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Comment Re:Math (Score 1) 576

That's a winner in smart-assery:

When you can make accurate guesses consistently over time, then maybe we can talk about calling them "predictions".

That's exactly the point he was making: give more credit to sources which have been shown righter in their previous predictions. But i guess agreeing wouldn't have given you the same ego boost.

You didn't predict anything. You made a guess. It took five entire years for reality to coincide with your guess.

A guess? Just because he did not give a time range? Well, he could easily have added "within 10 years". Many people did (I've been taught exactly that in 2002 during a market finance class).
But even without it, who would you rather trust now that it did happen? Someone who said it was going to, someone who said it wasn't, or someone who had no idea whether it would or not?
What you're doing is dismissing a statement claiming it does not contain enough information, which leaves you with either one that contains even less or one that contains none at all... Which contradicts your very point of wise trust allocation based on past record.

Comment Superstition? (Score 1) 621

"as long as the cost of believing a superstition is less than the cost of missing a real association, superstitious beliefs will be favored."

Rationally speaking, if there's a significant positive expected return, how can that be superstition? It's just rational risk management.
In other words, some form of pragmatic knowledge.

It's pretty easy to prove: drop a _non-superstitious_ mathematician in the rustling grass and see how long he survives...
Hopefully for us, prehistoric men weren't so "clever" and we stood a chance of existing at all.

Security

Submission + - Man hacks 911 system, sends SWAT on bogus raid. 5

An anonymous reader writes: The Orange County Register reports that a 19 year old from Washington state broke into the Orange County California 911 emergency system. He randomly selected the name and address of a Lake Forest, California couple and electronically transferred false information into the 911 system. The Orange County California Sheriff's Department's Special Weapons and Tactics Team was immediately sent to the couple's home. The armed officers surrounded the home.Inside the home lived a couple with two toddlers who were asleep and unsuspecting of what was going outside the home. The SWAT team handcuffed the husband and wife before deciding it was a prank.
Communications

Submission + - Scientists deliver God helmet (sciam.com)

prostoalex writes: "Scientific American is reporting on scientific work done to map the euphoric religious feelings with the areas of the brain responsible for producing those experiences. As a result, it's now quite possible to experience proximity to God (or Universe for those in the audience who stick to atheism) via a special helmet: "In a series of studies conducted over the past several decades, Persinger and his team have trained their device on the temporal lobes of hundreds of people. In doing so, the researchers induced in most of them the experience of a sensed presence — a feeling that someone (or a spirit) is in the room when no one, in fact, is — or of a profound state of cosmic bliss that reveals a universal truth. During the three-minute bursts of stimulation, the affected subjects translated this perception of the divine into their own cultural and religious language — terming it God, Buddha, a benevolent presence or the wonder of the universe.""
The Courts

Submission + - SCO blames Linux for bankruptcy filing 4

Stony Stevenson writes: SCO Group CEO Darl McBride says competition from the open source Linux operating system was a major reason why the company was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Friday.

In a court filing in support of SCO's bankruptcy petition, McBride noted that SCO's sales of Unix-based products "have been declining over the past several years." The slump, McBride said, "has been primarily attributable to significant competition from alternative operating systems, including Linux."

McBride listed IBM, Red Hat, Microsoft, and Sun Microsystems as distributors of Linux or other software that is "aggressively taking market share away from Unix."
The Courts

Submission + - Court convicts Skype for breaching GPL

terber writes: In Munich a German court once again upheld the GPL2 and convicted Skype (based in Luxembourg) of violating GPL by selling the Linux-based VoIP phone "SMCWSKP 100" without proper source code access. Skype later on added a flyer to the phones with an URL where to obtain the sources, but the court found this insufficient as this was in breach of GPL section 3. Plaintiff was once again Netfilter developer Harald Welte, who runs http://gpl-violations.org/. The decision is currently only available in German at http://www.ifross.de./ News source (German): www.golem.de/0707/53684.html
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Duke wireless problem due to Cisco, not iPhone (duke.edu)

jpallas writes: Contrary to a previous story, it now turns out that the widely reported problems with Duke University's wireless network were not caused by Apple's iPhone. The problem was actually with their Cisco network. Duke's Chief Information Officer praises the work of their technical staff. Does that include the assistant director for communications infrastructure who was quoted as saying, "I don't believe it's a Cisco problem in any way, shape, or form?"
Wireless Networking

Submission + - The stalker in your pocket (computerworld.com)

kashif.ahsan writes: "From the article "Camera phones contain all the necessary ingredients for completely invasive stalking: a microphone, camera, personal data on the user, location information, a chat and call history — you name it. And victims carry them everywhere they go.All that's missing is the software that lets stalkers take control. This new software, called snoopware, does just that. Snoopware — both legal and illegal — enables stalkers to secretly seize control of a phone's electronics to listen, watch and spy on their victims." Although this case might be a bit extreme but in a few years most of us will have some sort of issues like this."
Google

Google Maps Shows Chinese Nuclear Sub Prototype 339

mytrip writes "An image of what could be one of China's new nuclear ballistic missile submarines is available on the Google Maps and Google Earth satellite-image site, a defense blogger claimed Tuesday. The satellite picture was discovered by Hans Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project for the Federation of American Scientists, and announced Tuesday on his blog. Kristensen believes the picture, taken by the Quickbird satellite late last year, reveals China's new Jin-class, or Type 094, nuclear ballistic missile sub. The new sub class is approximately 35 feet longer than its predecessor, the Xia-class, also known as Type 092, according to two images Kristensen compares on the blog. The Jin-class sub has an extended midsection that houses 12 missile tubes and part of the reactor compartment, Kristensen explains."

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