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Comment Re:It's a sad sign of the times (Score 1) 467

Well, the thing is, they can. As long as they are given the time and freedom to do it. Right now it's nearly impossible to do anything with Thorium in the USA because of nuclear regulations and that's a real shame because it prevents a very worthy line of research from being pursued and it stops the development of rare earth mining in this country due to the prevalence of Thorium in the rare earth deposits.

Comment Re:It's a sad sign of the times (Score 1) 467

Oak Ridge National Lab ran a thorium reactor for about five years before they lost funding for it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten-Salt_Reactor_Experiment The only reason we have Uranium based reactors is because we needed them for atomic weapons. Also, I wasn't suggesting that the only power source we'll ever need are LFTRs, just that they make a lot of sense for the majority of power needs, also they have a really neat-o whiz-bang by-product medically useful radio isotopes.

Comment Re:It's a sad sign of the times (Score 2) 467

What's with all the love for solid fuels in your response, don't forget about MSRs. Thorium based reactors are even safer than their pressurized water Uranium based cousins. Not to disparage them, any nuclear is better than coal or oil, but Th is better than U. Here's a little video about it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9M__yYbsZ4
Operating Systems

Submission + - The Impending Demise of Microsoft and the Rise of Linux (cemetech.net)

Forty-3 writes: "Win8 is gonna fail hard. Why? Because it's designed for the tablet and smartphone world. Android and iOS are already entrenched there; anything else that isn't amazingly better will fail. Win8 cannot be amazingly better. Therefore, it will fail.

It will have a side effect, however. Desktop users will be alienated. Microsoft has already done this 2 times in the past, ME and Vista. They can't afford to do it again. Most of their profits come from their desktop OS market and their office market. Without their mainstay in the OS market, they will be unable to continue as a software company. All of their other products are copies of existing software, and have all suffered staggering losses.

There is another problem with Microsoft. They have poor leadership. Even if Gates was evil, he was still a programmer. He programmed at least 1 piece of commercially successful software (Altair Basic). Balmer, on the other hand, is an MBA. He has not programmed one piece of software in his life. He instituted stack ranking, described by Kurt Eichenwald:

Every current and former Microsoft employee I interviewed, every one, cited stack ranking as the most destructive process inside of Microsoft ... If you were on a team of 10 people, you walked in the first day knowing that, no matter how good everyone was, two people were going to get a great review, seven were going to get mediocre reviews, and one was going to get a terrible review source

This caused projects at Microsoft to stagnate as they became entwined into an increasingly large bureaucracy that prevented actual work from happening. Projects like Windows Reader (Originally an eBook), Vista, and Zune, where Microsoft had several years on their competition ended up being released years later, stripped of features and far from their original purpose. There is no reason that win9 will be any different from win8.

I believe that in the next 5 years, users will be increasingly motivated to change OSs as Microsoft takes yet another plunge in their profits. There are currently 2 other viable options to windows: OS X and Linux (I refer to the FOSS BSDs in this statement as well, though they are not strictly linux). Although OS X has a large fanboy userbase, I do not see it gaining more than 5-10% over the next 5 years, as its overpriced hardware is not comparable to the many cheaper PC manufacturers' products. However, Linux has the power to take the computer world by the storm in the next 5 years, as its many variations form themselves against a unique subset of the computing world.

Linux has a large commercial userbase already, as many companies have searched for a more economically viable solution to windows in the post-recession world. According to two surveys by W3Tech and Security Space released in August 2011 and 2009, respectively, Linux now runs 63.9% or greater of all servers. According to a 2012 survey of companies with $500 million or more in revenues, almost 80% of them foresee an increase in linux usage in their company in the next 12 months, and 71.8% are planning to add more linux computers in order to support "Big Data."

The big obstacle we now face is widespread desktop adoption of linux. However, this may have already begun. Current articles place linux usage from 8-10% and growing (source source). With the failure of win8 eminent, we may finally see Linus's World Domination Plan put into effect."

Real Time Strategy (Games)

Submission + - Help save the RTS game genre! (kickstarter.com)

BBF_OS writes: Nowadays funding for game projects are becoming harder and harder to obtain. Big publishers prefer to invest in titles that focus on casual gamers, and that can maximize their profits. With that their older public, which was their only public, gets marginalized with games that are so shallow, that might as well be implemented in flash.
Most must have heard of Kickstarter by now though. And with it's power, comes the possibility for smaller companies to launch interesting games that would not stand a chance with the current publishers. Now what happens when old school developers from several AAA RTS titles unite with a goal of building the success of one of the best RTS titles out there?

Planetary Annihilation happens!

So, if you ever played Total Annihilation, and have a love for deep and complex RTS games, why aren't you still throwing money at them?

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/659943965/planetary-annihilation-a-next-generation-rts

Programming

Submission + - Programming for kids; Father-son bonding

SteveDorries writes: My 6 year old son has recently become very interested in programming, or as he calls it "Telling the computer what to do".
I've decided to use a basic variant to teach him procedural programming since it's simple and easy to grasp, but I'm having a difficult time thinking of fun projects to do with him. Does anyone have any favorite listings from old yellowed back issues of computer magazines that we could play with?
Linux Business

LGP To Introduce Game Copy Protection 388

libredr writes "Phoronix reports that Linux Game Publishing have developed an Internet-based copy protection which will be used in their upcoming commercial game port, such as Sacred: Gold. Any user will be able to install the game, but to launch it he will need to provide a valid key and a password, which are validated against LGP's servers. The key/password combination will allow a user to install the software on different computers. However, an Internet connection will be required even for a single-player game, which might be a hassle for some users. This scheme has enraged some of the beta testers and LGP CEO, Michael Simms, responded he regrets he has to introduce a copy protection scheme, but has to do this since a lot more people download their titles instead of buying them, to the point they even received support requests for pirated version. But will every pirated copy magically transforms into a sale, or will this scheme just annoy legitimate users and be cracked anyway? One really wonders."
Medicine

Lack of Sunlight Could Lead To Early Death 304

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Members of this community may want to venture out of the basement more often, because Dr. Harald Dobnig and his team have found that vitamin D deficiency leads to increased mortality. These results still hold when they take into account such factors as exercise and heart disease. Low vitamin D status has 'other significant negative effects in terms of incidence of cancer, stroke, sudden cardiac death and death of heart failure,' Dr. Dobnig said. The evidence of ill effects from low vitamin D 'is just becoming overwhelming at this point.' Vitamin D3 is usually produced by exposure to the UV-B in sunlight, but in high latitudes, especially in the fall and winter, insufficient UV-B gets through the atmosphere to produce enough vitamin D3, even with hours of exposure. The researchers are recommending that people at risk for deficiency take 800 IU of vitamin D3 daily. Just don't go overboard — as a fat-soluble vitamin, D3 is more capable of causing adverse effects at unnaturally high dosages. The human body tops out at producing about 10,000 IU per day." According to the Wikipedia entry linked above, the D2 (ergocalciferol) version -- available as a vegan product -- works approximately as well to supply humans with their needed vitamin D.
Science

Odysseus's Return From the Trojan War Dated 160

srothroc writes "Scientists have used astronomical data from the Odyssey to attempt to pinpoint the time of Odysseus's return from his eponymous journey after the Trojan War. From the article: 'The scientists then searched for potential dates that satisfied all these astronomical references close to the fall of Troy, which has over the centuries been estimated to have occurred between roughly 1250 to 1115 B.C. From these 135 years, they found just one date that satisfied all the references — April 16, 1178 B.C., the same date as the proposed eclipse.""

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