Slashback: Hippocampus, Matter, Blogs 187
Why not a quarter for 15 minutes of access? amy's robot writes "After announcing plans to do so just last week, Verizon has activated the WiFi hotspots built in to their Manhattan payphones. Here's official info and a FAQ along with a map of the hotposts. The catch: you have to be a Verizon Online subscriber to use them, but they're free if you are."
So the blogs can stop fleeing to the hills. GeekLife.com writes "Dave Winer received a note from Google PR stating 'Just want to be sure you know that there's been no consideration of removing weblogs from our index.' Seems The Register's speculation may have somehow been unfounded."
I'd rather see a patent for smart toothpaste. Wil McCarthy writes "Last week on this forum, there was some heated discussion about my nonfiction book, Hacking Matter , and specifically about the patent application included in the book's appendix. I was accused of the intellectual property equivalent of cybersquatting: patenting a speculative idea and then sitting back and waiting 'for someone to actually do the hard work of inventing a useful product before gouging them for royalties.' In this scenario, my book has a chilling effect on an entire industry, stifling innovation.
What may have been lost in the shuffle is the fact that I'm not 'just' a science fiction writer or science journalist. First and foremost I'm an engineer, and to the best of my knowledge the idea of "wellstone," or bulk programmable matter woven from fibers surfaced with quantum dots, is original to me. The patent merely codifies these facts. Also, notably, the field of quantum dot research is lively and growing, but not at all focused on materials science applications. Thus there is no extant programmable matter industry to be squelched by my efforts.
Nor have I, per the discussion, patented a device which a person skilled in the art could not produce. It's true that some embodiments of the invention require nanometer precision in three dimensions and are thus beyond present-day manufacturing capabilities, but other less capable embodiments could be produced today. I didn't provide a working model to the patent office because I wasn't required to, having filed a Provisional Patent Application prior to the RPA.
As I make clear in the book, my interest is in hastening the arrival of programmable matter as both an industry and a field of inquiry. My partner and I are presently engaged in discussions to fund the development of a prototype quantum dot fiber which would be broadly, programmably self-doping at liquid nitrogen temperatures. We're also quite willing to license the technology to interested parties at non-gouge rates, and any suggestion to the contrary is simply foolish. If my aim is to change the world, what do I stand to gain by stifling development of my own invention?"
Sorting through the evidence. CowboyRobot writes "Edward Tufte (known for his book, Envisioning Information) analyzes the Boeing explanation for the Columbia disaster, pointing out design flaws and how those flaws conceal ambiguity in the report."
Tufte's analyis is the kind that should be applied to many more situations -- he dissects the way reassuring, blandly obfuscated PowerPoint slides can be used to slip through statements that might cause justified concern if spoken in plain language.
Dr. Whonow? Mechanik writes "You may remember the previous Slashdot story about the BBC doing a Flash treatment of one of Douglas Adams's Dr. Who scripts, Shada. Just wanted to let everyone know that Part Two is now available."
Welcome to Stepford. ragingmime writes "The Boston Globe has an interesting story on the Polyphonic "hit song science" technology that Slashdot mentioned a while ago. The Globe mentions specific things that the software measures and give opinions from various people in the music industry. It's an interesting - and kinda creepy - read."
Boilerplate or camera tricks? andrel writes "In his Slashdot interview Michael Robertson answered question 10 with:
I believe that if you purchase a product, you should have the right to change it, move it, or alter it for your own personal needs. The seller should have the right to say that you void the warranty or refuse to support it if you change it, but you should still have right as the purchaser to make that choice. This goes for music, software and personal computers. [emphasis added]
Too bad Lindows.Com doesn't share his values. The license agreement for LindowsOS explicitly prohibits users from modifying it (section 1.1.a.iv for individuals and 1.1.b.iv for businesses). As for voiding the warranty, well according to section 4 there wasn't one there in the first place. The EULA also claims that you may not allow a visiting friend to use your LindowsOS computer, nor may you use it to conduct business(both in section 1.1.a.iii)."
