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Slashback: OpenDocument, Intelligent Design, More DRM

Slashback tonight brings a few corrections, clarifications and updates to previous Slashdot stories, including several updates to the Sony DRM rootkit fiasco, another school system's take on intelligent design, some of the first pictures of the much talked about avian flu virus, a sentencing that gives us the first torrent user to get jail time, Bernard Golden weighs in on the continuing Massachussetts OpenDocument debate, and one users commentary on recent announcements to start pay-per-download services for TV shows. Read on for the details.

Sony still not "getting it". c writes "Mark Russinovich continues his investigation of Sony's DRM as he tries out the official uninstaller. His verdict? 'I've analyzed virulent forms of spyware/adware that provide more straightforward means of uninstall.'" Relatedly Cronos1388 writes "According to the Inquirer an Italian group is also suing Sony over the rootkit." Also, an unexpected side effect of this technology is that script kiddies have been able to leverage Sony's tool to hide unauthorized cheat programs from the watchful eye of MMO creators.

Intelligent design supporters ousted. PMuse writes "The Register and others are reporting that all eight of the members of the Dover, PA school board that had required Intelligent Design to be taught alongside Evolution have been canned by voters in yesterday's election."

What does avian flu look like? DevL writes "Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson has managed to capture images of a H5N1 (bird flu) virus entering and taking control of a cell. While the text is in Swedish, the images speak for themselves."

Torrent user goes up the river. stinerman writes to tell us that the Hong Kong man who was recently arrested for making several movies available via BitTorrent has had his sentence handed down. Chan aka "Big Crook" uploaded Daredevil, Red Planet, and Miss Congeniality which landed him 3 months in jail.

Golden weighs in on OpenDocument debate. OSS_ilation writes "With so much FUD and anti-FUD flying in the face of Massachusetts' decision to go with OpenDocument, it's no surprise that open source advocate Bernard Golden weighs in with his take on current events."

User says new downloadable television just plain "sucks." Thomas Hawk writes "In the past few weeks the three major studios have all announced deals to begin offering downloadable television for consumers -- Apple/ABC, DirecTV/NBC, and Comcast/CBS. The problem with each of these respective offerings is that they largely suck. Apple sells expensive low res limited television from ABC. NBC's new service will only work on DirecTV DVRs (uh hello McFly, why pay money for this service when I can just record it for free). And CBS' downloadable programming could contain commercials."

399 comments

  1. Re:energy is liberated through blasphemy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm so consumed with hatred of you that I will masturbate

    You know, you don't need to invocate satan and hate everybody to do that.

  2. Can you say "backfire" by tiredoftryingtofindo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I not sure their desire to put in DRM on their CDs won't cause them more grief than it saved them in non-pirated copies of the disc (which is probably already on P2P sites, most probably because of this fiasco)

    1. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Ctrl+Alt+De1337 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I just wonder how the logic in the decision-making process went.

      "Since CD sales have been falling, and it's cheaper to blame piracy than develop original artists, let's put a DRM rootkit on our CDs to prevent copying."

      "But wait sir, what happens when people find it? Won't that motivate people to avoid buying CDs since they don't know if they can trust us anymore?"

      "Don't worry. We'll hide it really really well so no one knows about it. Even though we have to run a firewall and antivirus software on our network to protect against vulnerabilities that no one even knows exist yet, we can safely assume that not a single soul on the entire earth will find our rootkit. And if we get sued, we'll can probably get off somehow by screaming DMCA. The lawyers are looking into it as we speak. Plus if no one finds it and sales go up, we all get bigger bonuses."

      "Apparently, I'm engulfed in evil."

      With apologies to Dilbert for the last line.

    2. Re:Can you say "backfire" by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your point is well-taken, but:

      Since CD sales have been falling, and it's cheaper to blame piracy than develop original artists

      I'm not sure why people say things like that. It's a hell of a lot easier to find new good music today than it was 5 years ago, and a thousand times easier than it was 5 years before that. Maybe I just live in some weird radio paradise area that doesn't only play Avril Lavigne.

      If there's a problem, and I'm not sure there is, it's that they play the same song off a CD for 3 months on the radio. Me and everyone I know, all of whom are fine paying for CDs, wait until we know there are at least two or three good songs on a disc before we pay for it. But with the radio set up the way it is now, I'm usually sick of the first song by the time the second one comes out.

      The second problem is 90% of the CDs I buy are ones that don't get much time on the radio. If I hear a song three times on my way to work every day, I'm not going to buy it.

      So my recommendation, record guys, if you're reading this, is to stop pushing that one single so hard. Give a song 3 weeks if it's really, really, fantastically great, then move on to the next one. I assume before you paid the band you made sure they had at least three good songs, right?

      Of course, maybe I don't know how radio works. Maybe the stations are the ones making that call. And I suppose there's always a chance I'm not the typical CD buyer.

    3. Re:Can you say "backfire" by pizpot · · Score: 0, Troll

      A super geek friend of mine, was hacking another hair salon to steal their web page software gave me his take on the Sony DRM issue. He is convinced that Sony does not like the RIAA. That Sony purposely made the root kit poorly implimented. That they followed the RIAA's DRM rules to the letter on purpose knowing they would get caught and sued. He even said that since the root kit was not being discovered, Sony sent an anonymous letter to the guy who found it telling him where to look.

    4. Re:Can you say "backfire" by nofx_3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Motive? I don't think a dislike of the RIAA is enough to damage one's own reputation. I could understand if it suddenly came out at the same time that a number of companies had done something like this, but I don't think Sony would do it on their own, knowing that it may drive people who actual listen to music to simply buy from other labels.

      --
      Visualize Whirled Peas
    5. Re:Can you say "backfire" by penix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I'm not sure why people say things like that. It's a hell of a lot easier to find new good music today than it was 5 years ago, and a thousand times easier than it was 5 years before that. Maybe I just live in some weird radio paradise area that doesn't only play Avril Lavigne."

      Simple...

      1.) It depends on your definition of "good". This is a subjective argument that the labels can't win on.

      2.) The downward forcing of prices for CDs from the likes of WalMart is causing their decline in profits. The labels then blame it on piracy. You have seen the FUD..."Piracy has cost us XXX bazillion in sales!!!" when in reality it is the outlets refusing to sell CDs for what the labels expect they should get.

      3.) Clear channel owns a HUGE percentage of the radio market. Whatever they don't own some other large corporation does. This means a homgonious selection of songs across the country. Local bands never make it onto local stations since there are no local stations any more. When was the last time you heard a local band even (maybe especially) if you live in a big city where the likelyhood is that local bands exist. Guarenteed they won't get air time even if they payed themselves if they aren't piped from clear channel. Look at what happened to the Dixie Chicks when they opposed Bush's war. They were pulled from all clear channel lineups and disappeared from the face of the planet.

      B.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    6. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He even said that since the root kit was not being discovered, Sony sent an anonymous letter to the guy who found it telling him where to look.

      That's the most ludicrous thing I've heard in a while. The "guy who found it", as you put it, is Mark Russinovich, probably the most renowned white hat hacker the Windows operating system has ever seen. He has produced many stellar tools that even Microsoft recommends (through their official help channels, no less!) to help troubleshoot misbehaving installations of Windows.

      His latest focus, beginning a couple of years ago, has been on preventing the subversion of the native Windows kernel APIs. He wrote the preeminent Windows anti-rootkit tool more than a year before Sony began packaging rootkits with their DRM. And his tool unearths far more sophisticated rootkits than Sony's. Sony's is mere child's play compared with what a really skilled kernel programmer is capable of. To suggest that Russinovich has to be "tipped off" to find it is simply absurd.

    7. Re:Can you say "backfire" by philipgar · · Score: 1

      >

      Think before you speak. If you think clearchannel did that because they disapproved of what the Dixie Chicks said, you're an idiot. They pulled it because many of the consumers of country music are highly patriotic and were very upset about the dixie chicks statements. I imagine many local music country music stations did the same thing because their consumers were pissed off. Likewise if a rock band said something bad about the war no one would care. Or at least not enough people to make a difference.

    8. Re:Can you say "backfire" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The way it was explained ot me is that the radio station get a list of songs to play. They choose the order and time they are played but they have ot eb played a ceretain amount of times.

      This list is created by some marketing group that lists sales for the genre the station caters to. Usualy there is enough time for the station to play a little of whatever they want also.

      In columbus ohio, most of the stations have some sort of show once or twice a week that plays local bands. This might be because twisted sister was "discovered" there by one of the radio station and they think they will get a bonus. The program i listen to is caled "local stuff" and "i think bar room blitz." the later is more or less a DJ going out to the bar scene and playing a couple songs of the live band playing. I think it is more cermercial or promotional then anythign but we do get to here some local bands in between the network mandated same song 20 time in a row.

    9. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Highly patriotic"?

      I guess that's the most polite way of putting it.

    10. Re:Can you say "backfire" by mrdaveb · · Score: 1
      Maybe I just live in some weird radio paradise area that doesn't only play Avril Lavigne.

      Hey, thanks to the Internet everyone lives in this weird Radio Paradise area.

      --
      Homme petit d'homme petit, s'attend, n'avale
    11. Re:Can you say "backfire" by dcam · · Score: 1

      I could be wrong, but I think the reason they push one song so hard is economies of scale. You make more money from one "artist" who sells 10 million CDs than from 10 who each sell 1 million or 100 who each sell 100000. The costs are lower. So instead of waiting for that one "artist" to appear naturally, they attempt to force their appearance.

      No this does not improve the quality of music.

      --
      meh
    12. Re:Can you say "backfire" by MadMoses · · Score: 1

      "But wait sir, what happens when people find it? Won't that motivate people to avoid buying CDs since they don't know if they can trust us anymore?"

      I don't think they even got to this step.

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    13. Re:Can you say "backfire" by mink · · Score: 1

      Your best bet for local radio in Columbus is WCBE. Sure they play public radio shows (I cant complain about the music ones, and enjoy the news/story ones), but the local stuff they produce is good and they take requests.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    14. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Braino420 · · Score: 1
      2.) The downward forcing of prices for CDs from the likes of WalMart is causing their decline in profits. The labels then blame it on piracy. You have seen the FUD..."Piracy has cost us XXX bazillion in sales!!!" when in reality it is the outlets refusing to sell CDs for what the labels expect they should get.

      That really does not make any sense to me. I was always under the impression that retailers bought the product from the producers. Wal-Mart can sell these products for cheap because they buy ALOT of them. Then, if the labels think Wal-Mart isn't giving them enough money, then they don't have to sell them cd's. Maybe I'm just old-fashioned.

      I do agree with you that piracy does not cost them billions of dollars. And of course they don't give any proof of this. The thing that prob cost them billions of dollars is their R&D for DRM BULLSHIT. If I have to pay top dollar for a limited product or I can get the same product with no DRM for FREE, which do they think I'm going to choose? If they would just *gasp* trust their consumers to give back to a community they enjoy, I think everyone would be better off. I know, wishful thinking and it's DEFINATELY not going to happen.So I guess they'll just try to make their money through the court and not the market. [/rant]

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
    15. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Lord+Kestrel · · Score: 1

      There are lots of local bands played here in Seattle on the clearchannel stations. Perhaps Seattle is just unique in that, but I suspect that local bands get far more coverage than you think.

    16. Re:Can you say "backfire" by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1
      I was always under the impression that retailers bought the product from the producers. Wal-Mart can sell these products for cheap because they buy ALOT of them. Then, if the labels think Wal-Mart isn't giving them enough money, then they don't have to sell them cd's. Maybe I'm just old-fashioned.

      You have got it backwards. Wal-Mart sell a lot of CDs, so they can force their suppliers to lower their wholesale price or they will not buy from them. When faced with the choice of lower profits vs not being available to sell through the biggest chain (which would mean absolutely no profits) the suppliers have no choice.

      Large retails stores are not good for suppliers, and in the long run not good for the consumers as it can result in lower quality, limited choice and fewer manufacturing jobs as the local manufacturers find that they cannot compete with the cheaper foreign companies.

      On the other hand, my house if full of cool luxuries that my parents could never have afforded in their day. I guess that I am part of the problem too.

      But to return to CDs, lower prices would certainly be a factor, but I think that the biggest problem for CD labels is that there are more alternative entertainment to spend our money on. Sure CD sales are declining, but DVD sales are going through the roof. I have found far too many instances where a DVD of a film is cheaper than the CD soundtrack.

    17. Re:Can you say "backfire" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I started looking into it. SO far i like it. Thanks for the suggestion.

      I usualy listen to 610 am in the morning and then maybe one of the rock stations in the evening. Usualy I only listen to public radio when I'm out of town. I don't really like thier news programs were the attidude generaly seems like a scolding when something the program host doesn't agree with. This station apears to be a little different then the other public radio stations I have listened to in the past. (that or maybe my tastes have changed.)

      It looks like I have a new program to add to my list of entertainment.

  3. Re:energy is liberated through blasphemy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. A lot of that last paragraph is paraphrased from Slayer's "Angel of death". That's a pretty unoriginal troll.

    Pumped with fluid, inside your brain
    Pressure in your skull begins pushing through your eyes
    Burning flesh, drips away
    Test of heat burns your skin, your mind starts to boil
    Frigid cold, cracks your limbs
    How long can you last
    In this frozen water burial?
    Sewn together, joining heads
    Just a matter of time
    'til you rip yourselves apart
    Millions laid out in their
    Crowded tombs
    Sickening ways to achieve
    The holocaust
    Seas of blood, bury life
    Smell your death as it burns
    Deep inside of you
    Abacinate, eyes that bleed
    Praying for the end of
    Your wide awake nightmare
    Wings of pain, reach out for you
    His face of death staring down,
    Your blood running cold
    Injecting cells, dying eyes
    Feeding on the screams of
    The mutants he's creating
    Pathetic harmless victims
    Left to die
    Rancid angel of death
    Flying free

  4. I'm kind of shocked.. by jeblucas · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...that they went after the guy that uploaded Daredevil, Red Planet, and Miss Congeniality. Does this mean that they are really serious and will protect their copyrighted materials no matter how crappy they may be? Or, are they so pissed at this guy for reminding P2P users that these three movies were made that they had to do something to punish him? If the latter, I hope whoever posted Gigli on eDonkey has a good lawyer.

    --
    blarg.
    1. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny

      Apparantly they felt that only authorized government agencies or the MIAA should be allowed to poison the torrents...

      --
      If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
    2. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hopefully they won't blame lost revenue on these movies is due to pirates.

    3. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. They would make more money by cutting out the middle-carrier (cable and sat. providers). Just stream programming via their website like NPR. Perferably with on a format that is supported on Linux and other plateforms. I would not mind having commercials for a free stream. They would also gain more reliable viewer ratings.

    4. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by DingerX · · Score: 1

      Actually it makes sense. If he's uploaded those three films, it's clear that he's not doing to promote art and good taste, but simply to steal. It's kinda like being Catholic and eating both fish and steak on Friday in Lent: if it were just steak, you could claim fish was too expensive. This guy was flaunting it -- "I don't even need to steal good films".

      To be fair, they should send the producers who greenlighted those films up the river too.

    5. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

      If you think "Miss Congeniality" was bad, you should see "Miss Congeniality 2". That really sucks.

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    6. Re:I'm kind of shocked.. by Braino420 · · Score: 1

      Orrr it could be because he wanted people to view it for free and see what a terrible movie it was instead of having people pay to see it. But I agree, the producers and everyone involved in the making of that film all need to be sacked.

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
  5. Downloadable TV by dduardo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why don't the networks give people the choice to either download HDTV shows in WITH ADS from their site for FREE or download HDTV shows WITHOUT ADS for $2.00? They could even create their own torrent type network that only works with their network to lessen the load.

    1. Re:Downloadable TV by n1ywb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That would imply that the network executives had functioning neurons. I would like to direct your attention to the following Futurama transcript...

      Network President: Greetings gentlemen, you already know my Execubots. Executive Alpha, programmed to like things that are seen before.

      Alphabot: Hey hey hey.

      Network President: Executive Beta, programmed to roll dice to determine the fall schedule.

      [Betabot rolls two dice.]

      Betabot: More reality shows.

      Network President: And Executive Gamma, programmed to underestimate middle America.

      Gammabot: It's funny but is it going to get them off their tractors?

      --
      -73, de n1ywb
      www.n1ywb.com
    2. Re:Downloadable TV by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 3, Informative

      The affiliates probably wouldn't be happy about either of those options.

    3. Re:Downloadable TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because they're stupid.

    4. Re:Downloadable TV by temojen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why bother creating annother torrent type network? Just include ads and drop the tracker a week after it airs. The Internet could be considered just an extension of the RF broadcast business model to further distances.

    5. Re:Downloadable TV by dduardo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or they can have a system that automatically updates both the ads within the video and the tracker every so often. Fresh Ads = Constant Revenue.

    6. Re:Downloadable TV by temojen · · Score: 1

      That wouldn't be compatible with long-lived seeds.

    7. Re:Downloadable TV by forkazoo · · Score: 1

      What if there was a geoIP lookup, and the network credited the nearest affiliate in some way? Network is happy because they can distribute in upper lower bulgoslovia without bother to sell to a local affiliate in every single country. Existing local affiliates are happy because all the downloads earn them something.

    8. Re:Downloadable TV by javaxman · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The affiliates probably wouldn't be happy about either of those options.

      This assumes (a) that the affiliates are not owned by the broadcaster and (b) that the affiliates are in a position of power.

      Let's think for a minute. What's a better market for an advertiser : All of the viewers in one major market, or all of the users of iTunes?

      The local, independant affiliate has lost market share in a big, big way over the years. They don't have the sway over the broadcasters that they once had. How many people get their TV off-air ( not via cable or satellite ) these days? Is that market the wealthier, even middle-class group that advertisers like to target? Affiliates might not be the most important part of the network equation, at least not for long...

    9. Re:Downloadable TV by dodongo · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest reason is the predominance of really basic, easy-to-use editing tools. And no, I'm not talking iMovie, even. Just QuickTime Pro, for instance, gives you the ability to cut segments out of a video stream. Until they have a way of guaranteeing an impression every time you view (i.e., making it available only by live stream), there won't be an option for free viewing with commercials.

    10. Re:Downloadable TV by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 1

      Torrents don't need the tracker to be online anymore with dht networks. The network could remove the link but it would still be easily accessible by anybody looking on google.

    11. Re:Downloadable TV by Tiger4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Good idea, but it only solves half the ad revenue problem. The network is happy, it gets the national ads put into place. But the affiliates don't get to sell the local ads.

      Us old time satelite dish guys still remember the dead air "holes" the networks leave in place for the locals to insert local spots in. You can tell the locals, they are the ones with real prices, real dates, locations you recognize, etc. Sometimes you can hear the little tweedle-chirp that triggers the local tape players on and off.

      --
      Behold, this dreamer cometh. Come now, and let us slay him... and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
    12. Re:Downloadable TV by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because the cheap availability of VCR's with a fast-forward button and able to record absolutely killed the ad-supported over the air model. The point is, you and I know how to do that, but 99% of the people watching don't know how to remove the ads. Any intelligent advertiser considers a stupider consumer a more valuable pair of eyeballs anyway.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    13. Re:Downloadable TV by dodongo · · Score: 1

      VCRs do still enable ad impressions. It doesn't matter if you watch the 30 second spot and hear the jingle, or if you just see the McDonalds logo while fastforwarding through. An impression is an impression is an impression, and to any company large enough to care, it doesn't matter if you know their jingle as long as they're getting mind-share.

      I agree that large portions of people may not know how to do this from the get-go, but I do believe that the perception* that distribution through these channels prevents people from seeing ads will slow the adoption of any commercial-message-driven distribution of TV shows on the web.

      * - Note that this perception does extend back, as you mentioned, to videotape recordings, but also to TiVO.

    14. Re:Downloadable TV by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      This assumes (a) that the affiliates are not owned by the broadcaster and (b) that the affiliates are in a position of power.

      Granted.

      What's a better market for an advertiser : All of the viewers in one major market, or all of the users of iTunes?

      It depends whether it's a local or national business.

      The local, independant affiliate has lost market share in a big, big way over the years. They don't have the sway over the broadcasters that they once had. How many people get their TV off-air ( not via cable or satellite ) these days?

      I don't see how this follows. The whole point of "must carry" is that cable and satellite must carry local affiliates, not a network feed. (Except in a few cases.)

    15. Re:Downloadable TV by kraut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Network President: And Executive Gamma, programmed to underestimate middle America.
      You can't underestimate middle America.

