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Comment: Re:totally bogus argument (Score 1) 46

by JoeRobe (#40153807) Attached to: NASA, ASU Team Finds a New Test For Osteoporosis

I agree with your logic, but I think the poster's argument was that NASA is still contributing to society outside of putting people into space. There's a vocal group of people out there that think the only things we got out of NASA were Tang and Velcro (neither of which came from NASA, incidentally), and that its current form is an utter waste of money. The poster is pointing out that NASA still is doing research relevant to society, not that society is necessarily better off than if NASA had never existed.

Comment: Re:Strange (Score 1) 722

by JoeRobe (#40124219) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: How To Shop For a Laptop?

Wow you're the first person in this whole comments section to actually respond to the poster's question. Everyone else is so excited to tell the person what the best laptop is, they dont realize that the poster wants to know how to compare laptops, not which one to buy. I agree, newegg is the best place to go to make comparisons, especially for individual parts, but also for full systems.

16th-Century Map May Provide New Clues About The Fate Of The Roanoke Colony->

Submitted by JoeRobe
JoeRobe writes "Roanoke Colony (on the coast of North Carolina) disappeared sometime between 1587 and 1590, with the only clue to its fate being the word "Croatoan" carved into a wooden post. Now, as if straight out of an Indiana Jones script, new clues to the whereabouts of the lost colony may have been discovered on a 16th-century map. The British Museum has re-examined the watercolor map to find a hidden symbol under a patch, in the shape of a 4-pointed star. The star likely indicates the location of an existing or intended fort that the settlers may have retreated to after abandoning the colony. Adding to the mystery, the patch overlaying the star may have been added in order to hide it from the "spy-riddled English court.""
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Businesses

Leave Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson Alone! 319

Posted by timothy
from the statute-of-limitations dept.
theodp writes "Over at The Daily Beast, Dan Lyons says Resumegate is overblown and says it's time to stop picking on Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson. Even without the circa-1979 CS degree some incorrectly thought he possessed, Lyons argues that Thompson is still perfectly capable, his critics have ulterior motives, and his competitors have all lied before. 'Forgive me for being less than shocked at the idea of a CEO lying,' writes Lyons. 'Steve Jobs [college dropout] used to lie all the time, and he's apparently the greatest CEO who ever lived. Google lied about taking money from Canadian pharmacies to run illegal drug ads, but finally had to come clean and pay $500 million in fines to settle the charges. Mark Zuckerberg [college dropout] last fall settled charges brought by the FTC that his company had made "unfair and deceptive" claims—I think that's like lying—and, what's more, had violated federal laws.' So what makes the fudging of a 30-year old accomplishment on the Yahoo CEO's resume a transgression that the 'highly ethical and honest folks in Silicon Valley' simply cannot bear? 'Facebook is a cool kid,' explains Lyons. 'So is Apple. Yahoo is the loser kid that nobody likes.'"

Comment: Re:Numerical analysis not appropriate? (Score 1) 139

by JoeRobe (#39645021) Attached to: Statistical Analysis Raises Civil War Death Count By 20%

Would they be able to use other, more modern wars/conflicts with more reliable numbers to test the same statistical analysis? For example, we know how many Americans died during, say, WWII better than during the U.S. Civil War. Would they be able to reproduce those numbers for WWII using their census-based analysis? Immigration/Emigration rates would be different, but they should be able to account for it in the same way they accounted for it in the 1860 timeframe. If they don't get it right for the 1940's, they're not going to get it right for the 1860's. The British also had quite a few wars (according to wikipedia) in the mid 1800's, during which there was a census, so they could compare to that as well if they wanted a comparable country in a comparable time.

Comment: Re:Chrome vs IE (Score 1) 212

by JoeRobe (#39583599) Attached to: Chrome Beats Internet Explorer On Any Given Sunday

I found that interesting as well. Even safari has small bumps up on the weekend. I do know that Firefox has become a lot more accepted in work environments probably because it's been around so long that IT trusts it by now. I wonder if the fact that Chrome usage increases more on Sundays is because enough people are still working on Saturdays that IE wins.

Comment: Re:too late -- the flare already hit. (Score 1) 154

by JoeRobe (#39280035) Attached to: Large Solar Flare To Glance Off Earth

You're totally right, my bad. I should have said the CME from the flare will deliver a glancing blow to the planet. I didn't know that bit about the AR1429 vs. AR11429, very interesting. Is that something that NOAA has started doing, or is it just spaceweather.com? (I didn't call it "spot number", I just called it "spot 1429". Should have said "AR11429".)

Space

Large Solar Flare To Glance Off Earth 154

Posted by samzenpus
from the raise-shields dept.
JoeRobe writes "According to spaceweather.com, a major X5 solar flare is on its way to deliver a glancing blow to the Earth's magnetic field. This is the second x-class flare to be released by the same sunspot in the past few days, the first being an X1. In both cases, the sunspot (spot 1429) was not directly facing Earth, but it is still active, and poses a threat for a large, Earth-directed flare in the next few days."

Comment: Why not take orthogonal scans? (Score 1) 494

by JoeRobe (#39276969) Attached to: The Ineffectiveness of TSA Body Scanners

If having the metal object on the "side" of your body results in it not being seen in the standard "front-side" image, then it will show up very clearly if they take a side-on image. All they'd have to do is take the standard front-side image of you (typically only a couple of seconds), then ask you to turn 90 degrees, and take another image (another couple of seconds). This way they could never miss a metal object being "hidden" on your side.

Large Solar Flare To Glance Off Earth-> 1

Submitted by JoeRobe
JoeRobe writes "According to spaceweather.com, a major X5 solar flare is on it's way to deliver a glancing blow to the Earth's magnetic field. This is the second x-class flare to be released by the same sunspot in the past few days, the first being an X1. In both cases, the sunspot (spot 1429) was not directly facing Earth, but it is still active, and poses a threat for a large, Earth-directed flare in the next few days."
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