Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:The US is the *least* interesting EV market (Score 1) 319

In America we have essentially legislated against small vehicles. Our CAFE standards were supposedly designed to push us towards more fuel efficient vehicles, but the reality is that the easiest way to pass CAFE standards is to simply make the vehicle larger. So the United States ends up with larger vehicles, and the smaller vehicles that we do get tend to be more expensive than we should be. We have essentially legislated away the category of a ultra basic small car. That happens to be a pretty popular segment in most of the world. The small cars we can buy are nearly as expensive as their larger brethren and so they make a lot less sense.

EVs are an even better example of how U.S. legislation skews things towards larger ICE vehicles. The most popular EVs in most of the world are the most basic EVs. I personally would love to buy a basic EV to replace my current commuter car. I have a house and a place to plug in an EV. My commute is short and even the most basic EVs would be fine. However, the only vehicles available in the market are essentially luxury vehicles. I can buy a whole lot of gasoline for $30K, which is the least expensive new EV available here, but if I could get my hands on a cheap Chinese EV for $12K I absolutely would do that. For the price of the least expensive EV you can basically buy a Toyota RAV4 that is a much more capable vehicle.

Comment Re:Am I missing something? (Score 4, Insightful) 39

Yes, verifying the citations is trivially easy, which is how these people get caught. You will notice that the lawyers in question say that it was an honest citation mistake and not "fabrication of authority" which is a legal term for a crime that carries jail time and fines. The problem with that defense is that the article that they cited doesn't actually exist. They say it has an inaccurate title and inaccurate authors, but I suspect that is legal speak for, "AI made up the article."

Now, if an article exists that happens to say approximately the same thing, and it just has a different title and authors then it is possible that the lawyers in question might be able to pretend that they really did just goof up the title and authors. If not, then what they did actually fits the definition of fabrication of authority. At which point I think that they should throw the book the fools.

The reality is that our current legal system relies heavily on lawyers not pulling these kinds of stunts. The system is adversarial, for sure, but it is generally assumed that the opposing counsel isn't making things up whole cloth. That's why fabrication of authority carries such high penalties. No one has time to check every citation. The assumption is that the person writing the brief is citing correctly and not misrepresenting what is actually said. The fact that these particular lawyers took it a step further and included a citation that doesn't even exist is absolutely ridiculous.

Comment Re:Rehire ban for 2yrs? (Score 2) 57

I suspect that there were lots of cases, in a company the size of Microsoft, where someone didn't get along with their boss, or had problems with a team that they were on, but that still had friends and allies in other parts of the organization. So they might get let go from one part of the organization, but when another part of the organization had an opening they then got rehired.

Like most rules of this type I would bet that the new policy has an interesting story. I would bet that one particularly toxic employee got rehired enough times that management finally created a policy against it. The whole point of the new policy is that people fired in this manner can no longer work for Microsoft for two years, even if some other part of the organization wants them.

Comment Re:GOP (Score 1) 273

Personally I would rather pay a flat rate (even a slightly inflated flat rate) than hand over my location data to the government.

I do agree that at $200 per year that is quite a bit steeper than it should be. The current federal gas tax is $0.184 per gallon. That means that you would have to burn 1087 gallons of gas to spend that much. At 20/24 MPG you would have to drive at least 21,740 miles to spend that much. That's hardly typical. If the price were $100 that would seem a lot more equitable.

More importantly, I don't know why commercial vehicles should get a pass. Commercial vehicles don't currently get a pass when it comes to gasoline taxes, and it is all too easy to get your vehicle labeled "commercial." We can't hardly pretend that commercial vehicles don't wear down the roads. I understand why this was done. A lot of businesses (most notably Amazon) have switched to electric vehicles specifically to dodge this particular tax. In certain parts of the U.S. (including where I live) electricity is cheap enough that a lot of businesses have already made this switch.

If the tax was closer to equitable then this would not be a big deal. Yes, electric vehicles would lose some of their relative competitive advantage against internal combustion vehicles, but at least our roads would get paid for. Electric vehicles still get substantial direct subsidies.

Comment Re:Oops.... (Score 1) 521

I am a lifelong conservative. The first time I didn't vote Republican for anything was the first time that Trump ran. It makes me crazy that the party of free trade has somehow become the party of tariffs.

That being the case, I suspect that Trump is going to Jimmy Carter the economy. Rightly or wrongly, Jimmy Carter was blamed for wrecking the economy to the point where Democrats didn't have a chance of winning the presidency for 8 terms. Not only did Reagan win twice, but Bush won twice as well.

The midterm elections are already going to be rough for Republicans. I suspect that even without gimmicks like Amazon showing us what these tariffs are costing us that prices are going to go up across the board.

Comment Re:Finally (Score 2) 163

Exactly. My current daily driver is a 1996 Honda Civic, with just over 200k miles on it. I bought it in 1996, and it has never let me down. That being the case, after 30 years of being run hard and put up wet it is getting pretty worn down. I have other vehicles that I use for long trips, and for transporting larger groups of people. What I need is an economical and reliable runabout.

When I was in Peru last year I even took a look at the inexpensive BYD electric cars that are available there. If I could get one of those here I probably would do that. They are even less expensive than the Slate and basic enough that they probably would hold up.

However, the idea of getting a small pickup for just a little bit more is appealing, and I will admit that I absolutely love both the aesthetics and the simplicity of this vehicle. This is precisely the sort of vehicle that I think is going to bring electric vehicles into the mainstream.