      --
      no taxation without representation!
    16. Re:Downloadable TV by AngelofDeath-02 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, my guess has to do with the payment networks recieve for showing commercials

      I'm not saying it can't be done, and that it would be good, I just think certain individuals would perfer it otherwise compared to complicating or devaluing the current business model

      --
      No, I am not an English major. My posts are subject to typos and incorrect grammar. Do not expect perfection.
    17. Re:Downloadable TV by ottothecow · · Score: 1

      Sure it would: The advertisement part of the file would all of the sudden start failing hash checks. Even though they are no longer actively downloading, the seeder should be able to realize that it has a corrupted file and redownload the changed sections. The initial TV station seed would then just have to be in a superseed type mode where it propogates the ads first to the people who have the rest of the show so that they can quickly propagate through the torrent.

      --
      Bottles.
    18. Re:Downloadable TV by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Oh no! Gamma's running amuck on the internet!

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    19. Re:Downloadable TV by nmos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Until they have a way of guaranteeing an impression every time you view (i.e., making it available only by live stream), there won't be an option for free viewing with commercials.

      There are few guarantees in life but one of them is that if they leave the download market to the P2P community then noone will see their commercials.

    20. Re:Downloadable TV by Percy_Blakeney · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Why don't the networks give people the choice to either download HDTV shows in WITH ADS from their site for FREE or download HDTV shows WITHOUT ADS for $2.00?

      One of the major problems with this is that they don't have ads to show; advertisers aren't exactly biting at the bit to stick their ads on a download instead of on-air. Why is that? Because there does not exist an official ratings system for downloads. Until Nielsen or some other group begins collecting reliable and independent stats on viewership of video downloads, you won't see any advertisers that are willing to pay big money for ads on downloaded video.

      Of course, an even bigger problem is the affiliates. If a major network were to start competing with its local affiliates, then you would have a complete mutiny of all the affiliates within hours of the announcement. The networks may be big and powerful, but they could not resist the power of the combined affiliates, given the fact that the affliates reach millions of homes that can't be reached any other way. Combine that with the fact that the affliates, as a whole, have more power, influence, and money than the networks do, and you will come to the conclusion that the networks would be commiting suicide by pissing off the affiliates right now.

      Stay tuned, though (so to speak)... your concept of skipping the affiliates will happen within five to ten years. Its really quite inevitable, but it will take a while for the networks to screw up enough courage to write off their affiliates.

    21. Re:Downloadable TV by ajs · · Score: 4, Funny

      Slashdot poster: Greetings gentlemen, you already know my Execuscripts. Script Alpha, programmed to like things that are seen before.

      Alphabot: Information wants to be free!

      Slashdot poster: Script Beta, programmed to roll dice to determine preferences.

      [Betascript rolls two 20-sided dice.]

      Betascript: Imagine a beowulf cluster of petrified torrents!

      Slashdot poster: And Script Gamma, programmed to underestimate anyone with a non-technical job.

      Gammascript: It's cool, but is it enough to get the network executives to stop suing children for the FBI long enough to give me free stuff?

    22. Re:Downloadable TV by NickFortune · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Until Nielsen or some other group begins collecting reliable and independent stats on viewership of video downloads, you won't see any advertisers that are willing to pay big money for ads on downloaded video.

      Does Neilsen still work on polls plus power consumption? 'Cause I foresee problems getting this off the gound...

      Neilsen Suit: Pardon me sir, I wonder if you might tell me which of these shows you download
      L337 D00D: Why, none all all. These shows are only available via unauthorised downloads. That would be against the law, exposing myself to the risk of lawsuits, and depriving the content generators of the revenue needed to create new quality programs.
      Neilsen Suit: Thank you for your time

      Then the L337 D00d goes back to see if the latest Battlestar torrent has finished downloading and the Neilsen Suit reports that no one is watching any downloaded TV.

      I think there's money to be made here, but it's going to need a new business model.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    23. Re:Downloadable TV by bit01 · · Score: 1

      Until they have a way of guaranteeing an impression every time you view (i.e., making it available only by live stream),

      Why? They have no such guarantees in other media, just likelihoods. This is no different. And whatever happened to making ad's that people actually wanted to see?

      ---

      "Copy Right" is incorrect. It's actually "Copy Control Privilege". "Patent" is incorrect. It's actually "Idea Control Privilege".

    24. Re:Downloadable TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Middle America called and left you a message. They said "Fuck You!"

    25. Re:Downloadable TV by dodongo · · Score: 1

      Fair point! :) We'll see how their legal disassembling of the community & technology goes.

    26. Re:Downloadable TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But affiliates do provide local news and local advertising.
      I doubt you see commercials for Appliance Direct on your TV. Publix probably does not need to pay for advertising nationwide and a few commercials on a few affiliates can solve that problem.

      I get satellite, but I know I would drop it if I could not get my local stations with it. The regular broadcast signals are not to good in my area for several of my local stations.

    27. Re:Downloadable TV by javaxman · · Score: 1
      I don't see how this follows. The whole point of "must carry" is that cable and satellite must carry local affiliates, not a network feed. (Except in a few cases.)

      That's actually an important point. Here's the thing about "must carry", though. It's not the great thing that affiliates might think it is. It's a stop-gap measure at best. As the recent Comcast and DirecTV deals show, it's entirely possible for the networks to do an end-run around their affiliates if they choose to. If affiliates stop making enough money for the network, they could probably now find a way to make money without affiliates. Lord knows MTV makes money without them...

      The whole iTunes Video thing just shows yet another way in which video production networks can distribute their content without the help of over-the-air broadcast stations. Broadcast guys are in trouble, much like the music publishing industry, and they know it.

      As far as local v.s. national advertisers... I'm going to guess we might see market-specific ads online in places other than 'Yahoo/Google local'...

      Keep in mind, I'm not saying over-the-air broadcast is going away, I'm just saying it's less important, even to the networks themselves.

    28. Re:Downloadable TV by Braino420 · · Score: 1
      Why is that? Because there does not exist an official ratings system for downloads. Until Nielsen or some other group begins collecting reliable and independent stats on viewership of video downloads, you won't see any advertisers that are willing to pay big money for ads on downloaded video.

      Kinda like hits on any given website? It would be allll to easy to tell how many people downloaded the torrent link :o

      This is not nearly as complex as you people are making it. It can all be explained by the networks fear of teh internets (kinda like the **AA).

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
    29. Re:Downloadable TV by Percy_Blakeney · · Score: 1
      Kinda like hits on any given website? It would be allll to easy to tell how many people downloaded the torrent link... This is not nearly as complex as you people are making it.

      It has nothing to do with "complexity", per se, but has everything to do with accurate and reliable statistics. Tell me, how hard would it be to create some fake hits to your web site? Advertisers aren't going to drop a load of cash on a system that relies on the broadcaster/web site being completely honest about their stats. There is a definite need for an independent, third-party measurement company, like Nielsen.

    30. Re:Downloadable TV by mikefe · · Score: 1

      Some days you wonder why there is only +5 funny...

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    31. Re:Downloadable TV by Braino420 · · Score: 1

      Google does pay per click adds which are very easy to fake, but that seems to work for them. But even if we cut the advertisers out of the deal and make people pay per download, the major networks and producers aren't jumping on it(obviously). You make a good point and I'm sure that also plays a roll in this, but I still think it's because they're too afraid to upload their products into cyberspace with fear of people easily being able to copy it and distribute it themselves. For some reason they never think to cut their losses and atleast get a few people to pay for content themselves. After all, it's already REEAL easy for anyone to get anything, even little kids are doing it, you know, the ones that are taken to court. Getting illegal content couldn't be much easier. If they would just start trusting their consumers and simply say what's true: if you don't pay for content, less of that content will be made. I mean, i've given up hope for this idea, but it's fun to talk about the way things could be.

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
    32. Re:Downloadable TV by Jasin+Natael · · Score: 1

      Because 'l337 d00d' would have already uploaded the show an hour after it aired. If they want to push revenues, they need to include ads and have a controlling tracker that will allow a spaced-out 95-99% of the show to be seeded in the first several hours before the show airs, then start seeding the final bits a few minutes before the show comes on TV. Introduce a branded (but compliant to some broad standard) client that allows a secure login to the tracker, and 'push' the torrents to subscribed users.

      If they familiarize Joe Public with the technology, what's going to stop him from taking an interest in getting the show from another source?

      --Jasin Natael
      --
      True science means that when you re-evaluate the evidence, you re-evaluate your faith.
    33. Re:Downloadable TV by temojen · · Score: 1

      Why would they want subscribers? All they need to know is how many people downloaded ~= viewers for the purpose of selling advertising. Although seeding all but the first block and a few randomly throughout before the show airs would be an interesting idea. Just bring up a superseed that doesn't have these blocks, then bring up a full seed when the show airs.

    34. Re:Downloadable TV by Jasin+Natael · · Score: 1

      They want subscribers so that they can tie downloads to unique users, and so they can measure their age/income/gender demographics. Ideally, the tracker, stats and user logins should belong to a third party, so that the networks don't control their own ratings statistics.

      --Jasin Natael
      --
      True science means that when you re-evaluate the evidence, you re-evaluate your faith.
  6. Bird Flu by RY · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The H5N1 SWF is like watching clouds,

    before a tornado rips you apart,

    1. Re:Bird Flu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is hilarious. The only article that gets any response here is the one about DRM. When somebody posts about an other article it's modded Offtopic.

  7. Apple video SUCKS by mboverload · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apple video uses QVGA, which is Quater VGA. It means exactly what you think it does, you can put 4 tiles of QVGA into one VGA image. That's 320x240 pixels. 320x240 VERY compressed pixels. VGA is the same resolution as NTSC. Yes, it's crappier than network television quality, if that's possible.

    Go to TorrentSpy.com and download a 350 meg episode of Prison Break. With just DSL you can download faster than you can watch. Or go for a 700 meg version, which is insane quality.

    These are just words, and words can not describe the bullshit that Apple is selling.

    1. Re:Apple video SUCKS by BancBoy · · Score: 1

      QVGA, which is Quater VGA. It means exactly what you think it does

      It comes with a motorized logic debug system?! Sweeeeet! http://www.quater-research.com/

      --
      [UID-HeinzIntel]
    2. Re:Apple video SUCKS by mrsev · · Score: 1

      QVGA.... is the best resolution ever! If you can not see how much better it is please report to your local apple fanboy education centre where we will re-adjust your eyes.

    3. Re:Apple video SUCKS by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      On the other hand it is so much better than 320x200x256. Those are rectangular pixels by the way, never knew why they just didn't put bars at the top and bottom of the monitor.

    4. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Phexro · · Score: 1

      NTSC is 720x480, not 640x480.

    5. Re:Apple video SUCKS by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      BitTorrent doesn't work for streaming at all, as blocks are downloaded pretty much at random. In general I found that video becomes watchable only when you get 90-95% of the file. Before that the only useful thing you're likely to get out of a partial file is to be able to verify that it's what you want and that the quality is good enough.

    6. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Quevar · · Score: 1

      It may not be the highest quality, but it's a lot better than the other choices out there right now with DirectTV and Comcast. The Apple deal allows you to take it with you. The quality isn't too bad when it's made full screen. I'd definitely rather have higher quality, for it works pretty well if I want to take a show with me on the road.

    7. Re:Apple video SUCKS by javaxman · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Apple video uses QVGA, which is Quater VGA. It means exactly what you think it does, you can put 4 tiles of QVGA into one VGA image. That's 320x240 pixels. 320x240 VERY compressed pixels. VGA is the same resolution as NTSC. Yes, it's crappier than network television quality, if that's possible.

      Yup. Optimized for the video iPod. You are somehow thinking it should be optimized for your computer? Not until Apple can make more money on that model...

    8. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Pedersen · · Score: 1
      NTSC is 720x480, not 640x480.

      <pedant>No, NTSC is 352x240 (roughly). Standard DVD is 720x480. I forget what PAL is, though, sorry.<pedant>

      --

      GPL made simple: What was my stuff is now our stuff. If you improve our stuff, please keep it our stuff.
    9. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this informative? VGA is not a specific resolution but a hardware standard, which includes a lot of modes.

    10. Re:Apple video SUCKS by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, no, he means it's optimized for playing back the Quatermass shows from the BBC.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    11. Re:Apple video SUCKS by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Take a look at this nice video conversion table. You will see that while 720x480 is a workable approximation of ntsc resolution, it is not exactly the same.

      For most practical purposes, ntsc is approx 711x486. Video captured at 720x480 is indeed having some black pixels on the sides, and is missing a total of 6 lines from top and/or bottom.

      This all depends on what sampling frequency you are using for digitizing video of course, slightly different sampling frequency results in the often used 640x480 resolution.

    12. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      have you seen a video iPod in real life?

    13. Re:Apple video SUCKS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here Here! The grandparent committed slashfamy. Don't worry he'll now get mysterious "overrated" mods in the future on unrelated posts.

  8. Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by rastin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Recent developments in Kansas have paved the way for the largest increase of "Science" class offerings to our next generation of young Americans. Take "CZO140: A field study of the behavior of Unicorns" for example. Students will learn how to make Unicorn calls, analyze a maidens purity through Unicorn reactions and extract faerie dust from Unicorn droppings. For years "Rational Science" has frowned upon the link between faerie dust and Unicorn dung, likening it to a futile study of plain old horse shit. But now that science is not limited to natural explanations of phenomena jobs in academia are readily available to anyone with a wild imagination and a fragile grasp on reality!

    1. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Ctrl+Alt+De1337 · · Score: 1

      Careful what you say. In Kansas they already believe in jayhawks, so you never know what's next!

    2. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by jlowery · · Score: 1

      Yes indeed, the Kansas school board has changed the definition of 'science' so that it's no longer limited to natural phenomena. I'm sure their authority rests on members' vast curriculum vitae and numerous Nobel awards, or what a 300-foot Jesus told them.

      --
      If you post it, they will read.
    3. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by vanyel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I feel for students of the Kansas school system when they try to enter the job market. If I were hiring and saw they were from Kansas, I would immediately be concerned that they wouldn't have the rational thinking skills necessary to function in the real world. Actually, for that same reason, I think the Kansas school system should lose its accreditation.

    4. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by rho · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Wow. Learn ID alongside Darwinian evolution, and suddenly you're in danger of being unable to think rationally.

      Whether you agree or disagree with ID being taught, your wild-eyed devotion to Darwinian evolution as a key lodestone for critical thinking is positively magikcal.

      What hyper-sensitive twaddle.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    5. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by SHP · · Score: 1

      What's funny about hyperbolic rant that grossly mischaracterizes the issue? If scientists were to study Slashdot comments, they may (possibly correctly) presume that Evolution had ceased, and we've begun a slow but deliberate regression back to the primordial soup.

    6. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by sfjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful



      It's not a "wild-eyed devotion" so much as a recognition that one thing is science and one thing is not. Kansan students are not going to be graduating knowing what is and is not science. I won't have any positions in my company available for astrologers either.

      --
      It's simple: I demand prosecution for torture.
    7. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by rho · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So you won't hire people who believe in a deity, then? They do believe in an invisible Sky Daddy, you know. Sound like whackjobs--best limit your hires to secular humanists only.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    8. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...best limit your hires to secular humanists only.

      Sounds like a good idea. I do want people working for me who use logic and reason to see the world, not relying on myths.

    9. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your arguments are entirely fucking wrong, the fact that they've been modded up as insightful is just sad. There's really no other way of putting this. Intelligent Design is a metaphysical theory since it cannot be falsified. Scienctific theories are falsifiable, metaphysical theories are not. To teach metaphysical theories as scientific is to teach lies as truth. This has nothing to do with claiming religious or other metaphysical beliefs are whacko. To be a scientist or objective does not require that one disavow any unscientific beliefs, but that one recognize that they are metaphysical and not scientific.

      This argument that science is wrong to discriminate against metaphysical theories is wrong. Sectarian disputes are arguments over metaphysical theories, science does not take a position on such theories and therefore cannot be drawn into such debates while retaining it's integrity. This entire attack on science as if it is antagonistic of religious beliefs is provably wrong. Those who make it should be shunned as idiots, regardless of their metaphysical positions.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    10. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by blincoln · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Someone who is religious is different from someone who was schooled to deliberately not understand the difference between a scientific theory and what is more or less a religious belief.

      I'm very glad that when I was a kid, some of my teachers took the time to go over logic and reason instead of just facts. Being able to figure something out is more useful than knowing specific tidbits of knowledge, because you can generally use that skill to find the knowledge when you need to.

      Teaching creationism as something that's in the same category as evolution is a huge blow to that potentially developing framework of logic in someone's mind. There's nothing wrong with it as a religious belief, it just doesn't belong in a science class any more than cake recipes belong in a geometry class.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    11. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by otomo_1001 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think he was referring to the difference between scientific and not scientific.

      Basically if ID is presented as a scientific theory in Kansas and the students believe this, they are at a disadvantage to students that learn ID is NOT a scientific theory.

      Quit trying to make people into anti religious zealots when they may not be. I really don't care if you believe a pink unicorn created the world in 2 minutes. But I do care if you cannot determine what is scientific/verifiable/repeatable/falsifiable or not.

      Cheers!

    12. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Sir+Holo · · Score: 2, Insightful


      So you won't hire people who believe in a deity, then? They do believe in an invisible Sky Daddy, you know.

      Religion and science are two different things. Don't take my word for it, ask the Vatican.

    13. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There should be consequences to the people of Kansas for this decision. I graduated from the University of California, and I'm going to write UC a letter. I'm going to suggest that either they don't enroll students who received their high school degrees in Kansas, or that they require that Kansas educated students take remedial classes. As an alumni I need to preserve the good name of my school.

      There are more then enough qualified students out there, so UC would have no trouble filling the slots. If remedial education is the answer, Kansas students need to be informed that the world is not flat, that the earth is round and it orbits around the sun, the universe is around 14 billion years old, and that all life on earth is closely related. Basic stuff, so they know how the world actually works. A major university in the 21st century should not be wasting its resources on people who have a 14th century orientation.

      How fast do you think the voters of Kansas would change their minds if leading colleges and universities stopped accepting Kansas graduates? Would you want a doctor who doesn't believe in evolution? What about a structural engineer who thinks that science is "no longer limited to the search for natural explanations of phenomena"?

      By the way, all the board members who voted for this change are Republicans...

    14. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...your two venomous piles of paragraph puke are falsifiable with one very simple proof: when you fail to wipe before you type, your reckless "logic" smells more like a gripe...

    15. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets see, what is more logical? The idea that our entire world and life as we know it came from a bunch of exploding gas that gradually became more complex and developed into extremely intricate organisms, like humans for example. Or that an all powerful being created the world as we know it in a mature state out of nothing. To me, both ideas are pretty off the wall and I would call neither of them scientific. No one was there to witness creation of evolution. No one has ever witnessed something being created out of nothing or a billion year process of something becoming more complex. Both of these theories rely on faith. Therefore, I don't see anything wrong with schools teaching both ideas.

    16. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by vanyel · · Score: 1

      Just to be clear, this was exactly my point...

    17. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by o'reor · · Score: 1
      > Lets see, what is more logical? The idea that our entire world
      > and life as we know it came from a bunch of exploding gas that
      > gradually became more complex and developed into extremely
      > intricate organisms, like humans for example. Or that an all
      > powerful being created the world as we know it in a mature
      > state out of nothing.

      Considering the fact that scientific methods have been established to determine the age of fossils, and that a wealth of fossils allowed the paleologists/geologists to trace the history of life on earth to a high level of detail, well, I think the first theory fits reality much better.

      Oh, and don't give us the usual bullshit about "planted false evidence to test our faith". It reminds me of children who've been stealing chocolate cookies in the cupboard, and when asked who left chocolate-covered fingerprints all over the place : "I didn't do it dad, it's $YOUR_FAVORITE_MONSTER !". A-hem.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    18. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Jesrad · · Score: 0

      To teach metaphysical theories as scientific is to teach lies as truth.

      Actually, I think this works the other way around. Religious beliefs like ID aim to describe "The Truth", while scientific theories aim to describe reality. As we know, there is no way to extract the truth from reality, so all scientific theories are false (some are simply less false than others).

      So I find it quite flabbergasting and counter-productive that people would go as far as to call their take on "The Truth" as science, since it automatically makes their beliefs into a certainly-false interpretation of reality. It's rethorically shooting oneself in the foot ! They're trying to pass off what they genuinely believe to be true as something false, for no discernable reason.

      Seriously, as a man of faith from "Old" Europe, the whole Intelligent Design / Creationism trolling (there's no other way to qualify it, frankly) makes ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE WHATSOEVER.

      --
      Maybe we deserve this world ?
    19. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one was there to witness creation of evolution.

      What?

      Why is it so many people have such trouble understanding basic science?