Robertson reads Slashdot; I hope we'll see his reaction to this soon.
Imagine the course of a canoe paddled by Microsoft and SCO. SolipsistX writes "The Seattle Times is reporting that Microsoft now says that the iLoo is not a joke. Apparently, execs killed the project after it became a laughing stock. The announcement yesterday that it was a joke was caused by miscommunication, says Microsoft. Needless to say, this does not help Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing initiative."
iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
Re:iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
I think we have some good material for cartoons there. Maybe when it does crash, it clamps your buttocks and gives you a 3-fingered salute!
Of course this could all be a cover for the new Microsoft Wedgie2003 Professional release...
Re:iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
Big Shit Of Death?
Sounds painfull.
Re:iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
Re:iLoo (Score:2)
"If the problem persists, please contact the manufacturer"
Re:iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
Whoever dumped the log.
Re:iLoo (Score:2, Funny)
Re:iLoo (Score:5, Funny)
"Microsoft's PR Needs Flushing" (Score:2, Informative)
heh (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe Robertson should spend more time reading his own EULA's and less time reading /.
fixing the link on the main page (Score:1)
Re:fixing the link on the main page (Score:5, Insightful)
But then I started thinking maybe that's wrong. I mean what is it that makes millions of us sit up at night on the web rather than watching late-night tv? I believe that it is because there is some kinds of information that you can get on the web that you can't get on television, newspapers, magazines, or radio.
That information is simply real people speaking plainly in their own voices. Complete with lies, swear words, misunderstandings, misspellings, everything. it's completely devoid of slick, corporate, boardroom approved, focus-group tested, marketing speak. People like that, it seems. They like it enough to shut off Letterman and hang here.
If you wanted to buy a car for example you could go to the dealer showroom and listen to the sales person and read the glossy brochure. Or, you could go to an independent web discussion site to hear what owners have to say about it. Even if some of the things they say aren't true you're a lot more likely to get the straight scoop after reading a hundred posts there than you are by reading all the promotional materials the maker can throw at you.
So, given that this type of information is what makes the web a cool place to begin with, in the end maybe the real smart thing for google to do would be the opposite: the default behavior is to include blogs. You'd have to deliberately exclude them if you wanted to. An opt-out scenario.
And please excuse me for butchering the ideas of David Weinberger in his magnificent Small Pieces Loosely Joined [amazon.com].
Re:fixing the link on the main page (Score:2, Interesting)
The true problem that needs to be fixed is that google needs to be able to grok well-formed sentences and return appropriate results. I hope that my future kids will one day be able to search the web with something better than boolean logic with a page rank assist.
Google already downgrading blog search results (Score:2)
It's as if Google did a one-time slapdown of my blog.
I'd rather have had medium-level search results for all my articles, as a lot of my best material is early material.
The s
Re:Google already downgrading blog search results (Score:2)
Isn't that part of the Google algorithim... links on/from the front page contribute more to your PageRank? As links to your article move off of blogs' front pages and into "archive" sections, your PageRank is going to go down. (IANG)
Why? (Score:2)
Why is that exactly? PR versus good code writing go hand in hand now?
Re:Why? (Score:2)
uummm, ok its a stretch.
OTOH they don't go hand in hand, this is why we can't trust MS is implimenting security in a trustworthy way just cause they say they are.
ha, that ones better.
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re: artificial hippocampus (Score:2, Insightful)
This will help you remember Sammy Jankis (Score:4, Interesting)
No, the Guy Pearce joke should be about Memento [otnemem.com]. In that movie, Pearce played a man who could not form new memories because of traumatic damage to his hippocampus. (Saying much further would spoil the plot.)
