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Comment Re:Redeeculous (Score 1) 121

ebay has Dr. Clark's copy from $250. Amazon is $200 - $600. The online availability of a $72 microfilm version from UMI has been terminated. Only 2,000 copies were printed, and the Atlanta library system has zero. If anyone has any ideas how I can get one, please email me directly at randy.j.parker@gmail.com My dad is still lucid at 91, and would enjoy this for Christmas! During WWII he developed shaped charges for the Army with George Kistiakowsy in Pittsburgh, before Kistiakowsky got "drafted" by the Manhattan Project. Werner Von Braun used to live 2 doors down when I was a toddler, and his niece was a baby sitter for our family.
PlayStation (Games)

Long-Delayed L.A. Noire Gets Trailer, Spring 2011 Release 54

It's been years since the announcement of L.A. Noire, an expansive murder mystery game set in 1940s Los Angeles. After several lengthy delays, Rockstar Games has now posted a trailer and confirmed that the game will release in Spring of 2011. One of the game's major undertakings is to step up the realism of the voice acting and the way characters' faces and bodies are animated, "allowing players to analyze every subtle nuance of an actor's performance in order to get to the truth." The trailer shows in-game footage (though not actual gameplay), and while it's always a good idea to take such displays with a grain of salt, the facial expressions do look pretty realistic.
Canada

Feeling Upset? Look At Some Meat 155

Meshach writes "A study out of Canada claims that seeing meat actually calms a person down. From the article: 'Contrary to expectations, a McGill University researcher has discovered that seeing meat makes people significantly less aggressive. Frank Kachanoff, who studies evolution at the university’s department of psychology, had initially thought the presence of meat would provoke bloodlust, believing the response would have helped our primate ancestors hunt. But in fact, his research showed the reverse is true.'" I can see all the "Make Steak, Not War!" protest signs already.
Movies

The Home-Built Dark Knight Batmobile 87

ElectricSteve writes "RM Auctions recently declared James Bond's Aston Martin DB5 to be 'the world's most famous car,' but there's no doubt that there is another contender for that title — the Batmobile. One thing that muddies the waters a bit is the fact that the term 'Batmobile' actually describes at least three different vehicles: the modified Lincoln Futura concept car from the '60s TV series, the vaguely Corvette-shaped 1989-and-beyond movie cars, and now the car from the most recent two movies, the military-spec Tumbler. Michigan-based movie props artist Bob Dullam really likes the Tumbler, so he did what any of us would do in his position — he built one of his own from scratch."
Cellphones

Why Overheard Cell Phone Chats Are Annoying 344

__roo writes "American researchers think they have found the answer to the question of why overhearing cell phone chats are annoying. According to scientists at Cornell University, when only half of the conversation is overheard, it drains more attention and concentration than when overhearing two people talking. According to one researcher, 'We have less control to move away our attention from half a conversation (or halfalogue) than when listening to a dialogue. Since halfalogues really are more distracting and you can't tune them out, this could explain why people are irritated.' Their study will be published in the journal Psychological Science."
Image

Visually Demonstrating Chrome's Rendering Speed 140

eldavojohn writes "Recent betas of Google's Chrome browser are getting seriously fast. Couple that with better hardware, on average, and it's getting down to speeds that are difficult to demonstrate in a way users can appreciate. Which is why Google felt that some Rube Goldberg-ish demonstrations with slo-mo are in order. Gone are the days of boring millisecond response time metrics."
United States

State Senator Caught Looking At Porn On Senate Floor 574

Everyone knows how boring a debate on a controversial abortion bill can get on the Senate floor. So it's no wonder that Florida State Sen. Mike Bennett took the time to look at a little porn and a video of a dog running out of the water and shaking itself off. From the article: "Ironically, as Bennett is viewing the material, you can hear a Senator Dan Gelber's voice in the background debating a controversial abortion bill. 'I'm against this bill,' said Gelber, 'because it disrespects too many women in the state of Florida.' Bennett defended his actions, telling Sunshine State News it was an email sent to him by a woman 'who happens to be a former court administrator.'"
Image