    20. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by vivian · · Score: 1

      How do you know that evolution happens smoothly and evenly? There have been some very interesting results rising out of genetic algorithm research, in particular where one guy created
      virtual life. With evolutionary pressure on simple "organisms, they could evolve to have much more complex behavior than they started with. One of the most interesting observations has been made though, is that the development of the virtual life tends to happen in spurts and jumps, with mutations building up gradually, with little apparent effect, until some critical mutations occured and the "organisms" went through very rapid changes. If you are looking for proof that evolution can give rise to complex creatures, instead of just simple adaptations of existing creatures, this is where you will eventually see it arise from.

      Mabey the "Intelligent Designer's" all this is to keep us on our toes with the occasional tsunami and healthy dose of cosmic angst. It seems to help virtual life evolve faster when it's in a stressed environment. It's sure explain why our "Designer" chose to create the many wonderful parasites that plague humanity ( Malaria, ring worm, tape worm, the many many diseases and other scourges of the developed and developing world) What a benevolent creator to have blessed us with these "Intelligent Designs". Bah. I am wasting my time replying to someone that can't follow even basic logic.

    21. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      So you won't hire people who believe in a deity, then? They do believe in an invisible Sky Daddy, you know.

      get your terms straight. its bearded sky wizard, m'kay?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    22. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a demonstrable fact. Around the time of the Industrial Revolution, white butterflies turned dark because it gave them better camouflage against the trunks of silver birch trees {which were now sooty from all the factory chimbleys chuffing out smoke}. When Thatcher closed down all the factories, the butterflies turned white again. {There are better explanations out there so do not be afraid to Google for them.} The fact that it is possible to create genetically modified organisms in the laboratory indicates that evolution is possible in theory, and the fact that DNA replication is not 100% perfect everytime suggests a practical mechanism by which this may happen without intervention.

      What is in dispute is whether or not evolution an conjunction with Natural Selection is sufficient to account for the diversity of life that we see on Earth today.

      The "Intelligent Design" fantasy is based around the argument that living things are irreducibly complex and could not have arisen by incremental changes, therefore must have been designed by an intelligent designer. This is patently false, as nothing in nature actually demonstrates this "irreducible complexity" of which ID proponents speak; however, an intelligent designer would by definition be irreducibly complex. This leads to a circular argument when discussing the origin of such an intelligent designer {and so is regarded by some as a reductio ad absurdum}.

      Science by strict definition limits itself to natural explanations for natural phenomena. Supernatural phenomena are nothing to do with science.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    23. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      First, let me say that I do not support ID as a scientific theory, but I also must say that evolution has some holes as a scientific theory. Natural Selection (a part of evolution) is scientific, but the creation of working genes through random chance mutation is not. In fact, ID, in one sense, is MORE scientific. We can actually DO Intelligent Design ourselves (to some degree), thereby proving that it is possible. We manipulate genes all the time. We can't yet create new functional genes, but at least we have taken some of the first steps. Nobody can DO random chance mutation to generate a new, functional gene. We've never seen it happen and we can't seem to get it to happen, even working with fast-cycle bacteria. 25,000+ generations so far and STILL no new genes. My disagreement with you is in your statement that computer based organisms have evolved to much more complex behavior than they started with. This statement is only true of tests in which the new, genes already exist in the environment. The virtual organisms are able to assimilate those genes and, through a process of natural selection, find the best combinations. No virtual life has been seen to "evolve" new functional genes. For that matter, no real life has been to do this either. Reshuffling of existing genes, yes, this has been seen. But the question still remains; Where do the new genes come from?

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    24. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      "I'm sure their authority rests on ... what a 300-foot Jesus told them"

      If you had said 900 Ft Jesus, you might be right.

    25. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ooze · · Score: 1

      Wait. I know how to solve this dispute once and for all.
      You know, in every monotheistic religion you only get the goods (e.g. go to heaven) when you believe in their god and accept their teachings. You don't even have to know or even understand them (I know far too many christians that know less of the Bible than I do). Ok. Let's do it the other way around too. You only get the goods of science (e.g. antibiotics, vaccinations, inteferons against cancer to name only the ones that are based on evolution) if you believe in the scientific principles and accept their teachings. Again, they are not required to know or understand it all. Not even scientists can do that.
      By applying this simple rule, they can have their heaven all for themselves (well, according to their teachings they have it already, and I'm not overly sad about that, thinking about having to spend eternity with them). And the whole dispute will be solved in about one generation.

      --
      Just because I can imagine doing a hippopotamus, doesn't mean I'd like to do it.
    26. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      I had some formatting issues - reposting my FULL reply: First, let me say that I do not support ID as a scientific theory, but I also must say that evolution has some holes as a scientific theory. Natural Selection (a part of evolution) is scientific (testable, falsifiable), but the creation of working genes through random chance mutation is not. In fact, ID, in one sense, is MORE scientific. We can actually DO Intelligent Design ourselves (to some degree), thereby proving that it is possible. We manipulate genes all the time. We can't yet create new functional genes, but at least we have taken some of the first steps. Nobody can DO random chance mutation to generate a new, functional gene. We've never seen it happen and we can't seem to get it to happen, even working with fast-cycle bacteria. 25,000+ generations so far and STILL no new genes. My disagreement with you is in your statement that computer based organisms have evolved to much more complex behavior than they started with. This statement is only true of tests in which the new, workable genes already exist in the environment. The virtual organisms are able to assimilate those genes and, through a process of natural selection, find the best combinations. No virtual life has been seen to "evolve" new functional genes. For that matter, no real life has been seen to do this either. Reshuffling of existing genes, yes, this has been seen. But the question still remains; Where do the new functional genes come from?

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    27. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ranton · · Score: 1

      I dont think you can possibly mischaracterize or overexaggerate the rediculousness of not limiting science to natural explanations of questions. Any humor used is simply a way to mask the horror of the situation.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    28. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How about a structural engineer who believes the 4 basic elements are Fire, Earth, Water and Air?

      Better yet, let's hope people from Kansas don't become teachers in the real world.

    29. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by bonius_rex · · Score: 1
      When Thatcher closed down all the factories, the butterflies turned white again. {There are better explanations out there so do not be afraid to Google for them.}

      I think you're talking about the Peppered Moth. This is one of the standard textbook examples of observable evolution.

    30. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm astounded that you actually have to explain this in 2005. We haven't had this problem in our country for a century or so. Is USA a 100 years behind or what?

    31. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      You said: *****"Evolution is a demonstrable fact. Around the time of the Industrial Revolution, white butterflies turned dark because it gave them better camouflage against the trunks of silver birch trees {which were now sooty from all the factory chimbleys chuffing out smoke}. When Thatcher closed down all the factories, the butterflies turned white again." ***** This is natural selection, merely a part of the evolution argument. The genes for light and dark moths already existed in the genome, they were merely expressed in differing ratios based on the survival benefits of one over the other. This example did not involve the "evolution" of new genes. You also said: *****"The fact that it is possible to create genetically modified organisms in the laboratory indicates that evolution is possible in theory".***** I would say that this proves that ID is possible (in theory) since it is a example of an intelligence (us) doing design work. I have a hard time believing that modifying something in the lab proves that it can be generated spontaneously through random chance. I can open my computer up and make mods, but I don't expect one to come into existence through random shuffling of computer parts. I modify code, but a random character generator will not create a working program. I agree with you that ID, as it is being presented, is not scientific. "Irreducible Complexity" is not demonstrable, therefore not scientific. I still see weaknesses in the random creation of new genes that Evolution requires.

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    32. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      I'm just curious. What would it take to falsify evolution in your mind? My point is that while I do not accept ID as a scientific theory, and while everyone says that evolution is falsifiable, very few science oriented individuals consider how evolution might be falsified. They just accept it as fact and continue blithely onward. Is there anything scientific that would falsify evolution?

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    33. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE WHATSOEVER.

      Ah, the good old Chewbacca Defense.

      In this instance, however, I can certainly see how it applies. Maybe Chewbacca is the intelligent designer behind the Kansaas board of ecudation?

    34. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
      On the contrary, doesn't that depend on the shape of the cake?

      MmMmmm... math cake.

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    35. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by rho · · Score: 1
      You mean a textbook example of adaptation.

      Also, peppered moths do not rest on tree trunks. This is one of the many repeated canards of evolution.

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    36. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by rho · · Score: 1
      What arguments are those? The one where I point out that it's nonsense to say that not believing in evolution does not make you immediately unhirable?

      For people who believe themselves to be scientific and reasonable, you people sure are shrill and over-emotional.

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      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    37. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      What would it take to falsify evolution in your mind?

      Precambrian rabbit fossils.

      Transposons found in whales and cows but not in hippos.

    38. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Also, peppered moths do not rest on tree trunks. This is one of the many repeated canards of evolution.

      Citation?

    39. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by dclydew · · Score: 1

      http://www.millerandlevine.com/km/evol/Moths/moths .html

      I think that link should clarify your misunderstanding. While the moths do not particularly hang about on tree trunks, the populations still modified their ratios in line with the pollution. The only thing that the corrections have indicated so far, seems to be that instead of birds being the sole reason for this modification, it appears as one reason among many.

      The population still "evolved", thogh to be fair, the evolution was mostly cosmetic and doesn't really prove anything of great import.

      However, even on its own, with nothing else, it's about 1000 times greater evidence that ID has.

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    40. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Just curious. Can you DO get out of the infinite regression that ID entails? I mean without saying: that's supernatural and thus cannot be understood? Or DO you mean that humans shuffling genes are supernatural too?

    41. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      And let's not forget, a big old deity with a white beard coming out and saying "evolution is crap, I want the credit'.

      Rich

    42. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      The genes for light and dark moths already existed in the genome, they were merely expressed in differing ratios based on the survival benefits of one over the other. This example did not involve the "evolution" of new genes.

      It's possible -- though very hard to prove -- that moths carrying only the "dark" genes could have produced offspring containing the "light" genes {or vice-versa} by simple random mutation. This probably would have been insignificant, though, compared to the number carrying both genes.

      Remember also that the dirtying and subsequent cleaning took only about 100 years which, even though it corresponds to many generations of moths, is barely the wink of an eye on the evolutionary timescale.

      You also said: *****"The fact that it is possible to create genetically modified organisms in the laboratory indicates that evolution is possible in theory".***** I would say that this proves that ID is possible (in theory) since it is a example of an intelligence (us) doing design work.

      Yes, it proves it's possible; however, it does nothing to change the fact that it's improbable. In fact, seeing as how it's taken us this long just to get together the wherewithal to do it, I think that might be construed as evidence for how improbable ID might be. Especially given that Nature can, and does, change genes a little bit all the time -- although most of the changes are swallowed up because of the inherent error-tolerance in DNA {which nature had long before we came up with the idea of a parity bit, let alone Reed-Solomon and Hamming codes!} and so never see the light of day.

      I have a hard time believing that modifying something in the lab proves that it can be generated spontaneously through random chance.

      If something can be done deliberately, then -- unless we can prove that whatever would trigger it cannot occur randomly -- it can happen randomly. A plant pot will fall if it is pushed off a windowsill by hand. Do you have a hard time believing that it will also fall if it is pushed off a windowsill by a curtain blowing in the wind? If there is a curtain within range, the window is open and it is windy out, then we have a plausible mechanism by which the pot might be caused to fall without intervention.

      Now, if we find the flower pot on the floor, the curtain flapping in the breeze and the door locked, should we assume that someone unlocked the door, deliberately knocked off the pot, covered their traces and left, re-locking the door ..... or that the wind blew it?

      I can open my computer up and make mods, but I don't expect one to come into existence through random shuffling of computer parts.

      But computer parts were designed so as to require an intelligent mind to assemble them together in the first place, so your analogy is not valid. Nature's components obey rather inflexible rules about what will stick to what and what will repel what if they are shaken up together. One carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms can only ever make methane, or two hydrogen molecules and a carbon atom.

      I modify code, but a random character generator will not create a working program.

      I beg to differ. If you consider a simple enough instruction set, it is easy to generate valid programs randomly. If every possible value for the order field represents a valid operation, then there can never be an invalid order and hence the validity of a program only depends upon it not producing an overflow condition {a jump to unpopulated memory is valid: unpopulated memory will read as all ones, and we know that 0xffffffff constitutes a valid instruction}. If your "randomness" is further constrained, as it is in Nature, then some of these programs might even do something useful. I suggest you perform some simple experiments to satisfy

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    43. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by chandoni · · Score: 1
      Rational thinking skills? What real world have you been living in? Unless you're in a techinical job, you don't need them.

      While unemployed PhDs are lining up for jobs at Home Depot or Walmart, Kansas schools will provide the next generation of successful entrepreneurs in rapidly growing fields like astrology and pet psychiatry.

    44. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design (the pseudo-scientific movement) requires irreducible complexity (a miracle) and is therefore not scientific. The idea that some intelligent entity may have performed design work on our genome does not require a miracle and can be shown to be possible. We ourselves perform design work on genomes, therefore, it is possible to do so. There is still the question of who created the first genome, which, I assume, is the "infinite regression" you are talking about. I don't know the answer to that question. I don't propose that either theory is the Truth. I merely point out that one can be shown to be possible and the other cannot. We cannot recreate random chance generation of working genes in the laboratory or in computer simulations.

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    45. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Sorry, that doesn't count. I asked for scientific answers. ;^)

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    46. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Yes, it proves it's possible; however, it does nothing to change the fact that it's improbable. In fact, seeing as how it's taken us this long just to get together the wherewithal to do it, I think that might be construed as evidence for how improbable ID might be. It hasn't taken long at all. We have developed the ability to directly modify genes in less than 500 years. This is certainly an eyeblink in terms of geological time. One might suppose that in the next 5000 years we might be able to create custom genomes of our own. Again, in an eyeblink. If something can be done deliberately, then -- unless we can prove that whatever would trigger it cannot occur randomly -- it can happen randomly. Are you arguing that because I can walk into the room and reassemble the flowerpot back together (maybe it was made of lego blocks), that it can reassemble without outside help if given enough time? Theoretically, yes, but the time necessary for that highly improbable outcome to occur is outside the bounds of reason. If you consider a simple enough instruction set, it is easy to generate valid programs randomly. If every possible value for the order field represents a valid operation, then there can never be an invalid order and hence the validity of a program only depends upon it not producing an overflow condition Exactly my point, in order to demonstrate random generation of meaningful code you have to dumb your instruction set way down. If you use an even moderately complex instruction set, the set of possible instructions becomes staggeringly huge while the set of working instructions is comparatively miniscule. This is, apparently, the state of things in the DNA world. Huge set of possible combinations, extremely small set of working combinations. Swedes, cabbages, turnips, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower and oil-seed rape are all descendants of a now-extinct plant, Brassica sativa. All these distinct species have come about since humans began practising agriculture {you might say they are the original genetically-modified organisms}. Unless humans once possessed and have since lost the technology for doing genetic modifications, it is reasonable to suppose that they represent random genetic mutations which proved beneficial to survival in a particular environment {farmers planted more of the seeds which produced the best vegetables}. I cannot say for certain, but I would expect that all of those descendants involved expression or non-expression of existing genes, but not the creation, by mutation, of new genes. Lots of genes get turned on or turned off or shifted around by viruses, but mutations tend to be fatal.

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    47. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm still working on formatting... Yes, it proves it's possible; however, it does nothing to change the fact that it's improbable. In fact, seeing as how it's taken us this long just to get together the wherewithal to do it, I think that might be construed as evidence for how improbable ID might be.

      It hasn't taken long at all. We have developed the ability to directly modify genes in less than 500 years. This is certainly an eyeblink in terms of geological time. One might suppose that in the next 5000 years we might be able to create custom genomes of our own. Again, in an eyeblink.

      If something can be done deliberately, then -- unless we can prove that whatever would trigger it cannot occur randomly -- it can happen randomly.

      Are you arguing that because I can walk into the room and reassemble the flowerpot back together (maybe it was made of lego blocks), that it can reassemble without outside help if given enough time? Theoretically, yes, but the time necessary for that highly improbable outcome to occur is outside the bounds of reason.

      If you consider a simple enough instruction set, it is easy to generate valid programs randomly. If every possible value for the order field represents a valid operation, then there can never be an invalid order and hence the validity of a program only depends upon it not producing an overflow condition

      Exactly my point, in order to demonstrate random generation of meaningful code you have to dumb your instruction set way down. If you use an even moderately complex instruction set, the set of possible instructions becomes staggeringly huge while the set of working instructions is comparatively miniscule. This is, apparently, the state of things in the DNA world. Huge set of possible combinations, extremely small set of working combinations.

      Swedes, cabbages, turnips, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower and oil-seed rape are all descendants of a now-extinct plant, Brassica sativa. All these distinct species have come about since humans began practising agriculture {you might say they are the original genetically-modified organisms}. Unless humans once possessed and have since lost the technology for doing genetic modifications, it is reasonable to suppose that they represent random genetic mutations which proved beneficial to survival in a particular environment {farmers planted more of the seeds which produced the best vegetables}.

      I cannot say for certain, but I would expect that all of those descendants involved expression or non-expression of existing genes, but not the creation, by mutation, of new genes. Lots of genes get turned on or turned off or shifted around by viruses, but mutations tend to be fatal.

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    48. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Transposons found in whales and cows but not in hippos.

      Now that we have the ability to decode genomes, we may find something like this. I don't think it would falsify evolution, though. Viral transposition could account for the same genes in cows and whales but not in hippos. I think we can be fairly certain that genes hop around quite a bit, even in eukaryotes.

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      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    49. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You're right that he could have selected a more powerful example than transponsons.

      Finding his example with transponsons would still be pretty ugly for evolution, but as you indicate it could be explained as a freak transfer event for two reasons. First of all with transponsons you lose the powerful unique location evidence. Out of an entire genome, unique location is pretty powerful evidence. Secondly, transponsons have an inherent jumping nature. That makes it infinitely more reasonable to accept freak jumping events... a transponson jumping and inserting itself into a virus, and then jumping and inserting into a different host.

      It would have been far better to site something like inert viral DNA that occationally gets inserted into host DNA. That is an extremly powerful evidence either supporting or refuting the tree of common decent, and effectively supporting or refuting evolution as a whole.

      There are countless known examples of that, and in every case they perfectly support the tree of common decent. Not only do they support that tree through their presence or absence, but through their precise location. There's an entire sequence of known examples laying out the primate tree. Some that are uniquely found in humans, then some that are uniquely in humans and chips, and going back in time step by step merging each primate group with the human line.

      If you found the same viral DNA insertion in whales and in humans - and in fact found it inserted in precisely the same location - and it was absent in chimpanzees - that would be a huge problem for evolution. The insertion of the same viral DNA at the exact same location cannot reasonably be dissmissed as a random occurance, and finding multiple such examples would be overwhelming evidence.

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    50. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The one where I point out that it's nonsense to say that not believing in evolution does not make you immediately unhirable?

      No, it is emerging from a shool that lacked a legitimate science curriculum would make you an extremly questional hire. I use "emerging" rather than "graduating" becuase it fails any reasonable definition for an accreditied diploma.

      You don't have to believe everything in science... in fact we know that gravity and quantum mechanics are fundamentally in conflict and one or both *must* be wrong in some way... but you *do* need to be familiar with the principals of science itself and you *do* need to be familiar with a general overview of the current state of scientific understanding. Students need to know enough to identify what is and is not within the field of science, and students need to know that the current state of the feild of biology is undisputed acceptance of evolution. And no, there in no genuine controversy over the fundamentals of evolution among professional biologists.

      It's no different than someone who emerged from a school that lacked a legitimate math curriculum. Such a person may be perfectly acceptable as a janitor, but would you seriously trust someone lacking a math education in a financial or managment position?

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    51. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The problem is that evolution ISN'T scientific. It isn't verifiable. It isn't repeatable. It isn't falsifiable.

      It's tiresome constantly addressing the same points over and over again simple because people DID NOT LEARN THIS STUFF IN HIGHSCHOOL.

      If you want examples of the predictions evolution makes... and examples of how they have been tested... and how every test has further confirmed evolution... and an explicit explanation of how each of those tests COULD HAVE FALSIFIED EVOLUTION (which you in errorneously claimed was impossible) then read talkorigins 29+ evidence for Macorevolution. Each section explicitly addresses potential falsifications.

      You can't prove evolution any more than you can prove that we are a computer simulation that started last week.

      Correct. We are simply demanding that one random feild of science not be singled out and treated differently that any other field of science simply because some religious fundamentalists have their panties in a twist over one random field of science and their particular "literal" interpretation of scripture. In fact this religious fundamentalist group is running entirely contrary to mainstream Christianity. The overwhelming majority of Chistians on earth fully accept evolution, and even THE POPE HIMSELF issued a document accepting the scientific legitimacy of evolution. It is only in the US that we have these fundamentalist activist spouting nonsense that evolution somehow conflicts with God. The same sort of idiots who once claimed that a sun-center solarsystem conflicted with their literal interpretation of the Bible and therefor denied God. Idiots trying to equate evolution and atheism. Yeah right, the Pope part of an atheist conspiracy to exterminate God, heh.

