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Comment Re:Welders are a scapegoat (Score 1) 407

Who wrote that article anyway? Some guy on the internet who looks at some pictures of the repair and thinks he knows what a bunch of engineers working on the problem didn't know?

Reading the article, it sounded more like sports commentary. He's looking at the evidence available to him and attempting to give his thoughts on what he thinks happened. It's not that he thinks he's smarter than the engineers, it's that he's interested in this incident, and he's using available public knowledge and his engineering interest to explain what he thinks about the event. Sorta like Bill Nye? It seems pretty obvious to me, given the way that he defines basic terms, that he's trying take a technical issue and explain it to a nontechnical audience.

I've got no basis for knowing if he's right or wrong, but if you think you know better, why not send him your ideas? He does seem to be reading mail.

Comment Re:This is how ITAR hurts us. (Score 1) 354

So I assume you have a solution to this problem that is more sophisticated than abolishing ITAR and any foreign national to work on anything?

Are you saying ITAR serves no useful purpose? I'm guessing not. But are you at least saying that ITAR does more harm than good? Because if so, I'd love to hear your reasoning on that.

Seems to me that you're proposing something that provides short term gains (more labor) for long term losses (loss in strategic technological advantage).

Comment Re: Doubtability (Score 1) 159

Brief and witty is good. Brief and ambiguous is bad. Should probably have just used more words, rather than try to be witty. You can't just ask someone to explain all their premises. State the premise you have a problem with, and then *maybe* you can use "citation needed."

I personally don't even know what he wants clarification on. Does he want someone to explain...

- what good deeds will will come of this (after all, how do we know that mining these minerals does not cause more environmental harm)?

- how specific government activities increase these 'beneficial' activities?

- how inflating the price of component is supposed to increase the availability of 'green' technology?

I dunno. Which one is it? Who knows.

Comment Re: Doubtability (Score 1) 159

If someone disagrees, then it's doubtable. As to whether it's factual:

That's true, but not very relevant. Whether a statement needs a citation does not depend on whether or not it is doubtable (or doubted), per se. Rather, it depends on whether the *factual accuracy* of the statement is doubtable. What I took from AC's post is that a statement judged on factual merit requires a citation if the veracity is doubtable, but a statement of opinion does not.

The factual premises on which the opinion is founded may need citations, but not the original statement of opinion.

The Courts

Bloggers Impacting the World of Litigation 120

DaveKleiman writes "Will bloggers change the world of Supreme Court litigation by inspecting published opinions? Rachel C. Lee has an interesting take on the question in the Stanford Law Review, Ex Parte Blogging: the Legal Ethics of Supreme Court Advocacy In the Internet Era (PDF). She begins the review with: 'Lawyers have been arguing their cases before the Supreme Court for over two centuries, while the phenomenon of legal blogs is perhaps a decade old. Yet legal blogs cannot be dismissed as merely a sideshow novelty — they are already capable of having a substantial impact on Supreme Court litigation.' The review hits on many key points both for and against the use of blogging, but ultimately concludes that members of the Court and their staff will have to refrain from reading any blog post relating to a pending case, no matter who it is written by. It's even possible we'll get carefully drafted rules preventing blogging by attorneys." It's going to be tough to make any such prohibition work. After all, Groklaw's PJ is not an attorney.

Comment Re:why? (Score 1) 346

For audio encoding, the overhead of transcoding a high quality file to a high-compression file might be relatively insignificant, but the usefulness is sort of similar to Scalable Video Coding.

Having both streams allows an itunes-like program that transfers audio files from your computer to your more limited mp3 player to very easily generate a high-compression file from a high quality one. The process is nearly free. You don't have to fully re-encode the audio, just strip out the lossless part.

Another use case is having a streaming media server that streams both high quality and low quality versions. The server only needs to store one audio file, but can serve multiple quality levels with minimal effort.

The Internet

Nationwide Domain Name/Yard Sign Conspiracy 324

robertjmoore writes "Everywhere I go lately, I see these lawn signs that say "Single?" and then give a URL with my town's name in it. Being a huge business intelligence geek with too much time on my hands, I decided to track down who was behind them and wound up uncovering ten thousand domain names, a massively coordinated and well-funded guerilla marketing machine, and the $45 Million revenue business hiding behind it all. Hot off the presses, these are my findings."

Comment Re:But what about NAND? (Score 2, Insightful) 58

Why restrict them to discovering a nand implementation? I was going to ask how close they were to implementing "not".

I'd rather ask the less restrictive question of how close they are to implementing a functionally complete set of gates in their process technology.

So for example this could be any of {nand}, {nor},{and,or,not}.

After all, it could be that in the RNA domain, building things out of all NANDs just isn't as efficient (in whatever sense they mean) as in static CMOS.

GUI

3D Web Browser Draws Lukewarm Review 218

GreyGoo writes "The media release claims 'Internet surfers will be able to walk through their favourite websites as if they are characters in a computer game with the launch of the world's first 3D browser in Australia today.' However a review from someone who has actually tested the software raises important questions about the worth of the product considering the competing social and 3D products, and that sites have to be hand-crafted in order to truly support the new browser." A browser tied to a social networking scheme seems like a recipe for supreme annoyance.
Input Devices

RallyPoint — The Computerized Combat Glove 82

MIT's Technology Review is reporting that a new input device, designed for soldiers, may soon be making an appearance. The "RallyPoint," a glove designed to allow soldiers to easily interact with wearable systems via sensors, could allow soldiers a feature-rich input device without having to put down their weapon. "Some U.S. soldiers in Iraq are already equipped with wearable computer systems. But the lack of efficient input devices restricts their use to safer environments, such as the interior of a Humvee or a base station, where the soldier can set down his weapon and use the keyboard or mouse tethered to his body. Now RallyPoint, a startup based in Cambridge, MA, has developed a sensor-embedded glove that allows the soldier to easily view and navigate digital maps, activate radio communications, and send commands without having to take his hand off his weapon."

Leaks Prove MediaDefender's Deception 230

Who will defend the defenders? writes "Ars Technica has posted the first installment in their analysis of the leaked MediaDefender emails and found some very interesting things. Apparently, the New York Attorney General's office is working on a big anti-piracy sting and they were working on finding viable targets. It also discusses how some of the emails show MediaDefender trying to spy on their competitors, sanitize their own Wikipedia entry, deal with the hackers targeting their systems, and to quash the MiiVi story even while they were rebuilding it as Viide. Oh yes, they definitely read "techie, geek web sites where everybody already hates us" like Slashdot, too."
Your Rights Online

Second Life & WoW Terrorist Training Camps? 292

Tech.Luver writes "theinquirer reports that 'Aussie Security experts claim that Second Life and online games such as World of Warcraft are being used to train terrorists. Apparently there are three jihadi terrorists registered and two elite jihadist terrorist groups in Second Life and they use the site for recruiting and training. This is on top of the Second Life Liberation Army.""

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