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Google To Digitize, Make Available British Library's Historical Holdings 86

pbahra writes with part of an excellent story at the WSJ: "The British Library today announced its first partnership with Google, under which Google will digitize 250,000 items from the library's vast collection of work produced between 1700-1870. The Library, the only British institution that automatically receives a copy of every book and periodical to go on sale in the United Kingdom and Ireland, joins around 40 libraries worldwide in allowing Google to digitize part of its collection and make it freely available and searchable online, at books.google.co.uk and the British Library website, www.bl.uk. ... As well as published books, the 1700-1870 collection will also contain pamphlets and periodicals from across Europe. This was a period of political and technological turmoil, covering much of the Industrial Revolution, the French Revolution, the introduction of UK income tax and the invention of the telegraph and railway. All of these topics are covered, as are the quirkier matters of the day, such as the account, from 1775, of a stuffed hippopotamus owned by the Prince of Orange."

Comment A humble proposal (Score 1, Offtopic) 123

There's been a lot of debate lately about the failed War on Drugs. Some say that legalizing drugs would take most of the income from murderous cartels, while others believe that the cartels would simple move into new markets. I have a win-win solution. Two of the core competencies of the cartels are: anonymously collecting money, and assassinating people. Let's legalize dope and pay the cartels to whack patent trolls. We free up a lot of prison space, increase tax revenues, cut spending, unfetter the economy, encourage actual innovation and product development, and scare some of the scu^W lawyers into hiding. Huge win all around. We'll have this deficit thing licked in about 3 years.

Comment A variant of this happens in Nevada (Score 4, Interesting) 313

This is according to a friend of mine who used to tend bar at a Reno casino. I don't know how much has changed since then; maybe a local can tell us more. Slot machines in Nevada are regulated and required to pay out a certain percentage over time. This means that the longer one type of slot at a casino doesn't pay out, the higher the odds are that they will soon. Once a casino got to the point where a payoff was probable, a bus would pull up full of compulsive gamblers, all wearing the same windbreakers. They'd sit at every machine in the casino and play until someone hit the jackpot. These people were not allowed to keep their winnings (or not much of them), but their habit was paid for.

Since they never tipped, the bartenders hated them. Whenever they saw the bus pull up, they'd place drinks at the slots to reserve the spots.

Anyway, wherever there is money you will find corruption. Rule of law (applied equably), transparency, and cultural values are all that mitigate this. The only reason this doesn't happen in American for-profit prisons is that the money isn't good enough, yet. But the dollar continue to drop. Your kids might gold-farm for the Chinese.

Comment Re:Same with 1080p (Score 1) 666

Yep. The monitor industry apparently just quit about 4 years ago. No significant improvements since then; prices are up and resolutions are lower. Part of that is due to the focus on mobile, and part of it is due to the media industry (the LAST people you want defining tech specs) taking over. 1080p ought to be good enough for anybody-- nobody will notice, especially with the horribly lossy compression your "HD" signal from Comcrap will use. So going from 1920x1080 to 19200x1200 will run you about $200. Ridiculous. As for those of us who want to do actual work... well, there are fewer of us all the time anyway. The media/ISP industry and the usual leader in new technologies, Apple, is making every effort to turn people into consumers, not builders.

Comment This is not revolutionary, but nice (Score 1) 176

Right now I have scripts to list the current ruleset, figure out the deltas between the new ruleset and old, add or remove rules as appropriate, and save that config to disk for reboots. It works well enough, better than restarting iptables, but it should be more efficient with these changes. I wondered why there wasn't a method (that I found; correct me if I'm wrong) for running batch changes without invoking the iptables command for each change.

Comment Hope it does better than Displayport and Firewire (Score 1) 568

Thunderbolt looks like a very useful technology. Unfortunately it will add several dollars to the cost of the PC, so probably only Macs will support it, so it'll be hard to find good, cheap monitors etc., and ultimately it will fail. Unless the PC manufacturers decide to grow a pair and do something useful for a change. The PC industry seems committed to the worst possible technologies that people will buy.

Comment Re:Veto (Score 1) 350

Nope, he flipped a 180 on FISA before he was elected. Nobody who might inconvenience the wiretap community will make it anywhere near the levers of power. Which is why a handful of us opposed these power grabs from day one, and were told we were being silly, that there were sunset clauses, there would be oversight, it was just a slight expansion....

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