      You cannot "prove" chemistry, as you indicate there could be some malicious deciving God feeding us false perceptions and all of our memories could be planted fabrications. However back in the realm of functional society, students do indeed need to be taught the fundamentals of reading and the fundamentals of math and the fundamentals of science.

      Students do not have to BELIEVE element theory, but they do need to be familiar with the fundamentals of chemistry and they do need to be presented with the theory of elements and the periodic chart and they do need to be aware of the fact that element theory is the indisputed foundation of chemistry by the scientific community.

      Students do not have to BELIEVE evolution, but they do need to be familiar with the fundamentals of biology and they do need to be presented with the theory of evolution and the tree catagorizing all life on earth and they do need to be aware of the fact that evolution is the indisputed foundation of biology by the scientific community. There are approximately two or three genuine professional biologist on the entire planet that seriously dispute the fundamentals of evolution, and even *they* will admit that evolution is the current indisputed foundation of biology.

      If you follow the so called evolutionary tree and then look at the genetics it makes no sense.

      All I can say here is that you're obviously not familiar with the subject and the scientific results. We have done TONS of genetic analysis and everything falls perfectly into the tree pattern of common decent. This is extensively covered in the prior link I gave.

      It happens quickly - then we should be able to observe it happening.

      Individual mutations constantly appear, and we do in fact observe it happening. And population gene frequencies do shift over a period of several generations, and we do in fact observe this happening.

      2. It happens slowly - in which case we should see some kinds of inbetween stages.

      Well it generally takes quite a while for a large number of signifigant changes to accumulate, and virtually everything we see *is* "inbetween" stages. We have fossils of frikin' WHALES WITH LEGS

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    52. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by Alsee · · Score: 1

      So you won't hire people who believe in a deity, then?

      Excuse me? Are you delusional? Did you actually just suggest that most Christians on earth are atheists? Did you actually just suggest that The POPE HIMSELF is atheist?

      Where do you get off on this delusion that you can equate evolution with atheism?

      You're as bad as the idiots who said that a sun-centered solarsystem conflicted with their particular "literal" interpretation of the bible. The same idiots who said that the sun-center solarsystem somehow denied god. The same idiots who said that a sun-centered solarsystem was was somehow atheist. The same idiots who had the rediculous notion that in order to beleive in God you had to follow their particular ideas about God, had to follow their particular restrictions on God, had to follow their particular fundamentalists beliefs saying that God did not... that God somehow COULD not have worked that way. Idiots stuck on the stupid idea that anyone who did not accept their limitations on God was an atheist.

      That anyone teaching a sun-centered solarsystem was an atheists out to exterminate God.

      And of course that is obviously bullshit.

      And that's exactly what you just did. You just denied all of the Christian scientists and denied the MAJORITY of Christians world wide who believe in God and fully accept evolution. You assumed they equalled atheists. You LABELED them atheists.

      Science class is for teaching science. The shlock being pushed as ID is not a scientific theory, and to the extent that it tries to resemble science it has been evaluated and thoroughly shredded in peer review.

      And even if ID did qualify as a scientific theiry, well highschool sciece class is not a battleground for science. Highschool science class teaches the scientific method and provides an overview of the modern state of well tested and well supported thoroughly peer reviewed science that has been challenged and won in the scientific community battlefield. We do not teach string theory and other unsupported and untested and unaccepted theories. The fundamentals of evolution are as accepted amongst professional biololgists as relativity is accepted amongst professional physicists.

      Students do not have to BELIEVE relativity, but they do need to be familiar with it and they need to know that it is the accepted foundation of physics amongst phsyicists. Students do not have to BELIEVE evolution, but they do need to be familiar with it and they need to know that it is the accepted foundation of biology amongst biologists. And any school that lies on any of those points is sabotaging the student's education. Any school that teaches non-science and tries to slap a science label on it is sabotaging the student's education.

      YOU are the only one pushing the idea that evolution somehow denies God.

      Any public highschool teacher that says in class that evolution says God does not exist is not only teaching invalid non-science, he is unconstitutionally abusing his goverment position and powers to push his personal religious beliefs and should be fired. That is no better than a teacher using his position to push his personal Islamic creation beliefs or Native American Polytheistic creation beliefs.

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    53. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      It hasn't taken long [for human beings to learn the techniques of genetic manipulation] at all. We have developed the ability to directly modify genes in less than 500 years. This is certainly an eyeblink in terms of geological time. One might suppose that in the next 5000 years we might be able to create custom genomes of our own. Again, in an eyeblink.

      From where do you get 500 years? It's my understanding that human beings have been around for tens of thousands of years. Which is still not long geologically, but a long time in human terms, which is what I meant. I apologise for not making it clearer; I thought the paragraph break would show what I meant, but on subsequent reading it does seem that it can be read wrongly.

      Are you arguing that because I can walk into the room and reassemble the flowerpot back together (maybe it was made of lego blocks), that it can reassemble without outside help if given enough time?

      Well, I'm not discounting outside help; only intelligent outside help. It's clear that, quantum phenomena notwithstanding, the components of life are going to need some input of kinetic energy if they are to move in relation to one another. The forces of the weather, and the Moon's gravitational pull on the primordial soup, might well have been responsible for the origin of life on Earth; but they are not applied with any intelligence.

      But I'll run with your idea of a plant pot made out of Lego bricks. Let us first assume that there is a finite number of bricks, which therefore can only be arranged in a finite number of possible combinations. If you take these bricks and arrange them in every single possible combination in turn {here you are acting as an external influence but not applying any intelligence -- you are merely following a set of rules without question}, then it is a mathematical certainty that one of those combinations must exactly match the original configuration of the pot. Yes, it would take you a long, long time to go through all the combinations. That's the point -- the universe is very, very, very old. Being only Lego bricks {which are human-made and intended to be assembled by an intelligent operator} they do not have an inherent mechanism for maintaining a viable configuration. Still, it doesn't take intelligence to apply a rule which says "stop rearranging when it looks like the picture". And if you had many identical sets of bricks, and kept fully-assembled constructions for as long as possible before dismantling and rearranging them {again, a rule that can be applied without intelligence}, then that would at least maximise the lifetime of a viable construction. Also, a real living creature would be able to get out of the way of the dismantling-and-rearranging vortex which you are simulating.

      If the plant pot exhibited symmetry then there is more than one viable combination. And if you don't care about the colour or even too much about the shape, as long as it will do approximately the job of a flower pot, then there are even more viable combinations.

      ..... in order to demonstrate random generation of meaningful code you have to dumb your instruction set way down. If you use an even moderately complex instruction set, the set of possible instructions becomes staggeringly huge while the set of working instructions is comparatively miniscule.

      Whoa there, you're getting ahead of yourself. Who said anything about dumbing down the instruction set? You don't actually need that many instructions to achieve completeness. {A somewhat lengthy digression follows:}

      Here's a simple instruction set for you. You need a word length of at least 16 bits: 4 {highest} bits for order, 12 or more bits for data {which may well mean address of data}. One accumulator, one instruction pointer and three status flags: carry, zero {= 1 if all bits of accumulator a

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    54. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      It's interesting. I don't really disagree with anything you say, but we seem to be coming to different conclusions. A couple of points:

      From where do you get 500 years?

      I was trying to encompass the industrial revolution, Mendel, Darwin plus a large fudge factor. Nothing magical about the number except that in that short period of time we have come so far. Even using your time period of tens of thousands of years, it's just not a very long period of time. And yet, here we are, modifying genomes. I think that proves the point that intelligent tinkering with genes is a very real possibility.

      Your discussion of the plant pot made of legos is well-made. I think any disagreement we had on that has been cleared up. To summarize, we seem to agree that just about anything is possible, but it might take a very long time for it to happen. Agreed? Whoa there, you're getting ahead of yourself. Who said anything about dumbing down the instruction set?

      With all due respect, you did. You said:

      If you consider a simple enough instruction set, it is easy to generate valid programs randomly. If every possible value for the order field represents a valid operation, then there can never be an invalid order and hence the validity of a program only depends upon it not producing an overflow condition

      The genome is not a simple instruction set. My original point was that if I use a random character generator, I will not get working programs. Let me amplify this a little. I work with C# sometimes. I could set up my random character generator to create text output and then try to compile it as a C# program. While it is theoretically possible that someday I may get random output that compiles and does something useful, it is staggeringly unlikely.

      What you proposed is that we create a simple instruction set in which every possible random string is a valid instruction. I would call that "dumbing down" the address space of possible instructions. I think my analogy is closer to the real world of DNA. There is a huge address space of possible strings of amino acids to be woven into a strand of DNA. Only a small set of them produces "working code" when "compiled" into proteins inside a cell. I don't disagree with your example, I just don't think it is close as mine to the real world that we are discussing.

      Now you're just moving the goalposts closer and closer together.

      Yes, I am. This is because I think there is a difference between using existing code and creating new code. This is the distinction that I am trying to illustrate. To continue with my C# example, if I create new programs by using existing objects or cutting and pasting other people's code, I am not creating new code, just remixing code that already exists and is known to work. While this can creat novel functionality, it is not the equivalent of writing code the old-fashioned way, from scratch; it does not create new strings of working code, just reshuffles the code that already exists.

      With regards to the genome, we see what appears to be increasingly complex code throughout geological time. The question is, "Where did that new code come from?" So far, I have not seen convincing proof that random chance mutation, even across geological timeframes, can produce new, working code. Yes, it is a reasonable explanation, but it has not been proven to be possible.

      At this point, most people I discuss this with throw up their hands and say, "You're here, aren't you? That proves that it must work." This is a logical fallacy. Existence of an object does not prove what method was used to create that object. Yes, random chance mutation may be the source of new, working DNA code. But, so far, nobody has actually been able to reproduce that process in the lab or on a computer without doing what you proposed (what I referred to as "dumbing down" the instruction set).

      I want to say that I am enjoying this discussion and do not mean any disrespect of your beliefs and/or logic. If something I say comes across as dismissive or condescending, please forgive me in advance.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    55. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Science does have a truth, that truth is to objectively describe reality. Simply because that goal is unobtainable and has no a priori justification, does not mean one is not capable of evaluating how well certain ideas achieve this goal, compared to other ideas. It just means that you can never be certain that you have obtained "The Truth" aka 'the most efficient means of reaching ones goals'.

      Because of this irrational goal (no natural justification for understanding reality, we just find it useful for our other equally irrational goals), science is able to have a truth. Truth is just the most efficient means for reaching unjustified goals, science's truth involves the exclusion of metaphysical theories.

      In other words, all "truths" are unjustifiable interpretations, but if your goals are to objectively describe reality (science), then the scientific method (no metaphysical theories, must be falsifiable) produces progress towards absolute truth. If your goals are to unwaveringly believe in an unobjective description of reality, then science is not your truth. The problem isn't that people want to believe in a metaphysical theory, it's that people want to call their metaphysical theories scientific. The only way to do this is to change the definition of science, which is dishonest. Parading metaphysical theories as science is part of an ideology that justifies lying to achieve it's goals. It perpetuates a fraud to claim students were taught science and showed proficiency in the field, when the curiculum specifically undermines the definition by introducing metaphysical theories as scientific.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    56. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      "very few science oriented individuals consider how evolution might be falsified"

      Irrelavent and incorrect. All scientific theories are falsifiable, so at least some thought went into how they could be falsified. Evolution is considered to be a fairly reliable theory because it has managed to not be falsified so many times. Since you cannot know what it is that you do not know, evolution is evaluated every time new evidence is found. So far, no new evidence has failed rationalization with the theory of evolution. What you see as verification is actually attempted falsification. In fact, evolution is so reliable that you have mistaken it for being accepted as fact and treated as dogma. If that were the case, science would cease to exist as a practice.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    57. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      "What arguments are those?"

      Ahem:
      Learn ID alongside Darwinian evolution, and suddenly you're in danger of being unable to think rationally.

      The issue is a metaphysical theory being taught as a scientific theory. Yes, this does put you in danger of being unable to think rationally. Thinking rationally requires objectivity, calling a metaphysical theory scientific is unobjective. You cannot logically enter into this position with rationalist identity without losing rationalist integrity. Rationalist identity without rationalist integrity is unobjective.

      Whether you agree or disagree with ID being taught, your wild-eyed devotion to Darwinian evolution as a key lodestone for critical thinking is positively magikcal.

      Wild-eyed devotion to anything is unobjective and therefore unscientific. We are discussing what is proper to teach in science class, I would say that science is a good candidate. Science is the attempt to objectively describe the physical world (measurable existence, reality; whatever you'd like to call it), science does not function without objectivity.

      Your trollish reply to sfjoe ignores this point, thus my first reply to your ignorant and provably wrong comments. Business requires objectivity, science class is possibly the clearest place to learn objectivity, teaching ID undermines this objectivity, undermining science and producing students who are less productive. I wouldn't hire anyone who couldn't use the scientific method either, how could I ever trust the information they give me otherwise?

      Using Science isn't a matter of belief. I don't care what you believe, but you'd better know how to produce objective analysis and communicate it objectively. You have to distort this to make your point, which is why your replys are trollish and wrong. Just like Intelligent Design, you don't have an honest argument to make.

      BTW, I'm shrill and emotional about this, because your perpetuating fraud. If I know you're disseminating falsehoods and I point it out, then you deny it in light of reasoned evidence, not much else I can do but shun you until you choose to behave like an adult. You've obviously been around long enough, this is a forum for science enthusiasts, either make an honest argument or go find someone else to annoy. You're just generating noise and reducing the signal here.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    58. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Irrelavent and incorrect.

      Not irrelevant and not incorrect. You'll notice I didn't use the word "scientists", I said science oriented individuals. And I notice that you did not answer the question. So, let me ask again. What scientific evidence would it take for you to be convinced that evolution had been falsified? If something irreducibly complex were found, would you then be convinced? Would it take a message encoded into the genome from some Progenitor race? Would evidence of bacteria raining down from outer space convince you? I'm not asking you to abandon your scientific principles, just to fantasize a little. Or, perhaps, to admit the there is not much chance that you could ever be convinced that evolution had been falsified.

      All scientific theories are falsifiable, so at least some thought went into how they could be falsified. Evolution is considered to be a fairly reliable theory because it has managed to not be falsified so many times. Since you cannot know what it is that you do not know, evolution is evaluated every time new evidence is found. So far, no new evidence has failed rationalization with the theory of evolution.

      This is a fair enough statement, but it is tangential to the question. The question is a speculative one. What piece of evidence would convince you that evolution had been falsified?

      What you see as verification is actually attempted falsification.

      With all due respect, you seem to be making a lot of assumptions about what I think and see. And, to set the record straight, I am familiar with the scientific process.

      There are weaknesses in evolution and the big one is that nobody has been able to prove that random chance mutation can generate functional genes. Yes, it's a reasonable assumption. Yes, the evidence seems to fit. But science is about reproducing results and, so far, nobody has reproduced that part of evolution. Not in the lab, not in computer simulations.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    59. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ppanon · · Score: 1

      The idea that some intelligent entity may have performed design work on our genome does not require a miracle and can be shown to be possible. We ourselves perform design work on genomes, therefore, it is possible to do so. ...I merely point out that one can be shown to be possible and the other cannot.
      Actually you have done no such thing. You have admitted in another post that direct genetic manipulation by humans has not resulted in the creation of new genes, just the manipulation of existing genes (usually by taking them from one species and inserting them in another). Actually there have been some examples of de-novo protein design for pharmaceutical use, but those have not been inserted into a species' genome to make it more successful in the wild (only for reproducing bacteria in pharmaceutical labs to produce the new proteins as drugs). To go from that to claiming that intelligent design explains the creation of complex structures like the mammalian eye is even more of a leap of faith than current expectations that evolution did the same. As far as I can tell that means that ID has no more supporting evidence about the possibility of intelligent creation of new genes supplementing evolution than Darwinian evolution does.

      As for simulations of artificial life and the demonstration of spontaneous creation of new genes through random mutation: We certainly don't understand fully how genes are expressed in complex cells, let alone multicelllar organisms, and until we do the accelerated simulation of evolution is not really possible. Heck, even the simplest cells we can study are the product of billions of years of evolution because anything more primitive probably has been completely obliterated through obsolence. It doesn't give us much to go on. I think we're going to have to fully crack the genetic code (probably at least a few more decades of research) with a better understanding of which/how environmental factors can cause mutations before you can see some reasonable simulations of artificial life applying those concepts on simplified cells and showing spontaneous de-novo genetic creation.

      However, assuming the next few generations of scientists don't have their analytical faculties damaged by intelligent design zealots or their research funding politically denied by similar fundamentalist religious zealots in political office, the days where you can make idiotic statements like the quote above are numbered.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    60. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Up until the point where you called me an idiot I was enjoying what you said. If you are going to refer to my other posts, please try to be fair and not selectively quote. In almost all of my posts I have pointed out that Intelligent (ID) obviously pseudo-science.

      Actually you have done no such thing. You have admitted in another post that direct genetic manipulation by humans has not resulted in the creation of new genes, just the manipulation of existing genes (usually by taking them from one species and inserting them in another).

      This is a good point. Let me be more clear. In the short period of time that we as humans have been using the scientific method, we have gotten to the point of manipulating genes. I believe this proves that intelligent manipulation of genomes is possible, since we are already starting to do it ourselves. If something can be shown to be possible, that is a point in its favor, scientifically.

      Actually there have been some examples of de-novo protein design for pharmaceutical use, but those have not been inserted into a species' genome to make it more successful in the wild (only for reproducing bacteria in pharmaceutical labs to produce the new proteins as drugs).

      Thank you, you make my point for me. We are performing genetic modifications, thereby proving it to be possible.

      To go from that to claiming that intelligent design explains the creation of complex structures like the mammalian eye is even more of a leap of faith than current expectations that evolution did the same. As far as I can tell that means that ID has no more supporting evidence about the possibility of intelligent creation of new genes supplementing evolution than Darwinian evolution does.

      You are absolutely right. That is why I made no such assertion. I simply pointed out that being able to manipulate genes proves that genetic manipulation is possible. Let me say again, I think ID as it is being pushed by the religious right is garbage. But that does not change the fact that intelligent tinkering with genomes is possible and may have occurred. To say this does not make me a zealot, merely a realist.

      As for simulations of artificial life and the demonstration of spontaneous creation of new genes through random mutation: We certainly don't understand fully how genes are expressed in complex cells, let alone multicelllar organisms, and until we do the accelerated simulation of evolution is not really possible.

      Again, you make my point for me, Thank you. We cannot, at this time, prove that random chance mutation can produce working genes. Not in the lab, not in computer simulations. This is the major weakness of evolution as a theory. Notice, I never said it was wrong. I just said that we can't prove it to be possible, let alone prove that it was, in fact, the mechanism providing genetic diversity. I agree, it probably was. But it is not yet demonstrated.

      However, assuming the next few generations of scientists don't have their analytical faculties damaged by intelligent design zealots or their research funding politically denied by similar fundamentalist religious zealots in political office, the days where you can make idiotic statements like the quote above are numbered.

      I agree fully. I think, however, that to overreact, as you have done by calling my statements idiotic, is also a bad thing. Open-mindedness is important. ID zealots are pushing a political agenda, no question about it. But to insist that one must not criticize or point out weaknesses of evolution because of the ID zealots is harmful as well. There are other scientific alternatives.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    61. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      I was going to let this one go, but I can't, I just can't.

      Heck, even the simplest cells we can study are the product of billions of years of evolution (Can you prove this? Phylomon) ...because anything more primitive probably has been completely obliterated through obsolence.

      In this statement you are arguing from your assumptions. Since you start with the assumption that evolution has produced everything, you argue that evolution is too complex to understand easily. This, then, explains the lack of success in reproducing this part of evolution in the lab or computer. This is EXACTLY the same type of argument that the ID supporters make. They start from the assumption that God created everything and then argue that anything that can't be easily explained must be proof of God's existence. Both arguments are fallacies in this context. I am only disagreeing with the way you argue this point, not the validity of your assessment.

      Please understand that I am enjoying this discussion. I hope you are, too. I do not intend to insult your beliefs or intelligence. If I've done so, please accept my apologies.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    62. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ppanon · · Score: 1
      Heck, even the simplest cells we can study are the product of billions of years of evolution
      Can you prove this?

