Comment Re:And how do we know these are legit? (Score 1) 180
We do the only thing we can do - we trust the Washington Post have done the one thing that they're supposed to be doing, which is check their sources.
We do the only thing we can do - we trust the Washington Post have done the one thing that they're supposed to be doing, which is check their sources.
What about leaving instructions near nuclear dump sites? You simply do not want your bonobos to dig up our old, radiating trash, thinking it valuable and wearing it as necklaces or whatever. Humans have done this, so there's no reason bonobo's wouldn't come to the same conclusion. (Ooh, shiny.)
This article talks about the problem, and some offered solutions, but concludes that it's pretty much impossible to make something look uninteresting or uninviting enough to prevent curious bonobos from exploring it. It's a pretty interesting read.
What's with the naming convention? With Google releasing SPDY, Snappy and QUIC, I'm guessing they will run out of synonyms for 'fast' sooner than Apple will run out of cats...
Oh, a bit like comefrom in Intercal?
I used to live near one of the towns where the experiment was done - I believed local politics called it 'Shared Space' or something. It's absolutely terrible.
While perhaps safer, it's absolutely terrifying, both when driving a car and when going by bike (the latter occuring rather more than you would think). Drivers and cyclists have been trained to obey rules, but when there's no signs and no indication, it's completely unclear what the rules are. There's no magic communication between road users that wouldn't occur otherwise, there's just confusion and chaos.
As an example, one of the shared-space roads I know had a roundabout that was only marked by a change in the road type (concrete instead of bricks) - remember, no traffic signs allowed. Depending on how you interpreted the pattern, cyclists had priority. The whole thing was of course absolutely invisible in rainy weather (which we get a lot), which meant people sometimes thought it was a regular crossing, only to slam the brakes when they realised their mistake.
The whole thing is nice in theory, but just reducing the max speed to 5mph would be just as safe IMHO, and that's what the whole Shared Space idea amounts to in practice. Of course, with everyone chugging along at a snail's pace, less accidents will happen - which looks great in reports, even more so when you add nice little graphs in bright colors.
The article you linked to is quite old, and AFAIK no new Shared Space-experiments have been done.
This is how it's done, and this is how it has been done for a long, long time.
That brand new Intel CPU in your machine? Yeah, it still runs the same code its predecessor did back in 1976. The internals have changed and become more complex many times, but the outdated interface is still there if you need it. It's not pretty, but there's not really any other way.
You could do what Richard Stallman does:
I generally do not connect to web sites from my own machine, aside from a few sites I have some special relationship with. I fetch web pages from other sites by sending mail to a program (see git://git.gnu.org/womb/hacks.git) that fetches them, much like wget, and then mails them back to me. Then I look at them using a web browser, unless it is easy to see the text in the HTML page directly. I usually try lynx first, then a graphical browser if the page needs it.
I also browse from other people's computers, with their permission. Since I don't identify myself to the sites I visit, this browsing can't be connected with me.
One consequence of this method is that most of the survellance methods used on the Internet can't see me.
It's not the most practical way to browse the Web I would think, but it's an interesting datapoint on the security-convenience scale.
This will simply not work - it's a technical solution to a social problem (the article mentions the oligopoly currently in place). It's also a technical solution implemented unilaterally by Mozilla.
As the summary mentions: the original Do-Not-Track effort only failed when Microsoft made the boneheaded, unilateral decision to make it the default. Starting out this way will only start an arms race between Mozilla and advertisers.
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin
Why do you make a distinction between tablets 'and similar' and smartphones? Where do devices like the Galaxy Note go on your scale?
If Microsoft is really as dependent on the Xbox as you're implying, i.e. more than on consumer Windows, I'm really curious how that will pan out. The Xbox One so far hasn't been unanimously praised - privacy issues, the whole used-game thing, lack of backwards compatibility... I know my personal experience doesn't exactly equal market research, but I haven't seen nearly as much drooling as over other releases.
If I had MSFT stock, I'd sell it. Maybe it's better that I don't actually have any.
I'm probably just being daft, but wouldn't it be technically impossible to play music from a sattelite? Space being a vacuum and all?
Bingo: it's the "no commercial servers" part. If you're making money off of your internet connection, you need a business plan. Simple as that.
AMD sold tri-core processors for a while - most if not all of those were just quadcores with one core either non-functional or intentionally crippled. Pretty smart move.
Whatever you do, don't tell Alice - she's the jealous type, or so I've heard
Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer