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Comment Re:the ebook ripoff (Score 1) 154

I've had the opposite experience... all of the eBooks I've purchased have been less than the hardback version. I've not checked the paperback prices on all of them (some were not available in paperback) and generally the eBook price was comparable. In the few instances where the price was slightly higher, the convenience of an eBook offset the slightly higher price.

I buy a few books a month, just what I can read in the time that I have. I am pretty sure that I spend less on books than most people spend on other forms of entertainment.

The loss of the ability of lending a book is not really a big deal for me because I never really loan any books out. My friends who are readers generally read different things than I do and if I find something that I think they might enjoy, I'll just buy it for them. In the past, I've sold some books that I no longer had any use or need for, however, not being able to resell an eBook is not that big a deal either.

I still buy traditional books. It all depends on the book and what I'll be using it for. However, the majority of my book purchases have been eBooks over the past year.

Comment Re:Keep in mind (Score 1) 154

I have a NOOKcolor (and had a wifi Nook before that). Like you, I waited until the prices dropped a bit on the readers before I purchased one. I sold my wifi Nook when I got my NOOKcolor. eBooks are great for a lot of genres, but I still buy a hardcopy book from time to time. I prefer hardcopy cookbooks and I prefer getting magazines in electronic format.

Sure, you can not really loan an ebook, however, I rarely ever loaned any of my hardcopy books, so that's not a big loss for me (many of my friends are not readers, and the ones who do read are generally interested in other things). I think technical books are good candidates for ebooks, simply because many of them are huge and take up a lot of space on the shelf.

I especially like being able to take a "stack" of books with me while traveling and not have to worry about "books" taking up space in my luggage.

Comment Re:nookcolor, rooted (Score 1) 396

I wanted an iPad but kept talking myself out of purchasing one ... then B&N announced the NOOKcolor and I was tempted again. I ended up getting one for myself in December and I have been very pleased with it also. I primarily wanted it for eBooks (I had a wifi Nook and sold it after I got the Color) but the extra tablet functionality is nice- especially at half the price of an iPad. It's not as full-featured as an iPad and B&N are touting it a an e-reader, but it's certainly a device worth investigating.

I have not rooted mine (as someone who is familiar with Aussie slang, "rooting" a device makes me feel uncomfortable, hahaha, but I'll go along with the term) but It's good to hear from another person who's pleased with the NOOKcolor.

Comment Re:FedEx? (Score 4, Informative) 165

FedEx (and other carriers) handle materials like this all the time. Also, if you had bothered to do a little more research you would have found this article:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-26/fedex-seeks-missing-shipment-of-radioactive-rods-used-in-ct-scan.html

quoute:
"The recovered cylinder, which was about 10 inches long and weighed 20 pounds, contained four rods of germanium-68, used in medical-imaging cameras. Their total radioactivity is 684 megaBecquerels, the equivalent of about 18 microcuries, said David McIntyre, a spokesman for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The rods are among the least significant sources of radioactivity from health and security perspectives, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

If someone had opened the canister, “it would take like 1,000 hours of exposure to get a skin blister,” Munoz said."

Comment Re:Jobs (Score 4, Informative) 153

Comment Re:This has all happened before. (Score 1) 602

I think the writers made a huge blunder by not revealing that Ellen Tigh was a Cylon earlier on ... I think that they should have shown her being resurrected at the end of the episode where she died, instead of waiting until the final season. I think that would have made for a more interesting story line throughout the latter seasons.... or at least a decent cliffhanger.

Comment I think Taco is correct (Score 1, Interesting) 602

"Another perspective here might be that a boring, ponderous show got yoinked because nobody watched it. Just sayin'"

I tend to agree. I gave "Caprica" a chance, but the story was not compelling enough to hold my interest. I gave up after the first part of the first season and never bothered with trying to watch any of the newer episodes. I keep thinking of the line from the 'reimagined' BSG "The Cylons Have a Plan" ... but the writers don't.

The Military

Mystery of the Dying Bees Solved 347

jamie points out news of a study attempting to explain the decline of honeybee populations across the US. As it turns out, the fungus N. ceranae that was thought to be killing off bee colonies had a partner in crime — a DNA-based virus that worked in tandem with N. ceranae to compromise nutrition uptake. From the NY Times: "Dr. Bromenshenk's team at the University of Montana and Montana State University in Bozeman, working with the Army's Edgewood Chemical Biological Center northeast of Baltimore, said in their jointly written paper that the virus-fungus one-two punch was found in every killed colony the group studied. Neither agent alone seems able to devastate; together, the research suggests, they are 100 percent fatal. 'It's chicken and egg in a sense — we don't know which came first,' Dr. Bromenshenk said of the virus-fungus combo — nor is it clear, he added, whether one malady weakens the bees enough to be finished off by the second, or whether they somehow compound the other's destructive power. 'They're co-factors, that's all we can say at the moment,' he said. 'They're both present in all these collapsed colonies.'"
Medicine

eLEGS Exoskeleton Allows Paraplegics To Walk 56

Zothecula writes "At a press conference held recently in San Francisco, California's Berkeley Bionics unveiled its eLEGS exoskeleton. The computer-controlled device is designed to be worn by paraplegics, providing the power and support to get them out of their wheelchairs, into a standing posture, and walking – albeit with the aid of crutches. The two formerly wheelchair-bound 'test pilots' in attendance did indeed use eLEGS to walk across the stage, in a slow-but-steady gait similar to that of full-time crutch-users."
Displays

Pioneer Preps Laser Heads-Up Display For Cars 116

itwbennett writes "On display at Japan's Ceatec show this week is a heads-up display from Pioneer that links with a smartphone's navigation system. The prototype uses a laser to display bright, high-contrast, full-color images on a screen that would be mounted above the dashboard so drivers don't have to take their eyes fully off the road in order to receive driving instructions from their robot overlords. The demonstration model was hooked up to an Android-based phone and displayed a navigation map on the left-hand side and an animated Android robot on the right-hand side that passed on information to drivers. 'We are currently aiming for an after-market product, but we are talking with car manufacturers,' said Masaya Hashida, tech manager at Pioneer's smart vision business development department." An anonymous reader points out another gadget shown at Ceatec: a pair of augmented reality glasses that projects information to a user's peripheral vision and weighs only 20 grams.

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