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edalytical (671270)

edalytical
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http://www.edalytical.com/
by Enderandrew on Saturday August 16, @12:03AM (#24620483)
Attached to: ISO Rejects OOXML Protest Appeals

Last year I was in a car accident. Someone rear-ended me and totaled my car. The insurance agent called me, and without seeing the car or knowing any facts, said I was 15% liable for being rear-ended. I didn't speed, I stayed in my lane, etc. I called a lawyer who said I was screwed. There wasn't enough money to justify fighting the case in court. The body shop guy said he saw it ever day in my state, that the insurance company wouldn't pay the full claim and just screwed people if the case was small enough to stay out of court. He saw someone parked on the street had their car totaled, and the insurance company said they were partially liable for being parked on the street legally. If the car wasn't on the road, it never would have been hit.

I was furious, so I called my state senator to talk about the partial liability law. We have term limits, so he wasn't up for reelection and wouldn't personally benefit, but he called me back several times to get info. He researched the law, and several cases like mine where we were ripped off. Then he went into legislation and fixed the law.

Sometimes there are a few decent people in office who want to do good. But if you never bring these things to their attention, nothing will ever be done.

Contacting your elected officials may not work, but it beats doing nothing.

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 [+] comment, metanod
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday August 15, @02:47PM
from the money-can't-buy-happiness-but-it-can-rent-it dept.
snydeq writes "ISO and IEC gave OOXML the greenlight after organization leaders rejected appeals from four countries to protest the vote that approved OOXML as a standard. According to an ISO press statement, appeals by the national bodies of Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela did not garner support from two-thirds of the members of the ISO Technical Management Board and IEC Standardization Management Board, which is required by ISO/IEC rules to keep the appeals process alive."
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 [+] story, it, microsoft, fail, greed, corruption
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday August 15, @02:03PM
from the bigger-stick dept.
Out-Law is reporting that the British government is planning to increase the maximum fine that can be awarded for online copyright infringement tenfold. "The Government and the Intellectual Property Office (UK-IPO) are consulting on the plans, which would allow Magistrates' Courts in England and Wales to issue summary fines of £50,000 for online copyright infringement. The larger fine is proposed for commercial scale infringements, where the person involved profits from the infringement. The plan would implement another of the recommendations of the Gowers Review of Intellectual Property, the 2006 report by former Financial Times editor Andrew Gowers which has been the foundation of intellectual property policy since its publication."
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 [+] story, yro, patents, government, copyright, greed, goodluckwiththat
Posted by samzenpus on Friday August 15, @12:48PM
from the space-is-a-big-place dept.
Imagine how big you could get in a zero-g environment.
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 [+] story, idle,
Posted by kdawson on Friday August 15, @12:33PM
from the aappropriate-allocation-of-prosecutorial-resources dept.
unassimilatible writes "Torrentfreak is reporting that German prosecutors will now only pursue larger-scale file sharers on the Internet, as they are tired of being the entertainment industry's profit collector. 'Prosecutors in a German state have announced they will refuse to entertain the majority of file-sharing lawsuits in [the] future. It appears that only commercial-scale copyright infringers will be pursued, with those sharing under 3,000 music tracks and 200 movies dropping under the prosecution radar.' And the money quote: 'It seems that the legal system in Germany has had enough of this "abuse" of the criminal law system for "civil" monetary gain.' If only an American politician would make this point. Why should taxpayers underwrite their government becoming enforcers for the entertainment industry? Then again, when you see how much politicians are being paid, an answer suggests itself."
Posted by kdawson on Friday August 15, @11:46AM
from the black-eye-on-green-cheese dept.
mattnyc99 writes "A few weeks ago we got first word of NASA's plan to crash a spacecraft into the moon next February. The new issue of Popular Mechanics has an in-depth look at the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite and its low-cost, lightning-fast mission prep — even if delays have pushed it to late February or early March. Quoting: 'Andrews had no budget for an expensive lander to seek water, and conditions in the eternally dark polar craters would kill rovers, with temperatures close to minus 300 F. Instead, Blue Ice and its partners at Northrop Grumman came up with a concept to bring the lunar floor out in the open.... Since engineering precision hardware would break the budget, the LCROSS team had to make existing components work together.'"
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 [+] story, science, moon, nasa, space, thatsnomoon, blowupthemoon
Posted by kdawson on Friday August 15, @11:00AM
from the raster-fair dept.
MojoKid writes "During SIGGRAPH 2008 in Los Angeles, NVIDIA is demonstrating a fully interactive GPU-based ray tracer. The demo is based purely on NVIDIA GPU technology, and according to NVIDIA the ray tracer shows linear scaling during rendering of a complex, two-million polygon, anti-aliased automotive styling application. The article reproduces screenshots from NVIDIA's demo. At three bounces (rays being traced as they bounce three times through a scene), performance is demonstrated at up to 30fps at HD resolutions of 1920x1080 for an image-based lighting paint shader, ray-traced shadows, reflections and refractions running on four next-generation Quadro GPUs in an NVIDIA Quadro Plex 2100 D4 Visual Computing System." Meanwhile reader arcticstoat passes on Intel's latest claim that rasterisation will die out the next few years, possibly in favour of ray tracing.
by jackb_guppy on Sunday August 10, @05:03AM (#24540755)
Attached to: Did NBC Alter the Olympics' Opening Ceremony?

If you are not Windows or Mac, there is no web broadcast.

Gets me thinking, how did a Slashdoter view the web broadcast... Is someone using Windows?

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 [+] comment, metanod
by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 27, @01:03AM (#24353385)
Attached to: Comparison of Windows XP and Linux/Sugar On the OLPC XO
Shut up nigger.
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 [+] comment

  Comment: beware (Score 5, Funny) 2008-07-25 12:03

by appleLaserWriter on Friday July 25, @12:03PM (#24333167)
Attached to: Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide

spam kills

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 [+] comment
by Bastard of Subhumani on Friday July 25, @10:03AM (#24333325)
Attached to: Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide

You're just jealous because he went one better than you. Right, Hans?

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 [+] comment
Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday July 21, @06:18PM
from the sky-is-falling dept.
chareverie writes "Fortify Software released a study where they concluded that open source software poses a large security risk to corporations who have implemented it. They reason this by stating that the fault lies within the open source communities and their failure to adhere to minimum security practices. Fortify Software studied 11 open source software packages, where the application server Tomcat was determined to be the best. The other 10 were found to have poor results, with those being Derby, Geronimo, Hibernate, Hipergate, JBoss, Jonas, OFBiz, OpenCMS, Resin and Struts. Jacob West, manager of Fortify's research group, reminds that purpose of the study was 'not to condemn open source software, but rather to point out that the security practices need to improve because open source adoption by enterprises and governments is growing.'"
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 [+] story, developers, software, flamebait, troll, fud, comparedtowhat