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Comment Re:And allow them to collect demographic data... (Score 1) 419

Except that mainstream ad blockers like Adblock Plus remove almost all ads with their default filter subscriptions. The people who work on these don't differentiate between benign text ads and flashing flash ads - they all get blocked. You'll find very little useful information in the noisy "what ads are being blocked" signal.

Comment Re:Ideas (Score 4, Interesting) 533

Careful with TrackMeNot - I used it for awhile, and Google started blocking my real searches, returning an error screen that indicated my searches may not be legitimate. They clearly know when you are using it (who sends in dozens of searches every hour of the day?), and may consider it a violation of their TOS. I don't know about you guys, but if they decided to shut down my account it would be pretty devastating - I backup a lot of information and important e-mails only on gmail.

Comment Re:Age and quality. (Score 4, Insightful) 443

On Slashdot, the moderation system keeps good comments at the top and bad comments hidden. This is why the quality seems so good: one only has to read the top of the comment page to get really good discussion. So, regardless of how many trolls there are, they remain out of view. This was Slashdot's greatest innovation, IMO.

Reddit deals with the same issues: plenty of smart users, so they need a good ranking to keep the good comments at the top. Reddit used to use Slashdot's approach to ranking, but the inherent moderation system is different so it didn't work. The average comment in an active story on Reddit can get dozens of mods VS less than 1 on Slashdot. Reddit's problem was Slashdot's system heavily biased in favor of comments with a lot of moderation (upvotes minus downvotes is scaled higher). Typically, the first few non-troll comments were fixed at the top. On Slashdot this isn't a problem because mod points are rare so people use them with more care; also, the maximum score is capped at 5.

Reddit recently started using a more statistically sound approach which rewards high upvote:downvote ratios, and the comment quality has drastically improved. It saved the site, IMO. Slashdot is still known for having better quality comments than Reddit, and I commend them for it.

See http://blog.reddit.com/2009/10/reddits-new-comment-sorting-system.html for more information on reddit's new system.

Comment Re:Not quite. (Score 1) 241

If the histogram is wider (higher variance) than your image, than they can "stretch" your picture out by upping the contrast. If it is narrower (less variance), than the noise approach is probably the best solution.

If your image has a totally different shape (e.g. a few white patches on a black background), find a new image :P

Comment Re:Massive exaggeration (Score 1) 245

Yeah, seriously. Recently I started downloading high definition TV shows, which take up 3x as much space as low-definition shows. Does this mean I consume 3 times as much TV now? On the other hand, perhaps that is the point of the metric. As computers get faster, networks wider, and storage cheaper, people will begin to expect more space-intensive media. Higher megapixel photographs, more media on websites; etc...

But I don't see how this is particularly insightful if everyone consumes higher quality media. More interesting to me was the informal study that showed kids today actually prefer MP3s to uncompressed music!

Comment Re:Maybe not the best solution (Score 3, Informative) 267

Nintendo isn't necessarily worried about the quality of third party games on their system; they make a profit off hardware sales either way. With the iPhone, Apple has proved that people can perceive hardware as high quality despite an overabundance of shitty software.

The main problem to Nintendo is flashcarts make it ridiculously easy to pirate games. Almost too easy - it's far easier to lug around a tiny flashcart than 10 game cartridges. The loss in game sales affects their quality in the long run, and hence the system's chances of success.

Comment Re:Law of thermodynamics violation? (Score 2) 820

I'm not sure what you think thermodynamics means, but it is not what you appear to be saying. Meat is not the same thing as energy, and calories are not the same thing as meat (plants can create calories from air, water, and light). There is no law that says calories must be conserved in a closed system - the laws of thermodynamics only say this about energy. Maybe the scientists are heating the broth, or shining a light on it.

And they never mention a "meat broth" - that phrase does not belong in quotes. The article talks about a "broth of other animal products", which could mean a lot of things, like: skin cells, blood, or milk. As a vegan I would never consume the resulting meat, but a vegetarian should be fine with eating meat converted from milk.

Comment Re:May I ask (Score 1) 632

I'm looking at an archived copy of that article (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Virdi/CyanogenMod); it failed a *very* basic notability requirement - it never showed that it got significant coverage from a reliable source. The project's webpage doesn't count, nor do forums.

Comment Re:May I ask (Score 1) 632

You aren't understanding tmk's argument - he is saying statistically it is highly unlikely that a bunch of people would simultaneously lose interest in the same article. The "watch article" feature makes it easy to keep track of an article, so why would everyone lose interest at once while fighting earlier?

I don't believe tom's story, and I'm not surprised to see that he never linked to his example despite several requests for one.

Comment Re:add one (Score 1) 632

Most of the people who attack Wikipedia for being deletionist don't understand its purpose: Wikipedia seeks to be a reliable source of information before it seeks to be a complete source of information. Wikipedia has gotten better over the years; not because it has grown (which it has), but because it has increased in average quality. Just five years ago Wikipedia was considered somewhat a joke because it contained so much misinformation and unreliable information.

You have a pretty strong opinion on all this, as do a lot of other Slashdotters. I present this challenge to everyone: provide an example of an article that you think deserves to be on Wikipedia but was deleted despite having reliable sources. My guess is you will be hard-pressed to find examples.

Comment Re:add one (Score 1, Informative) 632

Wikipedia is not a Democracy, so a delete request would never be "accepted by a narrow margin". (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:What_Wikipedia_is_not#Wikipedia_is_not_a_democracy)

Besides, if an article was up for deletion 3 times and ultimately was deleted, it had some serious issues. In all those months that passed, a single reliable source would have been enough to squash any deletion nominations right away. Why didn't you just add one?

I'm calling your bluff - please link to your old account or the article in question.

Comment Re:Google Is A Steamroller (Score 1) 51

Whatever their stated goal, their actual goal became profit when they went public. If they sacrifice profit for the sake of squirreling away knowledge, their shareholders and board will reign them back in. The current stock price reflects shareholder belief that Google will continue to grow their profits, and if this doesn't occur the price will plummet in a very visible way.

For example, in the remote chance that Google doesn't make a cent off their book scanning after a few years, they will stop scanning books.

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