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Android

Submission + - Google Maps is going indoors (blogspot.com)

ProbablyJoe writes: Google have blogged about a new feature for their Maps app on Android — indoors mapping.

The feature is designed to replace the "you are here" maps found in shopping malls and department stores. It will automatically zoom into an indoors map if you enter a mapped building, and should also change maps as you move between different floors

Currently the maps are only available in certain airports, shopping malls, and department stores in the USA and Japan, but Google say they'll be adding more worldwide locations soon.

Science

Submission + - Physicists: Walking Through Walls Might Be Possibl (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: If you've ever tried the experiment, you know you can't walk through a wall. But subatomic particles can pull off similar feats through a weird process called quantum tunneling. Now, a team of physicists says that it might just be possible to observe such tunneling with a larger, humanmade object, though others say the proposal faces major challenges.
Intel

Submission + - Intel's liquid CPU cooler: Is water worth the cost (extremetech.com)

MrSeb writes: "When Intel launched its high-end 3960X CPU last month, it also debuted a new liquid cooling solution. Typical boxed Intel CPUs ship with a heatsink+fan, but the company noted that the majority of its enthusiast customers bought third-party solutions. The new liquid cooler — it goes by the inspiring moniker of RTS2011LC — is meant to offer enthusiasts and OEMs an Intel-brand solution they’ll actually use. But is water cooling really necessary? Like its quad-core "Extreme Edition" predecessors, the 3960X still dissipates 130W — and more tellingly, Intel even states that it'll be releasing a sub-$20 air cooler for Sandy Bridge-E and Ivy Bridge-E chips anyway. So is it worth plunking down $85 for the new RTS2011LC? Does it provide the kind of performance that Intel's stereotypical "enthusiast" customers need? ExtremeTech goes hands-on to find out."

Comment Re:Let's bring some numbers into this... (Score 1) 954

Few foreign governments expect the US to police the world. Taiwan, Israel, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, yes... certainly not Pakistan or Nicaragua. Most countries don't really want the US to play that role.

Social security expenses usually return to the domestic economy, buying american food and houses. Military expenses usually go to 1%s or foreigners, which store it away or spend it outside of US.

Comment Re:Tap Energy of Volcano? (Score 2) 469

IANAG, but I think removing heat wouldn't make such a difference.

There's some process in the mantle feeding this area, adding mass to it. The biggest problem is pressure, since that mass is used to compress the volume under the volcano. When the rock shatters, that pressure is communicated with the surface and then there is an upward flow.

Refrigerating the volume of rock under the volcano won't change much of its pressure.

From a geoengineering point of view, I think that what's necessary is a controlled eruption to alleviate the pressure. But I have no idea how deep it would be necessary to drill.

I would really appreciate if a geologist could correct me here (I'm a mechanical/petroleum engineer)

Comment Re:Interesting... (Score 1) 1797

That money should be used to fund public universities. The government is a much better negotiator than individuals, because the government can fund the entire university itself.

Bad analogy: with a hundred thousand dollars, you can buy an ice cream truck, freezers, ice cream ingredients and hire one person to make and distribute ice creams for a summer. And that's a damn good ice cream truck.

Now show a hundred grand to someone selling ice creams and tell him you will spend that money on ice creams during the summer. And you will buy all that ice cream only from him and negotiate the price daily. Soon you will be buying 100 dolar ice creams cones.

Comment Re:Women have it hard in the future (Score 1) 240

Men demand sex and women demand security, but those are necessary conditions, not sufficient conditions.

Men won't date someone who won't put out or isn't minimally attractive, but once certain minimum requirements are met, men will demand mental or emotional attributes from their partner, besides the sex. For some men, though, those attributes are to shut up and take care of the house; others will be happy with someone who just isn't batshit crazy; and others demand a loving and humble rocket scientist.

Women won't date someone who can't or won't provide, but once minimum requirements are met, etc...

Of course those minimum requirements depend on the person, and those usually depend on how much that person can provide sex or security for their partner.

Unix

Submission + - Dennis Ritchie, 1941-2011 (boingboing.net)

An anonymous reader writes: Computer scientist Dennis Ritchie is reported to have died at his home this past weekend, after a long battle against an unspecified illness. No further details are available at the time of this blog post. [...]
The news of Ritchie's death was first made public by way of Rob Pike's Google+.

Programming

Submission + - Dennis Ritchie dies

mvdwege writes: "Rob Pike, long time collaborator, confirms on his Google+ account that Dennis Ritchie, co-creator of the C programming language has died this morning. I learned my first C ages ago from the famous K&R book, and I'm sad to see another part of my computing youth pass away."
Cloud

Submission + - Cloud-Powered Facial Recognition Is Terrifying (theatlantic.com)

oker writes: From the article: "Researchers at Carnegie Mellon were able to not only match unidentified profile photos from a dating website (...) with positively identified Facebook photos, but also match pedestrians on a North American college campus with their online identities. (...) we predicted the interests and Social Security numbers of some of the participants (...) the goal of Experiment 3 was to show that it is possible to start from an anonymous face in the street, and end up with very sensitive information about that person, in a process of data 'accretion.' ". Do we really enter "Minority Report"-like world?

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