Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Drone It (Score 2) 843

There is a pretty good chance the F35 can beat the F16 in the air before a dogfight ever occurs. There is more to air-to-air combat than dogfighting, just like there is more to infantry combat than hand-to-hand combat. Ideally you want to win the fight before you get close enough to punch someone.

Comment Re:Drone It (Score 1) 843

It kind of sucks that this expensive new plane sucks at dogfighting, but honestly it's probably better to have all the other stuff except dogfighting. They've been saying it for years, but I think it's funally true. Dogfighting is obselete. Not to say that there will never be another dogfight in the future, I just don't think designing an aircraft around dogfighting makes sense anymore.

You don't need to dogfight if your plane can go faster, and has better radar systems to see enemies and and shoot them done well before a dogfight ever takes place.

That said, I've heard some disparaging comments about the true stealth profile of the F35, but that's another story.

All I am saying is that lack of dogfighting ability is probably not a dealbreaker, if it performs in all the other areas. But it's entirely possible the F35 is still sucks and is a waste of money.

Comment Re:I'd certainl yhope so... (Score 1) 64

What I am saying is that I'd rather live in a world without libel and slander laws (i.e. one with freedom of speech). I realize this comes with the added responsibility of determining what is true or false without help of the courts, but I am willing to accept that. I am also willing to accept that this also means others may lie about me or my products.

Comment Re:I'd certainl yhope so... (Score 2) 64

I don't think the blocking of shitware is a problem per se. It seems that the objection is to the labeling of the products of others as "shitware". There are apparently rules that forbid Coca cola from saying "You should drink coke instead of that diarrhea water called pepsi".

I understand the motivation for these sorts of laws, but they do lead to cases like this, where our ability to call a turd "a turd", is questioned.

I would much prefer a world where there was freedom of speech even in advertising, and I will be responsible for determining if pepsi is really "diarrhea water", or whether a browser toolbar is shitware rather than the government. Think of all the human effort and time wasted in legal battles that would be saved. Think of all the kids potentially becoming lawyers, because laws and litigation are how we solve our disputes. Think of all the people who must think "Well if I heard it on the TV or the internet it must be true, because liars lose their court cases", even implicitly.

Comment Re:Our tax money (Score 1) 133

Google is not the gatekeeper of information. They are merely the most popular gate currently. They understand this, and it is why google search is still really good. Google knows that if they completely sell out and offer top search spots to the highest bidders (rather than what people are probably looking for), their customer base will disappear about as quickly as it came.

The "power" google holds in search is tied to the quality of the search. If that diminishes, so does their power.

I wonder sometimes if it could be necessary to offer the consumer a blended search capability, where searches are parsed from multiple sources and blended in an agnostic fashion without concern for any provider's business interest.

They used to have these back in the day (when search engines were terrible). You could search lycos, and alta vista, yahoo, hotbot, excite, etc, all at the same time. Maybe one of them would find what you were looking for. Then google came out, and everyone quickly realized that it always provided the best results, and we didn;t need these search aggregator anymore.

But that doesn't mean they won't/can't/shouldn't come back. Google's public API makes it pretty easy to include in such a search aggregator. I'm sure they wouldn't mind having their results compared with Bing, etc.

Any 1st year CS student could probably easily make one. If it is useful (i.e. showing the true results, rather than just the results from Google's sponsors), people will probably even use it.

Comment Re:It's obvious how Uber does it (Score 1) 230

Here is one example:

Taxi medallions create an artificially low supply of drivers. The price of these medallions is often hundreds of thousands of dollars. This lower supply of drivers also means higher prices for consumers.

The high barrier to entry is good for the people who already own the medallions, but it is bad for everyone else. It is especially bad for people who spent a lot of their own money to get a medallion right as the ridesharing trend took off. They must rightly feel cheated.

There is no reason to try to artificially lower the supply of drivers. Cities should purchase medallions back from drivers to help them recoup the costs they've incurred, and new drivers would be able to avoid a large cost.

Slashdot Top Deals

It has just been discovered that research causes cancer in rats.

Working...