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Comment Re:You can get close, but it isn't easy (Score 1) 222

2. You need to develop a method of coming up with your educated guesses that is repeatable. The process must allow you to estimate every step of your development process and how much each step is estimated to cost both in time, materials and labor.

I was always taught to estimate HOW you are going to do something, not WHAT you are going to build. If you start with a block diagram with 8 blocks and your work breakdown structure has 8 major headings you are probably going to get rubbish estimates. Building those 8 blocks and connecting them up probably involves 20 macro-level steps. Many of the developers I've seen get this wrong don't think through HOW they will build the final state they are trying to get to so their estimates miss a lot of stuff.

Comment Re:Need to compare on an energy generated basis (Score 5, Insightful) 320

Can you honestly put your hand on your heart and say the true decommissioning costs of these nuclear plants are built into the prices today? I don't think anyone can. We have properly decommissioned and cleaned up so few nuclear plants that all of the cost estimates I see have a massive risk of cost overruns associated with them. The unfortunate feature of such a long-lived asset and then waste stream is that it's very hard to price in the true cost and the community end up wearing the risk if these are miscalculated. I don't claim malice or conspiracy, just that pricing long term costs is really, really hard.

Your Rights Online

Blogger Fined €3,000 for 'Publicizing' Files Found Through Google Search 248

mpicpp points out an article detailing the case of French blogger Olivier Laurelli, who had the misfortune to click links from search results. Laurelli stumbled upon a public link leading to documents from the French National Agency for Food Safety, Environment, and Labor. He downloaded them — over 7 Gb worth — and looked through them, eventually publishing a few slides to his website. When one of France's intelligence agencies found out, they took Laurelli into custody and indicted him, referring to him as a 'hacker.' In their own investigation, they said, "we then found that it was sufficient to have the full URL to access to the resource on the extranet in order to bypass the authentication rules on this server." The first court acquitted Laurelli of the charges against him. An appeals court affirmed part of the decision, but convicted him of "theft of documents and fraudulent retention of information." He was fined €3,000 (about $4,000).

Comment Jeff Dagle - He knows what he is talking about (Score 1) 293

I know Jeff Dagle and he knows what he is talking about. I meet him when visiting PNNL earlier in the year and he understands how the bulk transmission system in the US works better than most people on the planet.

The best thing the US TSOs have done to prevent this happening again is install lots of PMUs under the NASPI program (see https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.naspi.org%2F) which Jeff is a member of. This is what gives the TSOs (and all the regional coordination authorities etc....) the real-time operational awareness of the stability of the bulk transmission system that just didn't exist a decade ago.

China

US Gives $120M For Lab To Tackle Rare Earth Shortages 170

coondoggie writes "With China once again playing games with the rare earth materials it largely holds sway over, the U.S. Department of Energy today said it would set up a research and development hub that will bring together all manner of experts to help address the situation. The DOE awarded $120 million to Ames Laboratory to set up an Energy Innovation Hub that will develop solutions to the domestic shortages of rare earth metals and other materials critical for U.S. energy security, the DOE stated."
User Journal

Journal Journal: How Microsoft Fights for Hearts & Minds

Just received the following email into my corporate Inbox..... (My real company name replaced with "My Company Name")

Microsoft Office at Home

"My Company Name" is pleased to announce a new scheme for employees arranged by the IT Department.

NES (Games)

Submission + - Shigeru Miyamoto, The Walt Disney Of Our Time (bangamovie.com) 1

circletimessquare writes: "The New York Times has a gushing portrait of Shigeru Miyamoto, a man whose creative successes have spanned almost 30 years. From Donkey Kong, to Mario (as well known as Mickey Mouse around the world the story notes), to Zelda, to the Wii, and now to Wii Fit, which according to some initial rumors is selling out across the globe in its debut. The article has some gems of insight into the man's thinking, including that his iconic characters are an afterthought. Gameplay comes first, and the characters are designed around that. Additionally, his fame and finances and ego are refreshingly modest for someone of his high regard and creative stature: 'despite being royalty at Nintendo and a cult figure, he almost comes across as just another salaryman (though a particularly creative and happy one) with a wife and two school-age children at home near Kyoto. He is not tabloid fodder, and he seems to maintain a relatively nondescript lifestyle.'"

Comment Re:Unfortunately... (Score 5, Informative) 912

Try looking up the Olympic Dam mine in Australia owned by BHP Billiton. Every few years they send the geologists out a few more hundred meters and add another 50 years to the life of the mine when they need to boost reserve numbers for financial reasons. No one knowns how big the deposit is but it is HUGE - I've heard figures sugesting it might supply 30% of world uranium demand for the next century or more.

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