davidblair | 6 years ago | on: This Old House: The Rare Home-Improvement Show That Spotlights Skilled Workers
davidblair's comments
davidblair | 7 years ago | on: Decline of Greyhound service mirrors rural Canada's plight
[1] https://www.greyhound.com/en/help-and-info/ticket-info/cardh...
davidblair | 8 years ago | on: PID Without a PhD (2016) [pdf]
davidblair | 11 years ago | on: Why a Tennessee town has the fastest internet
https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/2ccgs2/we_are_the_gig...
davidblair | 12 years ago | on: Square Market Accepts Bitcoin
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: We're turning off Clickpass March 15. How to keep your HN account.
When online sales first took off, credit card theft was a huge concern. Even though nothing would go wrong for the vast majority of people fear was enough to make users and vendors go to great lengths to protect data. Not a perfect analogy but conceptually similar.
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Apple unveils iTunes U for iPad
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Amazon Will Pay Shoppers $5 to Walk Out of Stores Empty-Handed
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Ryanair now presents you with a Recaptcha every time you search for a flight
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Apple pulls iTether from App Store
Based on what I've read about others tethering apps, Apple will not remotely disable Tether.
The only major downside is that I will never see any updates. It's only a matter of time before an OS upgrade breaks the app permanently.
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Princeton bans academics from handing copyright to journal publishers
I also have a big problem with the fact that journals receive a perpetual copyright to the work instead of it becoming an open license 6-months to a year after publication.
Returning to the cost issue. The cost I am referring to comes from paying for the software to manage the peer review process and the time it takes to build the relationships to have enough reviewers available to deal with the first submission and the revision that will almost likely occur.
To put out a single issue with 20 articles can easily involve 50 reviewers and at least 40 authors.
It is the social science and humanities journals that have real problems with getting papers ready for print. It's easy to only think about scientific journals but the reality is a great deal of researchers only have sufficient computer skills. They will write a professional paper and do the best they can to format it but it isn't anywhere near ready to send to the printers.
Large journals can easily cover these costs. Small journals are really struggling to get by. I hear small journal editors talking about how long they will be able to survive. They want to make it work but just don't know how.
It's not an easy problem to solve.
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Princeton bans academics from handing copyright to journal publishers
The major cost of a journal is the peer review process, editing, and printing. This can really take a substantial portion of someones time. I don't think it justifies a $25 (sometimes over $40) fee to see an article printed 8 years ago though.
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: Princeton bans academics from handing copyright to journal publishers
davidblair | 14 years ago | on: $1,279-per-hour, 30,000-core cluster built on Amazon EC2 cloud
http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/faqs/#How_many_instances_can_I_run...
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: DuckDuckGo and Wolfram Alpha are now official partners
More than once he had to remind people that a lot of the shortcomings they point out are not trivial. It's easy to see how someone could interpet him as egotistical for this. But Wolfram seemed much more focused on building a product now and making it better as you learn from customers.
Wolfram is not trying to make everyone happy. It seemed like is he is trying to build something he loves doing and see if others find it useful.
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: Locksmith gets less tips and more price complaints for being faster
A quick google search returned a news item posted on the corporate website of Coinstar which claims the machine processes 600 coins per minute. They also have some general information about customer behavior on the page as well. http://www.coinstar.com/us/WebDocs/A3-2-2
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: Locksmith gets less tips and more price complaints for being faster
The machine is able to calculate the total change deposited almost instantly. Yet, during testing the company learned that consumers did not trust the machines. Customers though it was impossible for a machine to count change accurately at such a high rate.
Faced with the issues of trust and preconceived expectations of necessary effort, the company began to rework the user experience.
The solution was fairly simple. The machine still counted at the same pace but displayed the results at a significantly slower rate. In fact, the sound of change working the way through the machine is just a recording that is played through a speaker.
Altering the user experience to match expectations created trust and met the customers expectation of the necessary effort to complete the task.
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: Show HN: I wrote a gopher client and decided to put it on GitHub.
As a protocol, Gopher is straight forward. Whenever someone talks about the "semantic web" I'm always reminded of Gopher has been doing since 1991. It is in no way perfect, but worked well.
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: Appointment Reminder Launches
I can't tell from the site whether one can do this without signing up for an account but if it's not a feature yet I would seriously consider it.
davidblair | 15 years ago | on: Tell HN: My 3D terrain in Flash just went online
It's going to take him a long time, but anyone who wants to catch up he has a playlist of the first 32 episodes at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZePj70B4IwyNn1ABhJW...