      No more than I can prove evolution, because my background and field of knowledge is not in paleozoology, but I maybe can make a reasonable case. Apart for organisms found in deep ocean thermal trenches, nearly all organisms around today have evolved to live in an oxygen rich environment. Such an environment is very different from the primitive environment in which life must have first evolved (whether here or off-planet) since a molecular oxygen-rich atmosphere and sea is the product of eons of plant oxygen-producing activity. As far as I know, with the exception of the aforementioned deep-trench life, the few anaerobic bacteria that still exist tend to be involved in the decomposition of other organic matter.

      As I remember it, part of the huge excitement in the finding of life around thermal vents decades ago was because it was expected that such life would provide a peek into early earth biology because it involved an anaerobic thermal cycle instead of a solar/oxygen based cycle. However, even the most primitive single-celled deep trench life found so far still exhibits fairly complex genetic material.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    63. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Up until the point where you called me an idiot I was enjoying what you said.
      Nah I didn't call you an idiot, I said the statement was idiotic. Even the smartest people have blind spots and make idiotic statements some of the time. If Einstein did it (and he certainly was no idiot), you, I and anyone else can certainly make the occasional idiotic statement without being considered an idiot. While such statements are more likely to be made while distracted by members of the opposite sex, that is neither a necessary nor sufficient condition.

      So how do you feel about what I say in this post?

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    64. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      No more than I can prove evolution, because my background and field of knowledge is not in paleozoology, but I maybe can make a reasonable case.

      Exactly. And it is a very reasonable case. I believe that even someone whose background is paleozoology could not prove it. They might be able to make an even more reasonable case. The history of science is littered with reasonable cases that later turned out to be incomplete or just not true. They were reasonable, but they failed when tested. Yes, I know, evolution has not failed any major test so far, but the big test, recreation of the process in lab or computer simulation has not been completed yet either.

      However, even the most primitive single-celled deep trench life found so far still exhibits fairly complex genetic material.

      A fact that was not predicted by Darwinian evolution. This doesn't invalidate evolution, but it does point out another weakness.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    65. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      Nah I didn't call you an idiot, I said the statement was idiotic.

      Yeah, I was baiting you a little to see if you would call me on it. I read your other post and it is interesting. Certainly speculative, but who's to say no? I've heard some speculation about periodicity in mass extinctions. But, as always, is it falsifiable? We'll know in a 100 million years or so.

      As I've said in other posts, my favorite speculation about panspermia involves the creation of a library of useful genes, installed into hardy bacteria with some viruses to shuffle things around and launched into the cosmos. Once the bacteria established a beach-head on a likely planet, the shuffling of genes would generate complexity that would look a lot like !evolution!. Any intelligent descendants would be hard pressed to find proof one way or the other.

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    66. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ppanon · · Score: 1

      But, as always, is it falsifiable? We'll know in a 100 million years or so.

      Maybe so, and maybe a lot sooner. I seem to remember that it's been more than that time since the last major extinction and that we're sort of overdue for another major asteroid impact. So maybe our hypothetical evolution punctuators are hanging out in the Oort cloud to see what happens with the human race. While they would spend most of their time in relativistic transit between the stars, they would probably be willing to spend a few hundred thousand years to study yet another developing civilization.

      Suppose that Susan Blackmore is correct and that immitation and memetic evolutionary pressures are are the source of our big brains and intelligence. If that is a common path to evolving intelligence, then the macroscale effects of memetic competition (i.e. religion as a precursor to large-scale organization and civilization, and war), could also be common stages that intelligent species must work their way through.

      A species that reaches easily available genetic manipulation, biological or nuclear warfare, must either develop a way to control the externally violent aspects of memetic competition or wipe themselves out. Any attempt to interfere with that process would probably be counter productive and just redirect the subject's anger against the external factor until it was wiped out. And then the subject would turn back to self destruction. Human history, in particular 20th century history, is ripe with examples of such behaviour and would provide a strong warning to intelligence farmers, even if such behaviour isn't a typical response in all developing civilizations.

      Think of the human race as a very bright man-child with the intelligence to create a gun or a grenade but the impulsive emotional reactions of an 8-year old. If it can manage to live long enough for its emotional development to catch up to its intellectual development, then it will be a terrific addition to civilization. But if it kills itself off, well, you clean up the mess and see if its siblings will fare any better. But you don't go poking your head up asking for it to get blown up by saying "You know, you really need to grow up or you're going to hurt something with that thing". If you prompt the candidate species to start a shooting war, you may very well need to wipe them out, or at least lobotomize them and wipe out the very faculties that may make them an interesting addition to a galactic civilization.

      So, if we manage to figure out how to design a memetic framework that prevents us from going at eachother's throats physically, and convince the rest of the world to adopt that framework, then there may be some hope of near term contact, assuming the existence of alien intelligence farmers, or long term contact if we survive long enough to become intelligence farmers ourselves. Otherwise our best hope for species survival is the establishment of extraplanetary colonies that would survive an earth-wide extinction of humanity. Personally, I would feel happier if we could pull off Plan A because my odds of surviving in Plan B are pretty low.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    67. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by phylomon · · Score: 1

      So, if we manage to figure out how to design a memetic framework that prevents us from going at eachother's throats physically, and convince the rest of the world to adopt that framework, then there may be some hope of near term contact

      I'm guessing peace through superior firepower wouldn't fit the bill, eh? Honestly, I don't see much hope for this type of advance. The human race is violent and almost all attempts so far to meet aggression with peace have ended in disaster for the peaceful side. Alien intelligence farmers or not, I think we are pretty much stuck with the memes we carry now. Whatever the next step up on the evolutionary (or memetic) ladder** is, isolation would seem to be needed for it to gestate. With the "global village" we live in now, extraplanetary colonies would seem, to me, to be necessary before any serious "advance" could be made, either at the genetic or memetic level.

      **I know, teleological, but go with me on it

      --
      My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
    68. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by ppanon · · Score: 1
      So, if we manage to figure out how to design a memetic framework that prevents us from going at eachother's throats physically, and convince the rest of the world to adopt that framework, then there may be some hope of near term contact
      I'm guessing peace through superior firepower wouldn't fit the bill, eh?
      When the ability to tailor a virus or bacterium that attacks only one ethnic segment is developed and becomes widely known and available, if the world remains as it is today then it's purely a matter of time before it gets used. Mutually Assured Destruction only works when you are dealing with sane, rational people. Religious fanatics are neither. Neither are people who have been downtrodden and exploited for generations (for example, blacks in South Africa).

      Honestly, I don't see much hope for this type of advance.
      Then we're all walking dead men. And frankly the global realization of that fact is the only thing that's likely to cause the change that's necessary. If we're lucky we'll get a big enough scare that doesn't wipe us off the face of the map as a species. i.e. We need a western government to say that a 100% fatal virus gene tailored to attack a racial strain has been developed as a proof that it is possible to do so for all major racial subgroups, and that it is estimated that the techniques for doing so can easily be redeveloped based on the open literature available. Given what we've learned about the human genome an gene expression in the last 10 years, I expect that development of such a disease will probably happen in a black lab sometime in the next 10 to 20 years. If we're lucky it will be admitted as above instead of used as the pressure of "superior firepower". The latter insures our extinction.

      Actually a third alternative is that susceptibility to religious fanaticism is due to a set of traceable genetic traits and that a tailored virus could be used to purge that from the gene pool. However the collateral damage would be tremendous - probably more than our current civilization could stand without collapsing - and we might also purge a critical part of our organizational or creative abilities from the gene pool as a result. It's an absolute last resort and a person who did this would probably also die since to take that radical a step would require a certain level of fanaticism and dedication to a meme.

      Alien intelligence farmers or not, I think we are pretty much stuck with the memes we carry now.
      If we have the hubris to believe that we can take control of genetic evolution, why not believe that we can take control of memetic evolution instead of letting the memes rule us? The latter seems a lot easier and a lot more accessible to everyone. All you need is a rational brain, an understanding of human psychology, memetics, and game theory, and an ability to communicate your results. I think we'll have the tools to engineer and spread new memes (if we don't already have them) before we'll have the biological tools to tailor viruses to attack genetic subgroups. All we need is the realization that it's not just important, but vital to our species' survival.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    69. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > So you won't hire people who believe in a deity, then?

      That's not what he said. He said he wouldn't hire people who think that a 2000+ year old book written by ignorant nomads describing one of many diety's actions describes "science."

    70. Re:Kansas welcoms new professor of Cryptozoology by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > let's hope people from Kansas don't become teachers in the real world

      Hope alone gets you nothing. You have to act to get real results. NUKE KANSAS NOW!!!

  9. You Forgot to Mention the California Class Action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    detailed at Washingtonpost.com's Security fix blog.:

    From the article: "A class-action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of California consumers who may have been harmed by anti-piracy software installed by some Sony music CDs. A second, nationwide class-action lawsuit is expected to be filed against Sony in a New York court on Wednesday seeking relief for all U.S. consumers who have purchased any of the 20 music CDs in question.

    The suit alleges that Sony's software violates at least three California statutes, including the "Consumer Legal Remedies Act," which governs unfair and/or deceptive trade acts; and the "Consumer Protection against Computer Spyware Act," which prohibits -- among other things -- software that takes control over the user's computer or misrepresents the user's ability or right to uninstall the program. The suit also alleges that Sony's actions violate the California Unfair Competition law, which allows public prosecutors and private citizens to file lawsuits to protect businesses and consumers from unfair business practice."


    The Post also has a PDF of the California filing and suggests another nationwide class action will be filed in New York shortly.

  10. Score one for Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  11. Either way they win... by tetrahedrassface · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sony may have a black eye over this, but in the end they are gonna win. In fact all the big media conflagrations are going to win.. Its not because their music is better, its because the minute they hear something open and interesting they just copy it, change it around and feed it to the million of idiots paying for their antiquated system of development (read theft). They have been stealing IP (intellectual property) for so long,that they feel they can do anything. Well not only *can* but *will*... Thats the reason you don't hear anything new out there, and the reason the song mills of Nashville, LA, and New York are busier than ever. Busy churning out shit.. Why should they reward creativity that does not fit in with their designs on control? They don't have to because they can clone any sound and any look. They not only can they do.. Thats why most of the great music is dead. They don't really need DRM, they already have a version of it far superior.. that being total A&R control.. They want minions of slave musicians.. and they have it. If i sound embittered it because I am, but not for the most obvious reasons. although they all are valid/

    1. Re:Either way they win... by tetrahedrassface · · Score: 1

      Okay so thats flamebait.. sorry for telling the truth.. I know an 80 year old dude who wrote for sun records.. He lives in a trailer, and wrote 3 #1 hits... /shrug/ /me moves on

    2. Re:Either way they win... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      bear in mind that 'shit' makes a lot of money.
      Just because you decide not to like it, doesn't mean nobody else likes it.

      I would think we have had enough of people like you who automatically thinks that everyone like the same things as you do. Hell, there are probably whole Genres of music you refuse to listen to becasause its 'lame'.

      If people making music wouldn't sign the contracts, the contracts would be changed. Plus, producing your own music is damn cheap these days.

      GO Away.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Either way they win... by tetrahedrassface · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anyone had to like what i like..
      Thats not the point of this whole thread
      The point is the music industry gets it coming and going, and they have a cabal..
      Regardless of genre.
      Im not going anywhere..
      Peace

    4. Re:Either way they win... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      "In fact all the big media conflagrations are going to win.. "


      That word does not mean what you think it means.
    5. Re:Either way they win... by DrXym · · Score: 1
      You say that, but Sony is making vast gobs of money. Why? If you look at their products, they're the usual high quality (and somewhat expensive) kit they've always been. So what's putting people off? I suggest that its DRM and proprietary formats.

      I'll illustrate with a couple of examples from my own experience. I own a widescreen Sony TV and I want to get a DVD player. Do I:

      1. Buy a Sony DVD player where region coding is extremely hard if not possible to remove? If it is possible to remove it might involve cutting circuits or soldering.
      2. Buy a Philips DVD player where I can enter a code from the remote control and it will play anything? Oh and the DVD player plays DIVX discs too.

      Oops. Sony lost a sale there. Okay. I want to buy a digital camera, and competing brands all have models that I would like to buy. The decision boils down to memory storage format. Do I:

      1. Buy Sony, where there are at least 4 different versions of "memory stick" and each seems conspicuously more expensive than the equivalent storage in other formats? Oh and memory stick is used virtually exclusively in Sony products. Oh and some memory sticks are different from other ones and have DRM built-in. Oh and since they're barely used by anyone else don't expect to be able to reused them in other ways.
      2. Buy any other model. Memory formats are still confusing, but XD, SD, & CF cards are significantly cheaper, are not used exclusively by one vendor, there are more brands of each kind and there seems to be a better chance that I can share the card with my PDA, music player or whatever.
      Hmmm.

      I want to buy a personal music player. Do I:

      1. Buy a Sony player which looks nice, but is so fucked up that I must run their software and convert MP3 songs first to ATRAC3 before downloading them on the player.
      2. Buy a more modern Sony player which doesn't have this requirement but is still so fucked up that it takes an age to transfer files and the software is so shit that it is next to useless.
      3. Buy an iPod or virtually any other device. The iPod even offers easy software for managing collections, burning, transfer and access to an online store where I can buy music.

      Why I'd buy the Sony of course! Just as soon as a piece of my brain had been removed.

      I want to buy a music CD which installs spyware onto my machine which is impossible to remove and might seriously damage my OS or require a reinstall if I try. Do I:

      1. Buy the CD, knowing that Sony is doing god knows what everytime I'm running my computer and there is a good possibility that my computer might fall and never get up if I so much as touch the internals, such as by installing a service pack, or Norton Utilities, or any other software that might want to poke around down there.
      2. Boycott Sony (and the band) and buy another CD.
      3. Boycott Sony and pirate the CD.

      Boy, that's a tough one.

      Sony is losing money hand over fist and I attribute most of this to their insistence on proprietary formats and DRM when it makes no sense. People aren't stupid and if they're faced with two comparable products, one costing a premium and laced with crippleware and one which isn't, it isn't hard to figure out which one they'll choose.

    6. Re:Either way they win... by tetrahedrassface · · Score: 1

      Sorry for the delayed reply. But yeah. I hope they do lose big time on this.. The real idea would be for folks to boycott Sony cd's altogether for a while to make them realy see the writing on the wall. All of these proprietary formats are a lock in, and all the vendors know that.. thats why they are proprietary. I hope and pray you are correct, and it was nice meeting ya. :)

  12. Sony DRM to be detected by antivirus programs by tehanu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    On related news about the Sony DRM,

    Antivirus companies are going to start detecting it as harmful software:

    http://news.com.com/Antivirus+firms+target+Sony+co py+protection/2100-1029_3-5942265.html

    The article also has claims from CA that the DRM damages the computer's ability to make rips of ANY CDs including non-copyrighted CDs.

    According to Computer Associates, the Sony software makes itself a default media player on a computer after it is installed. The software then reports back the user's Internet address and identifies which CDs are played on that computer. Intentionally or not, the software also seems to damage a computer's ability to "rip" clean copies of MP3s from non-copy protected CDs, the security company said. "It will effectively insert pseudo-random noise into a file so that it becomes less listenable," said Sam Curry, a Computer Associates vice president. "What's disturbing about this is the lack of notice, the lack of consent, and the lack of an easy removal tool."

    And the original patch has been replaced by one one third of the size. Mark Russinovich posted new info on the (smaller) patch on his blog showing it causes BSODs in Windows.

    http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.j html?articleID=173601122

    1. Re:Sony DRM to be detected by antivirus programs by tehanu · · Score: 1

      Oh, BTW, the paragraph in the middle starting "According to Computer Associates" is supposed to be a direct quote from the article. Must have made a HTML error.

    2. Re:Sony DRM to be detected by antivirus programs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just installed the smaller patches onto my machine. No BSOD, but I do feel very icky.

      So why again, do I give Sony a hand jo... er... download an activex control to submit my second part of the request for uninstall the DRM rootkit again?

  13. Commercials? by aerthling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If they do start including commercials in downloadable TV, what's to stop people editing them out?

    1. Re:Commercials? by bodrell · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If they do start including commercials in downloadable TV, what's to stop people editing them out?

      I think you're missing the point. These are commercials in a file that you pay for, that you download with your own bandwidth. Why should you have to tediously edit-out commercials from a program you already paid for? By a similar rationale, why should you have to sit through commercials in a movie theatre, after paying $8 for admission and who knows how much for concessions?

      People really need to realize that their attention, and their personal information, are very valuable to marketers. It's not really a bargain to get a free T-shirt in exchange for signing up for a credit card. Your name, address, income, etc. are worth a lot of money to advertising folks. The T-shirt, if you wear it, is free advertising for them. Every second you watch a commercial, it's equivalent to giving money to the "sponsor." But people don't generally calculate the value of intangibles such as their time and attention. Any marketing students or professionals out there know the exact figure, the amount each TV viewer's time is worth to the people buying ads? In pennies per second? For Homer Simpson, for example? (White male, 35 years old, nuclear technician, wife and three kids.) If you have to download and (theoretically) watch the ads, they should be free, like broadcast TV. Otherwise you're paying for them twice.

      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    2. Re:Commercials? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incorrect. First, you can rewatch, store, and share downloaded TV episodes. Second, the advertising probably already subsidizes the cost of the download. Just because it doesn't cover the cost entirely doesn't mean there isn't a discount for having it.

      What people don't understand about DVD releases is that they are so cheap because studios have already paid off the principle for producing the show through TV advertising dollars. Any gains from DVD sales is pure profit. If you cut out the advertising dollars from the TV broadcast you need to increase the price of the packaged release to offset the production costs.

      And given the kind of viewership some of these shows get on TV I imagine the advertising income is not insignificant.

    3. Re:Commercials? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your average American's time is valued at $1/hr for prime time network shows.

      dom

    4. Re:Commercials? by igb · · Score: 1

      I take it you object to, and try to avoid, adverts in newspapers and magazines? The same argument applies: you've paid for the publication, so why should you look at adverts?

      ian

    5. Re:Commercials? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homer's 35? I would've guessed 45 or 50.

    6. Re:Commercials? by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      Don't know about the OP, but hell yeah, I do. I frequently rip the ads out of my magazines, when I can do so without messing up the rest.

      But print ads are a lot less annoying than TV ads. You can skip past them easily. With TV, you're stuck... unless of course you've got something like a Tivo. Which I do. :)

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    7. Re:Commercials? by bodrell · · Score: 1
      Homer's 35? I would've guessed 45 or 50.

      Well, he certainly doesn't take care of himself, does he?

      I was specifically thinking of the episode where Lisa is complaining that as a kid, she gets paid no attention. And Grampa complained of the same problem, but as a result of being elderly. Then Homer walks in the kitchen, proclaims "I'm a white male, aged 18-35 years old--everyone listens to me, no matter how stupid my ideas are." Then he proceeds to eat from a can marked "Nuts and Gum: Together at Last."

      If Homer knocked-up Marge around senior year of high-school, and Bart is nine, then Homer should actually be closer to 30 (!) If so, I really hope I age more gracefully than Homer.

      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    8. Re:Commercials? by bodrell · · Score: 1
      I take it you object to, and try to avoid, adverts in newspapers and magazines? The same argument applies: you've paid for the publication, so why should you look at adverts?

      I realize the ads subsidize my subscription, but I do try to avoid them. Adbusters magazine has no real ads (just spoof ads), and consequently costs much more than BLENDER magazine, which is roughly 25-50% ads. What really ticks me off is the movie ads, because you're a captive audience, can't press a mute button, and can't easily turn away from the screen. And as I mentioned earlier, you've already paid a premium to see the movie.

      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
  14. Hey, wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm confused. Are most Americans crazy anti-science religious zealots or not? The "voting off" (meaning the majority of people made a choice) of a bunch of loons who approved a stupid anti-science agenda in schools suggests not. Damn! This spoils so many good jokes.

    1. Re:Hey, wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad to see that they have some sense.

      The power to teach "alternate theories" in science class opens the path to teaching "alternate theories" in Sunday school.

    2. Re:Hey, wait a minute by rdoger6424 · · Score: 1

      No. Just the people in the south, great plains, and portions of Pennsylvania (All except Lancaster, Alleghenny, and greater Philly)

      --
      "Hello 911? I just tried to toast some bread, and the toaster grew an arm and stabbed me in the face!"
    3. Re:Hey, wait a minute by bodrell · · Score: 2, Informative
      I'm confused. Are most Americans crazy anti-science religious zealots or not?

      A good portion of the voting Americans are crazy anti-science religious zealots, who are well-organized, and write lots of letters to Congressmen. How do you think Bush got elected? Well, a good portion of the Bush electorate are simply rich people who want to keep their tax breaks and ability to pollute without repercussion (specifically his homies in Texas--I'm looking at you, ALCOA).

      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    4. Re:Hey, wait a minute by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
      Bush got elected because he ran against power hungry loonys.

