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Submission + - Google Phone on Verizon Wireless Network 1

bowl_of_petunias writes: Google and Verizon had a joint press conference today. http://money.cnn.com/2009/10/06/technology/verizon_google/index.htm
From the CNN Money article: "The companies said they plan to develop "several" Android-based devices that will be pre-loaded with "innovative applications" designed by Google, Verizon and third parties." and "The companies said Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) will introduce Android-based handsets within the next few weeks." Not a huge surprise after all of the rumors, but still nice to hear confirmation. Will this give ATT haters the phone of their dreams?

Comment A few here and there. (Score 1) 958

US of course, Greece, Germany, Jamaica, Canada, and Mexico.

In the US, I've been to every state on my motorcycle except Hawaii. I understand I can ship my bike to Hawaii but I'd rather just rent a bike like I did in Greece.

I've also ridden my bike to all the Canadian Provinces and Territories except Nunavut.

I want to get a smaller BMW and take a ride in South America but I want to learn some Spanish before making the attempt.

[John]

Comment Linus "does not believe in Freedom" (Score 2, Interesting) 747

From de Icaza's article: 'To him, ridiculous statements like Linus "does not believe in Freedom" are somewhat normal [1].'

Isn't that true, though? I always thought Linus came down heavily on the side of open source as an engineering philosophy and against the ideological side of software freedom? I'd have expected Linus to agree with the sentiment RMS is expressing, to be honest, as I believe it matches his real world stance.

RMS is obnoxious in the things he says or the way he says them sometimes. He also frequently comes across as patronizing in the way he states his beliefs as if they are Truth. But at least the guy is pretty consistent. I'm not sure having a hardliner such as him is as helpful now as it was was but you can at least rely on him to take a fairly consistent take and articulate his principles well, even if you don't believe in them. I respect him, even though he's maddening sometimes.

Comment Re:Wow , at 8 cents a page for a PACER document... (Score 1) 445

The point here is that the works were public domain; Walking in and reproducing them only incurs the cost (to the customer) of paying for the reproduction, i.e. toner, electricity, copier maintenance, paper. That's it.

What this script did was bypass the arbitrary $0.08 "reproduction fee" for accessing these public domain works, and make them available free of charge (as they are by signing up to the library service, as I understand it).

AFAIK, he used a script to automate the procedure of accessing each page, and uploaded it elsewhere. Doing it on a computer which wasn't his was dumb, but hardly a big issue in the context.

$1.5m "value" is just idiotic. On the internet, reproduction costs decrease to zero in an insignificant amount of time.

Comment Re:apple - the most anti-open company (Score 1) 600

Probably not. Like I said, Kodak doesn't seem to have suffered greatly from withdrawing themselves from the BBB, and that's an even more serious taint on their trustworthiness IMHO than not being USB-IF certified. Especially compared to also knowing why Palm is losing USB-IF certification: not because of defects or unreliability, but because of some silly rules which they broke in order to make their products work better. (Hypothetically assuming Palm loses their USB-IF certification over this, I mean.)

Comment Re:Looks like a nice device (Score 0) 175

And I'm suprised to say this but compared to Apple's tablet this will probably be more open (in the not-restricted-to-apples-store way) and have a Windows platform. I hope they reveal more details soon.

What an interesting conclusion especially since it is completely contrary to the current state. In the hand held computer market Apple encourages anyone and everyone to write applications for the iPod Touch and iPhone. Their only restrictions are related to digital signing (a reasonable restriction) and the use of the App store (a less reasonable restriction). By contrast Microsoft won't allow any 3rd party applications for their new Zune (their iPod Touch competitor) except from a few select partners.

In the personal computer market both Apple and Microsoft encourage any and all developers to write applications for their respective platforms. Apple's platform includes far more open source pieces than Microsoft's. For example, Mac OS X is built on BSD and Safari on Webkit and Apple makes considerable contributions to the open source community. Microsoft, not so much.

So what evidence led you to your conclusion?

