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World: r3wp

[Tech News] Interesting technology

Maxim
18-Apr-2006
[484]
I wonder if many birds crash in to all those windows... ;-)
Ryan
19-Apr-2006
[485]
It once was really bad. Marks regularly would be splattered on the 
blue screens that covered the old windows.  For now its alot better, 
but we will see how it goes after they put in the new vista windows.
Henrik
19-Apr-2006
[486]
he should be careful with windows that can be flipped over and are 
hinged at the center of the frame. I have those in my livingroom. 
When opened at a certain angle, the reflection in the glass is  directed 
towards the roof. Sometimes a bird would get "caught" in the reflection 
while sitting on the roof and start attacking the window glass repeatedly. 
It looks really funny, but you have to clean up the mess afterwards: 
I suppose repeatedly banging their head against the window glass 
every 2 seconds for 10 minutes makes for a bad stomach...
Henrik
21-Apr-2006
[487]
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20060420.html<--- So how 
will Apple handle the Windows problem?
Maxim
21-Apr-2006
[488x2]
Thanks Henrik, you just made my day ;-)     running windows XP apps 
on OSX natively!  HAHAHAHAHA  get the better OS, and the better Software 
and run them together.  event though they wheren't meant to even 
support each other from the start   :-)
now the intel macs make sense more than ever...
Graham
21-Apr-2006
[490x2]
Does that mean that RT can stop development of View for OSX?
Sounds good that they can now move on to other things.
Maxim
21-Apr-2006
[492]
not yet, but maybe in time... the article talks about technology 
which currently exists, but is not distributed by apple.
Graham
21-Apr-2006
[493]
I can see this as killing Mac developers
Henrik
21-Apr-2006
[494x2]
I don't think it will
because you loose a lot of the goodies in OSX if you don't develop 
for the OS. not even the integration put forward here could make 
up for that
Maxim
21-Apr-2006
[496x2]
surely, opening up the windows API to mac users... sounds like a 
case to code in OSX natively  hehehe
but at least you could use Ultra edit on the mac to code it  ;-)
Henrik
21-Apr-2006
[498]
you'd loose access to core image, core data, core video and audio 
and spotlight..
Maxim
21-Apr-2006
[499]
yeah making media player work inside a mac border, doesn't make it 
any better.
BrianH
21-Apr-2006
[500]
First, Cringley is a little off here. What he suggests is basically 
a description of Wine, but he says it is not like Wine because of 
a complete misunderstanding of what Wine is. Stupid.
Henrik
24-Apr-2006
[501x2]
http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-6064016.html?part=rss&tag=6064016&subj=news
<--- US Congress to prepare a new and tougher DCMA
http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/<--- 17" Mac Book Pro is out
Chris
24-Apr-2006
[503]
Re. DMCA, I guess the entertainment industry have the better lobbyists, 
perhaps not the better brains?
Henrik
24-Apr-2006
[504]
and more money
[unknown: 9]
24-Apr-2006
[505]
The problem in this case is that the software itself became illegal, 
which is similar to lock picking tools being illegal.


Then the transport of these tools (links on websites) were made akin 
to transport (trafficking).


The solve is simply to fracture all software into so many pieces 
that it is impossible to point in any one direction.


A paperclip here, a tin of graphite there, etc.  And in theory, it 
may be possible due to the web not to have any group of these items 
in your possession at the same time.


Another option is much simpler…send the files out (to some other 
country), have them return unlocked.  This would pose an interesting 
problem since clearly you are receiving a copy some IP.  So then 
one should receive a "protected" copy using a different protection 
system.  No that part has to be proven as well.


It is all very interesting…but in the end we must abide by the law 
until we can vote it to change.
Henrik
24-Apr-2006
[506]
I'm just a little baffled that it would have to go in the direction 
where words like "fighting terrorism" need to be used. I remember 
an ad that ran here a few years ago with footage of Columbian drug 
dealers, terrorists and animal smugglers that said if you bought 
pirated access cards for satellite TV viewing, you'd be supporting 
drug dealers, illegal trading and terrorists. (Geomol has probably 
heard of TV3 and Viasat) I couldn't believe a private company would 
play on that, but they really did. Of course it changed nothing, 
since people are not that stupid and out of touch with reality.


