critical thinkers (Score 1) 365

I'd normally assert that my time is too fkn valuable to waste on this silly, manufactured debate. But this time, the referenced article is so idiotic that I just had to post. Good frigggin' grief! If you RTFA, it reveals that this code is NOT part of the displayed terms of the site. It's from a block of text embedded as a comment into the site HTML, apparently inadvertently left in the code when an author cut-and-pasted code from another site.

.If anyone tries to tell you that this a legally relevant "hidden terms of service," just walk away.

From the article:

"It is unclear why these sentences appear in the code at all since they are not displayed, although the code may simply have been copied from another website that does use the full warning. In this case, the unwanted portion of the warning was rendered inert with HTML coding tags ("") usually used by programmers for inserting comments to explain the purpose of a section of code. However, the code can be rendered "live" again by simply removing those tags, in which case the full text would appear on the screen to users. However, it is unclear why the paragraph containing "no reasonable expectation of privacy" would ever have even been considered appropriate in this context."

It's articles like this one that give Obama-haters a bad name.

Comment This is new? (Score 1) 233

What am I missing? How is this different than what my 2010 Prius has been doing for me for the last three years. When I come up on a parking area, the Prius highlights candidate spaces on the touch screen and I select one. It then steers itself into the space. The driver keeps a foot on the brake in case of an event like a kid running behind the car, but otherwise, the Prius takes care of everything. Yes, this Ford system has a few greater degrees of automation, but I think those are just bells & whistles. I'm not so sure it's really a great idea that the driver doesn't have to be in the car, if only for the aforementioned safety reasons.

.

So I don't get it. Why is this news??

Comment More stupid Slashdot tricks (Score 1) 196

1. Applicant files overly broad patent application. Applicant is usually large tech outfit w/resources to gamble prosecuting an overly broad app that discloses subject matter that can be used to overcome expected rejection by narrowing claims during prosecution. This is a common (and common-sense -- you don't start a negotiation with your final offer) strategy for optimizing scope of an issued patent, but may appear to I-ANALs as a serious attempt to patent the overly broad claims.

.

2. Application publishes and is spotted by I-ANAL geek Web site which, not understanding what it's reading, pumps out a hack piece citing the application as further proof that the patent system (or intellectual property in general) is "broke."

3. Equally ignorant and/or confused I-ANAL Slashdotter posts story on /. with ironic comment. In some cases, there's no link to the actual application, making it difficult even for an IAAL figure out what the applicant was actually trying to patent.

4. Equally ignorant I-ANAL Slashdotters post comments that comprise: i) a terse pun; ii) "See, I told you the patent system (or IP in general) is broke!"; iii) A detailed, carefully reasoned analysis of an irrelevant detail of the patent; iv) A strange, off-topic, or unintentionally funny authoritative statement. (My favorite: "A design patent is basically a trademark.")

5. In many cases, a few IP or patent attorneys attempt to correct another poster's sillier misconceptions. Generally, the attorney's remark ends the conversation or, worst case, provokes an "anybody who knows what they're talking about is not to be trusted" kick-to-the-curb.

Just sayin'.

I've seen this episode before.

Comment Re:Yes, but... (Score 1) 102

You're thinking of the Plasmatronics product line, which, I believe, debuted in the late 1970s. Heard a pair once in NYC way back when & the high-end was pretty remarkable. Suitable mainly for tweeters & supertweeters. They don't use an extraordinary amount of electricity and produce only a tiny amount of ozone. But they require a supply of halogen gas, which I recall makes an annoying hissing noise.

Comment Geek Honey Boo Boo (Score 1) 299

What do you think this is, France??

.

Given that most people in this country can't divide 100 by 8 in their heads, I mock the thought that anybody would take this story seriously.

At what age should kids be taught to read patent-claim language?

At what age should kids be taught to replace head gaskets?

At what age should kids be taught how to cull facts from political rhetoric, rather than just repeat what they hear on the radio?

I think it would be worth a cheer to see pre-teens get excited about writing little BASIC programs on their iPads, but in the real world, school teachers I know would be happy enough to be able to teach the majority of their grade-schoolers how to balance a checkbook, or how to understand a short piece of classical music.

Comment Re:Is this even constitutional? (Score 1) 266

>The First Amendment has no real part in this. The First Amendment is between you and the government, only. It does not come into play in contracts between you and a web site operator, unless the operator is a government entity itself. That might involve the First Amendment, but I doubt it will be a significant issue.

.
FWIW, the 1st Am. can become relevant if the government forces an entity to restrict speech, regardless of whether that speech is a term of a K. If I contract w/Facebook to give Facebook the right to publish and republish any text that I post, the 1st is implicated if the Federal govt. attempts to bar Facebook from enforcing that term. The 14th Am. extends this issue to state govt.'s. And then, there's also the contract clause of the Constitution, although freedom of speech generally trumps financial protections.

Comment Re:history? (Score 1) 310

>So my point stands: When it was that warm in Greenland, it was certainly warm in Canada and Alaska. So where did the polar bears live, if warmer water is lethal to them?

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.No, I don't have anything constructive to contribute here, but I just wanted to be sure that everybody saw this comment. It really brightened my day. Who needs SNL?

--
Who says enabling technology is a good thing?

Comment Re:Success (Score 1) 432

Easy answer -- you've got to compare apples to apples. (Sorry, couldn't avoid that one.) People here are discussing sales over an atypical time period -- the weekend after a major launch. Compare that number to a weekend after another, comparable, launch. Say, the iP 4, SIII, SIV, etc. An alternative is to, average out the brief post-announcement peak and compare sales over the first 60 days after each launch. If you want to mitigate the distorting effect of pre-announcement delayed sales, compare 60-day periods starting 30 days before each launch. Whatever. The point is that simply citing a single set of numbers, based on sales during a small, atypical period of time, without direct comparison to even nominally similar periods, as evidence of success or a failure of a product is not enough to support either proposition -- much less to support allegations of a longer-term trend.

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