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Comment making NASA agile? (Score 2, Insightful) 319

The problem here is clearly about the leadership changing priorities and budgets before anything gets finished.

The projects that NASA work on have long timelines, this is not compatible with budgets which change annually and where the govenment who holds the purse strings also often changes (as in this case) before the project is completed.

This is not too different in concept (but is admitedly different in scale) to software development where if priorities are allowed to change before projects are completed, nothing ever will be finished.

Maybe NASA can try and work to smaller achievable goals within a smaller timeline that have a clearly defined benefit?

Sound familiar?

Submission + - BBC pulls plug on community (theregister.co.uk) 1

An anonymous reader writes: The register has a perfect summary article on a recent move by the BBC which blocks "Unauthorised", including free open source applications from accessing streams from the BBC I-Player service.

The BBC has quietly updated its hugely popular iPlayer with a verification layer that closes the door on open source implementations of RTMP (real-time messaging protocol) streaming, The Register has learned.

To me, this is utterly baffling. SWF verification makes absolutely no difference to tools designed to cirvumvent the BBC's copy protection methods (get_iplayer works fine). All it has done is alienated the creators of some very slick iplayer apps. Needless to say im withdrawing my TV license :)

Cellphones

Submission + - Photo Stalking? There's an Android App for That!

theodp writes: You could ask that pretty young thing to give you her phone number. Or you could just take it. A Swedish app called Recognizr lets you point your smartphone camera at someone and retrieve their online profiles via face recognition. Suppose it's the next logical step after Google Goggles. Let's hope the technology doesn't spread to the locker room.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Debuts Europe's Choose-A-Browser Screen (theregister.co.uk)

derGoldstein writes: Microsoft will finally roll out its browser choice screen next week: "The UK, Belgium and France will get the first crack at the screen, which will be rolled out through Windows update to users who are running Explorer as their default browser. A phased roll-out to the rest of Europe will begin from March 1". Dave Heiner introduces the Browser Choice Screen in this blog post, and notes that "The browsers that are listed and the content relating to them will be updated from time to time".
Iphone

Submission + - What you get when you buy a $40 iPhone in a bar (pcpro.co.uk) 1

Barence writes: How good — or bad — are fake iPhones? PC Pro blogger Steve Cassidy has a friend who paid £25 ($40) for an "iPhone" in a bar, and he's got the photos and full lowdown of what's inside this not-so smartphone. The phone looks convincing enough from the outside, with a genuine-looking backplate, but things start to go wrong when you switch it on. What’s a “Java” and “WLAN” App button doing on the screen? And how about that Internet Explorer icon? It’s like you’re handling an artefact from an alternate history, dropped in via a spacetime wormhole. It has dual SIM handling, too, and came with a bizarre auxiliary battery festooned with warnings about not pressing a button mounted on the front of the top-up device.

Comment Official footage (not subversive at all) (Score 0) 1

This was NIN official footage that he release on his site (just prior to the remix section going live) with the aim that fans would build their own videos and submit them to NIN.

Can't spot the link on the NIN site any more - but I definatley saw it last week. As you can see from their site however this is a feature for fan based videos.

Trent is a very smart guy and definatley is leading the way in the future of the music business.

Government

Submission + - France on the verge of Internet censorship (computerworlduk.com)

superapecommando writes: French lawmakers voted Tuesday to approve a draft law to filter Internet traffic, a measure the government says is intended to catch child pornographers. The bill will now go on for a second and final reading.
Critics of the catch-all "Bill on direction and planning for the performance of domestic security" say that filtering won't stop the spread of child pornography, but could allow the government to censor other materials.

Comment Re:Rock Rainbows? (Score 0) 341

If you read the arictle you may notice that the planet doesn't get a sunset due to it having a captured rotation:

From the article:
"it is so close to its sun that its orbit is like the Moon around Earth. One face is always pointed towards its sun."

ie no sunset - sorry

Comment Re:on the road charging? (Score 0) 586

When I drive I generally don't drive 100% of the time at full throttle. Being at a constant velocity all you need to do is overcome drag. This will obvious depend on the car but you know they will be working hard to being this down so at 50mph you may find that you only need 1/4 throttle which means the 5HP generator will keep you nice and topped up. Then at zero throttle you are making a net gain.

All this means is that the maths is much more complicated that your model and depending on the journey a 5HP generator could add significatly more range.

As for the car emissions standards they measure percentage of certains harmful gases not absolute volume. So a small car with a "bad" emissions can easily be much less harmful to the environment than a large engine vehicle that pushes out massive volumes of exhaust gases which results in the "good" car emiting more harmful gas than the "bad" small car. At which point a 5HP generator is not so bad for the environment as say the 150HP engine you are replacing.

Games

Turning Classic Literary Works Into Games 93

Adventure Classic Gaming is running an interview with Chris Tolworthy, an indie game designer who is working on a project to make video games out of various literary classics. His decision to develop these kinds of games was sparked by a desire to reach out to gamers who want more "serious" subject matter, as well as finding an audience among people you would find in a book store, rather than a game store. Tolworthy has already released one game, an adaptation of Les Misérables, and has almost finished Dante's Divine Comedy. After that is done, he'll move on to other works, including Theogeny, by Hesiod, and Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, aiming for two or three releases a year. He said, "I try to keep as close as possible to the original text. When I create a game I simply go through the book and adapt it chapter by chapter. As far as possible all my puzzles are based on ideas in the original book. So my Dante's Inferno is a lot closer to the book than EA Games' Dante's Inferno that changes Dante into a warrior with a giant scythe! Although I stick closely to the story, I would find it boring to only give the straight text, so my games always give a different twist. For example, I show Les Miserables from the point of view of a minor character who dies early on. In my Divine Comedy I show other points of view as well as Dante's, and they don't see things the same way. Really, what I'm doing is what theater directors do when they put a Shakespeare play into a modern setting. It's the exact same story, but presented in a new way."

Comment Re:I have experince with this. (Score 0) 533

Being pedantic won't this need an 8 bit graphics card? 16 bit ISA came along with the 80286 didn't it?

That said you can certainly get EGA and if you are lucky you might find an 8bit VGA card (back then VGA was new I remember my parents amstrad 2086 (had a 8086 processor at 8Mhz but boasted VGA graphics and a 640x480 display!) so it should be possible.

Comment Re:I read the "answers", now I feel for you.. (Score 0) 370

I agree most do not seem to grasp the nature of the question.

Why can manufacturers make high resolution LCD screens for laptops but do not use these screens to produce similar desktop LCD screens?

Maybe it is to artificialy boost the laptop market?

The smallest pixel size I have seen if from the libretto U100 screen, 7.1 inches and 1280 x 768, so why can't I have a 15 inch LCD screen at the same pixel size? ie 2540 x 1536

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