Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:no. it does not. (Score 3, Informative) 405

You've met one now - I've got the antenna on a small pole on the back of my house extending it about 10 feet above the roof line. I have a spare battery I charge with it in the base as well and always carry the phone and spare battery with me -- it works from my house all the way to my office - as well as all over my neighbourhood. I have it connected to an analog digium card in my asterisk pbx. It's nice having access to my home phone and free voice over IP calls from anywhere within 3-4 km of home, and the phone isn't much bigger than the old "candybar" style cell phones of the late 90s/early 2000 vintage.

Comment Re:How is that sustainable? (Score 5, Informative) 453

Remember that 240 wind turbines spread across 36,000 acres does not *use* 36,000 acres - not anywhere near it. Every wind energy corporation I've worked with allows farmers to farm right up to within 10 meters of the turbine tower base. The wires are almost universally all run underground with these new wind farms. The actual footprint of the turbine tower base with the 10 meters of safety space, is less than 1/2 of 1 acres. 240 towers will use an area around 120 acres. The remaining 35,880 acres will still be prime viable agricultural space. In the meantime, the typical turbine lease involves payments to the landowner of approx. $10,000 per year per turbine on their property. That means if you have a farm that is 1000 acres and have suitable space for 10 turbines, you'll lose about 5 acres of your growing space, but be paid around $100,000 a year. The loss of 5 acres of crop space may see something in the order of $5000 in lost revenue from the growing space.

The farmer comes out $95,000 a year ahead - that just might keep their farm operating when otherwise economics might say they couldn't. Also, note that for every MWh of power generated by a wind turbine, that's typically 1220 pounds of CO2 emissions avoided from traditional power generating plants (coal, gas, oil, etc.) - a 600Mw farm running at 25% capacity for a 20 year life span generates 26,280 GWh of power - potentially keeping 16 million tons of CO2 out of the environment.

Comment Re:It's a battle and not the war.. (Score 4, Insightful) 406

Now if only the article was correct - this didn't take place in New Jersey, but Pennsylvania. FYI I went to this high school in the 90s. The girls were nothing to write home about. I still don't think they are - not much changes in farm country.

I know the families of several of the involved in this case -- it just was yet another case of a DA trying to make a big name for himself with a "prize case" that would make nation attention and move him up the ladder in his career. He's a real ass clown.

Comment Re:Bad Ass... (Score 1) 174

No kidding - there are so many hundreds if not thousands of applications for this that I wish I'd had the technological know-how to make one of these.

Imagine if you will:
- Flexible advertising that would allow you to interact with it (e.g. the hood of a car in a showroom - you could explore all the specs and details)
- Portable point of sale - maybe you sell things at concerts or trade shows - unroll the screen, plug it into a micro-format computer with wifi/3G and have e-commerce available on a 50 inch screen.
- So many other cool things that I could just go on listing all day - but I've made my point.

Anyone dismissing this technology is either jealous or clueless.

Comment Re:All that trouble... (Score 4, Insightful) 848

In these cases isn't it reasonable to run a virtual machine on the computer with an instance of DOS X.XX installed on it? I had a small company I was helping out a while ago that wanted their staff to be able to have email and web browsing at their workstations, but their point of sale and contact management software were "Uber-Old" DOS apps that acted like your example. I installed the free version of VMWare Server on all their PC's and installed DOS in the virtual environment. Their "over-powered" computers that had just been running DOS and nothing else, now had full Win XP environments with Email, Web, etc. - as well as their proprietary DOS apps in the virtual machine.

Comment Re:Customer information sharing (Score -1, Offtopic) 526

I don't know about you but I still buy almost everything with cash - I don't carry it for long - I head to the bank or ATM and get my money for the day's purchases - and make them quite happily. I've yet to run into a store that wasn't happy to take my $20's in return for whatever I was buying - that has included a $2500 56" LCD TV, my PS3 (from Best Buy - they can't find me hehe!), many movies and games, an HP Laptop, a Lenovo desktop, the majority of the furniture in my house, and my wife's car ($21,000 in cash).

