Friday, March 30, 2012

Intermediate Languages: Meet Us Half Way

“Hire a hero.” They may not all speak the language you need, yet the core is maintained. Some say the mission is the only way in life. People have choices, and any constant function has the same observed effect and the same result not observed until compared.

There must be something that we compute that assembles languages, not languages assembled. When that core decentralized, then we could not assume the core is within the center. Let's compare that idea to the syllables in words, so we called them syllables instead of intermediate words. The boundary of words are clear through-out the species, and this may be ideal. Consider the diversity of sounds known by the mission. At the assembly level, multicultural sounds for syllables, with certain accents, ran through our species.

Passwords: It's No Secret

We need “keys” instead of passwords. The complexity of the password(s) does not help. If your like me, you dread another password prompt, as they add up from dozens to hundreds of passwords for different sites. If you can't remember them, you write them down, so they're no secret.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Taxes: They Battled Over P2P Networks

“Big Carrier” charged outrageous monthly fees for access to established networks. They practically earned money from “free energy” with their only expense is maintenance. Developers that have contributed to such networks now have in turn also been charged access to the networks they built, engineered, innovated, installed, and designed. Big Carrier now looks like the next business bubble, like Big Oil, which has drilled for its near “free energy” basis. How did they do it? They mislead people when they stated their Internet access is more secure, yet they didn't say they only made it more secure for Big Carrier topologies such that they don't let you connect directly to your neighbors, friends, other nearby computers, or peers (P2P).

Sunday, March 25, 2012

iCare: The Health Applet, #ThisWeek

“When I touch here, does it hurt?” Obamacare is one of the top issues lately. It's on the desk of the Supreme Court. The main argument against it was that it forces everybody to pay healthcare, which is not much of an argument when you consider that Child-Support laws (and Civil code) already do that. What's overlooked is the digital part; the part that says lets take all the paperwork bottlenecks, digitize it, offer new Health UIs, and allow more personal mobility of your medical history.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Crystal Computers: The A.I. Of Nanobots, Neurons, and Plants

Nanobots and neurons are the same thing, or at least no doctor can yet make any significant distinction between the two. Then again, doctors usually study inside-out of the body and not the other-way around. Agricultural Biotechnologists study the world outside the body and how that relates to the inside-inside of the body, with either computer science or biochemical paths. Yes, the inside-insides, which are often the same as plants until fully assimilated by the human body. That's more true if those studies are about non-carnivores, as we know the brains of carnivores vary from one to another. Some are more like silicon, like the holographic wafers of integrated circuits, and others are quite different.

“Be As Wise As Ye Serpents”

Monday, March 19, 2012

Scientific Process: Where Civil Court Fails and Retaliates

Evidence tried in Criminal Court and also tried in Civil Court results in two different outcomes. Those who agree with Judge Judy and other TV Judges probably assume the Civil Court outcome is the truth, yet there is reason why the Criminal Courts won't ever agree with Civil Court, and why you won't find Criminal Court broadcasted like any of the TV Judges. For one thing, in Civil Court the Judge asks the questions, which already means the Civil Judges ask only the questions they want for the answers they only want heard. Civil Judges won't take actual evidence and won't find every scientific fact, like Criminal Court does. Even evidence ruled out through Criminal Court process, the Civil Court still uses. No, Civil Court is not fair, yet it keeps cases out of Criminal Court, other venues, and moves the process along.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Trademarks: The Other End Of The DTV Rainbow

News Reporters with Internet Protocol Numbers, yes, some how your local news station likes the communication between the reporters and independent radio shacks, that still exist. Digital TV (DTV) now offers the “white-spaces” option, which is the consolidated air-wave allocation over white-noise. The base radio only broadcasts the “white-noise,” and the allowed news reporters fill in the “allocated space.” The white-noise is equivalent to the random noise generator over natural, present noise; the result is the static screen seen typical on older analog television-sets after station sign-off. The transceiver of such consolidated communication devices seems complex, yet the network over the top level domain names dot-C-C and dot-W-S was hushed for awhile under initial intern(al)-debate.

We now know DTV from it's earlier phase as set-top boxes. After 30 years, its no longer the laughing stocks. Now, recognized trademarks and brand names have entered upon this work-in-progress.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

FRENCH: Anger Management, dn.a.t.t.co

It'll come to you. “Ugh... mi parle...”