Re:This will help you remember Sammy Jankis (Score:2)
Re:This will help you remember Sammy Jankis (Score:2)
Re: artificial hippocampus (Score:2)
Incidentally, I made a typo in spelling the word. Your grammar errors, specifically the use of several sentence fragments, are easily as incorrect as a single misspelling of a word.
By the way, moderators...I was making a joke; who in the hell moderated me up as insightful?
Come on now (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Come on now (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Come on now (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Come on now (Score:2)
Re:Come on now (Score:5, Interesting)
Microsoft may have screwed this one up with some really poor internal communications and overzealous PR reps, but the media also has to take some blame for some really poor journalism.
While a few MS reps did try to spin things as "an April Fool's joke", the story with the widest circulation (and it's still being published in some papers as late as today) was the one with the "hoax" headline attached to a story that made it clear that it was NOT a hoax, but was simply an overhyped pilot project. Of course all the editorials and TV news programs simply read the misleading headline about a "hoax" without reading the rest of story and turned this into an even bigger story, while most Slashdot comments seemed to pick out the obvious discrepancies right away.
Slashdot readers may be criticized for not always reading the stories but at least they seem to do much better than the mass media in this respect. That the media will continue to spin this story over the next couple of days is almost as sad, irresponsible, and scary as the recently exposed fraudulent NYT reporter.
Of course, it's fun to laugh at Microsoft too!
Re:Come on now (Score:2)
It's not real... and I doubt it ever will be in the way it's documented. What I could see as cool is if you could walk in and it could scan your eyes so you could "look" at where you want to go. Much like the visual-assisted computers that some disabled people have used, without all the heavy headgear. That way, when you "click" on the wrong place, you won't pick up more than just a 404
This probably won't be soon, so
Right (Score:5, Funny)
Which would not be the case if the slides had been created with Agnubis or Impress. That bit of editorial spiel would have read "he clarified points made in the presentation slides".
PowerPoint == presentation (Score:1)
importance of proper software (Score:4, Informative)
Which would not be the case if the slides had been created with Agnubis or Impress.
</sarcasm>
You're right. Obviously, it is possible to create crappy presentations using any given product - just as it is possible to write crummy code in any programming language.
However, you miss one of Tufte's main points. There are many, many ways to produce high-quality technical documents (I prefer TeX/LaTeX). There are even multiple ways to produce overhead-projector or LCD-screen presentations (see LaTeX slides, or the Prosper package [sourceforge.net]). Packages that are designed to work with variables, equations, and scientific notation, would have done a better job with this presentation than (what looks like) PowerPoint did.
They would have made it easy for the authors to use a consistent, clear notation for the "cubic inches" unit measure that is crucial to their analysis. At the very bottom of the slide, they reveal that the piece of foam that struck Columbia was 640 times the size of the foam chunks they experimented with on the ground! As it is, they refer to this unit as "cu in" several times but each time the unit, as plain text, blends into its surroundings rather than associating itself with the accompanying number.
Have you ever tried to write an equation in PowerPoint? PITA. Now of course, ideally the Boeing engineers would have put in boldface 18-point font at the bottom of the slide that they did not want to extrapolate their test results by a factor of 640. But in the absence of this honorable impulse, a technically-minded presentation package would have made it easier for them to present the critical information in an readily-digested manner (and may even have warned them against using all those single-item sublevels).
As it is, any time they wanted something other than plain, bulleted text, they were working against the grain of their software. Who knows if it made the critical difference (I doubt it), but please recall that we are talking about 7 lives and several billion dollars here.
-renard
Re:importance of proper software (Score:2)
Re:importance of proper software (Score:2)
This is a good example of a case where the tools and the author have limited the way in which the data was represented, leading to an incomplete understanding/obfusciation of the problem.
As for the O-ring thing...that's a whole other barrel of fish, and not at all
Tip of the day (Score:2)
Have you ever tried to write an equation in PowerPoint?
I have. It's one of my jobs because the older guys struggle with it.
