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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 47 declined, 20 accepted (67 total, 29.85% accepted)

Submission + - Aereo TV rebroadcast is still legal. (wired.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: While Redigi is illegal, Aereo isn't. “We conclude that Aereo’s transmissions of unique copies of broadcast television programs created at its users’ requests and transmitted while the programs are still airing on broadcast television are not ‘public performances’ of the plaintiffs’ copyrighted works..."
Of course both decisions are going to be appealed.

Google

Submission + - Why Autonomous Cars Won't Catch On (slate.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: Only rich people will be able to pay for a completely automous car. Auto-autos will only go the speed limit. Rich people don't like to go slow. Ergo, there won't be any market for automatic cars.
Wait, I hear you say. The rich guy will just modify his car to go faster. But, if you go over the limit it's a fine, but to mess with the safety systems of even your own vehicle is probably a felony. Much more likey: The rich will get new laws passed to make it legal for automatic cars to go much, much faster than human driven vehicles.

Submission + - Why Amazon wants to pay sales tax (slate.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: A while ago, Amazon caved on paying individual states sales taxes. Now we know why. Amazon is setting up same day delivery warehouses, *everywhere*. They will put most normal retailers out of business.

Submission + - Doctors "cheating" on board certifications (cnn.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: After taking board exams, doctors have been routinely getting together to remember and reproduce as much of the exam as they can. These notes are then bound and reproduced. According to the American Board of Dermatology the exams are protected by copyright laws, and any reproduction, not approved by the board, is illegal. While I have no doubt that the Board believes this, and pays lawyers to believe it as well, I don't think they understand copyright. Perhaps they should invest in better testing methods.

Submission + - Laptop fires on airplanes (nytimes.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: As usual, xkcd gets it right: http://xkcd.com/651/

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/27/business/27fires.html?_r=1&hpw

"More than half of the 22 battery fires in the cabin of passenger planes since 1999 have been in the last three years. One air safety expert suggested that these devices might be "the last unrestricted fire hazard" people can bring on airplanes."

Submission + - Is the Higgs Boson sabotaging the LHC (nytimes.com) 1

Maximum Prophet writes: First it stopped the Superconducting Super Collider. Now it's throwing monkey wrenches into the Large Hadron Collider. It's the particle that doesn't want to be discovered.

This happened in the science fiction story, "Einstein's Bridge", now Holger Bech Nielsen, of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics in Kyoto, Japan, are theorizing that it's happening in real life.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/13/science/space/13lhc.html?em

Toys

Submission + - Polaroid Lovers Try to Revive Its Instant Film (nytimes.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: A small group of Dutch scientists are trying to bring back Polaroid film. This group has the machinery to make the film packs, but needs to recreate the chemicals. Polaroid Inc. stopping making the specialized chemicals years ago. The had stockpiled what they would need for their last production runs. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/26/technology/26polaroid.html?em
The Internet

Submission + - Copyright infringment of books (nytimes.com)

Maximum Prophet writes:

Ursula K. Le Guin, the science fiction writer, was perusing the Web site Scribd last month when she came across digital copies of some books that seemed quite familiar to her. No wonder. She wrote them, including a free-for-the-taking copy of one of her most enduring novels, "The Left Hand of Darkness."

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/12/technology/internet/12digital.html?hpw

Hardware Hacking

Submission + - Lasers used to add color to metal (nytimes.com)

Maximum Prophet writes: An optics professor and his postgrad have developed a way to use ultra short pulses of laser light to etch nano features into the surface of metals so that they can absord or reflect specific wavelengths of light.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/31/science/31metal.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

This is very similar to the way that butterflies get the color in their wings.

Education

Submission + - David Pougue reviews the XO

Maximum Prophet writes: He seems to like it.

To quote "And sure enough, the bloggers and the ignorant have already begun to spit on the XO laptop. "Dude, for $400, I can buy a real Windows laptop," they say.

Clearly, the XO's mission has sailed over these people's heads like a 747.

The truth is, the XO laptop, now in final testing, is absolutely amazing, and in my limited tests, a total kid magnet. Both the hardware and the software exhibit breakthrough after breakthrough — some of them not available on any other laptop, for $400 or $4,000."

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/04/technology/circuits/04pogue.html?em&ex=1191643200&en=54a7e1d4ece85192&ei=5087%0A
Businesses

Submission + - Programmers and overtime

Maximum Prophet writes: Programmers and System Administrators typically don't get overtime. Here's and article about a lawyer who's challanging that:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20908975/

From the 2nd page:

Computer workers of various stripes, for example, have commonly not been paid for their extra hours. ... But under California law, the exemption applies only for workers whose primary function involves "the exercise of discretion and independent judgment." In numerous lawsuits, Thierman and other plaintiffs' attorneys have alleged that legions of systems engineers, help desk staff, and customer service personnel do no such thing. Of programmers, Thierman says, "Yes, they get to pick whatever code they want to write, but they don't tell you what the program does.... All they do is implement someone else's desires."
The takeaway: Everyone start recording your hours now. Even if you don't sue, someone else might, and documentation about your overtime will go a long way. towards getting your piece of the pie.
Space

Submission + - 100 years of astronomical data to be digitized.

Maximum Prophet writes: Anyone with a spare $5,000,000, please contact the people in this article: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/10/science/10astro. html
Harvard has over 100 years of glass photographic plates taken from observatories all over the world. They've built a special scanner, but need funds to complete the project. Perhaps they should talk to Google?

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