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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Wow, (Score 2, Interesting) 1079

In defense of the Brits, the structure of their navy during and right after the Cold War was in large part because of a division of labor and resources determined by NATO (and the US military). The British Navy was designed, during this period, to work as a part of a larger NATO/US Navy force tasked with dominating the North Atlantic.

And can I add - OMG how off-topic is that? We're talking about the SF writer Peter Watts getting the crap kicked out of him by some thug border guard. A lot of cops are nice guys, a lot aren't. If this is the driving element in this case, I suspect the charges against him will be quietly dropped in a couple months. The DA offices in the USA are notorious for their attempts to avoid embarrassment by any means necessary. First they'll try to get him to plead out, offering him probation or some such. If he refuses, they'll threaten him for a few months, then, very quietly, so quietly in fact no one will hear about it, they'll drop the charges. I've seen this very scenario play out in a friend's life. I even experienced a trivial version of this little dance, when I was once charged with reckless driving and decided to contest the charge.

Comment Re:As someone from "Tornado Alley" (Score 1) 275

The center of tornado activity in general (EF0-EF5) is in Oklahoma and Northern Texas.....BUT if only EF2+ tornadoes are counted, one of the most dangerous areas is Northeast Kansas, including Manhattan. However, powerful tornadoes only make up a tiny percentage of all tornadoes. Manhattan has been hit twice by EF2+ tornadoes in the last 40 years, last year and back in the 1960s. The risk is there, the risk is real, but not on a per year basis. I'd say there is a large risk to the facility if you consider the entire lifetime of the facility. One last thing: Kansas is cattle country. If you want to destroy the American livestock industry, a massive release of animal pathogens in Kansas would do it.

My thanks to the NWS web site for all the scary tornado facts.

Comment Re:Seems ridiculous, but... (Score 1) 215

Everything rewires our neurons. Read a book, neurons rewired. Play a video game, neurons rewired. Play catch, neurons rewired. Do anything repetitively, neurons rewired.

The first time I went to an IMAX theater, I was deeply impressed. I raved about it for days. Yet I never went back. To this day, I've only ever seen ONE IMAX movie.

It's another gimmick. I'll be impressed if he's managed to create the holodeck.

Comment Re:On one hand... (Score 1) 483

You are correct sir! I forgot about Roddenberry rewriting the script. He even talked about it at conventions and wrote up an account of it somewhere. Roddenberry and Ellison were friends at the time, and according to one version of the story, Roddenberry would go over to Ellison's house and pester him about the screenplay. Ellison would prevaricate, and Roddenberry would then "borrow" some of the records from Ellison's music collection. Ellison had to turn in the script to get his records back. Only trouble was, Ellison didn't quite get the idea of writing for a budgeted TV show, he had all sorts of crowd scenes in it, huge FX shots, etc. It was also MUCH longer, almost too long even for a two-hour movie. So Roddenberry had to rewrite it, taking all the impossible or over-budget stuff out. The result is essentially a collaborative effort between two writers, Ellison and Roddenberry. And I forgot all this. OMG, am I getting old? I blame it on the rock music and all them violent video games I play.

Comment I thought there was a time limit (Score 1) 483

on writers' shares of secondary rights in contracts before the 1990s. I'd love to look at the 1960 and 1966 contracts to see, but I sincerely doubt they are anywhere to be found outside the WGA-W archives or the LA public library. So I don't have the faintest clue as to whether Ellison has a leg to stand on. If he does, go for it, though he'll only get just enough to pay half his lawyer's bill. Unless the writer of this spin-off trilogy is a big name, he'll be getting around $40,000 per book (maybe a little more, maybe MUCH LESS). The books themselves have limited earning potential, hard to tell for a TOS novel, could be high six or low seven figure sales. Remember, the ST franchise is fractured and competes against itself. Lots of TNG ppl don't like TOS, lots of Voyager ppl don't like TNG, etc. Most of the earnings for the trilogy go to the outlets and the publisher. The license to publish it might have brought only $100,000. Hey, maybe Ellison's lucky and its $250,000 (I doubt it, but I'm always wrong about these things). If he doesn't have a leg to stand on, this is about his anger at his work being spun off without his permission. But all Hollywood writing is work-for-hire, so you're boned if you think you'll ever have a say in how your work is used.

Comment SOP for Hollywood (Score 1) 483

All of them rip off the writers. It's part of the culture. That's why many writers now wear "producer" labels. They get to write and the new label gets them more respect.

What's so special about now? Besides, contractually, I think writers are only eligible for residuals for the first 17 years after the series was on. I could be wrong, "Always in motion, Hollywood writing contracts are."

Comment Re:I met Bobby Fischer once (Score 1) 192

I enjoy a challenge, and I purposefully die enough in my favorite shooters that no one thinks I'm a pro, semi-pro maybe. But I often hang out with real pros, elite gamers, and when they appear in a game, guys bail so fast, you'd think we were on the Titanic. Some of the pros change their names every so often, just to get a game. But you know who they are, you know when someone snipes you from the freakin' other side of the damn map, from behind a pillar next to crashed gunship, and you know, you just know it's that damn DeathWolf under another name!

Comment Re:Interesting... (Score 1) 242

Memory in mammals is a complex thing. Just how thorough was this "genetic crippling" of the memories of these mice? Are other genes involved in mammalian memory than just those affected by the experimenters? Where did the mice come from? If from a commercial source, maybe their creation and breeding are somehow flawed. So many questions, so few real answers from this article.

I look forward to future experiments of this sort. Maybe something will come of it; or maybe the experiment was flawed. I'm keeping an open mind until more information is available.

Hardware Hacking

Submission + - Greensburg Tornado - computer damage

rpbird writes: "It's been a little over a week since two tornados destroyed my mom's home. I had been living there with her as her caregiver for several years. Me, my mom, and her two cats survived, but the house was reduced to kindling. A couple days later, several friends and I salvaged the small stuff from the house. My collection of Star Wars PC games was long gone, on Mars, maybe (KOTOR 2, Republic Commandos, Battlefront II, Jedi Outcast, Jedi Academy, Dark Forces II). I guess it'll be a few weeks until Frangible's killing trandos in RC multiplayer. We found my two PCs (hand-built by me, as befitting a /. reader), and my NEC crt monitor, its screen undamaged. One of my two Toshiba Portege laptops survived, but their docking stations are toast. Most of this stuff is sitting in a cousin's garage — I'm at another cousin's house. The four hard drives are probably all right, but is anything else? Oh wise men of /., is it even worth trying to get the monitor and the PCs running, or should I strip out the hard drives and build new machines? What's the probability that the monitor and the PCs will run? Time is crunched for me right now, and I don't have any space yet to tinker in. Should I strip out the hard drives and junk the rest? Any advice would be appreciated."

Slashdot Top Deals

Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer

Working...