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World: r3wp

[Tech News] Interesting technology

Ladislav
25-Jan-2012
[6547x2]
Yes, agreed about the subterfuge... But, usually, such things are 
corrected sooner or later
'There is a lot of "opinion"...' - as an example, I recently tried 
to discuss whether events with probability 0 are possible, i.e., 
if they can actually happen. While the opinion that such events *can* 
happen seems to prevail, I think that the opposite POV is defendable. 
(what do you think, BTW?)
Reichart
25-Jan-2012
[6549]
Wow, when you get to zero, we jump into philosphy, and questions 
of "what is matter' etc.  i therefore, truly, have zero opinion.
Ladislav
25-Jan-2012
[6550]
:-)
Reichart
25-Jan-2012
[6551]
:)
Ladislav
25-Jan-2012
[6552x2]
However, it is even possible to have an unorthodox POV when some 
events with probability 1 are considered. For example, the "orthodox 
probability" states that when picking up a random number from the 
[0;1] interval you obtain an irrational number with probability 1. 
Once again I find it defendable to disagree.
;-)
Geomol
26-Jan-2012
[6554]
I suspect it varies on the domain you are looking into.  Stuff like 
science should be okay.


When I took courses at the university some 5 years ago, WikiPedia 
was becoming still more popular, and the students used it to get 
information about science. The professors warned us about WikiPedia, 
about it's being unreliable, and said it shouldn't be used for scientific 
facts. Over the years, I find it ok with many banal facts, but not 
much more than that. I try to remember to tell myself to have my 
critical glasses on, when I read WikiPedia.
Pekr
26-Jan-2012
[6555]
I like Wikipeia - for me, it is kind of psychological. I was e.g. 
looking at ARM gfx chip options. I orientiated myself thanks to Wikipedia, 
learning about PowerVR, Adreno, Mali, , their history, list of companies 
using those chips, etc. When I want white papers, I can visit target 
company websites, but Wikipedia provided me quickly with the interconnecte/related 
info, so I got my overview of the situation rather quickly. And that' 
it - it would be much harder imo to just search for a bits of info 
here or there ...
Endo
26-Jan-2012
[6556]
It looks reliable to me about technical stuff, like network protocols 
etc. It may not reliable about history or science because there are 
subjective ideas or uncertain facts..
Geomol
26-Jan-2012
[6557]
I agree, Pekr. I use Wikipedia a lot the same way. To get a quick 
overview, and as Reichart say, to be able to begin to ask the right 
questions.


I also often use the external links and references at the bottom 
of most pages.
GrahamC
27-Jan-2012
[6558]
http://www.reghardware.com/2012/01/27/rim_uk_slashes_blackberry_playbook_tablet_price/

They should do an HP!
Reichart
30-Jan-2012
[6559]
http://aseigo.blogspot.com/2012/01/reveal.html
Henrik
1-Feb-2012
[6560]
Regarding Wikipedia, I just finished this interesting podcast, where 
Dan Benjamin and John Siracusa discuss Wikipedia and why they think 
it's built on the wrong foundation. Siracusa was misquoted on an 
article that he wrote for ArsTechnica, but was unable to change it 
incorrect citation in Wikipedia (it has since the podcast aired been 
changed):

http://5by5.tv/hypercritical/52

Starts at 72 minutes and 30 seconds.
Henrik
19-Feb-2012
[6561]
Speaking of VLC, VLC2.0 was just released, with an entirely new UI 
(at least in the Mac version):

http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
Gabriele
20-Feb-2012
[6562]
Yeah, the old UI was horrible... this one is... well... what is the 
word for "worse than horrible"?
Gregg
20-Feb-2012
[6563]
Abominable? ;-)
Pekr
22-Feb-2012
[6564x2:last]
OSNews "tweeted" about the new language for web development - Opa 
- http://opalang.org/
Some usefull UI concepts, which might be forgotten with the decline 
of WebOS ... unfortunately WebOS is going under the Apache open-source 
wings, so hopefully some good ideas are going to be reused elsewhere 
- http://ignorethecode.net/blog/2012/02/21/steal_webos_features/