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Comment Re:Energy Independence (Score 1) 438

CERN isn't experiencing troubles from radical religious factions, and implementing a similar program for the NIF should not be too different. In terms of a more global perspective, resource management is becoming the next important issue (although yes, I know that it is not the only one) and people will begin to gravitate away from such radical religious groups once it becomes evident that such fanaticism is not going to effect the international cooperation needed. This is what happened during African decolonization and during the end of the Cold War: when an ideology outlives its usefulness, it will begin to die out, as Keynesian economics is beginning to do here in the US.

Comment Re:Energy Independence (Score 5, Insightful) 438

I think we've moved past the old Cold War era modus operandi: nuclear weapons are no longer necessary nor considered as an indicator of power. Military spending in that area has decreased drastically since the Reagan era. Essentially, we've reached a point where "kick[ing] each others ass as best as we can afford" is no longer a profitable venture and is, in fact, a great way to lose the economic support and favor of the international community. What we need is some CERN-scale collaboration on this so that we can possibly help to alleviate the energy strains on the global populace.
Windows

Windows 7 Beta Released To Public After Delay 848

Z80xxc! writes "The Windows 7 Beta release is now available for download by the general public, in 32-bit and 64-bit flavors. Microsoft had previously announced availability around 3 PM PST on Friday, but after unexpected numbers of people proved to be interested in the download, had to postpone it to add more servers."
Games

The Best Games of 2008 109

As the year comes to an end, most game sites are putting up lists highlighting their favorite games of 2008. Gamasutra is no exception, but they've nicely consolidated a variety of lists, and included some of their reasons and commentary to go with them. The topics range from the best overlooked games (Soul Bubbles and Pure) to the best new gameplay mechanics (first-person parkour in Mirror's Edge and Spore's procedural content generation) to the best overall games of the year (Fallout 3, World of Goo, and LittleBigPlanet). What were your top games of 2008?

Comment Fun w/ scp (Score 1) 2362

I enabled ssh access on all the computers in my house, and I use scp to get files from their computers, upload it to mine where I mess around with it and then upload it to their computer in place of the document they had saved. scp [file/path/on/your/computer] user@location:[path/on/their/computer] Also, if you ssh into someone's computer, use the 'say' command to have their computer start talking to them. Or, use osascript to get iTunes to start playing an annoying song really loud.
User Journal

Journal Journal: Computer Science: UC Berkeley or Stanford?

So its around that time of year when I have to apply to colleges, and since I want to major in Computer Science, I'm wondering which would be the best college(s) to which I should apply. UC Berkeley and Stanford are already on my list, but I don't know how their CS programs compare. Regardless of how hard it is to get in, which schools have good computer science programs?
Perl

10 Forces Guiding the Future of Scripting 190

snydeq writes "InfoWorld examines the platforms and passions underlying today's popular dynamic languages, and though JavaScript, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Groovy, and other scripting tools are fast achieving the critical mass necessary to flourish into the future, 10 forces in particular appear to be driving the evolution of this development domain. From the cooption of successful ideas across languages, to the infusion of application development into applications that are fast evolving beyond their traditional purpose, to the rise of frameworks, the cloud, and amateur code enablers, each will have a profound effect on the future of today's dynamic development tools."
Science

CO2 To Fuel, Closing the "Carbon Loop" 316

leprasmurf writes "Inhabitat has posted an article detailing a recent announcement of a process to turn CO2 into fuel. The process, which used to be considered too energy inefficient, uses a multi-step, low pressure, and low temperature biocatalyst to break the CO2 into 'basic hydrocarbon building blocks.'"
Software

Optical Character Recognition Still Struggling With Handwriting 150

Ian Lamont recently asked Google if they planned to extend their transcription of books and other printed media to include public records, many of which were handwritten before word processors became ubiquitous. Google wouldn't talk about any potential plans, but Lamont found out a bit more about the limits of optical character recognition in the process: "Even though some CAPTCHA schemes have been cracked in the past year, a far more difficult challenge lies in using software to recognize handwritten text. Optical character recognition has been used for years to convert printed documents into text data, but the enormous variation in handwriting styles has thwarted large-scale OCR imports of handwritten public documents and historical records. Ancestry.com took a surprising approach to digitizing and converting all publicly released US census records from 1790 to 1930: It contracted the job to Chinese firms whose staff manually transcribed the names and other information. The Chinese staff are specially trained to read the cursive and other handwriting styles from digitized paper records and microfilm. The task is ongoing with other handwritten records, at a cost of approximately $10 million per year, the company's CEO says."

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