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Comment Re:Make A Huge Difference - For Zero Dollars (Score 1) 596

I've thought about doing this for way too long and never actually acted on it.

It's crazy to think just how stark a difference you have the potential of making. One at-risk kid who could easily end up wasting a life of promise on gangs and drugs -- a good mentor can give this kid the strength he needs to go against the flow and make a better future for himself.

Comment Re:Palm Pre? (Score 1) 53

I'm not sure what GP is trying to say, but if he has broken an iPhone every other month for the past half year, the Pre (and any other smartphone cased entirely in plastic) would probably have lasted him about a week each. Perhaps he tried a Pre in the Sprint store and before he could even give WebOS a chance, he accidentally crushed the device with his bare hands.

Comment Re:Great news! (Score 1) 214

The reason for that is very likely Apple's practice of manufacturing a single hardware spec for all markets. Since Japan is nearly the only place where touch card tech is regularly integrated into phones, Apple hasn't considered it worth the cost of building it into the same phone they ship everywhere else.

Once they can get the cost down far enough to be negligible, though, they'll build it in. Who knows, it could even drive adoption outside Japan!

Comment Re:Great news! (Score 4, Insightful) 214

I thought from reading around on slashdot that Japanese phones were 10+ years ahead of American ones? How did we catch up so quickly?

We didn't. The average Japanese cell phone is still vastly higher-tech than the average US cell phone.

In terms of feature set, the iPhone isn't particularly remarkable compared to run-of-the-mill Japanese handsets. The reason it's become so popular is the same reason it's done so everywhere else: the quality of the UI and the gestalt user experience absolutely blow everything else away.

Comment Re:Something wrong with the sales model? (Score 1) 496

For major releases, I think the market has actually adapted quite well. Consumers are given a pretty good tradeoff spectrum to decide how much a game is worth to them:

If a game looks to you like a good enough value proposition that you're willing to buy it at launch, you pay $60.

If a game looks worthwhile but you don't need it at launch, you can hold off for a few months and someone will have it for $40 (eventually MSRP reflects this).

If a game looks fun but you wouldn't pay more than a budget title for it (and it isn't a consistent bestseller), play other games for a few more months and you'll see it for $20.

The last game I paid $60 for was LittleBigPlanet, just over a year ago. I've played some other great games this year that I'd been looking forward to, but I haven't paid over $40 for a single one.

Now, download-based games are another story. Steam is getting it right on the PC with the frequent sale promotions and bundles, but Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo barely ever do it. They'll figure it out in time.

Comment Re:Wow. (Score 5, Insightful) 184

Normally I'm against captain-obvious troll-feeding, but this is one case where I think a response is merited.

ACTA awareness needs to reach as far as it possibly can. We are, quite literally, talking about the future of the world here: A global treaty that promises to have a profound effect upon the freedom of all of us is being negotiated in secret.

The maximum must be brought to light before the widest audience. If that means dupe stories, then I'm all for dupes.

Comment Songwriters' Guild, 1900 (Score 1) 565

This electricity you speak of is only being used for piracy of our content! People are staying up after dark, laboring by the light of these electrical lamps to copy down note-for-note the contents of our valuable original content!

What we propose is a law of three-strikes, not unlike that of baseball. Upon the third finding that a person has been engaged in illegal copying, their electricity is to be cut off forever, preventing their copying in the future.

It is of the utmost importance to our industry and culture that the use of electricity be carefully monitored and restricted, lest it be used illegally. With vigilance and diligence, we can combat the menace that electricity poses to the future of our nation.

Comment Love and chemicals (Score 5, Funny) 91

The more I learn about this, the more it looks like one of those failed relationships where the guy thought things were getting serious and the girl was never looking for a long-term attachment.

Neither one can be blamed or absolved completely; they both were under the illusion that the other shared their view. Of course, the couple should have talked a little more about what they both wanted out of the relationship, as should Arrington and Fusion Garage have.

Love, or that dizzying sense that you're going to change an industry. Both serotonin.

Comment Error diffusion (Score 1) 241

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

Even then, you'd probably get something basically recognizable -- I'd imagine the error diffusion just puts a lot of noise in a black area that's too big. Heck, it may even run an unsharp mask over the image to exaggerate details when the predicted output noise reaches a certain threshold.

I bet the algorithms for this bear a number of similarities to photomosaic systems as they're both working with a known set of "subpixel units."

Comment 120x160 (Score 2, Informative) 241

Mod parent up.

It's the gradients on the pieces, and the principles of human vision that JPEG takes advantage of, that give this puzzle its cool effect, creating the appearance of a much higher resolution than the 15x20 "pixels" everyone else is referring to.

You can't make a (easily) recognizable Mona Lisa in 15x20 pixels. You can in 15x20 cosine gradients.

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I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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