Pure science is vital. Science relies on data, also, pure science questions
the same data. Data is only useful if it can be relied upon. You can collect
as much data as you as you like and probably end up with useless
information. Imagine if you based you theories on flawed data - result is
meltdow
On 1 Oct 2008, at 18:26, Ian Forrester wrote:
Facebook
---
1. How much data do you hold on the average user and how long do you
keep it for?
2. How does it affect you and your company when 2.5 million+ people
join groups protesting a redesign? Are the opinions of users important?
3. Are
To All
---
What does freedom mean for the users and developers of web services?
What is at risk? What should the free and open source software community do to
ensure that software, and its users, stay free in this new technological
environment?
When will users have ownership of personal cloud
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Ian Forrester wrote:
> Facebook
> ---
1. Given that your business is worth nothing without the trust of your
community, why have you just hired someone who worked for the former US
Attorney General who approved warrantless wiretapping, torture, helpi
Thanks Steve for clearing the whole thing up. I generally only edit the top and
tail of the footage if at all, so a flash based h.264 camcorder makes sense.
Having a HD camera in my bag everyday has been handy sometimes.
BBC R&D did some work on this a few years back - here's a white p
On Wednesday 01 October 2008 01:00:18 Richard P Edwards wrote:
> When, after waiting thirty years, will I and others, be able to truly
> own our digital files on computers and over the internet?
> Where every file is stamped with digital ownership. A "stamp" that is
> integrated to all files an
Jeremy James wrote:
Simon Thompson wrote:
The GOP length is the number of frames between successive I-Frames. A
long GOP length will, for example, cause a delay on video appearing on
changing channels on a STB or, as editing cuts can only start from an
I-Frame will mean you can't do frame accur
Simon Thompson wrote:
> The GOP length is the number of frames between successive I-Frames. A
> long GOP length will, for example, cause a delay on video appearing on
> changing channels on a STB or, as editing cuts can only start from an
> I-Frame will mean you can't do frame accurate editing.
I
>
> IMHO, plus points for the Sony include no-light nightshot for your Blair
> Witch-style fun, and a (albeit low-rent) Carl Zeiss lens. The audio jack is
> the main selling point for me though.
>
> "...the GOP length will affect the ability to edit the output."
>
> I've never really understood GOP
Jim Tonge wrote:
IMHO, plus points for the Sony include no-light nightshot for your
Blair Witch-style fun, and a (albeit low-rent) Carl Zeiss lens. The
audio jack is the main selling point for me though.
"...the GOP length will affect the ability to edit the output."
I've never really unde
Well, licensing refers to law, which governs the legal system, which
is still mostly effective in protecting privacy, determining
ownership, setting wrongs right, etc.
I'm not at all sure I would want a unique identifier, even biometric,
on any of my documents in this age of Google (which as far a
On 01/10/2008, Richard P Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Ian,
>
> My question...
> When, after waiting thirty years, will I and others, be able to truly
> own our digital files on computers and over the internet?
> Where every file is stamped with digital ownership. A "stamp" that is
> inte
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