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Education

How To Teach a Healthy Dose of Skepticism? 880

c0d3h4x0r writes "It's no accident that 'whatcouldpossiblygowrong' is one of the most common tags applied by this community to stories about proposed ideas or laws. The ability to spot and predict faults is a big part of what makes a great engineer. It starts with having a healthy skepticism about the world, which leads to actual critical thinking. Many books and courses teach critical thinking skills, but what is the best way to encourage and teach someone to maintain a healthy dose of skepticism? Is it even a teachable skill, or is it just an innate part of the geek personality?"

Comment Re:open source ?= tech innovation (Score 1) 302

I think that open-source sometimes starts as a reverse-engineering endeavor, but then, once it has achieved that goal, it normally moves beyond just copying the original idea. This is the point where real innovation starts to happen.

Your parallel between open-source and communism/socialism (which I personally think is flawed) may be based on how people defend or fight for open-source. Propaganda abounds.

But if you actually look at the majority of OS projects, they are not just trying to replicate a piece of software, they want to make it do what they want it to do. So yes, they have to replicate it, but that just serves as a springboard to bigger and better things. Once they have that 'replication' or 'springboard' then that is when innovation really starts to happen. If all they do is reverse-engineer a piece of software and leave it at that, most peoples reaction is "meh".

I grant that your solid examples of MRI and such may seem valid, but real innovation in those types of fields really comes from theory... Its the implementation that racks up the dollars. So I think that *REAL* innovation has nothing to do with how much money you are allocated. The money is needed to make innovation materialise, but innovation comes about nonetheless. To paraphrase; 'shit happens'.

On a side note, I have a lot of really fantastic and innovative ideas. So if anyone out there has a lot of really fantastic money, lets do lunch sometime.
Patents

Linus Responds To Microsoft Patent Claims 496

An anonymous reader writes "Linus Torvalds has a sharp retort to Microsoft executives' statements in a Fortune article that Linux violates 235 Microsoft patents. In an emailed response to InformationWeek's Charlie Babcock, Torvalds writes: 'It's certainly a lot more likely that Microsoft violates patents than Linux does.' He added: 'Basic operating system theory was pretty much done by the end of the 1960s. IBM probably owned thousand of really "fundamental" patents... The fundamental stuff... has long, long since lost any patent protection.'" Torvalds also commented on Microsoft's stated intention not to sue Linux users: "They'd have to name the patents then, and they're probably happier with the FUD than with any lawsuit."
Music

Prof. Johan Pouwelse To Take On RIAA Expert 184

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Marie Lindor has retained an expert witness of her own to fight the RIAA, and to debunk the testimony and reports of the RIAA's 'expert' Dr. Doug Jacobson, whose reliability has been challenged by Ms. Lindor in her Brooklyn federal court case, UMG v. Lindor. Ms. Lindor's expert is none other than Prof. Johan Pouwelse, Chairman of the Parallel and Distributed Systems Group of Delft University of Technology. It was Prof. Pouwelse's scathing analysis of the RIAA's MediaSentry 'investigations' (PDF) in a case in the Netherlands that caused the courts in that country to direct the ISPs there not to turn over their subscribers' information (PDF), thus nipping in the bud the RIAA's intended litigation juggernaut in that country."
Microsoft

Why Microsoft Won't List Claimed Patent Violations 626

BlueOni0n writes "Earlier today, Microsoft announced it will begin actively seeking reparations for claimed patent infringement by Linux and the open source community in general. One opinion on why Microsoft won't reveal these 235 alleged IP infringements to the public is that they're afraid of having the claims debunked or challenged — so instead they're waiting until the OS community comes to the bargaining table. But a more optimistic thought is that Microsoft may be afraid to list these supposed violations because it knows the patents can be worked around by the open source community, leaving Microsoft high and dry without any leverage at all."

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