But doing the same kind of lobbying to a government could be very 
dangerous. Are the people in the government easier to affect? Probably 
if you are waving enough money in front of them.
Chris
24-Apr-2006
[507]
R: Vote to change?  I'll bet at least 50% of Dems will vote for the 
revision.  Lobbyists are the constituency that counts.
Chris
25-Apr-2006
[508]
Speaking of lobbyists, are we all ready for the end of network neutrality? 
-- http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/29086
Maarten
26-Apr-2006
[509x3]
To me, it is all very simple. I just install a program that protects 
all content on my computer before *anything* comes on my PC. Now, 
every piece of software that tries to get anything of my computer... 
of course the protection I offer is cumbersome, so most software 
will circumvent it... and I can sue them. Of cousre I can publish 
something to protect me, espscially from a non-US country.
What I try to say: the solution will be to fight them with their 
own weapons.
Imagine that people would run such a piece of software when the sony 
rootkit came out.
Maxim
26-Apr-2006
[512x2]
yes, the first to install his protection raquet is the one that is 
right.  anyone that trie to go around it can be sued if you catch 
them.
so basically run our PCs in diskless mode, and use remote networked 
disks on which we can really protect the content.
Volker
26-Apr-2006
[514]
Set up an old box as webserver and use browser and rebol?
Maxim
26-Apr-2006
[515]
actually I meant to use SAN disks ;-)
Volker
26-Apr-2006
[516]
Does rebol run there? :)
Terry
28-Apr-2006
[517]
Javeline DeskRun: Run Ajax Apps as Native Windows Programs
http://www.javeline.org/modules/products/deskrun.php
Henrik
29-Apr-2006
[518]
http://youtube.com/watch?v=YtiCHtHxc48<-- I want one of those
james_nak
2-May-2006
[519]
Cool. It almost seems like there is a real person inside the suit. 
:-)
Anton
2-May-2006
[520x3]
I'm waiting for the double head kick at the end of the exercises. 
:)
But you know what the first application of this technology is going 
to be - military - killing people.

The next application will be smaller  - robbing a convenience store.
Maybe I'm too cynical and it really will be used to teach people 
how to dance.
Henrik
2-May-2006
[523]
actually in Japan it's expected that these robots will be used to 
aid older people in their homes. the number of young Japanese people 
is on the decline and there will be a shortage to help elders in 
a few decades, so Honda started a humanoid robotic development program 
20 years ago. Asimo is where they are now.
Anton
2-May-2006
[524]
That sounds alright - but wait, my cynical brain is in action again 
- I think there are going to be some very interesting murder cases 
coming up.
Gabriele
2-May-2006
[525]
machines won't probably be so much better than humans; nor should 
we expect them to be much worse, engineering problems aside (but 
engineering will eventually disappear; life forms are not engineered, 
they evolve)
Anton
2-May-2006
[526]
Engineering is much faster than natural evolution, so I don't think 
it will disappear. But you could think of engineering as evolving 
in the space of ideas, rather than natural evolution evolving in 
the space of genes.
Gabriele
2-May-2006
[527x2]
if you restrict evolution to biological evolution, you are right 
:)
software will eventually start creating software. the universe is 
just information after all.
[unknown: 9]
2-May-2006
[529x2]
I'm with Anton....No matter what good it is used for, it will be 
used always for bad.
Three scariest things on this planet: Terrorist, old people, and 
robots.  


It will start with robots helping old people be terrorists.
james_nak
2-May-2006
[531]
Danger Will Robinson!
Anton
2-May-2006
[532]
Yeah... "You better listen to your grandma !!  or ELSE..."
Gabriele
2-May-2006
[533]
i disagree, the scariest things on this planet are humans. (they 
can be terrorists, they become old people eventually, and they even 
create robots.)