      Many current boards of education are there because (a) they're the only ones who cared enough to run, or (b) they were elected to oust the sort of people who want to show first graders how to use condoms. "Public" schools have become a battleground for people who want to warp everybody's children their way. Everyone loses.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    5. Re:Hey, wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > A good portion of the voting Americans are crazy anti-science religious zealots, who are well-organized, and write lots of letters to Congressmen.

      babelfish "i r teh stoopid" to "English" Translation -> Um, well, a bunch of dumb illiterate evolutionists just got their ass whooped by some Intelligently designed voters who can at least write...

      ...oops. Who's stupid again?! I. r. teh . evolutionuts. Must..'member. to.think. before..I. types.......whew!!

    6. Re:Hey, wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Or, could it be (just maybe!) that Bush got re-elected because Kerry was actually a WORSE choice? Let me see, what was Kerry's platform.... oh yeah, it was "I'd do pretty much the same things as Bush did, only different, and in the future I'll do pretty much the same as Bush, only better and faster."

      The so called "rush to war" was what, like a year long? Bush did everything but wear a neon sign that said, "Saddam, we're going to invade your country if you don't do exactly what we say."

    7. Re:Hey, wait a minute by bodrell · · Score: 1
      > A good portion of the voting Americans are crazy anti-science religious zealots, who are well-organized, and write lots of letters to Congressmen.

      babelfish "i r teh stoopid" to "English" Translation -> Um, well, a bunch of dumb illiterate evolutionists just got their ass whooped by some Intelligently designed voters who can at least write...

      ...oops. Who's stupid again?! I. r. teh . evolutionuts. Must..'member. to.think. before..I. types.......whew!!

      I said the religious zealots are organized and write letters, but you've pretty succinctly proven that the ability to write is no indication of intelligence.
      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    8. Re:Hey, wait a minute by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      AC's confusion is because these election results seem to say the opposite: ID proponents were voted out. Meanwhile, I read a poll the other day that showed a majority of Americans believing in some form of ID, though for many of them it was of a "God's hand guided evolution" form.

      So why wasn't that reflected in the election? My guess -- and it's pure speculation -- is that only when it becomes a campaign issue, as in this case, does it get examined seriously by the average voter. Whereas, when those ID proponents first got voted in, they probably didn't campaign openly on an ID platform (though I'm sure they always had it in mind), but rather on innocuous-sounding non-issues like "bringing values back to our schools", or some such rot.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  15. Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Work+Account · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am so sick of this.

    I am also a True Believer and attend a worship service every Sunday.

    That said, ID is NOT true science. It is simply a score of men who wish to get nonsense into our textbooks.

    We MUST stop ID!

    --

    If you "get" pointers add me as a friend (116)!
  16. The big question... by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is if Sony practices what they preach?? If I start sharing $SYS$Daredevil.AVI and $SYS$AllMetalicaSongs.mp3.zip, will their network monitoring tools not notice it? Seeing what they have done with their little rootkit, that seems only logical for them..

    --

    What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    1. Re:The big question... by Trepalium · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or perhaps more usefully, $SYS$EverquestCheats.exe. It's a pity that cheaters are using this to target WoW, when they should be targetting Everquest. It'd be much more fun to pit the Sony departments against each other even more.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    2. Re:The big question... by DaveCar · · Score: 1

      Having just downloaded^Wbought, yes, bought, not downloaded at all, a Van Zant Brothers track it would surely be better all round if the Sony rootkit just stopped you from playing the VZB CD - _period_. Maybe it could prepend $SYS$ to the physical CD so that when your friends came round they wouldn't be able to see it and ridicule you mericlessly for buying such crap?

  17. Kudos to Golden by snitmo · · Score: 1

    Kudos to Bernard Golden for a well written article. It summarizes the situation well and gives several perspectives - historical one, that of Microsoft, that of State of Massachusetts. I am often dissapointed by blogs written by "technology experts", but I was impressed by Golden.

  18. Slashbackback? Slashslashback? meta-Slashback? by jeblucas · · Score: 1
    Intelligent design supporters ousted....In Pennsylvania. They made some pretty nice headway in Kansas, though. This seems like a rather ~focused~ Slashback if it can recall a story from May 2nd that ends well for the side of science and well-reasoned individuals, but ignore the story that got front page treatment earlier today.

    These ID guys are starting to scare me a little. It's one thing to learn this stuff at Bible Camp and what not, it's another to compel teachers to give it time in science class. Embarassing for us as a nation, really. Thanks, Kansas.

    --
    blarg.
    1. Re:Slashbackback? Slashslashback? meta-Slashback? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Well, I certainly can't wait for courses such Recognizing Evil Spirits in Medical Crises or How The Devil Can Make Your Engine Misfire. Now that we've got rid of all that nasty naturalism, we can finally get back to tearing down lightning rods that block Divine thunderbolts and teaching our children how to recognize witches. At last, the Enlightenment has ended. Bring back the Dark Ages!

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Slashbackback? Slashslashback? meta-Slashback? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not so sure why you say they're ignoring the story from earlier today. The main summary says "another school system's take on intelligent design," which is clearly in reference to the Kansas school board's decision that was written up earlier today. They're not ignoring that topic (not to mention that there's a 1800+ comment article that you're more than welcome to post on), they're simply mentioning how PA reacted to a similar decision.

  19. The penultimate oxymoron by saskboy · · Score: 1

    OpenDocument DRM, Intelligently Designed.

    I think the interest in Sony's rootkit methods will only grow as spyware writers begin to include a rootkit with their install routines, so that Spybot, MS Antispyware, and competitors will begin to have further trouble cleaning up customer's computers. Perhaps it's already started?

    And as a side note, today AVG detected my Adaware 1.06.exe file as containing a trojan downloader. I guess whichever site like Download.com that I got it from was less than trustworthy, or has Adaware gone to the dogs according to Grisoft.com?

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    1. Re:The penultimate oxymoron by Khyber · · Score: 1

      I haven't used AdAware since they started alowing crap to reinstall itself after removing it. Their active scanning SUCKS, and the only thing they had gong for them last I used them was the ability to unload the processes runnig (instead of rebooting) but now, Ad-aware just sucks. Best bet? Certainly not Microsoft AS seeing as it allows ISTSVC as a TRUSTED program.Uninstall anything ISTsvc and M$A$ allows an automatic reinstall.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    2. Re:The penultimate oxymoron by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      Most likely it's a false positive.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  20. Good for the Alabama part of PA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Pennsylvania is Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with Alabama in between" is the quote from James Carville and his joke is a pretty accurate portrayal of the state. It is good to see this garbage get quashed in an area like that. Maybe we can have some hope in this area for Kansas. This atheist is all for those Christians reveling in their salvation and even getting crazy in the public square, but keep your filthy mitts off of science class. Go sell crazy somewhere else, like comparative religions or macro economics.

    1. Re:Good for the Alabama part of PA by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 0

      Noooooooooo! Please no! Not macro economics!! It already has more than its share of true believers.

    2. Re:Good for the Alabama part of PA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh that's disturbing. I might possibly have an interview for a job at Penn State, which is smackdab in the middle of the state at the aptly-named town of State College.

    3. Re:Good for the Alabama part of PA by xero314 · · Score: 1

      State College is a small out post of civilizations. Don't stray past the city line, heck don't even go to close to the city line. Stay in the College grounds, which is pretty much all of State College and you should be relatively ok.

  21. Coral Cache of H5N1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  22. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by keraneuology · · Score: 5, Insightful
    seeking relief for all U.S. consumers who have purchased any of the 20 music CDs in question

    In other words, the lawyers are lining up to ease the pain of the affected consumers by securing a $2 off coupon for the next DRM'ed CD while collecting $12 million for themselves.

    --
    If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
  23. Possible outcome by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Funny

    Since the Avian flu video couldn't be purchased online because it sucks, and the DVD's can't be purchased because they have a rootkit, the State of Massachussets proposed to download an Open Document version of it. Luckily, this became available for all, including intelligent design proponents in Kansas who realized someone very evil had to design those viruses, because they couldn't just simply evolve. In related news, a new torrent file of the Avian Flu virus was distributed in Hong Kong, but a misunderstanding led to the government think that the distributor was actually committing bioterrorism, so they got him arrested. In his defense, he said: "the Flying Spaguetti Monster made me do it."

    1. Re:Possible outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice try, just put more imagination and maybe one day you could come with an ingenious, irrelevant post like many we have already had.

    2. Re:Possible outcome by Flying+Spaghetti+Mon · · Score: 0

      > In his defense, he said: "the Flying Spaguetti Monster made me do it."

      No, Midget, I did not.

      But I Can Touch You With My Noodly Appendage.

    3. Re:Possible outcome by MadMoses · · Score: 1

      Flying Spaguetti Monster

      Blasphemy! You shall have no other pasta before Spaghetti. Burn the heretic!

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
  24. Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1


    It is nice to know that some people in the US aren't so apathetic that they will pay attention, fight this ID crap, and actually win. Score one for Pennsylvania.


    If only the same thing could happen in Kansas (among others).


    Though, I expect this whole thing to get a lot worse before it gets better.

    1. Re:Win some, lose some. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the first time it happened in Kansas the conservatives got voted out. This time, however, the public seems more on the board's side because the creationists have succeeded in making the debate about open-mindedness (let's teach them everything!) versus close-mindedness (let's just teach them science). Before they tried to make the debate Jesus versus Darwin. The right is becoming more intelligent.

    2. Re:Win some, lose some. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1
      It's not like anyone from Kansas ever escapes the state, so we don't even have to worry about them entering our workforce.

      So Dorothy didn't make it?
      You're still in the woods,
      you're kept in the dark,
      you're out like a light...
      Sorry, Dorothy,
      You're still in Kansas
      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    3. Re:Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1
      The right is becoming more intelligent.
      Then perhaps we should let them learn all about ID ;)
    4. Re:Win some, lose some. by Clockwork+Apple · · Score: 1

      I'm from Kansas, we aint all hicks.

      Look at some of my posts regarding this kind of issue.

      I'm scared shitless that my daughter starts regular public school next year. Cant afford a private school and it wouldnt matter if I could. All the private schools in the area are run by bible thumpers of one kind or the other.

      That said, science teachers are going to hate having my lil girl in the class.

      I'm just saying, there are some thinking people here, we are already down, dont kick us too.

      C.

      --
      "Doctor, it's not the voices I hear in MY head, but the voices I hear in YOUR head that really frighten me."
    5. Re:Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1

      Humor aside (though you did give me a good chuckle, Dilbert is good) I can't really share your optimism just yet.

      What I've noticed in life is that these... people, seem to be far more organized and motivated than intelligent people. And they just don't stop when beaten (probably because they aren't aware of it).

      Plus, they get their word out far more quickly as they don't have to worry about those pesky fact things.

      I hope I'm wrong.

    6. Re:Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1
      That said, science teachers are going to hate having my lil girl in the class.
      Please, give her many, many, many hard questions for the "teacher" to answer. And then write something up for us. It'll be interesting to know what the teachers reactions are.

      *evil grin*

    7. Re:Win some, lose some. by SHP · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that anyone who believes in ID isn't thinking? How arrogant. There are MANY highly intelligent, highly educated people who do support ID. In anticipation of your next question...

      Michael Behe.

    8. Re:Win some, lose some. by Clockwork+Apple · · Score: 0, Troll

      There are a lot of lower middle class folks who vote republican (should know better) too, but I dont know what their problem is either.

      C.

      --
      "Doctor, it's not the voices I hear in MY head, but the voices I hear in YOUR head that really frighten me."
    9. Re:Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1
      There are MANY highly intelligent, highly educated people who do support ID.
      Who have failed time and time again to provide one single prediction. This being one of the requirements of science.

      Seems as though, if these people are as intelligent as you think them to be, that they would answer the one question that would begin to validate their claims.

    10. Re:Win some, lose some. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I'm scared shitless that my daughter starts regular public school next year. Cant afford a private school and it wouldnt matter if I could. All the private schools in the area are run by bible thumpers of one kind or the other.

      Well, imagine that. You seek refuge in a private school system run by Christians. Oh, the irony. The envy of the education system in America IS the private school system (run by religious denominations no less), and when they try to culture the public school system with some truth and knowledge, they resist it even more. Oh, somebody call 911 please. My side hurts from all the laughter...

    11. Re:Win some, lose some. by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1
      There are MANY highly intelligent, highly educated people who do support ID.

      I agree with that; ID seems to attract people with some level of education and intelligence. As with any other hypothesis, even if looks true to some, it cannot take it as fact until it has been tested an scrutinized, especially since most hypothesis end up being proven false. Most scientists will not take Michael Behe's word that ID is true. Strong, repeatable evidence that survives inspection by many eyes is needed to convice doubters. That's the process that basic concepts such as gravity, evolution, relativity, quantum mechanics, etc. went through, so don't expect ID to be granted any favors.

      --
      No data, no cry
    12. Re:Win some, lose some. by SHP · · Score: 1

      Thank you for a rare intelligent comment! I'm not asking for any favors. I just prefer not to see people who give credence to the likes of Michael Behe shot down in flames of brainless name calling and ridicule.

    13. Re:Win some, lose some. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1
      I agree with that; ID seems to attract people with some level of education and intelligence. As with any other hypothesis, even if looks true to some, it cannot take it as fact until it has been tested an scrutinized, especially since most hypothesis end up being proven false. Most scientists will not take Michael Behe's word that ID is true. Strong, repeatable evidence that survives inspection by many eyes is needed to convice doubters. That's the process that basic concepts such as gravity, evolution, relativity, quantum mechanics, etc. went through, so don't expect ID to be granted any favors.
      The proof of the existence of god through complexity dates back to Thomas Aquinas http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas. And it hasn't gotten much more sophisticated since then.

      So, the ID people are going to have to do better than re-hash 800 yr old already discarded arguments to get peoples attention.

      Please also note that by definition, ID does not fit the defintion of a scientific hypothesis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_hypothesis , because it cannot be tested (nor does it make any predictions).

      Anyone remember just two days ago, http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/11/0 7/1526216&tid=99&tid=14 the Vatican criticised these fundamentalist ideas. """ "The fundamentalists want to give a scientific meaning to words that had no scientific aim," """

      So, us doubters, got more than enough reasons to doubt. Way more than enough.

    14. Re:Win some, lose some. by Guuge · · Score: 1

      You're just nit picking. Obviously, if you have a creationist agenda then the most intelligent thing to do is support ID.

  25. Three Cheers For Dover by cannuck · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Glad to hear voters in Dover chucked all 8 school board members trying to force creationism into the public school system. I have been following the Dover case on the online newspapers from Dover - lots of allegations floating around about several of the board members having perjured themselves. Which would be par for the course.

  26. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Those obscene damage awards, while doing little for the consumers but lots for attorneys, do accomplish one important thing: deterrence. So it's a win-win. The lawyers get paid, and the people who bought the DRM-infected CDs don't have to come up with the money to hire a lawyer to sue.

    --
    I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
  27. You have liberated... by Grog6 · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... enough energy for your Entropy to equal infinity.

    This does NOT make YOU God, however.

    If the second coming ever happens, God is going to be so busy, with the troubles of his own flock, and of course, twits like you.

    Me, I'm hoping there's enough of my corpse left for the Valkiries to carry me back to Valhalla, to spend Eternity drinking and whoring with Thor and that bunch; I'm sure Heaven would be fucking boring.

    --
    Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    1. Re:You have liberated... by Scarletdown · · Score: 1
      I'm hoping there's enough of my corpse left for the Valkiries to carry me back to Valhalla, to spend Eternity drinking and whoring with Thor and that bunch; I'm sure Heaven would be fucking boring.
      Bah! I'm signed up to go to the Floating Island of Mandango instead. :D http://newgrounds.com/portal/view/72146
      --
      This space unintentionally left blank.
    2. Re:You have liberated... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Me, I'm hoping there's enough of my corpse left for the Valkiries [sic] to carry me back to Valhalla, to spend Eternity drinking and whoring with Thor and that bunch; I'm sure Heaven would be fucking boring.

      I don't know... those Asgard don't really seem to be a very exciting bunch. But they do have some really cool technology.

    3. Re:You have liberated... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me, I'm hoping there's enough of my corpse left for the Valkiries to carry me back to Valhalla, to spend Eternity drinking and whoring with Thor and that bunch; I'm sure Heaven would be fucking boring.

      But don't you think that after awhile in Valhalla it would be boring fucking?

    4. Re:You have liberated... by UglyMike · · Score: 1

      So, you'd rather become cannon fodder for Ragnarok than sit at the right hand side of the Almighty for ever, and ever, and ever..... OK, Ragnarok it is then!

    5. Re:You have liberated... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does one do at the right hand side of the Almighty?

      No, seriously. What's the popular conception of Heaven?

      I've heard of the 'clouds and harps' thing, and the 'oneness with God' thing. I've also heard of singing God's glory for eternity.

      I dunno. It seems a little weird, to be thinking and reasoning and to spend the eternity doing one thing. It sounds almost like being brainwashed into happiness. I know the language is loaded, but it's the closest equivalent I can think of.

      Is this really what Heaven is?

  28. Why all the fuss about bird flu? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's been around for a long time and kills people in Asia and elsewhere every year. I'm not usually a Bush basher, but I think this is obviously an attempt to get people talking about ANYTHING other than Libby, Rove, Cheney, and especially Iraq. Every day there are countless stories about the inevitable "pandemic" of bird flu just waiting for the right conditions and opportunities to spread to mainland USA and how we have such a short supply of vaccinations available. GIVE IT A FUCKING REST. Yes, it's a deadly disease and we should probably take some precautions, but it does not deserve the attention that it's been getting recently. Just the other day 9 senators voted AGAINST a bill specifically prohibiting torture, and that has barely gotten any press coverage.

  29. Microsoft at UMass by staticx0085 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I find it interesting that despite the Mass. government moving to the OpenDocument format, Microsoft chose my school, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, as a "Microsoft IT Showcase School."

    1. Re:Microsoft at UMass by geekoid · · Score: 1

      That's probably why they chose your school.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  30. Why is this flamebait? by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ID is NOT science, there fore it doesn't belong in a science class.

    I, for one, would like to thank Kansas for taking the first step that leads us to a new dark age!

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Why is this flamebait? by tomonti · · Score: 1

      Because the entire concept of ID is flamebait. :-)

  31. Congratulations Kansas by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 1

    I'd like to be the first to thank the citizens of Kansas for stepping up to the plate and speaking against the egregious mistake that the board made.

    1. Re:Congratulations Kansas by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 1

      LOL, oops. Next time I'll read the article first. Congratulations goes to Dover, PA. Hopefully Kansas will follow an educated lead?

    2. Re:Congratulations Kansas by delcielo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Don't worry. We'll get our chance in 2006. 4 of the 6 conservative board members who voted for this embarassement are up for re-election.

      I'll do my part, and I'm sure my fellow Kansans will help me in trying to earn back a bit of the credibility we just lost.

      --
      Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
  32. Comedy Gold by ndansmith · · Score: 1
    Oh, I get it, because they can't spell! Haha, now that is comedy!

    No wait, this is comedy: It should be "your," not "you're." Who is stoopid now?

  33. Actually... by tkrotchko · · Score: 4, Informative

    " NTSC is 720x480, not 640x480."

    Its neither of those resolutions.

    Take a look here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTSC#Technical_detail s

    and you'll see that while NTSC allows for up to 525 scan lines, only 480 are used due to their use for specific purposes (i.e. sync, vertical retrace)

    For the horizontal resolution, the limit is really how small the dots that can be made, but in practice, that amouts to 440 (http://members.aol.com/ajaynejr/vidres.htm).

    Thus, the maximum resolution of NTSC is 480x440.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Actually... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      From the article you linked:

      "For broadcasts the portion of a scan line that is visible can hold up to about 440 dots so a grid 480 high by 440 wide represents the maximum amount of picture detail possible."

      In other words, 440 x 480.

    2. Re:Actually... by michaelbuddy · · Score: 1, Funny

      Actually NTSC is 1080i, according to the Wikipedia article. That's becuase of course I just added that into the article myself to fit the answer I wanted to be true. Wikipedia rules!

      --

      ...::----::...

      I am in no way affiliated with this sig.

    3. Re:Actually... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 2, Informative

      NTSC is usually sampled at 720x480, probably to get good representation of color, which is modulated around 3.579 MHz. The higher-than-necessary sampling rate also reduces "jaggies". If the pixels are to be square, the image must be downsampled to 640x480 to fit a 4x3 aspect ratio display. The actual available information cannot exceed 2x(color carrier)/(horizontal scan frequency)=454. A portion of that 454 must be sacrificed to horizontal retrace. In practice, high luminance frequencies interfere with color information, so the useful resolution is even lower.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    4. Re:Actually... by jelle · · Score: 4, Informative

      "but in practice, that amouts to 440"

      I didn't believe that when I read it, and was ready to call it bull.

