Comment: Re:Simple answer: Cut the cord. (Score 1) 167
If you'll pardon the plug: Call Control by EveryCall.us has been an excellent caller-id-blocker for my Android phone. It handles wildcard blocks, so those jerks don't get through anymore regardless of which number they've picked each time.
Comment: Re:They have no intention of really doing anything (Score 2) 167
Comment: Re:Strange sense of morals (Score 2) 263
Meanwhile, the 29.97% interest rate that the payday loans people charge (and that only because 30% is considered usury and is illegal) is in no way wrong?
Don't forget the mystery math that lets them charge that percentage against your payment, not your principal.
$100 principal loan at 29.97% of the principal owes the obvious amount of $129.97 in payment.
$100 principal loan at 29.97% of the payment costs the more common amount of $142.80 in payment, an effective (and legal) 42.8% interest rate.
Comment: Re:Biased much? (Score 2) 302
Comment: Re:Will referee? (Score 3, Insightful) 206
+ - Lamar Smith & Bosses Call Wikipedia Blackout A->
“It is ironic that a website dedicated to providing information is spreading misinformation about the Stop Online Piracy Act," Smith said in a statement on Tuesday. "The bill will not harm Wikipedia, domestic blogs or social networking sites. This publicity stunt does a disservice to its users by promoting fear instead of facts. Perhaps during the blackout, Internet users can look elsewhere for an accurate definition of online piracy.""
Link to Original Source
+ - Google joins SOPA protest, but no blackout-> 1
Link to Original Source
+ - I live in China, let me tell you what life is like->
Imagine that there are equivalents of these sites that are state-owned and controlled: a search engine that only returns government approved sites, a censored twitter where you must register with your real name and passport number, and an internet radio site that is forced to play "red" songs celebrating the government. Imagine that these government-sanctioned alternatives are shoddily and hastily assembled and have none of the quality or convenience the originals had."
Link to Original Source
+ - How Stephen Hawking Has Defied the Odds for 50 Yea
+ - Mathematicians Solve Minimum Sudoku Problem->
There's another unwritten rule: the puzzle must have only one solution. So grids cannot contain just a few starting clues.
It's easy to see why. A grid with 7 clues cannot have a unique answer because the two missing digits can always be interchanged in any solution. A similar argument explains why grids with fewer clues must also have multiple solutions.
But it's not so easy to see why a grid with 8 clues cannot have a unique solution, or indeed one with 9 or more clues.
That raises an interesting question for mathematicians: what is the minimum number of Sudoku clues that produces a unique answer?
This is a question that has hung heavy over the Sudoku community, not least because they think they know the answer. Sudoku fanatics have found numerous examples of grids with 17 clues that have a unique solution but they have never found one with 16 clues.
That suggests the minimum number is 17 but nobody has been able to prove that there isn't a 16-clue solution lurking somewhere in puzzle space.
Enter Gary McGuire and pals at University College Dublin. These guys have solved the problem using the tried and trusted mathematical technique of sheer brute force."
Link to Original Source
Comment: Re:Karma? (Score 5, Insightful) 117
How exactly does proving that standing around a bunch of X-ray equipment causes radiation exposure hurt those whose policies put those people there in the first place? No karma. Not hardly. OSHA should have been all over this from day one, to protect these employees.
I am a little disturbed they want to (appear to) do their own testing in this manner. I seriously doubt we'll see honest results out of the TSA management. Once again, OSHA needs to run this. Self-reporting will only toe the party line, that the machines are perfectly safe.
Comment: Re:Mmmm not true (Score 1) 321
Google don't offer premium version of their services they make their money by showing ads to their free users.
This is not entirely true. My university-branded google apps account and my personal-domain-branded google apps accounts exist in addition to my free gmail accounts. They have a model for selling co-branded versions of the apps for a premium price. Admittedly this is not the lion share of their profits.