Category: Technology

  • Obamacare Site Source Code Has Non HIPPA Compliant Comments

    Oh the horror.

    Truthfully I don’t even know what that title means. Comments in code cannot be HIPPA compliant or not, because they don’t do anything.

    As a developer, perhaps I should explain. Software code is often complex. Developers can add “comments” to the code. This is just text that no one sees except the next developer trying to figure out what the code does. It doesn’t appear to the user, it’s not even part of the system at all. It’s the developer equivalent of a sticky note to remember to pick up the laundry.

    Different languages have different syntax to indicate a comment. I code mainly in C#. You can put // at the beginning of a line which means the whole line is a comment. Or you can put /* somewhere and everything in the code until */ is a comment (good for really long, multiline comments.

    But it’s not always explanatory comments. Sometimes you have a chunk of code, maybe you copied it from somewhere else, and you realize that part of it isn’t applicable. Or maybe you aren’t sure if it’s applicable. So you don’t delete it, you comment it out. Same thing, at that point it’s just not part of the system anymore.

    In HTML (basic web site) code, comments always use the code block approach (like /* … */ above). For HTML the syntax is <!–  to start the comment and -–> to end it.

    comment

    This is the chunk of code that Rep. Joe Barton (R – Tex.) went ballistic over in the house hearings today. The highlighted part in line 1408 is what he objected to (click to zoom). But note the beginning of line 1406 and the end of line 1411. This is a comment block. It was probably boilerplate code used on many sites that the developer commented out. Honestly, I have no clue what it was, but it’s not part of the actual system.

    Can we officially state that folks in Congress have no business discussing computer source code?

  • One Billion…

    kilometers. Really more like 1.6 billion. That would be the distance from earth.

    Click on the picture to see the real resolution (10x bigger).

    Think about it. We took a picture, not of something over a billion kilometers away, but from over a billion kilometers away

    Holy crap, that’s awesome.

  • Modular Robots

    I’m revealing how much of a geek I am, but oh my, this is cool. There’s a lot of geek speak here but get to at least the 2:50 mark where they start jumping.

  • iPhone Sells More than McDonald’s

    Not Apple, just the iPhone:

    Courtesy of Bloomberg.

  • Earth at Equinox

    Here’s an interesting animation from a satellite in geosynchronous orbit (so it faces the same spot on Earth at all times). One day passing on the Autumnal Equinox.

    You can read all about it from Phil Plait here

  • One Billion Dollars

    Blackberry lost almost a billion dollars last quarter. They are going to fire 4,500 employees.

    Oh my.

    I have no comment other than in the tech world, death comes quickly…

  • Wall Street Journal to be even lamer on tech

    Really, not sure how to draw any other conclusion from this. All Things D is a solid tech site and Walt Mossberg is a good tech writer. Both things are rare.

  • Home Safe

    It’s a bit crazy that this stuff is so routine that it isn’t even news. Yesterday three astronauts that had spent 6 months in the International Space Station returned home safely.

    The picture is kind of cool.

    Courtesy of the Bad Astronomy blog:

    The picture above shows the moment of touchdown. The Russian Soyuz capsule has retrorockets that fire briefly to soften the landing, which was in a field in Kazakhstan.

    Returning was one American and two Russians. Seriously, this is cool stuff and it doesn’t even make the papers. And we wonder why kids don’t want to be scientists?

    More pictures here.

  • Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson on UFOs

    This is long at 11 minutes, but totally entertaining and just a great example of why he’s such a great science speaker. It’s a spontaneous response to a question from the audience and he goes off on the fallacy of Argument from Ignorance, the problems of eye witness testimony, lack of evidence, and finally a complete disdain for any alien culture that crash lands in Roswell.

    Don’t tell me you came across the galaxy and you can’t land on earth. Go home, bring me someone who can.

  • Conformity

    For anyone who practiced music with a metronome, watch 32 different metronomes sync up by themselves in 4 minutes.

    The physics are actually fascinating.