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Comment: Scala: parallel collections, functional + DSL (Score 1) 56

although multicores are good, there just aren't that many decent parallel programmers out there. I (and a few others) find parallel programming easy

That's why languages like Scala are so appealing.

Sure, there's no silver bullet to automagically solve all parallel programming problems, but languages like Scala have features like Parallel Collections libraries, functional programming and Parallel Domain Specific Languages that can abstract enough of the problems of parallel programming away that journeyman programmers have a decent chance of being able to work effectively with multiple cores.

Comment: Re:Sci-Fi nails another one! Michael McCollum's Ma (Score 1) 147

by MCRocker (#39203787) Attached to: Evidence For Antimatter Anomaly Mounts

Argh! There's an error with my post... McCollum got the idea from Feynman. Basically that antimatter is just regular matter going backwards in time from the big crunch. So, not a glorious case of Sci-Fi presaging science, but a case of Sci-Fi rehashing interesting science.

Sorry folks. Bad post and reply to my own post.

Comment: Re:Sci-Fi nails another one! Michael McCollum's Ma (Score 1) 147

by MCRocker (#39203769) Attached to: Evidence For Antimatter Anomaly Mounts

Actually, there's an error with my post (accidentally AC)... McCollum got the idea from Feynman. Basically that antimatter is just regular matter going backwards in time from the big crunch. So, not a glorious case of Sci-Fi presaging science, but a case of Sci-Fi rehashing interesting science.

Comment: Sci-Fi nails another one! Michael McCollum's Maker (Score 1) 147

by MCRocker (#39202639) Attached to: Evidence For Antimatter Anomaly Mounts

Wow! So Michael McCollum got it right in the Makers series where the difference between matter and anti-matter ends up being a primary plot point... which I won't spoil, but maybe these researchers should peak ahead to the last chapter of the second book, Procyon's Promise, to see what the answer is ;-)

Sorry for accidental duplicate AC post.

Comment: If that were true, then they could just use OpenID (Score 1) 286

by MCRocker (#37547248) Attached to: Spotify Defends Facebook Sign-Up Requirement

If that were true, then they could just use OpenID to accomplish the same goal.

Many sites that use OpenID for logins make it easy by providing pre-configured FaceBook, Google, and Yahoo buttons along with an 'Other' button for those who want to provide their own OpenID URL. For example, StackExchange sites provide five buttons and a more link on their login page. This makes it trivially easy for most people, possible for most of the rest and provides alternatives for geeks and contrarians.

Comment: Spamgourmet.com - disposable addresses (Score 1) 151

by MCRocker (#37452554) Attached to: When Does Signing Up Become 'Opting In?'

I use spamgourmet.com for disposable email addresses.

Among other things, spamgourmet lets you set the number of messages that can be sent, so it can be useful for things like placing an order where you need to register, get an email with a link to validate your email address and then get an order confirmation and a few tracking status emails, but then stop accepting anything after that.

It doesn't catch as many bad actors as I thought it would, but when they do misbehave, it's kind of cool to see the number of deleted messages that never filled my inbox.

They also have it set up so that it you can reply to messages routed through spamgourmet without giving away your real email address. There's also an alternate domain so that when you're dealing with an actual human being they won't be freaked out by an email address that has the work "spam" in it.

Comment: Scala has added parallel collections and has Akka (Score 1) 196

by MCRocker (#36267928) Attached to: What Makes Parallel Programming Difficult?

The Scala community has tried to move the problem into a more practical realm by adding things like parallel collections, DSL's to abstract out the problem for specific applications and the Akka Project for simpler concurrency.

Most of the parallel programming discussion I've seen is very complicated and not likely to appeal to those who have to do practical day-to-day business projects. By pushing the abstractions up a level, I think the Scala folks have made parallel programming more accessible for the average developer.

Ref: Parallel Collections video.

