Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:Not new... but also inevitable. (Score 1) 673

But as they get closer in size a pocket calculator than to a refrigerator

Actually I've seen two instances recently of refrigerators (one basic consumer level, one high-end consumer) where one part failed and the whole refrigerator had to be disposed of and replaced. Current manufacturing is generally heading down this road, optimizing for cheapness up to the moment of sale.

What really makes me upset about this is that I bet these are Energy-Star certified, because I doubt the certification takes into account the expected lifetime, repairability, and environmental costs of manufacture.

Comment Re:Start your party and let democracy decide (Score 1) 737

I think the essense of the problem is not the fact that everyone's opinion counts equally, which it does in democracy, but the way that those opinions are being informed. That's what's changing for the worse.

First of all nearly all social media now is guiding people towards opinions in line with their own. It's a technically beautiful idea, but the more successful the technology, the worse for democracy.

Slashdotters at Google, Facebook, even Amazon, everywhere else directing eyes: do you see how you're seriously subverting and polarizing our democracy. As a media organization you need to take responsibility for making sure you are not hiding alternative viewpoints. By doing this you're squeezing out the center, both in terms of how voters identify themselves and discuss issues, and in terms of politicians' loyalties.
The incredible shrinking center

And there's also the continued bite-sized-ification that prevents construction of thought-out arguments. This has been progressing for a long time, but keeps getting worse.

In both cases, we need to compare to what we had when the technology for communication was largely print and newspapers, and think about how to replace what's been eroded away.

Comment Re:Bribery (Score 1) 773

That's probably because no one uses a web search that isn't Google.

... and while I basically never use anything but google day-to-day, I'd be pretty comfortable using it to mean general web-searching, whatever the tool.

(maybe I should go altavista whether someone's got a more in depth discussion of google as a verb... heh. I had to go check if altavista still exists after I wrote the joke. It does. Sorry if that comment touches a nerve for someone.)

Comment Re:Better idea: take a research methods class (Score 1) 46

While Dr. Jacobson makes some good points, most of them are pretty obvious to anyone who has taken a good class on creating experiments with humans

I did not find the article trivial like that. There's a lot of useful thinking the author has put into Turk specifically---and how it intersects with research methods, IRB, etc. For instance his own experiments to help think about what to pay people. (Not a lot of detail given on how he did this, but helpful information nonetheless.) Also helpful technical information on how, within the structure of MTurk, to maintain contact with subjects for follow-ups, make payments efficiently, etc.

Comment conservative = conservative (Score 2) 629

Being a techie (and lefty) person with many techy and mostly lefty associates, I've seen the people around me move gradually from a prevalance to use various unixes to more macs as the mac under OSX became better. This isn't as insulting to conservative minded people as it sounds. It's conservative in the good sense to use something well-tested before jumping along to the next hot thing.

Slashdot Top Deals

We will have solar energy as soon as the utility companies solve one technical problem -- how to run a sunbeam through a meter.

Working...