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Comment please skip this story (Score 3, Interesting) 70

Slashdotters are clever and generally well informed, but this is way out of your league.

I'm trying to moderate today but the fact is that none of you know anything about space suits.
Consider yourselves modded down one point.

For many years, many well trained people have devoted time, energy and tons of money to devise a better space suit. It's hard to imagine even a very clever reader here having anything worth contributing to the issue. Please move on to a story where your comments will be competent.

Comment Re:Important details missing (Score 1) 554

Not just missing details, but overwhelming evidence: what about the hundreds of thousands of studies that say nutritional supplements are beneficial?

These 3 studies (that we are not allowed to read) are a poor counter to existing data. Thanks also to PapayaSF for pointing out the distinction between RDA amounts that protect against immediate death, and "optimum level of supplementation".

Finally, while I believe that there is something odd about the LEF founder, I believe that his organization is at the leading edge of research and formulation of useful nutrients.

Comment Re:2003 called, they want their article back (Score 1) 281

yeah well I'm pissed

I come here for news and I get *this*? The 'proof' is two lame examples in a lame article with no pretense of any scientific or statistical basis. This subject has been rehashed here and elsewhere for decades and it is brought out to present us with this useless article. Yeah, I RTFA and I'm pissed. Someone owes me 7 minutes of my life back.

Comment Re:A shot at other OS, computer *and* device maker (Score 4, Insightful) 471

> R&D

It's simple. Were it not for Apple and a very few other companies that do research, who take chances, who bet their lives that you want to move ahead, we would be using DOS.

R&D costs money. Dell and HP won't invest there; their money goes for marketing. Apple does real R&D and I am happy to support that.

Additionally, some foreign companies are investing increasingly in R&D. Apple (and Qualcomm, a few others) may be the only viable American company that remains.

Give your money to those who innovate, not to mass junk producers.

Comment economics (Score 2) 78

"A complete viral inventory would also carry a hefty price tag: about $6.3 billion"

Who wants to pay for that? Government? Private industry? The Gates Foundation? It's a major gamble for an uncertain reward. When you do the numbers it just doesn't make sense.

Economics aside, the human factor says it should be done. Assuming that ever larger numbers of humans on our planet is desirable. Is this what we want? I, for one, am willing to sacrifice your existence if it leads to a better world.

Comment documentation is for people (Score 1) 211

Documentation is for people, not programmers.

Many here seem to think that programmers write software for other programmers. Some do, but look at the 'Dummies' books- they are for people. People who have to do accounting, who have to write with Word, who want to know how to assemble an Ikea coffee table.

As an Apple ][ user and then a Mac user, I've never needed a manual to run ordinary programs. Autodesk CAD software and Mathematica require some instruction but most stuff just happens as you expect it to. If a Mac program requires documentation, it's probably defective as programmed.

OTOH, dBase was written for DOS programmers. It was complicated enough to discourage ordinary users and provide a market for middleman scammers who would create simple databases for small business persons and make them dependent upon them forever after. Those end users using the Apple or Mac in the early days could easily create their own hierarchical or relational databases without a 'consultant' because the software was user friendly.

I am a senior member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC) and it is my business to communicate obscure information from programmers, scientists, engineers and other snobs so that regular people can understand it. If that information was properly organized by people with common sense, I would be out of work.

Comment belief vs reason (Score 1) 622

Certain people have a tendency to believe. Many can be found in churches, temples, mosques, etc, where of course they believe the local dogma. But these same people believe many other things; 'Everyone knows that Ms Jones down the street is practicing witchcraft!'. Even small things: Aunt Emma said that when a dog licks your wound, it will heal faster. A dog's mouth is the cleanest thing in the universe!

These people cannot be reasoned with. The fact that a study of 50,000 people indicated that there was only a 8% chance of XXXX, has no meaning to them if they know or heard of someone who was the exception. Explain all you want- their ears are deaf to you. Any 'fact' spouted by a celebrity carries infinitely more weight than a scientist's observation. No matter the facts, these people will judge the President by offhand comments whose source is forgotten but gospel truth anyway.

It's frightening for me to think that people like this have access to the button that fires a nuclear missile. That they work in our military and police forces and the halls of Congress. That they drive on the same roads that I do.

Comment Re:Blackberry Q10 (Score 1) 238

"addicted to the Stratosphere's slide-out keyboard, which enables me to type much faster than a touchscreen"

Perhaps it is better when your typing speed isn't greater than your mental speed. Slow down your fingers and speed up your brain- you'll see that you need to make some changes. The phone is the least important.

