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Science

Colliding Particles Can Make Black Holes After All 269

cremeglace writes with this excerpt from ScienceNOW: "You've heard the controversy. Particle physicists predict the world's new highest-energy atom smasher, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) near Geneva, Switzerland, might create tiny black holes, which they say would be a fantastic discovery. Some doomsayers fear those black holes might gobble up the Earth — physicists say that's impossible — and have petitioned the United Nations to stop the $5.5 billion LHC. Curiously, though, nobody had ever shown that the prevailing theory of gravity, Einstein's theory of general relativity, actually predicts that a black hole can be made this way. Now a computer model shows conclusively for the first time that a particle collision really can make a black hole." That said, they estimate the required energy for creating a black hole this way to be roughly "a quintillion times higher than the LHC's maximum"; though if one of the theories requiring compact extra dimensions is true, the energy could be lower.

Comment workplace "accountability" (Score 1) 621

Just because of the magnitude of the role he held, the million dollars is easy to come up with. But also due to that magnitude, a million dollars is really not a big deal. When employers start holding people accountable financially like that, productivity freezes out of fear. I mean, what if when he purchased the machines, he bargained for a great deal and saved $200 on each one? Now he's even, but nobody's threatening to GIVE him that money. It's a bad path to head down - dollar for dollar liability at your job.

And besides, didn't thousands of children learn about Fourier transforms? That's got to be worth at least a few bucks per student.

Comment simple model from my experience (Score 1) 735

On contract, I charge a few bucks an hour, 24/7, for being on call. If a call comes through, my normal hourly rate goes into effect on top of it.

Working with a company, I've had arrangements in the past where we simply traded on-call time for flexibility, some random afternoons off, etc. If you're working with good people who trust each other (as we did) we all felt like it was fair, and things ran smoothly.

Comment The Computational Beauty of Nature (Score 1) 630

The Computational Beauty of Nature, by Gary William Flake. It's an interesting high-level look at algorithms that define natural systems (genetic algorithms, game theory, fractals, cellular automata, etc.)

I enjoyed it way back when, because it was high-level enough to give you a sense of the topics quickly, but had just enough detail (graphs, formulas, specific discussion of algorithms) that you could dig into it a little.

Maybe a little heavy for high-school, but I guess it depends (and what doesn't?)

OH and I second the motion for "Flatland" by Abbott!

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