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Comment The poles are flipping? (Score 4, Informative) 346

This article covers it...

http://scienceblogs.com/highlyallochthonous/2009/02/is_the_earths_magnetic_field_a.php

I've heard it from several sources though, they have geological proof that the earths magnetic field has been periodically flipping and reversing its polarity, and that it does this at periodic intervals, and that we are in fact due for a flip any millenia now.

Comment Re:Dear Mr Murdoch (Score 1) 504

Fox news is obviously biased. People see it for what it is. The biggest threats to democracy are not obvious ones.

The path to tyranny is one which involves the elimination of jobs for ordinary working people whilst at the same time handing over more control and power to those who control the game. For would be dictators journalists are of course #1 on their hit list.

To quote Goethe, "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free". This whole thread of discussion, cheering on the downfall of the traditional journalistic business model is a graphic display of that sort of stupidity.

Comment Re:Dear Mr Murdoch (Score 1) 504

In the case of news.google.com, I actually think Rupert has a point. What I don't think you get, is that news.google.com does significantly more than link to sites. I believe in this case rather than supplying supplemental, they are in fact offering an alternative to the front page of every major news corporation's web site, making them a direct competitor to a news corporation. I would also bet google's news page in terms of hits is scoring very well against most equivalent pages Rupert pays to produce. The only difference between news.google.com and the home page of most news web sites, is that google didn't pay for their content. I think Rupert is entitled to be mildly pissed in a situation, where he is being beaten by a competitor, who is using content he owns to compete against him. I don't know about you, but when I use news.google.com, I rarely click on any of the links, I skim the headlines, read the blurbs and more often than not just close the page without going further unless there is an article which really grabs my eye. Whilst Google may be driving traffic to their articles, they are stealing traffic from their front page. Haven't you ever watched Superman? The front page is the most important! Without news.google.com, you would go to an equivalent page... www.nytimes.com www.smh.com.au etc. Personally I think in the case of investigative news journalism, paid content is a good thing, we want content that is worth paying for. The biggest danger to democracy I believe is the news feed, mindless aggregators which do not review, check or scrutinize news stories. The demise of investigative journalism is a threat to our freedoms. I believe the right thing for google to do would be to pay for aggregated content, just as every other news corp does with an equivalent page. That way there'll be dosh going round to pay journalists, who can call bullshit on propaganda.

Comment Re:You missed the part about patents (Score 1) 1008

Do you understand Microsoft actually helped Mono be created?

Do you know that the .NET CLI has been submitted and passed as a ECMA standard ?

Mono is very clearly a fully ligitimate, independent implementation of the open .NET 1.0 CLI standard. Microsoft can't change this standard its already out there. They can submit a new standard as they did for .NET 2.0.

There's simply no logic to anything you're saying. It's pure stupidity/FUD.

Comment Re:Microsoft, I said NO! (Score 1) 1008

What a crock.

Mono is a independent open source project. Microsoft has no real control over this code.

*IF* Microsoft tried to hijack or close down Mono, it would need to do so through the courts, when was the last time Microsoft won a case like that?

I think if Microsoft ever tried to do such a thing, the Mono community would simply do the same thing that Microsoft did to Sun's Java platform (the true origins of C#). When Sun tried to dictate control over their platform Microsoft simply stopped shipping the JVM on their OS and soon after started shipping the .NET runtime. The Mono crew would simply do the same, by simply forking and become something that is not .NET compliant,

This is simply sensless anti-MS zealotry. Applications written on Mono are no more of a risk than those written on any other platofrm

Comment Re:Well... (Score 1) 332

It makes perfect sense to me. Go to google switch off safe search, go to image search, a lot of pretty innocuous searches come up with stuff you probably dont want children seeing....

e.g...

http://images.google.com.au/images?gbv=2&hl=en&safe=off&sa=1&q=cream&btnG=Search+Images&aq=f&oq=

http://images.google.com.au/images?gbv=2&hl=en&safe=off&sa=1&q=yummy&btnG=Search+Images&aq=f&oq=

http://images.google.com.au/images?gbv=2&hl=en&safe=off&sa=1&q=pussy&btnG=Search+Images&aq=f&oq=

http://images.google.com.au/images?gbv=2&hl=en&safe=off&sa=1&q=doggy&btnG=Search+Images&aq=f&oq=

;P

I rest my case. I mean lets get real here, what sort of job would they be doing to let kids access that stuff?

I think any software product like this would be totally ineffectual without search engine integration.

Comment Re:No serious enterprise customers will adopt this (Score 1) 227

Yes this is article is total speculative horse shit. In so many ways it would be totally impractical for Microsoft to attempt to do this. As it's all XML based, anyone who knows anything about XML will know that they can quite easily support several different schemas and backwards compatibility. My limited understanding of Azure is that it is closely related to Amazon's EC2 and S3 work. They are adopting many of the standards Amazon created for their platform, as are others currently developing cloud based computing services. So basically Azure is only going to help move forward the standardisation process that will inevitably take place for cloud computing services. Any standard with a hope in hell of achieving broad community support is going to require extremely good support for maintaining backwards compatibility with previous releases. In short this guy is completely and utterly clueless.
Transportation

Strict Order Boarding Would Get Planes in the Sky Faster 880

electrostatic writes "In a Nature.com oldie-but-goodie, a physicist says he has solved a problem that costs airlines millions every year: what is the quickest way to get passengers aboard an aircraft? Boarding is a serious issue for airlines, particularly those operating short flights that run several times a day, yet boarding times have steadily increased for decades. Back in 2005 Jason Steffen of the Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois said the method used by many airlines to this day is almost the worst. 'The best way to board, according to the researchers, would be a row-by-row, seat-by-seat, strict order. That would mean everyone lines up, row 25 first. I can't imagine fliers will go for that. Next best, they say, would be boarding all the window seats first, followed by those in the aisle. Obviously that's not practical, at least for couples or families traveling together.'"
Windows

Submission + - Surface:a look at Microsofts new platform (arstechnica.com)

ThirdPrize writes: Here is a story on Microsofts "Surface". It is a touch screen/interactive/computer/table beastie that looks a bit like an old school Space Invaders machine. It goes into hardware as well as software details. Interestingly the front end is written using the same libraries as Xbox 360 games.

Why Sony Should've Put Its Weight Behind Hi-MD 519

An anonymous reader writes "OSNews has an article making a case for Hi-MD: 'Currently, .mp3 players are all the hype. Everyone has one, and if you don't, you're old-fashioned. I do not have an .mp3 player. I tried to have one, but for various reasons it did not please me. I'm a MiniDisc guy. I've always been. MiniDisc has some serious advantages over .mp3 players, whether they be flash or HDD based.'"

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