      But I looked up the facts, and found that the broadcast NTSC luminance bandwidth is 4.2Mhz even when using a comb filter, and the active time of a single line is 52.66 of 63.555 s, resulting in:

      2*4.2e6/525/29.97*52.66/63.555 = 442.35 active pixels per line.

      Wow.

      Directly at the camera/dvd player, and using S-Video, that is usually more though. You're just not looking at all the pixels on a normal TV monitor, plus you're making them more fuzzy if you hook it up using a simple composite cable...

      But when your are receiving analog TV signals from air or cable, and displaying on your big glass tube, only 442 pixels is what you get...

      Ugh.

      By the way, 2*5e6/525/29.97 = 636, so even from a 5Mhz luminance signal and no inactive pixels, you don't get to 640 individual pixels.

      Now, of course, when sampling close to the Nyquist-Shannon frequency, you get aliasing problems, so that should explain why we're digitizing analog video into more pixels than what the analog source can contain.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    5. Re:Actually... by radarsat1 · · Score: 1

      Cool! Thanks for the breakdown.
      Now I know why it is that when I compress a video down to a crappy resolution to fit it on a VCD it still looks pretty much okay when I watch it on a television.
      Nice.

    6. Re:Actually... by inio · · Score: 1

      > Thus, the maximum resolution of NTSC is 480x440.

      Which means if apple used 480x480 (stretched) MPEG-4 video (which the iPod supports at up to 2.5mbps) we would be getting full NTSC quality (plus a tiny bit).

      For reference, TiVo Basic/Medium/High is 320x240 and Best is 480x480.

    7. Re:Actually... by LittleBigLui · · Score: 1

      Of course anyone with half a brain who wants to get reliable information from wikipedia would at least check the history and discussion pages on the topic as well. Depending on HOW reliable they want the info to be they might additionally just-fucking-google-it or even (gasp!) read a book.

      --
      Free as in mason.
    8. Re:Actually... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      and you'll see that while NTSC allows for up to 525 scan lines, only 480 are used due to their use for specific purposes (i.e. sync, vertical retrace)

      That should be 486, you are correct about why it is less then the full 525 scanlines.

      For the horizontal resolution, the limit is really how small the dots that can be made, but in practice, that amouts to 440

      That depends a lot on what you are using for transfering the signal between devices. On a 'crappy' composite connection you are lucky to get anything beyond 360 horizontal pixels. y/c (s-video) hets you closer to those 440 pixels you mention, and that is indeed a practical limit to horizontal resolution in many low-end video display systems. With proper component video cabling, you can get a lot closer to the 'native' resolution of 711x486.

    9. Re:Actually... by BarryNorton · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification - why you've not been modded up, I've no idea... Perhaps other people can read?!?

    10. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember that it is an interlaced signal too, not progressive so the effective vertical resolution is only about 0.6 of the number of lines (I can't remember the experiment details that lead to this conclusion so your 480 lines actually can be matched by a 288 line progressive display.

    11. Re:Actually... by canavan · · Score: 1

      I think you're missing a factor of two in there. 1 Hz of bandwidth for the analog signal is equivalent to a full sine swing of the signal, e.g. from 0 to 1 to -1 and back to 0, which can be represented in digital as a black and a white pixel. The horizontal resolution of analog video is usually measured in "lines", but they actually mean pairs of lines. S-Video for example has about 400 of thoes lines of resolution, however, this is measured 'per picture height', i.e. one could fit 400/3*4 = 532 of those line pairs in a complete horizontal line (for a 4:3 acpect ratio). Also, since this is analog, one usually accepts that the signal is 3db or so down from the full swing (don't know the exact number), so one can in fact get away with a little less than two times the pixels as analog line pairs.

      Digital Video is something entirely different with 720 pixels horizontally for both NTSC and PAL derived standards. Note that those pixels are non-square, there's an alternative standard which is not commonly used in broadcast with square pixels, which is indeed 640x480 for NTSC (or to be more precise 480i).

    12. Re:Actually... by CyricZ · · Score: 1

      That, and it is common knowledge after all.

      --
      Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    13. Re:Actually... by Dayta · · Score: 1

      Let's correct a few errors here:

      720 comes from the conversion of PAL and NTSC formats to one digital format.
      PAL has the highest bandwidth of 5.5MHz, so using nyquist, to sample that you need to sample at 5.5*2.2=12.1Mhz (2.2 to account for filter roll off). The closest multiple of NTSC and PAL frequencies to accomodate 12.1 is 13.5MHz.

      NTSC has the longest active line of 53.333us. Sampling that time at 13.5MHz means taking samples lasting for 1/13.5e6. There are
      53.555e-6/(1/13.5e6) = 720.

      This means that digital video has the bandwidth to cope with PAL and the resolution to catch all of the NTSC's active line.

      --
      640x480 comes from the fact that there are approximately 480 vertical lines used to show an NTSC picture. If you're going to use 1 pixel to represent a line's height then for a 4:3 picture, you get (480/3)*4 pixels horizontally.

      --
      To say that NTSC has a maximum resolution of 480x440 is missing the point. We're talking about computers here, that estimation is based on how TVs display things. Whether or not it's true that a TV can display less detail horizontally than it can vertically (despite being wider), that doesn't change the resolution of the video. To correctly sample the video and get it on a computer at full resolution, you at the very least need a 4:3 ratio of pixels for a 4:3 transmission!

      However this brings me on to the point of this thread. Apple's resolution is fine, since it's only supposed to do one of two things. a) show on an iPod in its native resolution. b) Be shown on a TV. Sure, it's not going to look fantastic, but neither do video recordings. For TV playback the resolution is acceptable.

      At home, I use a digital TV receiver to record TV onto my computer without recompressing it. However, since that only has a resolution of 720x576, I still have to blow it up to fit it on my computer screens. For some TV shows it looks great, for others it looks lousy. It's a simple fact that technology has outpaced broadcasting in the sense that even 1080i video isn't going to trouble most computer screens of the future and in many cases, the present.

    14. Re:Actually... by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

      But isn't NTSC interlaced, updating alternate lines in each frame?

      So the effective resolution is 440 x 240.

    15. Re:Actually... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You shouldn't have been so surprised at how low TV resolution actually is. Just think about how horriffic TV is for displaying text. More than a few dozen lines and a few dozen characters per line rapidly turns to illegible fuzz. Low resolution is exactly why they *always* use proportional fonts for TV, so that most letters can be reduced to fewer pixel columns.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    16. Re:Actually... by jelle · · Score: 1

      I have the factor of two in there, it's the first number on the first calculation.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    17. Re:Actually... by jelle · · Score: 1

      You are the one with errors. Follow the links in my original posting for full explanations. Basically, you're forgetting about the chrominance bands in the space between channels, and the resulting luminance bandwidth for broadcast/cable TV.

      That luminance bandwidth is the restricting factor of how many alternating black and white pixels you can _see_ on the tube of your TV.

      It all has to do with the NTSC modulation. It has nothing to do with the CCIR656/601 standards for digital video, nor with the square pixels of your computer monitor.

      If you grab from your TV antenna or cable signal, NTSC is your input, and it's luminance bandwidth limits the horizontal resolution. Oversampling does not increase the resolution.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    18. Re:Actually... by jelle · · Score: 1

      Right, try watching a video with alternating black and white lines on a TV monitor. It will not show horizontal lines, but it will blink at 59.94Hz... Very annoying but interesting.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    19. Re:Actually... by Dayta · · Score: 1

      Sorry I mistook some of the numbers needed for the calculation and your calculations are correct (forgot the size of the vestigal side band).
      However, In my explanation I wasn't trying to say that oversampling or square/non square pixels improved the situation. What I was trying to say is that if you are going to sample each signal at its native resolution then show it on a computer, you're not going to get the right aspect picture. Best to oversample it to start with than stretch it later.
      I was also trying to say that Apple's choice of resolution isn't a bad one for TVs and I believe that still to be true.
      Cheers.

  34. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 0

    ( This was modded as 'flamebait' for about 5 minutes, then became 'insightful'. Who knows what it will be when you read this. )
    It is hardly flamebait when one of the guys in *their* camp admits that his own people are wrong.

  35. Commercials by porkface · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Heavens! Commercials you say?

    You want hi-res Hollywood quality (Lost) television on the cheap with no advertisements? Come on.

    To say a service sucks, go ahead and cite things like low-resolution, klunky DRM, limited playback options, platform dependence, or anything like that. But don't complain that their either charging for it or showing ads.

    1. Re:Commercials by iamsure · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "But don't complain that their either charging for it or showing ads."

      Thats the key - they are doing *both*. Charging for it, AND showing ads. Or more precisely, making you pay to download content that includes an ad.

      That also nicely ignores the fact that the content is available already at high-quality, without ads, for free, and a faster download, on P2P.

    2. Re:Commercials by rhetoric · · Score: 1

      To say a service sucks, go ahead and cite things like low-resolution, klunky DRM, limited playback options, platform dependence, or anything like that. But don't complain that their either charging for it or showing ads.

      What if they're charging a fee AND showing ads? :) I'd be OK with one or the other, but I don't know about both...

      --

      "where words meet intent, lies rhetoric's lament"
    3. Re:Commercials by TurboStar · · Score: 1

      "But don't complain that their either charging for it or showing ads."

      I'd complain when they do both. Which is often the case. There's one show on TV (SciFi channel) right now that I'd watch but it would cost me approx $360 a year for 10-12 new episodes and it comes with over 15 minutes of commercials per hour.

    4. Re:Commercials by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      How about we complain that they're charging for it, and also trying to charge a monthly subscription fee?

      You know, with all the absurd attempts at this that I've seen, it almost makes one think that they might intentionally be trying to sabotauge its acceptance with a crappy rollout. Gee....big networks would NEVER do that to try to protect their current advertising revenue model, would they?

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    5. Re:Commercials by winwar · · Score: 1

      "Thats the key - they are doing *both*. Charging for it, AND showing ads."

      You mean it's like cable :)

    6. Re:Commercials by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Yup, it's exactly what I want.

      Why the heck would I pay otherwise? Medium to high quality is available for free from BitTorrent, often ripped from DVD. And without ads.

      If they want me to pay, they can begin by offering more than the competition: Very good quality, good servers that allow me to use all the bandwidth available to me, and no ads.

  36. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by javaxman · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I am also a True Believer and attend a worship service every Sunday. That said, ID is NOT true science. It is simply a score of men who wish to get nonsense into our textbooks.

    Ok, I rarely comment on lame moderation, but really, you're currently moded "Flamebait" for that?!? Someone needs to turn in their geek card and have their moderation responsibilities take away from them. Until someone can come up with an experiment to prove the existence of a deity, that's not flamebait, it's fact. "Intelligent Design" is not a Scientific Theory, it's not even really qualifiable as a Scientific Hypothesis... in order to be either there would need to be a way to test it. There are experiments to test all sorts of wacky quantum physics things, but not I.D., and there is a reason for that. How the heck do you propose to prove that "some intelligent designer" "guides" evolutionary forces?

    Just because you don't understand something doesn't mean that it's done by magic.

    Thank god those school board lamers got voted out. The petty power-hungry jerks that end up on school boards in America, I swear... they're the worst... you just *know* there are real, serious needs of the students that went unaddressed while these guys were pushing their religious agenda.

    Whew. The system works. In the time it took me to write and preview my comment, you went from flamebait to insightful. Faith in humanity partially restored, given that and recent election results ;-)

  37. Watch out for those valkyries by simX · · Score: 1

    Careful, don't irritate those valkyries that take you away, otherwise you'll be hearing:

    "This is very interesting...but stupid."
    "I have ways of blowing things up."
    "You're being very naughty."
    "Who's your mommy?"

    ... and if you keep annoying them, they'll just make weird horse noises and mumble to themselves.

  38. Dover election results challenge over "0 votes" by davidwr · · Score: 1

    "One of the old school board members who lost his seat in the election has said he will challenge the result. Voting machines recorded no votes for James Cashman at all in one precinct, but in others he says he polled plenty of votes."

    Sounds like grounds for a hand-recount of that precinct. Sadly, unless the race was close there probably won't be one.

    Anyone know if these were those new-fangled paperless-you-can't-recount-them-by-hand machines?

    If they are, the Pennsylvania may go the way of California and add a paper audit trail.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:Dover election results challenge over "0 votes" by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      As much as I'd like Cushman and his fellow anti-science zealots out on their asses, I'd say that his zero votes in one precinct has the stench of fraud on it. The vote is disturbingly close, so Cushman would be right to contest the election. This won't effect the results much even if he were to gain a seat, because it would then only be 7 to 1 in favor of science on the Dover school board.

    2. Re:Dover election results challenge over "0 votes" by dnebin · · Score: 1

      > Anyone know if these were those new-fangled
      > paperless-you-can't-recount-them-by-hand machines?

      Are you kidding? Rural central pa? No, we have the lever-based
      machines. Although zero votes hints of fraud, these jokers
      don't understand how pissed the community is in how much money
      was spent fighting this stupid issue in the courts. It's
      not like Dover is rolling in dough.

      They were too busy talking to the churches to realize the
      community at large was against this whole issue.

  39. Uh... Nine, not eight. by pla · · Score: 1

    all eight of the members of the Dover, PA school board that had required Intelligent Design to be taught alongside Evolution have been canned by voters in yesterday's election.

    That Schoolboard actually has nine members, of which only eight came up for reelection this year.

    You can expect the ninth to get the boot next year, but for now, they still have one idiot left. Let's just hope their charter doesn't include a lot of ways for a lone moron voice to cause endless trouble.

  40. Excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That one article was really good.

  41. Article Text by Py+to+the+Wiz · · Score: 0, Redundant



    Sony still not "getting it". c writes "Mark Russinovich continues his investigation of Sony's DRM as he tries out the official uninstaller. His verdict? 'I've analyzed virulent forms of spyware/adware that provide more straightforward means of uninstall.'" Relatedly Cronos1388 writes "According to the Inquirer an Italian group is also suing Sony over the rootkit." Also, an unexpected side effect of this technology is that script kiddies have been able to leverage Sony's tool to hide unauthorized cheat programs from the watchful eye of MMO creators.

    Intelligent design supporters ousted. PMuse writes "The Register and others are reporting that all eight of the members of the Dover, PA school board that had required Intelligent Design to be taught alongside Evolution have been canned by voters in yesterday's election."

    What does avian flu look like? DevL writes "Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson has managed to capture images of a H5N1 (bird flu) virus entering and taking control of a cell. While the text is in Swedish, the images speak for themselves."

    Torrent user goes up the river. stinerman writes to tell us that the Hong Kong man who was recently arrested for making several movies available via BitTorrent has had his sentence handed down. Chan aka "Big Crook" uploaded Daredevil, Red Planet, and Miss Congeniality which landed him 3 months in jail.

    Golden weighs in on OpenDocument debate. OSS_ilation writes "With so much FUD and anti-FUD flying in the face of Massachusetts' decision to go with OpenDocument, it's no surprise that open source advocate Bernard Golden weighs in with his take on current events."

    User says new downloadable television just plain "sucks." Thomas Hawk writes "In the past few weeks the three major studios have all announced deals to begin offering downloadable television for consumers -- Apple/ABC, DirecTV/NBC, and Comcast/CBS. The problem with each of these respective offerings is that they largely suck. Apple sells expensive low res limited television from ABC. NBC's new service will only work on DirecTV DVRs (uh hello McFly, why pay money for this service when I can just record it for free). And CBS' downloadable programming could contain commercials."

    Gimme karma now, kthx.

    -your friendly neighborhood karma whore.

    (I would like to say in advance: "I didn't mean THAT kind of karma")

    --
    Fight the fall of slashdot by supporting PlayfullyClever in your sig.
  42. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by NuGeo · · Score: 1

    I would hope Sony recalls these (I would call them infected) CDs and replaces them with a clean copy for free. Maybe Sony could even pay for someone to come over to the customer's house and manually remove the rootkit Sony so generously installed for you. Now THAT would be justice.

  43. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    What I read is that they are going to teach that the theories in evolution about how life first began may not be true.

    There are no theories in evolution about how life began. You're yet another example of why people who don't know what they're talking about should keep it shut.

  44. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by rho · · Score: 1
    Wow, you make it sound like Darwinian evolution has to resort to riot tactics to keep its place in line. "Follow me, guys, and bring your pitchforks, WE'RE STORMING THE CASTLE!"

    Overreact much?

    --
    Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  45. Quater VGA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must be from Bahstin.

  46. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by SHP · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How the heck do you propose to prove that "some intelligent designer" "guides" evolutionary forces? How the heck to you propose to prove that life spontaneously emerged from nothing? I don't want religion in science classes, but I do want honesty. If scientific observation indicates that current theories are inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures, why would you want to supress that information?

  47. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pennsylvania was the state that voted people out over this Intelligent Design stuff. Kansas quite happily moved forward with their 6-4 approval, and no one was voted out to my knowledge.

  48. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by Viper+Daimao · · Score: 0

    I agree, but hey, at least this is an actual worthy case and not lawyers trying to find the next big tobacco to make millions off of.

    --
    "In the game of life, someone always has to lose. To me, if life were fair, that someone would always be Oklahoma." -DKR
  49. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Idontpostmuch · · Score: 1

    "There are no theories in evolution about how life began."

    I know. One time, someone tried to tell me that Darwin's work was called "Origin of Species". Some people are just so dumb.

    Learn the scientific method, read Origin of Species, and read Darwin's Black Box. (Brief History of Time might come in handy too, though "brief" is a relative term here.) THEN you may discuss the ID v Evolution debate.

    While you're at it, teach your kids the scientific method. School won't.

  50. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Inteligent Design is "science" once you redefine the term "science" to be more broad minded. It's like Microsoft redefining "Open" file formats to include Microsoft Word. *Heh* Perhaps we'll see an "Intelligent Document" format come out of Redmond soon.

  51. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Idontpostmuch · · Score: 1

    No no no no no. You don't understand. Big bang, Evolution and ID are not scientific theories. The first two are facts and the last one is something for slashdotters to mock. /sarcasm

  52. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

    That said, ID is NOT true science.

    Well, unless you take a page out of the Kansas school board's book, and redefine the term. Heh!

  53. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Xyrus · · Score: 1

    If Intelligent Design were toilet paper, I wouldn't even wipe my ass with it.

    ~X~

    --
    ~X~
  54. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by NevarMore · · Score: 1

    "We MUST stop ID!"

    GOD COMMANDS IT!

    Wait a minute......

  55. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Idontpostmuch · · Score: 1

    Become a pirate to stop global warming!

    http://www.venganza.org/

  56. What goes up, must come down by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

    Unless you're talking about Intelligent Falling, then all bets are off. In all seriousness, this is just a little speedbump in the march of progress. The Kansas creationists tried this in 1999, and got voted out. Now they're are back, but they'll be easier to beat this time. Teaching creationism was found to be unconstitutional in Edwards v. Aguillard. In the Intelligent Design (ID) trial in Dover, strong evidence has been presented showing that "ID" is a drop-in replacement for "scientific creationism." For instance, in the ID book "Pandas and People" we have the remains of a word processor search and replace operation with "cdesign proponentsists" being the resulting "transitional fossil," as Pandas' Thumb puts it. The Dover transcripts make for some particularily hilarious reading, especially Mike Behe's testimony, or when members of the Dover school board perjure themselves. We can count on a trial taking place in Kansas very soon, and it will go in much the same manner as it did in Dover. The Kansas Kangaroo Court has already laid the groundwork, providing good evidence on the motivations of the IDers, and how they are indistinguishable from creationists. These guys have shot themselves in the foot so badly that if either Dover or Kansas went to the Supreme Court it is hard to imagine the outcome for ID being any different than it was in the Edwards v. Aguillard decision back in '87. The two dissenters in Edwards v. Aguillard were Scalia (predictable) and Rhenquist, so even with if Roberts and Alito* vote theocratic (unlikely, they seem rational to me, at least) it'll be a 5-4 split with ID losing. IANAL, tho. I think the big take home message of this is that all of us who care about science need to keep up on what the kooks are doing. While I'm fond of following the creationist movement and even have a small collection of creationists books I've picked up from used book stores, I don't have the slightest idea of who is on the local school board and whether they are pro- or anti-science. That's going to change, though.

  57. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ceejayoz · · Score: 4, Informative

    How the heck to you propose to prove that life spontaneously emerged from nothing?

    How do you propose to prove that God spontaneously emerged from nothing? And let's not have the "oh he was always there" chickenshit answer - if that can happen with God, it can happen with the Universe.

    Plus, evolution makes no comment on the origin of life. It is a theory on the origin of new species, which is a different thing entirely.