Comment Re: Be careful (Score 1) 130

Exactly, and it is very likely that the Federal government has already set reasonable limits. After all, they have set limits. One state, the State of Washington, demands stricter limits, and apparently there are toothpaste manufacturers that fail Washington's stricter limits.

So if you were truly paranoid you could potentially buy your toothpaste from a store in the state of Washington. We live in a world where such a thing probably isn't even that expensive.

Comment Re:I Don't Blame Them (Score 1) 58

Microsoft announced in January that they would be building $80 billion in new datacenters for 2025. By the end of February they were already announcing that that this was no longer the case and that they would actually be pulling back from that target and were actually canceling leases.

Of all of the technology companies Microsoft is absolutely the worst at actually designing and building products. But they are very good at business.

Comment Re:Make America (Score 1) 296

Yeah, but what is really going to happen is that Trump is going to fully Jimmy Carter the economy. It was 16 years after Jimmy Carter before the Democrats even had a chance at a presidential election. I am a life long conservative who has always voted against Trump, mostly because I oppose his views on immigration, and it is discouraging to me that the party that used to stand for small government and free trade now has fallen to this.

Trump was able to carry enough of the fiscal conservatives in the last election to win, mostly because these conservatives mistakenly thought that Harris would be worse. Now they know the difference, but it is too late. Whoever gets elected to try and repair the inevitable damage that these police will incur will almost certainly not be Republican. Even the dimmest of dim bulbs is going to be able to draw a line between Trump's tariffs and the economic fallout they are going to cause.

Comment Re:Another solution. (Score 1) 196

You can keep X applications alive when the link goes down, although, obviously you can't see what they are doing. I think that the tradeoff is better than losing access to all of your desktop when the network goes down. I tend to move my state local, meaning that I have what I need locally if something goes awry. I can usually get meaningful stuff done without any network access at all. However, if what you want is to have an always ready desktop that you can connect to from anywhere then RDP is the solution. I have to use Windows every once in a while, and everything about using it is uncomfortable to me, but RDP is very nice. I actually get why you might set up your work flow in that manner.

RDP is actually a reaction to VNC, and it fixes many of VNC's problems. For emergency graphical remote control of a computer VNC is adequate, but it is definitely not a replacement for RDP.

Comment Re:Another solution. (Score 1) 196

You should take a look to see if X over ssh does what you would like. Although if you really want the the entire remote desktop running on your local multi-monitor system then maybe not. if I am sitting at a local workstation with multiple monitors and a nice setup I usually want my environment on that box (an easy thing to do with Linux) and then I run most of my applications locally. If I need a specific application (or set of applications) from another machine I use X Windows to display those applications on my local desktop. They run on the home machine, but the display is on the machine where I am working. This sort of thing has run surprisingly well for decades. Generally speaking I don't bother installing an X Server on the machine where the applications actually run, but that's because I am too cheap to have two sets of nice displays.

Comment Re:Not the point (Score 1) 161

I suspect someone realized that the conversation that they were having was both legally and morally wrong. I can certainly imagine a world in which someone might be a Trump supporter, but find this sort of thing farther than they were willing to go. What better way to whistleblow than to invite the editor of a newspaper into a ultra top secret conversation? I consider myself fairly security conscious, but I don't hand verify the keys of everyone that I talk to in a group in Signal.

Of course, I also don't discuss top secret military actions, and if I did, I wouldn't use unauthorized channels. Playing with that sort of fire can quickly add up to charges of crimes like "treason" or "espionage," where if you are lucky you end up a prisoner at Gitmo.

Comment Re:Not the point (Score 1) 161

I suspect that including a journalist was done on purpose. What better way for a whistleblower to blow the whistle than to include the editor of an important news paper in the group list. What? You aren't manually verifying the keys of everyone you talk to on Signal? Shame on you!

Signal is good tech, but it isn't magical. Hopefully, for whoever did this, Signal doesn't actually keep track of who added people to a group, because, if I am correct, then this could easily be full treason.

Comment Re:And the reasons? (Score 3, Interesting) 26

To some degree. When Wiley (old, big publisher) bought Hindawi (young, fast-growing upstart Open Access publisher), they quickly discovered that the entire publishing house was infiltrated by paper mills. They retracted thousands of papers, and closed many journals. However, some of their own journals are also heavily infiltrated by paper mills, and those had far fewer retractions.

Conversely, another young upstart, MDPI, has very few retractions even though they also have a high number of paper mill productions, including some that they know about very well and have "investigated".

Wiley is obviously a much more serious publisher than MDPI, albeit more hesitant to clean their old house than the newer that they bought.

Computer science, by the way, has a far higher rate of retractions for academic misconduct than other disciplines, and it's not because it's so easily replicated, it's because it's rampant with fraud. I'll give you an example of ridiculous verbiage that somehow stays in the academic literature thanks to the non-efforts of IEEE and an academic community that will publish anything but read nothing. You don't need a replication study to see that this isn't a serious academic work. It's most likely a patchwork of plagiarised text that's been fed through some paraphrasing filters to avoid automatic detection.

But yeah, psychology is surely not serious and computer science is very smart.

Slashdot Top Deals

If I have seen farther than others, it is because I was standing on the shoulders of giants. -- Isaac Newton

Working...