Comment: Platypus and Aardvark let you edit ugly pages (Score 1) 662

by MCRocker (#36256810) Attached to: Computer De-Evolution: Awesome Features We've Lost

That's what the Firefox extension, Platypus is for... unfortunately, it's no longer maintained, but Aardvark can produce similarly readable web pages without out too much work. Combine that with the Greasemonkey script, Autopagerize to join those multi-page articles designed to make you look at a whole new set of advertisements for each paragraph, and you come a little closer to having the experience that Tim Berners-Lee had in mind for the world wide web in the first place.

Comment: Daemon would be even better than Snow Crash (Score 1) 334

by MCRocker (#36197654) Attached to: <em>Neuromancer</em> Movie Deal Moving Forward

Daemon would be even better than Snow Crash. Sure, it's not technically Cyber Punk, but it has all of the elements and is much more up-to-date and terrifying.

Besides, The Delivinator won't work any more because the pizza delivery scene dropped the '30 minutes or free' thing for exactly the reasons that it was so sensational in Snow Crash. That is, pizza drivers who were afraid they'd have to pay for a late pizza would drive like crazy and occasionally get people killed.

Comment: There are cheaper, non-DRM bookstores (Score 1) 207

by MCRocker (#36197074) Attached to: Ebooks Now Outselling Print Books At Amazon

I generally buy my eBooks from WebScription, which is mostly Baen SciFi, or FictionWise, which is everything else. Both are much cheaper than Amazon and both offer non-DRM'd books, often in multiple formats. Sure, their site design is not as snazy as Amazon or Kobo or even Diesel, but I can find what I want and get it at a reasonable cost with no DRM most of the time.

I started with Kobo, but, at one point, I bought a book listed as "mobile", which I assumed was suitable for an eBook reader in a venue without WiFi, but discovered that, by "mobile", they meant online. Even though I hadn't read a page, they wouldn't refund my money, so I looked elsewhere, discovered WebScription and FictionWise and haven't looked back. Both are, not only cheaper than Amazon, but also generally cheaper than Kobo as an added benefit.

Comment: Oracle could donate proprietary StarOffice goodies (Score 1) 192

by MCRocker (#35875306) Attached to: Don't Expect an OpenOffice/LibreOffice Merger

The proprietary version of the software, StarOffice / Oracle Open Office, had a lot of other goodies like additional file filters, clip art, document templates and enterprise environment management features. If Oracle was willing to give that stuff to the OO.o foundation as well, then a merger would definitely be worthwhile.

Comment: Disappointed that e-paper printers never worked (Score 1) 164

by MCRocker (#34167132) Attached to: E Ink Unveils Color E-Reader Display

Although I love my Alex eReader, I am little disappointed that e-paper is being used as a display instead of being used like paper like it was originally conceived.

The basic idea was that you'd get a special electrostatic printer that you'd load with a ream of e-paper and print out your documents as usual, then, when you're done with a document just return it to the hopper so that some other document could be printed on it. It was supposed to be the ultimate recyclable paper.

I suppose that it was never really likely that e-paper would reach the price point where such a thing would be reasonable, but it was an interesting concept.

Even though people complained that computers, not only didn't hearken the arrival of the paperless office, but actually increased the amount of paper that was used, I think that the trend is going the other way and people are beginning to print less and less. So, the demand peak for a product like this has likely passed and few would see it as a valuable option.

Comment: Re: This is what you're talking about (Score 1) 214

by MCRocker (#34101808) Attached to: 8pen Reinvents the Keyboard For Mobile Devices

Thanks for the feedback. I'm in no rush to use either of these since I have a device with a physical keyboard and they totally neglect thumb typing in all of the scenarios discussed. As far as the size, it doesn't look like it takes up much more room than the regular software keyboard, so I don't see that as a uniquely serious drawback.

The first link in the original post is to the product home page. It does seem to be the same thing you're referring to. There are also videos on that page that look fairly compelling. Their FAQ makes it seem like they do plan to add customization at some point.

Something that can be operated with one hand using the thumb would be ideal. There were also some interesting motion input strategies back when Palm was de rigueur, but they were all proprietary and expensive and went nowhere at the time.

When the ax entered the forest, the trees said, "The handle is one of us!" -- Turkish proverb

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