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Government

UK Man Prevented From Finding Chipped Pet Under Data Protection Act 340

Dave Moorhouse was elated when he was informed that a microchip provider had information on the whereabouts of his stolen dog. This joy soon faded when the company informed him that it could not divulge the Jack Russell terrier's location because it would breach the Data Protection Act. Last week a court agreed with the chip company and refused Mr Moorhouse's request for a court order compelling them to reveal the name and address of the new owners. Steven Wildridge, managing director of the chip company said: “This is not a choice, it’s an obligation under the Data Protection Act. If the individuals involved do not want us to pass on their details to the original owner then we cannot do so unless compelled to following a criminal or civil proceeding."

Comment Back in the 1990s our Ford Ranger... (Score 2, Interesting) 930

Had a wide-open throttle condition, that happened with my wife driving from Charleston WV to Beckley, WV on the Turnpike. A limited access toll highway, where towing is really expensive.

She drove all the way to the Ford dealer in town, slowing at toll-booths with the brakes and throwing money at the staff. It was a 4-cyl Ranger and mostly uphill, which helped too. She shut the engine off to stop, and when she started it, full throttle. We were 12,000 miles and a year out of warranty and the Ford dealer replaced the ECM no questions asked. It wasn't even the shop where we bought the truck!

This was before cars had black boxes, but as others have commented, when a computer screws up, often the .log file is as screwed up as the rest of the output. But don't tell me that complex code can't have unintended results. Maybe Toyota outsourced the code to Elbownia?

Comment I was there once, (Score 2, Informative) 291

the 3rd member of the staff, hired by a friend who was the second member of the staff. Eventually we wound up with nearly 2 dozen people, many better than me or my friend.

But even when I was Application Development manager, I designed table structures and wrote custom queries to reply to FOIA requests for data.

I took some graduate school classes after getting my BSCS, so as to have access to a computer while looking for my first job, which tells you something about when this was. The best class was Relational Data Base using "An Introduction to Database Systems" by C. J. Date. ISBN 0-201-14471-9.

Mr. Date, along with Mr. Codd, invented relational calculus, including normal forms. In later classes at work we were strongly advised to use 3rd normal form, as even mainframes of the day couldn't really support 4th or 5th. That instructor had participated in a project to rebuild a 5th normal form system into 3rd for Westinghouse, whose mainframe choked on the small (low column count) tables
and huge keys required by 5th normal form.

The book covers other styles of databases, network and hierarchical, but both are antique now. So I'd skip or at most skim those chapters. They show how Relational DB design grew out of experience with shortcomings of Multics and IMS, early network and hierarchical DBs, respectively.

Other commentors are correct, which DB software you use isn't terribly important for good table structure design. Learning how to select keys for uniqueness and design tables to be non-redundant are not database-specific solutions.

Do good backups, and practise restoring from them regularly, it doesn't matter how well-deswigned a DB is if the hardware fails and you can't recover the data.

Science

The Proton Just Got Smaller 289

inflame writes "A new paper published in Nature has said that the proton may be smaller than we previously thought. The article states 'The difference is so infinitesimal that it might defy belief that anyone, even physicists, would care. But the new measurements could mean that there is a gap in existing theories of quantum mechanics. "It's a very serious discrepancy," says Ingo Sick, a physicist at the University of Basel in Switzerland, who has tried to reconcile the finding with four decades of previous measurements. "There is really something seriously wrong someplace."' Would this indicate new physics if proven?"

Comment Re:Handy conspiracy theory??? (Score 2, Insightful) 688

It only takes a geologist or a google to show this has been publicly known for decades. Google "Afgan mineral specimens" and add -ebay for better results. The gem minerals being sold from Afgan locales are primarily those found in lithium-rich pegmatite deposits. The gems are worth from $100-100,000 for something that fits in a ziplock baggy. Raw lithium is valuable, but in rail-car amounts. I'm just an amateur geologist and if you had asked me I could have listed 3rd world countries with rich undeveloped minerals.

The same is true of Pakistan. Neither country has heavy rail. Bolivia has rich mineral deposits and mines, and the natives are dirt-poor and poisoned by mining related pollution, so don't hold your breath for the Afgans/Pakis to become developed countries.

Comment In my experience, (Score 4, Informative) 645

people with depression, even deep depression, can smile, laugh, and be outgoing right up until the moment they commit suicide.

It's part of the syndrome that they want to act like a natural, happy person, even if they're on a brink - no matter what. Many won't admit they're ill until fatal results happen.

Insurance companies shouldn't have anything to do with diagnosis, they aren't qualified (not being doctors), and they have a conflict of interest, making money by denying illness. Frankly I think making money by denying health care to people is nearly as unethical as just shooting them up front.

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Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

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