Education

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Tablet PC for Classroom Instruction?

dostert writes: "With all of the recent hype of multitouch notebooks, the Apple Tablet, the Microsoft Courier, and the CrunchPad, I've been a bit curious about what happened to the good old pen and slate tablet PCs. I'm a mathematics professor at a small college and have been searching for a good cheap tablet (under $1000) which I can use to lecture, record the lecture notes along with my voice, and post up video lectures for the class. I have seen some suggestions, but many are large scale implementations at state universities, something my small private college clearly cannot afford. All I have been able to find is either tiny netbooks (like the new Asus T91), expensive full featured tablets (like the Dell XT), or multitouch tablets, that really wouldn't allow for the type of precision mathematics needs. I know a Sympodium device would work great, but we really can't afford to put one of those in each room, so something portable would be ideal. All I've been left with is considering an HP tx series. It seems nobody has created a new tablet like this in quite sometime, and HP, Fujitsu, and Dell are just doing incremental updates to their old designs. Does anyone have experience with this?"

Comment Re:Again with the #$##%# solar cells (Score 1) 150

It's all a matter of timing.

We know at some point petroleum will become impractical to support the energy needs of civilization as we know it. In 1979, people thought the end was nigh, when in fact it was just an oil cartel flexing its muscle. But the ability of the cartel to do this was a harbinger of peak oil. The US was no longer anywhere near energy self-sufficient. The same thing happened in 2008, suddenly the end was nigh. It wasn't.

Let me draw a closer analogy. During the Dot Com boom, lots of individuals made money, but very, very few web enterprises did. VCs were pouring money into startups with nothing more than a name and a PowerPoint presentation -- not a real business plan. There wasn't time. Money had to be spent. Why? Because everyone knew web commerce was coming. And they were right, web commerce was coming. Yet the vast majority of money invested in those days was wasted, at least from the perspective that investments should provide returns to the investors. In part it was classic bubble behavior, but even *solid* business plans had a huge element of uncertainty. If the business plan was timed *right*, it would be like buying Microsoft in 1986.

Some day, if the conditions are right, one of these photovoltaic "breakthroughs" may take the world by storm. The chance of any single "breakthrough" doing it is vanishingly small, but the chance of *some* "breakthrough" doing it is substantial. It has to be the right development at the right time.

There are basically three avenues I can imagine working:

(1) Really cheap cells. If it works and can be produced commercially, this is an almost certain winner, because there are many places we can use power and are throwing away photons. Probably won't change the world if it is really inefficient, because *other* costs around installation will limit success.

(2) Incrementally better cells. If it works with given production infrastructure and doesn't have any significant drawbacks, a nearly certain winner that will expand the utility of photovoltaics to applications that are currently marginal. Certainly not a big winner in the short term, but a step forward for the tortoise in the race.

(3) Radically more efficient cells. Least likely to succeed, IMHO. The best cells on the market are about 23% efficient; given thermodynamic limits there isn't a *great* deal of room for improvement. Super-efficient cells will probably have niche applications, but any "breakthrough" in this area needs to have the proviso "and costs about the same to produce as current photovoltaics" before it's worth sitting up and taking notice of.

Comment Re:The Future of Gaming (Score 1) 86

The Nintendo Wii sells by the mega-truckload.
The Wii Fit and various others, sell in a the standard truckload.

As an overweight Wii-game loving freak, I can tell you that Wii-Fit sits quietly on the floor, gathering dust, just like any other fitness product I've bought over the years.

"Being able to introduce a method of exercise that is genuinely fun for all..."

I don't think you can make getting fit, fun.

Comment Re:Dodgy statesmen (Score 1) 681

A lot of Europeans are criticizing Obama for saying, "We're canceling the missile defense system," but I think he has the right idea. If the European Union wants a missile defense shield to protect themselves from Russia, Iran, et cetera than let the EU build it themselves. They need to stop sucking on the U.S. taxpayer teet and build their OWN defensive army and shield.

>>>I'm not American, I've just had enough of all the US bashing, especially from the people who intersperse it with cries for help.

Thank you British cousin.
Thank you for being honest.
Oh and the reason the American death age is 1 year lower than EU rates has *nothing* to do with the government. Correlation =/= causation. The real cause is that we eating fatty foods that clog arteries & shorten lifespans. Like this ice cream I'm eating for breakfast. ;-)

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