Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Reading linearly is unnatural (Score 1) 224

We don't think linearly. Ideas spawn new ideas, and branch (like hyperlinks, right?!) to form a directed graph (like a mind map ... huh?) sometimes meeting up with other ideas.

Why would linear text be natural? It's not.

And the way humans have taken to hypertext like ducks to water should be a hint; maybe our brains are better suited to being able to follow ideas in a non-linear way.

Comment Re:kind of like the police (Score 1) 869

You are absolutely right. But a narrow definition of "god" can certainly help to establish the likelihood of his/her/its existence. As a result, I think it's pretty safe to say that Zeus, Ra, Ahura Mazda, and Yahweh (by some a.k.a. Allah) are all human fabrications.

For many (probably most) religious people, disbelief in every god of every known theistic religion is equivalent to atheism.

I agree that the possibility exists of an unknown entity responsible for the state (or at least existence) of the universe. And depending on how you define "entity" (e.g. "the laws of physics") that possibility is very high! So really, agnosticism or atheism boils down to what you are prepared to refer to as a god.

Comment Re:Too little. Too late. (Score 1) 387

After a quick jump over to WolframAlpha, and it turns 160 EJ = 44.44 billion MWh = 5.07 million MW years.

Assuming they are all on TV (where, according to a-ha, the sun always shines :-) ), we would need 12,931 more of these power stations to produce 160 EJ per year. I'm guessing you'd need to multiply by 3 or 4 for 6 to 8 hours of full-capacity production a day.

(We'd still need to come up with a plan wrt oil by-products like plastic, but iirc you can make it (more expensively) using bacteria.)

Submission + - NYTimes on dealings with Assange (nytimes.com)

kaapstorm writes: The New York Times Magazine is running an essay on their dealings with Assange.

They introduce it as 'Is Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, a puppet master of the news media? He would like you to think so. But The Times's dealings with him reveal a different story.'

From the essay: 'On the fourth day of the London meeting, Assange slouched into The Guardian office, a day late. Schmitt took his first measure of the man who would be a large presence in our lives. “He’s tall — probably 6-foot-2 or 6-3 — and lanky, with pale skin, gray eyes and a shock of white hair that seizes your attention,” Schmitt wrote to me later. “He was alert but disheveled, like a bag lady walking in off the street, wearing a dingy, light-colored sport coat and cargo pants, dirty white shirt, beat-up sneakers and filthy white socks that collapsed around his ankles. He smelled as if he hadn’t bathed in days.”

'Assange shrugged a huge backpack off his shoulders and pulled out a stockpile of laptops, cords, cellphones, thumb drives and memory sticks that held the WikiLeaks secrets.'

Comment Re:No kidding (Score 1) 431

I don't think it's a matter of people abandoning their wintel devices in favour of armdroids. It's about people with desktops also getting tabs (or whatever) and some people who don't have desktops also getting tabs, and phones, and maybe a fridge that runs Android too, for good measure.

The horse industry isn't dead. Neither is the propeller plane industry. They've just been superseded. One day the majority of computing devices won't be PCs and laptops. I don't think that's a far-fetched prediction.

Disclaimer: I'm writing this in the bath, using an HTC Desire.

Comment I can see it now (Score 1) 286

A weekly letter in the post: "Your weekly Oceania status updates ... Your wife likes Jones the Postman. Friend suggestion: Jimmy Smith. You got on so well at Willesden Comprehensive, and he browsed you holiday snaps last week. He has probably forgiven you for tagging him in those drunken weekend pics. Mary Contrary would like to borrow some chicken feed in FarmCounty. Your mother has been getting an escalating number of calls from "Uncle" Philip. Perhaps have her round for tea and ask her what that's all about. Your clandestine tryst with Julia in the countryside did not go unnoticed. Love, forever, BB." It's just an attempt at a nationalised version of Facebook. At last, a Keynesian attempt at addressing unemployment and the recession, using good old ENGlish SOCialism.

Comment Re:Go JPL (Score 1) 238

Hi casualty, I'm a South African, and our democracy -- or our attempt at one -- is much younger than yours. I've been wondering for a while how a country might foster more voters like you; people who seem to me to be able to separate signal from noise. Is it just that you are very smart, and it is impossible to get a lot of your kind of vote because Joe Voter has an IQ of 104? Or can your level of political discernment be taught? It seems to me that South Africa could benefit from a wider understanding of the rights that a democracy brings the people, and both our countries could use a deeper understanding of the duty of the people to exercise those rights, otherwise they may wake up one day with fewer rights. i.e. Can education improve the intelligence and diligence with which democratic rights are exercised? Or must democracies necessarily devolved into plutocracies, followed ... eventually ... by revolution? Or is there a third option, perhaps a meritocracy where everyone has at least one vote, but, like some online communities, a signed code of conduct and community service earn you extra (but depreciable) votes? I can see a lot of potential flaws, but some communities seem to be getting it right. Could this be a model for a post-democracy?

Comment Re:High Quality (Score 1) 711

Wow! That is very pretty! Here in South Africa we use Type M (BS 546) which has all the cons of the new British standard (big and bulky) with very few of the pros (earth prong opens live terminals in socket, but (usually) no fuse). THIS design looks like it offers all the good stuff, and works around all the ugly stuff -- although the sockets for "folded" mode use would need to ensure you can't accidentally touch the live prongs while inserting or removing.

Comment Because it's not broken (Score 1) 690

Other posts here debate the surrender of anonymity, and the article presents Conficker as an example of how broken the Internet is. Spam is mentioned often too.

We *could* digitally sign our e-mails, and I *could* choose only to accept signed e-mails. I could even filter out e-mails signed by people who aren't in my address book, and maybe glance at the subject lines occasionally. Spam problem fixed! No Internet 2.0 required.

Now all we have to do is convince enough people sign their e-mails for this solution to be practical -- no small task.

Conficker is an easy one too. If the Internet was more heterogeneous, writing malware as effective as Conficker would require writing it for many platforms. The argument against the MS monopoly is the same as the argument against monoculture crop dependency. Nature has proven repeatedly how crap an idea it is.

So is an Internet 2.0 safer for EVERYONE, or just an attempt to support a fundamentally flawed OS deployment?

Slashdot Top Deals

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

Working...