Woman Tells State Judiciary Committee, "DoD Implanted A Microchip Inside Me" 222

The Georgia House Judiciary Committee took up a bill that would "prohibit requiring a person to be implanted with a microchip," and would make violating the ban a misdemeanor. Things started to get weird at the hearing when a woman who described herself as a resident of DeKalb County told the committee, "I'm also one of the people in Georgia who has a microchip." Not sure of what she was trying to say, she was allowed to continue and added, "Microchips are like little beepers. Just imagine, if you will, having a beeper in your rectum or genital area, the most sensitive area of your body. And your beeper numbers displayed on billboards throughout the city. All done without your permission." Further prodding revealed that the woman's co-workers would torture her by activating the chips with their cell phones and that the chips were implanted by "researchers with the federal government." The committee thanked the woman for her input, and later approved the bill.
Earth

Cooling the Planet With a Bubble Bath 219

cremeglace writes "A Harvard University physicist has come up with a new way to cool parts of the planet: pump vast swarms of tiny bubbles into the sea to increase its reflectivity and lower water temperatures. 'Since water covers most of the earth, don't dim the sun,' says the scientist, Russell Seitz, speaking from an international meeting on geoengineering research. 'Brighten the water.' From ScienceNOW: 'Computer simulations show that tiny bubbles could have a profound cooling effect. Using a model that simulates how light, water, and air interact, Seitz found that microbubbles could double the reflectivity of water at a concentration of only one part per million by volume. When Seitz plugged that data into a climate model, he found that the microbubble strategy could cool the planet by up to 3C. He has submitted a paper on the concept he calls “Bright Water" to the journal Climatic Change.'"
Image

Best Man Rigs Newlyweds' Bed To Tweet During Sex 272

When an UK man was asked to be the best man at a friend's wedding he agreed that he would not pull any pranks before or during the ceremony. Now the groom wishes he had extended the agreement to after the blessed occasion as well. The best man snuck into the newlyweds' house while they were away on their honeymoon and placed a pressure-sensitive device under their mattress. The device now automatically tweets when the couple have sex. The updates include the length of activity and how vigorous the act was on a scale of 1-10.

Comment No-Lag Performance Is Why We Buy Faster Computers (Score 1) 519

Most of us spend money to get computers that don't "get in the way" of our work with irritating lag. We spend hundreds of dollars for faster CPUs and more memory to avoid breaking the flow.

Wireless mice and keyboards add annoying delays several times per hour. My anecdotal experience is that Bluetooth is significantly worse than proprietary RF. Is it the protocol, or the drivers? The original poster is right - there is no good survey of this problem, and no explanation from the vendors. I'd expect them to compete on reducing this problem, because it far exceeds the "break the flow" delays I suffer from any other part of my system (except for Comcast!)

I have a Microsoft 8000 Bluetooth keyboard / mouse on my Macbook Pro, and I'm pretty sure I'd be better off with a corded keyboard and Logitech proprietary wireless mouse.

My interest in wireless keys & mouse is eliminating some wire-plugging every time I move my laptop between home & office. Now I think a USB hub is a better solution.

Power

Submission + - How Do I Protect 'Ground' From Lightening?

randyjparker writes: Daily thunderstorms are typical in Atlanta this time of year. Last week, lightning struck a giant pine in my backyard, stripping bark for 80 feet. All my gear is on surge protectors and AVR UPS units, none of which even tripped, but I still lost a cable modem, router, two ethernet switches and a Shuttle computer motherboard. All my data was recovered from backup, but this is the third time in ten years I've lost equipment to lightning. My theory is that the billion-volt / 40,000 amp strike brought the voltage of 'ground' up enough to kill gear.

House electrical Ground is wired to my copper plumbing, which enters the house 10 yards from the strike. My Comcast coax cable is directly grounded to the plumbing in two places to eliminate TV ghosting from a couple of nearby broadcast towers. Both ends of the Comcast link were killed (the circuit board traces on the phone pole trunk tap, and the aforementioned cable modem), leading me to suspect the surge came over the coax grounding and then traveled over the ethernet. Is this theory plausible? If it is, what can be done? Some sort of capacitor? (I realize no surge protector can stop an actual strike to the cable, but what seems to have happened all three times is that a nearby lightning strike momentarily increased the voltage of a few hundred tons of wet surface dirt which contains my copper grounding.)

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