1. Insert > Object... from the Menu Bar
2. Click 'Microsoft Equation 3.0' on the list then click the OK button.
Failing that, find the Equation Editor here: C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Equation\EQNEDT32.EXE. Of course it can be used in many more applications other than Powerpoint.
It's a bit time consuming for complex equations but they look very nice.
Re:Tip of the day (Score:2)
Stifling INNOVATION, Not PATENTS (Score:4, Informative)
The whole point is that such patents will "squelch" any burgeoning "programmable matter industry", not simply one that is already extant at the time of your patent application.
The question of what constitutes innovation versus discovery is always a difficult one. The fact is, however, that patents are not meant to protect or aid those "who figure out how to do new stuff", but rather for those "who do new stuff". We do live in a society with a penchant for materialism; as thus, the "ideas behind something cool" are valued much less than that actual "something cool".
Thoughts?
Nothing to see, move along (Score:2)
In many cases it is unclear whether patents are actually functioning to protect the inventor financially, but in this case, it seems to
Re:Nothing to see, move along (Score:2)
See, the thing here is that I can make a pretty good stab at things which will be cool in the future, and I can even make a decent guess as to how to implement them. BUT! if I where to try and do what this guy has done, I could get a patent on those grounds alon! He's patented something where he doesn't exactly know how to do it himself yet! And that, in every definition the patent office wants, is just plain wrong.
Re:Nothing to see, move along (Score:2)
At least it isn't actually patenting something that is essentially conceptua
Re:Nothing to see, move along (Score:2)
But what this guy is doing is a step further beyond the pale; he's patenting something which he himself doesn't know how exactly it will work...which is like rewarding some dumb kid down the block for Einsteins work.
Re:Stifling INNOVATION, Not PATENTS (Score:2)
On a different note, science fiction authors have "invented" things like robots (Capek), communication satellites (Clarke), and even the internet (Gibson).
patent apologist (Score:4, Insightful)
As I make clear in the book, my interest is in hastening the arrival of programmable matter as both an industry and a field of inquiry.
Then why patent part of the field before it even gets off the ground? Why not just publish the description in a journal?
We're also quite willing to license the technology to interested parties at non-gouge rates
Ah yes, that's MIGHTY generous!
If my aim is to change the world, what do I stand to gain by stifling development of my own invention?
Oh, I dunno, a few dollars from the occasional "non-gouge rate" perhaps?
I hear this a lot.. someone patents something, then when asked they say: "I patented it because I want everyone to use it!" .. "I patented it so it would become the standard!" .. etc..
That doesn't make sense to me.
Maybe he patented it because... (Score:5, Insightful)
He came up with this thing. He knows, apparently, how to produce it. And this is what patents were made for--not stupid business practices which are all but common sense, or software concepts with only minute differences from other software concepts, or whatever.
This is the sort of thing the patent office was meant to do: Allow people who really innovate to secure ownership of those innovations and therefore rights to money made from them later if they so choose. This is a good thing, because it prevents me from inventing the machine that does your homework for you... and having my neighbor start up a company producing those machines and make millions, not giving me so much as a dime.
My father once new a guy who invented a new gadget of some variety. I want to say it had something to do with a regulator for an airgun or something. He patented it--not a cheap proposition. But he'd invented it; it was his. A largish company in that field, shortly thereafter, copied his design to use for their own products. He innovated--they stole it. And because he'd patented it, he was able to take them to court over it, and protect his work, so that he could continue to produce that item and make his living.
There's a difference between 'using the system' and 'abusing the system'. Patents are not completely evil in and of themselves. The problem comes when the goal becomes stifling competition instead of protecting innovation.
Re:Maybe he patented it because... (Score:2)
It's exactly like me patenting an engine based manipulating gravitational effects; I know it's something which could/will work, sometime in the future, but I haven't a clue how to make it now...but I'll patent it in the meantime, even though I can't make a prototype, no matter how much money I have.