Some Domain Name Systems are smart, and some use soundex(verify); why prevent the obvious under strict password systems; the French managed one of the biggest, yes biggest not bigot, selection of sounds for syllables. Consider how users of languages never written pride themselves before they are never told, again. Started and ended with the page clean. When you send text messages over the telephone does that originate from voice? Being one step ahead of the next possible syllable said is the French way.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Energy: Carmageddon, Iran, Big Oil's Endgame

Nuclear power or zero-emission vehicles: what is worse? Big Oil companies and conservatives have touted both as the same threat level! As news-reporters routinely spoke to conservative representatives, the conversation usually focused on the buzzword “nukes” and passed on any other energy source besides Big Oil. The world has increased significant usage in alternative energy resources, besides fossil fuels, and the conservatives still focused only on gas prices despite the fact the gas price does not directly affect users of alternative energies. What's known is that Iran has wanted out of the Big Oil game, yet the fear level over nukes has prevented Iran's achievement of that with nuclear energy.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Economy: Unemployment due to Credit Scores

Financial credit firms need not exist in reality, as all those non-banks can move completely into virtual reality. Those firms showed much reluctance over the dot-com boom, as that pulled the carpet out underneath them. What separates them from banks is that the financial credit firms deal only with imaginary numbers, which factors out upon interest. Obviously, people thought those imaginary numbers were real when those financial credit firms built large offices in business districts and paid their employees with real checks. After the dot-com boom, they silenced any company use of natural resources and real estate beyond their investment portfolio, as the benefits of their metaversal presence outweighed the practicality of their employees smoggy commute to the firm. They knew those imaginary numbers created the appearance jobs, and that reflects upon potential credit. Now, that credit canceled out real jobs due to the original imaginary source of interest, and that trend continued.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Mini-Quadcopters: Fireman's Best Friend or Court's Watchdog?

Thousands of them swarm over the horizon like insects attracted to ultraviolet lights. Each one equips an infrared camera as well as another set for high-dynamic photo-sensitivity. The infrared camera adds an ultra-dynamic range on top of the high-dynamic range cameras, which lets the viewer see in and out of shadows quicker while the infrared camera senses heat. Currently available technology allows more stationary cameras posted around cities for enhanced fire detection, and firefighter agencies have gained more interest in surveillance by mini-quadcopters.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Internet Addiction: The Biggest Stigma

Does “mental illness” define your job and well being? For many people that have spent their main job behind the computer, that is the label that has been put upon them. When people have even called such workers “antisocial” then the message is clear: stigmatic disassociation. In fact, the word “delusion” follows in the canned assumption law officers make when people report someone as antisocial. Is it fair? Would it be fair, in comparison, to call all major authors “antisocial” because they sat behind the typewriter in years past? I think it is an obvious “not fair” for us writers and programmers on both counts.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Car Apps: Fuel, Millage, Tolls, and Governors

Download smart car technology from the iCar store, right? Despite all the app stores for cellphones and tablets, cars have lacked that feature unless you install one of the various hardware devices from GPS units, OnStar, AAA OnBoard, StarMeter, or others. Mentioned in my previous post about autonomous vehicles, these devices assist and track car usage, and they also help automate tolls. Eventually, smart car technology may support virtual devices as “car apps” rather than need custom car installation.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Face Value: The Good, The Bad, and The Recognized

Rush Limbaugh posted his huge, wide, big mouth advertisements all over Sacramento's highway. Back then, before he moved to New York, not many people outside of central California recognized him. Back then, not as many recognized the radio lip service behind those 30' wide billboards. Maybe this blog title is not as inappropriate as Limbaugh's comments about feminazis, Ugly Bettys, or their XXX-parody titles, yet consider how many now recognize that face to that voice. How many computers recognize your face and your voice as some security measure? Unfashionably, his air wave disturbances made that measure more comprehensible.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Autonomous Vehicles: Decepti-sons of Anarchy

There is more than one trillion dollars in value on the State legislature's desk as of March 1st, 2012. That value is no deception when you realize the potential, industrial transformation of what legislatures now call “autonomous vehicles,” or more simply known as cars that drive themselves on regular roads. Reporters at the State capitol stated that Google is one of the faces of the autonomous vehicles, and that face may seem less partisan then any of the major car manufacturers. Google demonstrated that even the non-car manufacturer can get into this potential.