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Submission + - No joke: Feds are banning humorous electronic messages on highways (apnews.com)

schwit1 writes: It’s no joke. Humorous and quirky messages on electronic signs will soon disappear from highways and freeways across the country.

The U.S. Federal Highway Administration has given states two years to implement all the changes outlined in its new 1,100-page manual released last month, including rules that spells out how signs and other traffic control devices are regulated.

Administration officials said overhead electronic signs with obscure meanings, references to pop culture or those intended to be funny will be banned in 2026 because they can be misunderstood or distracting to drivers.

The agency, which is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation, said signs should be “simple, direct, brief, legible and clear” and only be used for important information such as warning drivers of crashes ahead, adverse weather conditions and traffic delays. Seatbelt reminders and warnings about the dangers of speeding or driving impaired are also allowed.

Comment Re:Free Market (Score 1) 257

There are still unlimited options with Sprint. http://www.millenicom.com/ resells Sprint 3G for $70/month (plus $165 startup costs), so the same tower you used with VM will be the one you get with Millenicom. No caps, no contract, month to month, could change at any moment, yada^3.

They also offer a 20GB package from Verizon for $60 (same $165 setup), as a January promotion.

Note they don't tell you who the upstream provider is unless you ask. You can read real user comments about them at http://www.dslreports.com/forum/cover,3165

I was a happy customer until my speed with the sprint service suddenly dropped to almost nothing, and no one could figure out why. After much gnashing of teeth and HW Upgrade$, I gave up and called Comcast to see if there was anything they could do. (They had quoted me $2000 to get on line a few years ago.) They hooked me up to the nearest neighbor's drop for nothing and now I am wired.

Comment Re:Can someone explain this guy's logic to me (Score 1) 367

The energy companies only have to pay if a persons generation exceeds consumption and as such they start pushing energy back into the grid (IE, spin the meter backwards). It seems perfectly reasonable to assess a fee if you are still hooked up to the grid, someone has to pay for the maintenance of the grid and connection to your house and if you are getting paid for pushing energy back in to the grid, you too are using the grid, only as a provider, not a consumer. Even if you aren't actively pushing energy back into the grid, you still have the option of pulling energy from the grid (say, on cloudy days or at night if you don't have sufficient battery capacity). Either way, you're using it and should help pay for the maintenance of it.

The problem is that you can only get paid to the point where your electric bill is zero. At least that is true in California. If you become a net producer, you are no longer a source of revenue for them, you are now a cost center. If enough homes become net producers, there is not enough revenue to cover the infrastructure and pay the producers. If everyone paid the same fee for the infrastructure, adjusted for total capacity, like the size of your water main, then the per kwH charge everyone pays should be reduced, and the amount solar producers get will also be reduced. I say let the solar owners become net producers, and let the power company split out the fixed fees from the variable fees.

Comment Re:Anecdote (Score 1) 223

Define implemented. Granted only 100 sets were sold, and there were only a few hours a week of broadcasting in the NY area, it was approved as the color TV standard in October 1950. A year later CBS stopped broadcasts. In 1953 the FCC approved the NTSC "compatible color" system developed by NBC/RCA. Ten years later, my mother won a 23" RCA TV in a raffle, and ours was the first house on the block to have a color TV. Most shows were still in B/W then.

Comment Re:Facebook is better than standalone websites (Score 1) 136

The thing no one has mentioned so far are the "fine print" quizzes that sign you up for some stupid ring tone or other service at $19.99 a month if you complete it. I wonder how many kids are running up dad's cellular bill with this kind of crap. They don't just want your phone number so they can call or text you, they will lock you into a service that you have supposedly approved. I think Facebook should disallow these deceptive marketing devices, where the product has nothing to do with the application. (Ringtones have nothing to do with IQ.)

Comment Re:Hope it is better than Intel's other memory pus (Score 1) 83

Intel started as a memory company, inventing the DRAM, SRAM, PROM, EPROM, and FLASH memories. Note the Bubble Memory is not on the list. Intel is still in the NOR Flash business, and is partnered with Micron (as IMFT) in the NAND Flash business. The PRAM or Phase Change Memory is in development at the same Santa Clara fab (D2) that develops NOR Flash.

The problem with FLASH (NOR and NAND) is it is not expected to scale much further, as it consists of floating (isolated) gates that hold an increasingly smaller number of electrons that can leak away, making the memory forget. Eventually, there won't be room for the number needed to stay charged. PCM is expected to scale way beyond FLASH and is expected to replace it.

BH - Not an Intel Spokesperson

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