Re:Maybe he patented it because... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe he patented it because... (Score:2)
Stupid microsoft people (Score:2, Funny)
I would like to see them confirm that its an april fools joke..... in May (or maybe April, but way after April 1st anyways)!
Re:Stupid microsoft people (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stupid microsoft people (Score:2)
You haven't seen many Microsoft product release schedules, do you?
controll (Score:5, Insightful)
ummm, MS changed the world of comuting, but I don't see them opening up there research.
Just because you want to change the world doesn't mean you don't want to control/dominate that change.
MS Commuting (Score:3, Funny)
Well, yeah, but who would want to replicate their model of commuting: travelling in a car with the the hood welded shut that requires a restart every few miles?
-Waldo Jaquith
Re:controll (Score:2)
Yeah, instead of idiots reading a newspaper while driving, we now have idiots using a laptop while driving. Thanks Microsoft!
What is that silly Lindows license thing ? (Score:5, Funny)
Bob, buzzing Roger : hey buddy, can I pop to your place to play with your new Lindows box ? ... ...
Roger : Err, actually Bob, I'd love to but we're friends and you'd be visiting me, so you couldn't use my box. The EULA says it, ya know
Bob : What does that mean ? are you kidding me ? you suck ass man !
Roger : hey, don't you dare insult me ! Bob : F*ck you man, you're talking bollocks. You're not my friend anymore. There ! Roger : well then, if we're not friends anymore, I suppose you can come visit me and try out my Lindows box
Re:What is that silly Lindows license thing ? (Score:3, Funny)
The iLoo is more serious than you'd think (Score:4, Funny)
The iLoo marks one attempt to create an environment where the internet is everywhere. It was a brave attempt - other attempts have focussed on relatively unusable systems such as bringing the internet to pocketable phones, an exceedingly expensive mechanism that does not deliver what it attempts to do due to the limitations of the medium. Airports have experimented, with moderate success, at providing Internet terminals, and also at 802.11 based systems - though in that case, taking advantage of the high number of laptops owned corporately and the high number of corporate users of air travel. More universal 802.11 solutions are doomed - at least until the development of a $199 Apple iBook.
Putting the Internet everywhere will be a difficult task. An environment needs to be fostered where relatively expensive equipment can be placed in public safely and profitably. This means thinking laterally, and Microsoft has, for once, done so with the iLoo. Systems may eventually be developed that provide usable Internet terminals on public transport or in shops or photobooths. The ideas about where cannot be limited except by trying and failing. But it's inevitable that ideas will not be tried if they're laughed at before they can even be tested. This quagmire of laterally thought ideas not being raised for fear of ridicule will not disappear by itself. Unless people are prepared to actually act, not just talk about it on Slashdot, nothing will ever get done. Apathy is not an option.
You can help by getting off your rear and writing to your congressman [house.gov] or senator [senate.gov]. Tell them that the Internet is important to you, and that universal access, both geographically and sociologically, is vital to the Internet's future and to the many billions of people who rely upon the Internet in their daily lives. Tell them that you appreciate the work being done to bring the Internet out of the offices and homes to where it can be reached by everyone, by groups such as Microsoft, VoiceStream, Palm, and Apple but that if they are unable to bring ideas even to the prototyping stage, you will be forced to use less and less secure and intelligently designed alternatives. Let them know that SMP may make or break whether you can efficiently deploy OpenBSD on your workstations and servers. Explain the concerns you have about freedom, openness, and choice, and how cramping creativity when it comes to opening the Internet harms all three. Let them know that this is an issue that effects YOU directly, that YOU vote, and that your vote will be influenced, indeed dependent, on their polices on Universal Internet Access .
You CAN make a difference. Don't treat voting as a right, treat it as a duty. Keep informed, keep your political representatives informed on how you feel. And, most importantly of all, vote.
Re:The iLoo is more serious than you'd think (Score:4, Funny)
Uh, yeah -- if I can't run OpenBSD on my quad-Xeon toilet firewall, why, it's almost not worth having network access in my bathroom at all!
