Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Global Warning (Score 1) 877

I am not a volcanologist, but my experience suggests this "microscopic shards of glass" is an overreaction. This article says that Mt Pinatubo released 4 cubic kilometers (= 1 cubic mile) of ash (= < 2 mm tephra). We were within 25 miles of it (we drove from Baguio to Manila that day), while it was blowing up, and nobody complained about breathing it in, and I never heard any discussion of respiratory problems... Actually, I remember standing outside watching the stuff fall down and asking my parents if it was snow. Amusement turned to concern only when it began sticking to our windshield (it was wet), forcing our driver to keep his head out the window, with sunglasses and an umbrella. On that day, we crossed bridges that collapsed shortly afterwards.

Granted, 1000 cubic miles is a lot more, but it will probably spread over a greater area too. My message is sure, get dust masks. But worry more about the roof of your house collapsing. Maybe bridges too. And, regarding one of those articles about water scarcity, I think a coffee filter should strain out the ash, if it came to that.

Come to think of it, people are able to survive dust storms just fine, which on a local scale, are probably worse than what a volcano would kick up. So maybe we should just ask the bedouins what to do.

Comment Re:Global Warning (Score 1) 877

I was near Mt Pinatubo when it blew. Ash was falling on us, but we weren't concerned about inhaling it... If that were a problem, you could just use an umbrella...

The problem was that the ash mixed with a typhoon passing by, and raining wet ash is a problem because it turned into dangerous sand-rivers. And, it ruined crop fields. In all, it hardly seemed like a big deal.

Certainly this volcano could be bigger, but I doubt it would make a great movie.

Image

Inventor Builds Robot Wife Screenshot-sm 469

Inventor Le Trung must really like the book "The Stepford Wives," because he has built the dream of every lonely man without hope, a robot wife. Le's wife, Aiko, starts the day by reading him the newspaper headlines and they go for a drives in the countryside. Le says his relationship with Aiko hasn't strayed into the bedroom, but a few tweaks could turn her into a sexual partner, even redesigning her to have a simulated orgasm. *Shudder*

Comment Re:The Academic Route (Score 1) 285

the "academic route" is probably not going to pay off since they're already busy with their own academics, especially if it is a "good CS" program.

most good scientific software projects that I know about were written by the scientists themselves who wanted to use that software. seriously, as a computational chemist, i know of almost no software comes out of companies. a company might take over and sell academic software, but there are very few projects that i'm aware of that *started* outside of a research group.

a better route might be, if you really believe that this is useful, is to DO IT YOURSELF. you're going to be wanting to add new features anyway, so you'll want to be able to modify it yourself. starting from scratch yourself isn't so difficult these days. just go with java, find a good IDE, load up one of their template projects, and you're 10% done already.

if you need to, submit applications for federal/state grants, and you'll possibly even get a publication or 2 out of the project, AND increased name recognition. when i was a freshman, i worked as a programmer for some faculty who went this route.

Censorship

NZ Judge Bans Online Publishing of Accuseds' Names 219

The Master Moose writes "A judge in New Zealand has banned the press from reporting online the names of two men accused of murder. The names of the men will be allowed to be reported in print as well as through Television and Radio broadcast. It would seem he has taken this step to prevent someone 'googling' these peoples names in the future and finding them linked to a crime if found innocent."
Music

Support Grows For Blanket Music Licensing 606

Anti-Globalism sends in Ars coverage of a speech by Jim Griffin, who is a consultant for Warner, one of the big four music labels. Griffin is encouraging dialog on the idea of blanket licensing of music — a topic heretofore more likely to be heard from the EFF or the Barenaked Ladies. "Taking music without paying for it may not be 'morally voluntary,' Griffin says, but he admits it has become 'functionally voluntary.' No civilized society, he adds, can endure 'purely voluntary payment for art, knowledge, and culture.' So Griffin's job is to help Warner monetize digital music, and he's convinced that the issue of payment for music is nothing less than 'our generation's nuclear power.' Griffin's most intriguing idea, and one he's been pitching for some time now, is a voluntary, blanket music license; essentially, bringing the collection society model to end users. In this model, consumers would pay royalties into a pot (by paying an extra monthly fee to their ISPs, for instance) and would then have access to all the music from all the labels that participate in the scheme."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Canadian Bureaucrats Don't "Think Different" 427

owlgorithm writes "Apple's new store in Montreal has three parking meters on the street in front of it. The city is in the middle of a campaign to reduce downtown parking. In Apple's ever-conscientious attempt to improve design, they offered to reimburse the city for the parking meters and their revenue if the city would remove them. Answer: Non — because 'We've never done it before, so we can't.'"

Slashdot Top Deals

Without life, Biology itself would be impossible.

Working...