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Comment Re:so this is the last generation ... (Score 1) 281

Oh, its somewhat funny. I'm in So Cal and I went to my first meeting/trip to a sheriff's station... All I remember is the person in charge getting into it with my mom because we showed up a few minutes late and were asked to leave. So my mom was like WTF and argued. So I was "allowed" to finish that outing, but wasn't allowed to return lol. I don't really have anything against the organizations, I've met a lot of people have been in them and they're all cool, not like the ones who gave me the boot :P

Comment Re:Forget the shoes (Score 1) 281

Actually, in certain industrial operations they reverse the "hover board" to make it lift heavy materials effortlessly. They magnetize portions of the ground to lift pallet-like areas. It's really interesting. Before I knew about that, I first thought about it in school when using a magnetic vice for a grinder: if you can clamp a piece of metal to a powered magnetic surface, why not reverse the polarity and lift it instead? Pretty sweet! Now we just need a skate park using that!

Government

Chief NSA Lawyer Hints That NSA May Be Tracking US Citizens 213

itwbennett writes "Responding to questions from the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence yesterday, Matthew Olsen, the NSA's general counsel, said that the NSA 'may', under 'certain circumstances' have the authority to track U.S. citizens by intercepting location data from cell phones, but it's 'very complicated.' 'There's no need to panic, or start shopping for aluminum-foil headwear,' says blogger Kevin Fogarty, but clearly the NSA has been thinking about it enough 'that the agency's chief lawyer was able to speak intelligently about it off the cuff while interviewing for a different job.'"
Earth

Interviews: Ask Technologist Kevin Kelly About Everything 135

Kevin Kelly has for decades been involved in some of the most interesting projects I know about, and in his roles as founding editor (and now editor at large) of Wired Magazine and editor of The Whole Earth Catalog has helped spread the word about many others. Kelly is probably as close to a Rennaisance man as it's possible to be in the 21st century, having more-than-passing interest and knowledge in a range of topics from genetic sequencing and other ways that we can use measurement in pursuit of improved health to how technology is used and reused in real life. Among other projects, he's also the founder of CoolTools, which I consider to be (unsurprisingly) the closest current equivalent to the old Whole Earth Catalogs. (Disclaimer: I've had a few reviews published there, too.) (He's also one of the founders of The WELL, now part of Salon.) Kelly is also Secretary of the Board of Directors of the Long Now Foundation, the group which for years has been designing a clock to ring on 10,000 years in the future. Below, ask questions of Kelly, bearing in mind please the Slashdot interview guidelines: ask as many questions as you want, but please keep them to one per comment. He'll get back soon with his answers.
Robotics

Submission + - Robot gets rid of landmines -- by crushing them (discovery.com) 1

derGoldstein writes: Discovery has an article about a robot that gets rid of landmines, not by using sensors to pinpoint their location, but by rotating a giant cylinder covered in tungsten hammers to smash them and blow them up: "An operator commands this beast from a safe distance using a remote control unit. The hull of the robot is made up of hardened steel plates in a "V" shape to help limit any damage from antitank mines and unexploded shells of sizes up to 3 inches, and the D-3 has been able to successfully ingest mines containing as much as 17.6 pounds of explosive, which is nothing to sneeze at.". A video of the beast in action can be found here.

Submission + - New Tests for Fake Scotch Whisky Developed (strath.ac.uk)

DaveJ86 writes: Researchers at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow have developed new, faster, tests for fake whisky using infra-red spectroscopy.

Full details were published in Analytica Chimica Acta 2011, 690, 228-233 in April.

Comment It can go either way! (Score 1) 2

The "extended star wars universe" has had its hits and misses, but for the most part is pretty good. The question is, how would she go about it? Would it be like the SWU where Lucas controls certain parts of the timeline, or would writers be able to just go at it? It has HUGE potential - both before and after HP's timeline, but will it pan out? I think the key lies with her in what she would allow to be done and what she would be involved in herself.

Comment Re:Typical (Score 1) 73

While I do agree with you in that the privacy of a person should not be negotiable, people do it all the time! They're known as stars, primarily out of Hollywood, CA. Once a person makes it big on TV, film or in music, they have effectively 0% privacy. They know this going in - and some actually enjoy that and get famous because if their publicity. So, maybe for those accepting the ToS, it might be worthwhile to them. But for me? Not at all.

Comment Re:Still need another 80m users (Score 1) 267

I am not a fan of FB or MS, and only have a fake MS account (set up in my friends honor). But G+ I like. Like I said before, the big G is getting an awful lot of our info together, but the tradeoff is having everything seamlessly connected.

They're still working out the bugs, but I'm getting the hang of it and really like it... I especially like that I can filter the incoming flow of spam some people throw up. 1 person was drowning out everyone else by the number of posts they had lol.

Comment Re:I've been waiting for this. (Score 1) 521

You're very right about that... I was interviewing at a place that does custom spas and kitchens.... and everything went great, they took me up to a board room and I met some more people. Was loving it! Sounded like a tight knit family operation... until they started asking what I liked to do on my "off time." I explained I like music and art etc etc and they kept pushing at "what else?" lol Eventually, I understood it to be what do you do on Sunday (they were very discrete). So after I got the hint, and I could say it's fairly obvious they were Christian, I didn't believe they had to know what I believed in, so of course I didn't share. And needless to say, I didn't get the job. My religious beliefs should not be the deciding factor for my employment.

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