Re:The iLoo is more serious than you'd think (Score:2)
Sounds like an advertising slogan to me.
"With the Microsoft iLoo, at least your internet access will be regular."
(P.S. The iLoo is a prank, started by Microsoft UK, if I recall.)
Info for editors: (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Info for editors: (Score:2)
Re: Lindows (Score:2, Interesting)
Patentable? (Score:3, Interesting)
So what makes it patentable if a person with ordinary skills in the art can build one? A patent is supposed to protect inventions beyond the abilities of those with ordinary skills at the time of application.
Re:Patentable? (Score:2)
Re:Patentable? (Score:2)
What I had intended to write was a cheap shot to point out that the explanation offered by Wil McCarthy neglected to show how the invention was non-obvious, a requirement for a patent. If three people didn't get it, the "shot" obviously missed, so I apologize for the miscommunication.
The main point remains: it's not enough to be the first person to think of an idea, if your solution is an obvious one to somebody of ordina
Audio Blogger, Picture Blogger, Beer Goggles (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually sounds really cool. Has anyone used or tested this? What's the filesize on, say, a 30 second clip?
How long until we see the first "I just got hit on and you won't guess what his pickup line was!" blog?
Now imagine the new "Picture Blog" service that works with photo-cellphones. Now that would give rise to an awesome blog called:
"I'm too drunk to tell; how about you guys vote on how she'd look without beer goggles?"
BSODs (Score:5, Funny)
An iLoo alternative? (Score:2)
Re:An iLoo alternative? (Score:3, Funny)
Yet another way to increase your throughput, would be to eat constipatives, carefully timing your crapping to weekends and vacations.
Computer rated music - the Versificator (Score:2, Informative)
Sounds like the record companies want to move another step closer to Orwell's 1984 [online-literature.com], where music was automatically generated for the proles by a machine called the versificator.
Is this why Big Brovahz had a hit single recently?
Better question (Score:5, Funny)
Here's a better question: If your aim is to change the world, what the fuck are you doing wasting time answering questions from a bunch of morons on Slashdot?
All my iLoo Jokes can still be used! Yay! (Score:4, Insightful)
One article stated that MSN saw a decline of 300,000 users in the first quarter of this year. Not satisfied with the number of people shitting on MSN, Microsoft now brings you the MSN Toilet!
This product opens up an opportunity for a whole new Microsoft slogan: And last but not least, Microsoft has found that deman for their steaming piles of crap far outstripps the supply, so they have come upw with a strategy to collect as much as possible. Enter, the iLoo!
--CTH
Hippocampus ... Got it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hippocampus ... Got it. (Score:2)
This part of the brain is responsible for primitive behaviors that scientists refer to as the Four-F's.
Disturbing trend in WiFi (Score:2, Insightful)
At what point in time do they have more
Re:Disturbing trend in WiFi (Score:2, Interesting)
And of course they can charge you. It's for their bandwidth. They are not charging for the spectrum.
Divot.
Tragedy of the commons- It's the buzzword the cool kids are using...
Re:Disturbing trend in WiFi (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Anyone notice.... (Score:2)
For those who found him interesting, the character of Professor Chronotus is fleshed out a lot more fully in the novel.