Comment Re:New? (Score 1) 261

I prefer the new 3D LCD monitors that don't require glasses at all - one of my customers bought one earlier this year (or had it sent to them for research?) in any case - I got to play on it a while - the 3D was viewable from a pretty good wide angle, and it was almost bizarre seeing it with no glasses on... the image really popped out of the screen and looked like it had true depth.
http://www.smarthouse.com.au/Gaming/Accessories/J6U3R4T3
For more information on the tech.

Comment Re:Just visit Manhattan (Score 3, Interesting) 439

Unfortunately, it's very hard to not become one of those people. I did. But I personally can affirm the story in my personal case.

I lived in San Francisco for 7 years after university, and became accustomed to urban life - having things open 24 hours, having china town a few steps away, having everything so close and easy to get to. On the other hand I always felt distracted, stressed, and like I was unable to do half the things I wanted because of crowds, traffic, too long of lines, waiting lists for restaurant reservations, you name it. I was not being very productive as I was always thinking about the logistical ramifications.

I left. I went to the opposite corner of North America - I bought a cabin on a remote lake in north central Ontario Canada - no phone line - electricity was solar and a generator - heat was a wood stove and a fireplace - internet was via 2-way Satellite - I can get in my car and drive an hour in any given direction and see no more than 5 cars. No more lines. No more traffic. No more logistical nightmares. When your biggest concern for a week is if you should drive in for provisions on Wednesday or Thursday depending on the weather, and if there's enough firewood split to last the month out. However I did catch myself saying "When I was in SF, I could get Chinese delivery in 20 minutes, and if I wanted a part for something I was working on there were so many stores to choose from!".

I lived there for 5 years - the most productive and happy 5 years of my life - but in the end it did get a little lonely and I've now moved to the fringes of a small city (100,000 ppl) - I'm still surrounded by trees and not people - but now I'm only a 10 minute drive to stores and supplies - rather than close to 2 hours. I still feel able to think here - there's nowhere near the horrible stress of urban life.

Sony

Submission + - HD DVD Death Watch Ended - Toshiba Calls It Quits (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: "It looks as though the inevitable will indeed finally come to pass, with news coming across the wire from Toshiba this morning that they're finally bowing out of the high-def format battle,ending further development of HD DVD products and that factories were being closed. NHK online reported "The Blu-ray format now makes up 90 percent of the Japanese high-definition DVD market after winning last year's price war for DVD recorders and players." Walmart better be ready with extra greeters on hand, as a few folks stream in with returns, now that the holiday HD DVD blowout buzz is over like a bad hang-over, realizing their players eventually will be nothing more than standard DVD spinners or up-scalers at best."
Privacy

Submission + - 'Opt Out' soon or Verizon will sell your CPNI 1

Rothfuss writes: "I actually opened and read one of the 'Updates to my Customer Agreement Terms and Conditions' that I received from Verizon today. I have no idea why. This one explains that they will be upgrading my service by assuming (unless I tell them otherwise) that I am willing to let them sell my Customer Proprietary Network Information or give it to anyone they choose. Apparently that will help me. However, the FCC won't let them do this without your permission — like, for example *not* calling them and opting out. If you are a Verizon customer and would like to opt out, you can do so by calling 1-800-333-9956. Ask to speak to Mr. Prosser."
Novell

Submission + - Judge in SCO vs. Novell clears the decks

An anonymous reader writes: The judge in the SCO vs. Novell case has issued a series of rulings in preparation for the beginning of the trial on the eleventh. He smacks down SCO pretty good. In particular, he denied their request for a jury trial. That means the trial will be completely carried out by the judge. It could be quite a short efficient trial followed by a loud clap of thunder. One issue is apportionment. That means the judge has to decide how much of the Microsoft/Sun licenses belongs to Novell. Any reasonable amount will immediately thrust SCO into bankruptcy. They won't get a choice of what kind of bankruptcy because there will be no hope that the company can be returned to profitibility. The trustee will walk in the door, take the keys from Darl and wind up the rest of this sorry mess as quickly as possible.

Link to ColonelZen's site

Slashdot Top Deals

Kleeneness is next to Godelness.

Working...