Comment numbers lie (Score 1) 152

at least to /. readers who seem to think that Friday surgery victims are 44 percent more likely to die than ... well who?

I assume that this is compared to other people having surgery.

So if those people have a .01% chance of dying, the Friday people have a .0144% chance of dying.

Does that take some of the drama out of the story or do you still not understand it?

Comment but will he read it? (Score 1) 228

Permission to send an email is meaningless if there is no indication he will read it. Presumably he has a small army of people handling corporate and personal communication. Let's look at the economics of his reading your special message:

If we assume he will be earning $1B this year (argue if you will, I don't care), and he works 200 days, that means he makes $5M/day or $625K/hour or around $10K/minute. He gets paid $50,000 to take a dump during working hours.

Now here's your $100 message. Does he really want to waste $20,000 worth of his time reading it?

Comment can selling pirated software be justified? (Score 1) 174

A bright, handsome young man joined our Mensa computer group in the early 80s. We were mostly hackers and programmers and we swapped a lot of software. Just curiosity; we'd run a program a few times to see how it worked. We'd disassemble it to figure out how the clever parts were done. And we'd move on to the next batch of software at next months meeting.

The young man seemed to come from nowhere and was instantly very popular. After a while I discovered he was printing labels for his 5" floppy disks and selling the software. He even set up a nice office downtown in our US city for this business. We were close, and he wasn't ashamed to show me his operation. I was stunned at his brash lack of morals.

But he went on to explain that he was from Ireland. The money was not for him, but for the IRA. He was proud to contribute, and it became clear that he was a hard core supporter and a patriot. But all I could think of was that the already dirty money would be going to buy guns & powder and escalate the violence.

He disappeared as mysteriously as he appeared- altogether staying less than 8 months in our city.

Comment research (Score 3, Interesting) 465

I hope I never have to do research in a paper book again.
No random access, useless index, no xref, no links, no instant glossary...

The books I studied in school weighed far more than a tablet, cost nearly the same, and offered far less. A tablet could contain 1000 such books and provide pulp fiction too if I wanted that. Not to mention that the tablet provides the internet, Wikipedia, other media and access to all my friends and associates.

The only real books I keep are those that have not been digitized or are very rare. OK, some have value and I'm not going to burn them. It's the same philosophy that helps me to decide which LP records, audio tapes, and video tapes to keep. Once they are properly digitized, the old media is out of here.

I'm a writer. Unlike those of the past who refused to learn to type or use a computer, my feeling is that the technology is irrelevant- it's the story, stupid. If you read it from an illuminated parchment or a pixellated screen or the wall of China, what difference does it make?

I do keep a paper book in the bathroom, just in case the other paper runs out.
Take that you paper snobs!

Comment brain size = intelligence ? (Score 1) 121

"the bigger-brained fish also tended to have smaller guts and produce fewer babies."

                              Just like humans!

I have to question the association with size & smarts. 100 years ago in the age of eugenics, there was an effort to measure people- individuals and ethnic groups, and to draw conclusions based on those measurements. There was a general assumption that a large head (and presumably brain) indicated an intelligent person. However, one source that I found from around 1950 stated that the largest brain ever recorded was that of an idiot.

Has this changed? Is there evidence now that size = smarts? Is this true for animals as well as humans? The most recent I had heard (probably 1990s) was that a large brain in relation to body size might indicate intelligence in some species.

So I'm googling around today and this question looks even more complicated, however this
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=does-brain-size-matter
agrees with most that size alone is meaningless.

Add to that the already debunked 'smaller gut' significance and what's left?

This experiment just looks stupid to me; something that a small brained scientist might try.

Comment speed power expandability (Score 5, Interesting) 56

This is what we want in our working computers. Not our educational tools.

Long ago, in the days of the Apple ][, there was a computer emulator called the Visible Computer 6502. It was a graphical representation of a 6502 processor along with its registers and IO ports. You could program it in assembly language and watch it execute the code. Top speed was probably about 5 cycles per second, but you could slow it down for a better look at program execution, or you could step thru one cycle at a time.

This was an intimate look at the inner workings of a computer that a 9 year old could appreciate. It gave insights that elude college graduates today.

If someone will use Raspberry Pi to demonstrate this elemental relationship between hardware and software in a visually compelling format, then it will have served a revolutionary purpose and millions will see computers in a new light.

speed power expandability not required

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