Re:Anyone notice.... (Score:2)
The relevent portion of the Lindows EULA (Score:5, Informative)
a. Family License: If You are a Family or Individual, You agree to the following terms of this Section 1.1.a: LindowsOS is a modular operating system made up of individual software components (each individual software component and all accompanying documentation, enhancements, upgrades and extensions thereto are referred to herein as "Software Program(s)") that were created either by Lindows or various individuals and entities ("Third Parties"). Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Lindows grants You a non-exclusive license to use the object code form of LindowsOS for Your personal use in accordance with the accompanying documentation. You may download and use LindowsOS on multiple computers owned, leased or rented by You; provided, however, You and members of Your Household (a "Household" consists of those individuals that currently reside with You) are the only individuals with the right to use Your licensed copy(ies) of LindowsOS. For example, if You have a desktop computer at home and a laptop computer which You travel with, You may download a copy of LindowsOS on both machines for the personal use of members of Your Household and You. You agree that You are responsible for the members of Your Household's compliance with the terms of this Agreement as though they were You and had agreed to all terms and conditions herein. Except as otherwise expressly set forth herein, You may not (and shall not allow any member of Your Household or any other Third Party to) (i) remove any product identification or other notices; (ii) copy LindowsOS (other than for back-up purposes, for Your personal use on Your multiple machines as set forth in this Section 1.1.a, or for archival purposes); (iii) provide, lease, lend, use for timesharing or service bureau purposes or otherwise use or allow others to use LindowsOS to or for the benefit of Third Parties, or (iv) modify LindowsOS or incorporate LindowsOS into or with other software, except as may be provided for in this agreement.
Common lawyering approach (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically, they don't want you giving out LindowsOS to all of your friends for free. You can use it on any of your own computers (or computers of anyone else in your household), but no one else.
yay (Score:2, Funny)
New Slashdot Poll (Score:2)
The Register and blogs (Score:4, Interesting)
Google bought blogger. They want to bring mass, cheap, digital publishing to everyone. Its a great bet and will connect more people to the google brand than the USENET archives did. Joe Sixpack doesn't care or even know wtf usenet is, but if he can blog with the click of a button and have his buddies find it on google instantly, well then something interesting might happen.
Self weblog-type publishing is fairly easy, but its going to get technophobe easy with google. Give them some time and they'll make the standard blogger tools of today look like a slackware install on an old 486.
Like someone said the digital divide today is between those who serve content and those who don't. Google isn't stupid. Sorry anti-blog people, but you're going to have to deal with cheap, egalitarian publishing on the net for a long, long time. Sure beats the default msn.com homepage, eh?
Hippo campus (Score:2, Funny)
Just imagine the possiblities... (Score:2)
You could choose to only save the good memories, or at least filter out all the damn advertisements.
The benefits would be tempting. Sleep with a model, heavy button pressing. Wake up with a member of a non-preferred gender and/or species, the button isn't touched all day afterwards.
People who do REAL research on Quantum Dots... (Score:3, Insightful)
Until then, it's all bullshit hype.
For an example of a real engineer, read this [umn.edu]. Of course, it's the USPTO that mistakes hype for substance...at the cost of the true innovators in this country.
Howard Salis
Re:People who do REAL research on Quantum Dots... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:People who do REAL research on Quantum Dots... (Score:2)
The Space Elevator was imagined by Arthur C. Clark a while back. Did he patent it because he thought of it? No. He didn't create one, nor design one (ie. detailed schematics), nor prove that he could build one.
The first person to be able to build long lengths of carbon nanotubes will surely get a patent for their TECHNIQUE. It will be priceless. It will b
False Dichotomy (Score:2)
If you'
MS hires Kingsmens to launch iLoo (Score:2)
Lindows.com responds... (Score:5, Informative)
This was the EULA our lawyers put together a year ago when Michael and I were buried trying to get LindowsOS off the ground. Now that we are up and running, Michael and I will go through this and review it. I think you've pointed out some good areas that probably don't really fit with what we're trying to do and could use some updating.
Thanks,
Kevin Carmony
President, Lindows.com
Re:Lindows.com responds... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
patents (Score:2)
And you can bet that there's NO WAY I'm going to work on something that's already been patented... just so he can thank me and run off with credit for MY research.
Bathroom internet (Score:2)
I am looking for a girlfriend (Score:2)
I am looking for a girlfriend from Israel. So if you happen to be a girl from there who reads
Btw: I love slashback!
Google tabs (Score:2, Funny)