Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:nice work (Score 1) 468

Well, there can be an argument for 'futurists' to attempt to come up with better ways to do things without a definitive need or even much of a want, but there still needs to be an actual benefit to the change. This windowless cockpit idea has few positives compared to the current status quo, and as airline accidents have demonstrated, has plenty of negatives.

If they want some fancy augmented reality system for pilots, then perhaps the motion-tracked helmet idea that the military is working on for fighter pilots makes more sense. Something that can be worn that can give the pilot the outside-the-visible-light-spectrum data that a pilot could benefit from, but could be removed when the thing stops working to go back to VFR.

Comment Re:YALC (Score 1) 104

First, this isn't NASA or the United States at all. Second, there well could be applications for differing landing systems for different applications, both for from-orbit landings and for terrain-to-terrain hops to traverse large amounts of territory or to bypass obstructions or other impassable terrain.

If the ESA will pay for it then I don't really care that much. The idea sounds a little silly given the atmospheric density on Mars, but if they can make something work or can learn and use this knowledge to work on something else that works well, all the better.

Comment Re:Superman (Score 3, Interesting) 249

Or the Make-a-Wish Foundation felt that what they were doing was fair-use. Remember, while they dressed the kid in an off-the-shelf costume, they called him "Batkid", not "Batman", and had DC tried to kibosh the whole thing they'd have looked like monsters.

Media companies struggle with this. There have been fanclubs that have received glowing endorsements from marketing departments while simultaneously receiving cease-and-desist letters from those same companies' legal departments. On the one hand letting the fans run wild with sanctioned merchandise and games and other enthusiasm brings value, but they have to be careful with derivative works and other uses, but if they step too hard then they'll be seen as douchebags and will alienate the very people that make them all their money. The best thing that they can do is to offer enough things with their IP on them for legal sale (look at Thinkgeek as an example of what's available) and the fans will probably be sated without resorting to IP violations en-masse.

Comment Re:Call me (Score 1) 129

Can we have a tech-person-rejecting-tech pissing contest?

I tell the time with a stick.

In all seriousness though, if you're salaried (so no punching a time clock), don't watch much television, and don't need to take scheduled mass-transit, then you probably don't need to know the time better than quarters of an hour, which can be guesstimated with decent precision based on the position of the sun.

You know what I'd want a smart-watch to do? Be a waterproof cell phone transceiver with basic 'dumb phone' functionality (SMS/MMS, contacts list, dialer) and with rudimentary notification capability, such as the ability to notify of calendar events, and to be a bluetooth hub for the headset, tablet, car connection, etc. That way I can still do basic communication when I don't feel like carrying around a two and a half inch by five inch block. I don't need it to be an e-reader, a map viewer, a shopping list editor (though it might be cool to view a list like a dumb phone can), or any of a whole host of functions that people expect their phone to do. Let the small tablet (or large tablet even) handle that, if I want.

Comment Re:nice work (Score 1) 468

This... this resonated with me a little. I took me back to last week when my Internet was down for 24 hours and I felt so helpless. All my devices useless. My iPad, my smartphone, my smart TV, my laptop... expensive decorations. All I had to occupy my time with was whatever was on OTA TV. It was like me and my brain were separated, since all my knowledge is on the other side of the router...

No non-Internet games or things to do on any of the devices? No non-computer hobbies? No going out to do something, even if it's something so mundane as going to a coffee shop to use their Internet connection?

I have things that I can do even if I'm without power, let alone without Internet connectivity.

Comment Re:nice work (Score 1) 468

Yeah. I use GPS, but mostly to determine what the route is, not to go turn-by-turn to follow it. I read the electronic thing as a map to memorize the route then just drive. Beats fumbling with the phone or even a paper map while driving.

It's even easier if there's a passenger- my wife is well versed in reading maps and tends to use the phone's GPS/maps in a similar fashion. She can give me multiple-steps-ahead directions if needed (get right, turn at the next light and then get left, and turn two lights later, then get right, etc) to make navigating tight streets easier than using a GPS.

Slashdot Top Deals

1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1.

Working...