To: LindyBill who wrote (41276) | 8/14/2012 3:13:53 PM | From: Frank A. Coluccio | | | Please stay on point, dealing in principles, rather than proselytizing over your political perceptions. The latter are temporal, at best. Cronyism, especially, could shift from right to left, back and forth, ad nauseum, just like a pendulum with the periodicity of every four or eight years.
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To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (41273) | 8/14/2012 3:27:04 PM | From: Cautious_Optimist | | | Monopoly (or oligopoly) capitalism is not a free market and does not maximize the wealth of a nation. Nor does it optimize superior technological innovation.
Like a sports referee maximizing fair competition under constantly improving rules, it is a desirable role for government to ensure the level playing field and rules for business battle.
As Alan Greenspan learned from the financial services industry, amoral "self-regulation" is ultimately not sustainable.
Even Adam Smith abhorred monopoly.
Ultimately such matters left to the players end up expensive battles between enterprises, in court, which is a massive economic cost; where deep pockets is the virtual value proposition. |
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To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (41277) | 8/14/2012 3:52:16 PM | From: LindyBill | | | Please stay on point, dealing in principles, rather than proselytizing over your political perceptions.
You asked me to tell you my stand on Monopoly, I told you. "Politics" is the study of how we interact with each other. I can't discuss my position on collusion between two companies without engaging in it.
My "politics" are my principles.
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From: Frank A. Coluccio | 8/14/2012 6:40:18 PM | | | | Will the FCC Impose Fees on Smart Grid Connections? by Michael H. Pryor | EL&P | Aug 2012
Smart grid connections are proliferating, with some 36 million smart meters' having been deployed in the United States, according to a May study. The Institute for Electric Efficiency (IEE) estimates this number will nearly double to 65 million smart meters deployed in nearly half of all households by 2015. Smart grid connections are one example of the burgeoning machine-to-machine (m2M) services market, which will create a mammoth "Internet of Things" in coming years.
This proliferation of connected devices has caught the attention of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which is looking for new revenue sources to pay for the federal Universal Service program. The FCC is assessing whether to broaden the base of entities and services that would be required to contribute to the program, as well as the mechanism for assessing such fees. Among the many proposals under FCC consideration is fees on smart grid connections.
The Federal Universal Service Program
Cont.: elp-media.com --
fac: the proposed USF fee would be in addition to its utility industry kin, the SBC fee, standing for service benefit charge, which every subscriber pays already?]
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From: axial | 8/14/2012 9:11:09 PM | | | | Open-air quantum teleportation performed across a 97km lake
' Sending signals through fiber optic cable is reliable and fast, but because of internal absorption and other effects, they will lose photons—which is a problem when the number of photons being sent is small. This is of particular concern in quantum networks, which typically involve a small number of entangled photons. Direct transmission through free space (vacuum or air) experiences less photon loss, but it's very difficult to align a distant receiver perfectly with the transmitter so that photons arrive at their destination. A group in China has made significant progress toward solving that problem, via a high accuracy pointing and tracking system. Using this method, Juan Yin and colleagues performed quantum teleportation (copying of a quantum state) using multiple entangled photons through open air between two stations 97 kilometers apart across a lake. Additionally, they demonstrated entanglement between two receivers separated by 101.8km, transmitted by a station on an island roughly halfway between them.

However, quantum communication sometimes also requires coordination between two distant receivers, so the researchers set up the transmitter on an island in the lake. The receivers were 51.2 and 52.2 km from the photon source respectively, on opposite shores of Qinghai lake, forming a triangle with the transmitter. The distance between the receivers—101.8km—was far enough to create a 3 microsecond delay between measurements of the photon polarization.
Given this setup, there was no possible way for the two receiving stations to communicate. Yet the photons they registered were correlated, indicating entanglement was maintained.
These experiments provide not only a proof of principle for free-space quantum communication, but also a means to test the foundations of quantum theory over larger distances than before. With very large detector separation, quantum entanglement experiments can help differentiate between standard and alternative interpretations of the quantum theory. Though the long-distance aspect is promising, the fact that they set up on the shores of a lake (where no intervening obstacles exist) and that the experiment could only be performed successfully at night indicate its limitations. Author Yuao Chen told Ars via e-mail that they are working on solving the problem for daytime communication, but since the signal consists of single photons, it's not clear how this will work—the number of received photons fluctuated with the position of the Moon, so noise appeared to be a significant problem for them. Point-to-point communication will need to solve that problem as well before satellite-to-ground quantum networks are practical. '
arstechnica.com
Jim |
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From: Frank A. Coluccio | 8/15/2012 1:32:22 AM | | | | Cisco Survey Finds Much Enthusiasm for Enterprise TabletsPublished
by Liam Lahey on January 24th 2012
Findings from a newly-released Cisco Systems global survey of IT managers’ perceptions about tablets suggests 2012 is the year in which enterprise-grade tablet computing will undergo significant change.
community.partnerpedia.com
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To: axial who wrote (41284) | 8/15/2012 5:24:08 AM | From: LindyBill | | | quantum teleportation
I am losing it with this. Sounds like magic. If this engineers out, are we looking at wireless transmission of data in volume? Where does it lead? |
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