    If scientific observation indicates that current theories are inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures, why would you want to supress that information?

    That information is not being surpressed. Scientists acknowledge that, for example, we don't know what was around prior to the Big Bang. Scientists acknowledge that we're not sure of the exact mechanism of the beginning of biological life. Scientists acknowledge that we're still learning bits about how evolution works.

    Intelligent design is being surpressed, but that's a different story alltogether. ID is just saying "we don't know how this works yet, so LET'S MAKE SHIT UP!"

  58. EFF's list of Sony DRM'd CDs by davidwr · · Score: 5, Informative

    Are You Infected by Sony-BMG's Rootkit? has a list of known infected CDs.

    Here's the list as of this post:
    ==========
    Trey Anastasio, Shine (Columbia)
    Celine Dion, On ne Change Pas (Epic)
    Neil Diamond, 12 Songs (Columbia)
    Our Lady Peace, Healthy in Paranoid Times (Columbia)
    Chris Botti, To Love Again (Columbia)
    Van Zant, Get Right with the Man (Columbia)
    Switchfoot, Nothing is Sound (Columbia)
    The Coral, The Invisible Invasion (Columbia)
    Acceptance, Phantoms (Columbia)
    Susie Suh, Susie Suh (Epic)
    Amerie, Touch (Columbia)
    Life of Agony, Broken Valley (Epic)
    Horace Silver Quintet, Silver's Blue (Epic Legacy)
    Gerry Mulligan, Jeru (Columbia Legacy)
    Dexter Gordon, Manhattan Symphonie (Columbia Legacy)
    The Bad Plus, Suspicious Activity (Columbia)
    The Dead 60s, The Dead 60s (Epic)
    Dion, The Essential Dion (Columbia Legacy)
    Natasha Bedingfield, Unwritten (Epic)
    Ricky Martin, Life (Columbia) (labeled as XCP, but, oddly, our disc had no protection)

    Several other Sony-BMG CDs are protected with a different copy-protection technology, sourced from SunnComm, including:

    My Morning Jacket, Z
    Santana, All That I Am
    Sarah McLachlan, Bloom Remix Album
    ==========

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:EFF's list of Sony DRM'd CDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One could argue that in the case of the Celine Dion CD , that the rootkit is the least of your infections.

    2. Re:EFF's list of Sony DRM'd CDs by bgspence · · Score: 1

      Bad reviews about the DRM and Rootkit for these CDs at Amazon and other retailers are swamping any good reviews. Hopefully the artists and their management are beginning to take notice. Posting a review there can only add to the heat Sony feels.

    3. Re:EFF's list of Sony DRM'd CDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did my part. Left an "infected with a virus" review. Laymen understand 'virus'.

  59. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Intelligent desgn is not science.

    That being said, neither is evolution.

    Both are philosophies masquerading as science.

  60. can I... by AbraCadaver · · Score: 2, Funny

    "...all eight of the members of the Dover, PA school board that had required Intelligent Design to be taught alongside Evolution have been canned by voters in yesterday's election."
    Can I just say "Amen to that!" :P

  61. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have to admit to finding the whole situation somewhat bemusing, I'm English and historically the Church and State are not so seperate (i.e within the Church of England) yet we have none of these problems (although social contexts with this respect are, I understand, pretty different). I'm not even sure if there would be a system/law to prevent ideas like this seeping into our education system (short of decent common sense).

    What is equally confusing is why the religious groups are so against classifying their views as a philosophy or a theological opinion? Both are respectable academic fields, yet the war wages on against science. Is it that they preceive science as being more valid, and therefore must associate their religious thinking with it?

  62. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by painAlley · · Score: 1

    Look here dumbass, if you are brainwashed into thinking evolution has anything to do with the big bang, with amino acid formation, with anything relatively close to origins of life issues, you've been had by the fundies and need a bitchslap. I suggest you go to your dictionary and look up the word "Evolution" in the english language. Then come back and see tell me where it says anything about Origins. In case you're just too lame, here is a link for you to click lamo http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=evolution It takes a mental genius to redefine a term and then bash it.

  63. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by SHP · · Score: 0, Troll
    Scientists acknowledge that, for example, we don't know what was around prior to the Big Bang. Scientists acknowledge that we're not sure of the exact mechanism of the beginning of biological life.

    Then why not tell kids that in science class. That's all I ask.

    Scientists acknowledge that we're still learning bits about how evolution works.

    Oops, your bias is showing. You've assumed evolution to be true. That'll help with the objective evaluation of the data.

  64. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by painAlley · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Uh, you are wrong. Origin of Species talks about how one species may, or may not, give rise to additional species. Perhaps you should go read it a bit. Brief History of Time, while an excllent read, is more appropriate for universe origins stuff, but has nothing to do with populations of living organisms. Behe's & Dembski's lunitic ravings require us to dismiss most of the stuff that we've learned from chaos, quantum, and complexity theories since thier inceptions. However, their rationalles based upon ad hominem tactics haven't been limited by reality nor anything more complex than high school algebra.

  65. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You may not post much, but you should probably post less, considering how much stupidity you managed to pack into that one post. Also, I love the lecture about how the guy should read the Origin of Species when it's painfully obvious that you have never done so.

  66. Here is what I am telling Microssoft by erikharrison · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm putting together a letter to Microsoft right now, regarding this Sony rootkit disaster. Basically, it asks MS to publically come out opposed to this sort of behavior. This is exactly the kind of programming that MS (claims, at least) gives Windows a bad name. MS consistently says that it is bad applications and bad drivers that cause stability problems, and that spyware and viruses are mostly Windows centric because Windows is the most dominanat desktop platform.

    Yet when Sony installs a DRM rootkit, with now exposed security and stability issues, MS says nothing. Sony's DRM only works on Windows, thus giving a reason to move to Mac OS and Linux, and by not censuring this kind of behavior, MS effectively says "it's okay for vendors to cripple our OS and drive business to our competitors, it's okay for Sony to implicitly install a bad driver, it's okay for Sony to make a mockery of our OS, and to make public one of it's weaknesses".

    It's embarassing for those folks who administer Windows machines to have to go into work, and be asked why they still run Window's boxen when the one big advantage of MS - support from a large company - is nowhere to be found when blackhat tactics like rootkits are used by a major vendor. Even a well written rootkit (which this is not) still will introduce bugs in other applications that must go through the same subsystem the kit is bound to - having this kind of tactic tacitly approved of by the software vendor only leads to a world where it's more dangerous to upgrade applications, for fear of conflict - the traditional Linux distro problem, now twice as bad in the Windows world.

    I urge everyone to point these facts out to MS. Even if MS approves of this kind of user bait and switch, and over invasive DRM on principle, I believe these arguments will force MS into the position of having to publically disapprove. Which has the nice side effect of giving this invasion of consumer rights the attention in the media that it deserves.

    1. Re:Here is what I am telling Microssoft by evought · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The real question is not how they can put up with what Sony did, but how they can write an OS which allows a vendor to implicitly and silently install a driver that roots the system. Why does Windows not put up a dialog box saying "Hey, this disk wants to install something. It is not signed and not certified. Do you want to allow it?"

      If Windows did that much, then it would be so much easier to prevent this kind of crap. Heck, Mac puts up a warning just because an installer wants to run an external program.

    2. Re:Here is what I am telling Microssoft by dbc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That is for double-darn sure. As long as this Sony fiasco has been going on, I keep wondering why no one is pissed at MSFT for letting this kind of crap get installed. Hooking low level file system API's for $diety's sake. Silent driver installs must be stopped. Click-through to install every single driver, and OS managed uninstall of every driver is the only way to stop this crapola, and MSFT needs to do it.

      I am planning to tell MSFT something slightly different than grandparent post. I am tired of cleaning spyware and other garp off of my wife's computer. Tomorrow, she gets a Mac. I will snail-mail MSFT a copy of the sales receipt, along with a letter stating exactly why MSFT lost a sale, and exactly why MSFT software is from this time forward quarantined to strictly off-net computers in this house.

    3. Re:Here is what I am telling Microssoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a load of crap. Although they haven't come out against Sony in particular (it's only been a week), Microsoft is not willing to put up with this and does not allow it on 64-bit machines and will not allow it on the next version, Vista. However, there is still legitimate and useful software that makes use of these techniques (moreso than spyware), so they can't just eliminate this feature. Even if they patched it, people wouldn't install the patch because it breaks software they use.

      And it's not like MS can simply write an OS that refuses to install unapproved software! Can you imagine if you had to have your software approved by MS in order for people to install it?

      In order for this shit to get onto your computer, you must log in as Administrator and agree to an EULA (that doesn't indicate what's going to happen). At this point you have entered your Administrator password and clicked OK. There is nothing MS can do to prevent the installed software from taking over your computer and doing anything it wants.

      There is nothing special about the techniques used that make them only applicable to Windows. Rootkits have always been available for Unix (hence the 'root' in rootkit), and I can name dozens of them. Windows is a huge market and there's over a decade of research into this sort of thing, so it's obviously going to be available for Windows first. Macs have a tiny market and changed their OS a few years ago, so the first Mac rootkit only appeared last year. Give it time and you'll see much more of this crap for Macs too.

      dom

    4. Re:Here is what I am telling Microssoft by erikharrison · · Score: 1

      I realize both that this story is old, and that since you posted as Anony you'll likely never see this response. Still, for the record, I'll respond.

      Social answers to social problems. Technical answers for technical problems.

      What I am asking from MS is a public admonishment of Sony for misuse of certain programming techniques and being shady about the deployment. I agree with every one of your technical points. I'm not asking MS to change the technology (I've not installed the Sony RK, but I do know that an unsigned driver, like a rootkit, will make XP complain a bunch - if the Sony RK doesn't generate that complaint, then Sony is exploiting a security hole, and that I inisit change), merely that they say that Sony is misusing the technology.

      The whole problem with Digital Restrictions Management is that it is a technical answer to a social problem. You conflate the two yourself, thus missing why I consider asking MS to act to be so important.

    5. Re:Here is what I am telling Microssoft by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The good news is that the next Microsoft operating system, Vista, will indeed prevent the installation of this sort of rootkit.

      The bad news is that Vista itself is one gigantic rootkit designed to secure your computer against you, and it is set up for Sony and everyone else to be able to use those rootkit features against you. Welcome to the wonderful world of Trusted Computing and "security" chips that are boobytrapped to selfdestruct if you try to get at your keys. Yes, IBM is advertizing the very fact that their notebooks carry this self destructing "security" chip.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  67. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Jack9 · · Score: 1
    Origin of Species talks about how one species may, or may not, give rise to additional species.
    No...he's absolutely correct. How life began and how a species comes into existence is not the same thing. Apologize, then walk away.
    --

    Often wrong but never in doubt.
    I am Jack9.
    Everyone knows me.
  68. Teh city landfill welcomes your business venture.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well, how much faith must one have while moving trash cans from teh curb to a truck anyways?

  69. It's Microsoft's license that is anti-business by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If you look at Microsoft's Office XML Reference Schema License, you will see that it has massive restrictions on what you can do with it. You are only allowed to read and write. Things like editing are not included (and even seem to be explicitly excluded. Microsoft may be able to deny the license for anybody for any non-governmental uses, and, in any event, they can make your whole license invalid by modifying the schema on the next iteration of Office (including, possibly even the first official release of office 12).

    It may also be possible that they could force your customers to register for the right to use your software (so they know who to 'go after', in cutting off your air supply).

    And, of course, if your company gets bought out, your license disappears.

    I can see lenders and shareholders running screaming from any business that embarks on a major undertaking, having accepted these terms. You would have to be either foolish or desparate to do so unless you could recoup the full cost of your endeavor with your first contract (which could raise the cost of your contract, making you non-competetive).

    Unlike the ODF, which (contrary to MS's FUD) does not place any restrictions on a company using it(*), Microsoft's XML license would leave any company accepting it at the abject mercy of a convicted monopolist.

    Good luck. You'll need it.

    (*)Unlike KOffice (which also implements ODF), Open Office is LGPL, which means that a company could legaly compile in proprietary extensions to OO without having to release their own code. That is, in fact, precisely what SUN does with StarOffice. This opens up opportunities for local vendors that would never be available under MS-Office.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  70. In short, serves you right. by sulli · · Score: 3, Funny

    What a crappy list of artists. Anyone with Celine Dion in his PC deserves whatever he gets.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  71. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by SHP · · Score: 1

    It takes a mental genius to redefine a term and then bash it. ... which is exactly what hundreds of Slashdotties have been doing to ID for the past week. Redefining it then bashing it.

  72. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by jelle · · Score: 1

    Basically, you're saying that in Kansas, they don't speak English anymore at school.

    --
    --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  73. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by aiyo · · Score: 1

    Your sarcasm is misplaced. The big bang and evolution are indeed facts as they are observations. We can observe that all matter diverges from a single point. We can observe how varying traits are benefitial or harmful, leading to improvment in the progression of life. They simply cannot be wrong, they are observations. I think you go a step furthur and assume these two observations imply the begining of the universe and life. That's not the case. We dont know where the big bang or life came from and we will never know. But what happened afterwards is fact. Also, since we don't know or will never know you cannot attribute it to a higher power. You weren't there to observe that and neither were the men who wrote it so. Science does not make a conculsion about this one way or the other. It does however state that there is no evidence of a higher power's involvement or lack of. Just leave it at that, and don't start pulling gods out of your ass.

  74. Court Case Moot by curtvdh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, if there is a new evolution-friendly school board, does that make the outcome of the court case irrelevant? If they follow the same route as Kansas a few years back (not the current crop of idiots), the school board is likely to rescind the ID requirement, regardless of the outcome of the trial. I suppose it could always be useful as a precedent (one way or another), but it would seem that ID is finished in Dover schools no matter what (for the time being anyway).

    1. Re:Court Case Moot by dnebin · · Score: 1

      It's not moot as closing arguments were entered in court last week. Haven't heard the outcome yet, but I'm hopeful if it goes IDs way that someone will step up to appeal it, even if it has to go all of the way to the SC.

      This whole thing is nonsense. I have no problem with folks believing whatever they want, I just don't want their beliefs taught in the public school system. If you want your kids to believe in God or aliens or whatever, there's plenty of places you can take them outside of the public schools to give them that education. But don't expect for me to sit back and allow you to influence the school board so you can push your beliefs onto my family.

  75. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by lubricated · · Score: 1

    > Oops, your bias is showing. You've assumed evolution to be true.

    Oops, your lack of a brain is showing.
    Unless you have a theory that is able to predict more that evolution.

    Sorry, you failed it.

    --
    It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
  76. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by snilloc · · Score: 1
    One doesn't attempt to directly prove the existence of God through ID. ID argues that the non-existence of a higher-power can be disproved. ID doesn't really say much about the higher power whose non-existence is claimed to be disproved. The irony of the Flying Spaghetti Monster movement is that ID is actually generic enough to accommodate His Noodly Appendage.

    Materialistic evolution (The standard view of contemporary science) supposes that all living systems evolved from simpler forms, down to the first single celled organisms, previous to which our knowledge is (understandably) incomplete. ID claims (rightly or wrongly) to have evidence that some living systems could not have come about in this manner. In short, they claim to have counter-examples to the fundamental premise of materialistic evolution. By eliminating materialistic evolution, the only remaining hypotheses are by definition non-materialistic, or "supernatural", or even "non-scientific". This is a perfectly logical conclusion based entirely on the strength of the counter-examples. Most critics of ID fail to see this. The smart critics reply that all of the supposed counter-examples can be refuted, or are at best inconclusive.

    If materialistic evolution cannot be fairly criticized in this manner (that is, attempting to find counterexamples or logical inconsistencies), then it is entirely unscientific itself in so much as it is unfalsifiable.

  77. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by oddfox · · Score: 1

    Evolution is an observable fact, you're incorrect here. The point of contention seems to always lie with people who don't believe that we evolved from monkeys, which is fine, I don't necessarily think that should be taught in class, but evolution is something that we know to happen on a gradual basis.

    Teach students the theory of evolution, sure, but it's not the school's place nor the teacher's place to attempt to claim that it is a fact of science that we evolved from apes. Anyways, I don't know when you were in school being taught this sort of stuff, but when I was, about 2-6 years ago (My HS career) we were explicitely informed that it's a theory and it does leave many questions unanswered in the scientific communities.

    Now if you think that proposing an observed scientific theory be definitively linked with the origins of ourselves and the rest of life on Earth is a bad idea, I don't see how it would be any better to attempt to tell students, in a class of science, that intelligent design (Which is a trojan horse, no more, no less) is something to look into, really. The belief of a higher being, a creator, isn't something to be taught in public schools, that's something for one to find on their own or through their family. Preferably on their own so they can truly make up their mind on what they feel is best.

    --
    "We invented personal computing." - Bill Gates
  78. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1

    Too bad no one has ever performed a scientific experiment in attempt to answer the (as of yet unanswered) question of the origin of life, which, as another poster pointed out, is separate from the theory of evolution.

    --
    Centralization breaks the internet.
  79. Evolution by ppanon · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Intelligent design supporters ousted.
    PMuse writes "The Register and others are reporting that all eight of the members of the Dover, PA school board that had required Intelligent Design to be taught alongside Evolution have been canned by voters in yesterday's election."

    Think of it as political evolution in action.

    I think it's getting to the point where the first thing any candidate for school board should be asked is how they feel about the teaching of Evolution and Intelligent Design in schools. This is a mandatory pass/fail question.
    --
    Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  80. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Damer+Face · · Score: 1

    Plus, evolution makes no comment on the origin of life. It is a theory on the origin of new species, which is a different thing entirely.

    Whose theory of evolution are we talking about? The Continental School? Neo-Darwinists? Darwin may have shied away from that problem, but the neo-Darwinists seem to think they've got the origin of life all wrapped up. How? By applying the ideas of evolution and competition to chemicals. Sic.

    So saying that evolutionary theory posits a mechanism for the origin of life is not as incorrect as you lot are trying to make out.

    Scientists acknowledge that, for example, we don't know what was around prior to the Big Bang.

    Who are these "scientists" that you all keep referring to? What the turd in Turkey would a paleobotanist know about cosmology?

    Most physicist regard it as a non-question. The Big Bang was the beginning of everything and the phrase "prior to the big bang" is semantically null.

    Which is just as much of a cop-out as "God made it all" although presented as being self-evident truth and therefore intellectually superior.

    Whether these physicists know what the hell they're talking about outside their narrow fields of specialisation is another matter, but a pertinent one and even inside their field of specialisation they can easily make mistakes. Thinking that you know the answer can lead you into horrendous gaffes, the Monty-Hall problem and Einstein's adherence to the Steady State Theory and an Objective Universe being two memorable examples.

    Paul Feyerabend makes the point that someone who has invested their life in proving a small set of facts to be true often has a more rigid world-view than your average schizophrenic. I have met many such people over the years, some are religios, some are politicians, some are scientists. Most are Daily Mail reading rightwing scum-fucks, but that's another argument.

    Scientists acknowledge that we're not sure of the exact mechanism of the beginning of biological life. Scientists acknowledge that we're still learning bits about how evolution works.

    Yet still run around using words like "fact", "truth", "we know" and "certainty" with a blinkered hubris that is worthy of the fundamentalist mindset.

    In case you missed the current model, it is that scientific theories have domains of applicability. Sometimes the theories turn out to have larger or smaller domains than previously thought. Some theories don't agree with each other, and some have serious philosophical incompatibilities with other theories. Some scientists believe a given theory to be true and others don't. A corollary is that some theories get more support than others.

    An example of this is that there are many interpretations of Quantum Theory which all predict the same results, yet the Copenhagen Interpretation is considered to be the offical version of reality. This is not about crackpot science or flawed or irreproducible data, just politics. And as I think we are learning, politics seldom leads to the truth.

    Intelligent design is being surpressed, but that's a different story alltogether. ID is just saying "we don't know how this works yet, so LET'S MAKE SHIT UP!"

    Like a hypothesis for example.

    Personally I think that ID is unintersting, intellectually worthless and purely political in motivation, and I like the belief systems and constructs of most sciences; but you people really need to stop worshipping at the Church of Absolute Truth of All Science and get yourselves some more enquiring minds.

  81. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you not comprehend how an explanation of how, from one species, others come into existence and evolve, is not saying anything about how life itself first came into existence?

    And your obnoxious tone, when you are the one wrong... it is both frustrating and amusing at the same time.

    You truly suck.

  82. where to look possibly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How the heck do you propose to prove that "some intelligent designer" "guides" evolutionary forces?"

      I would look for DNA "markers" that were...wrong. We have enough science now in recombinant DNA to have established patterns and modalities and practices. Just like they can type a bioweapon and declare what lab it came from, etc. Look for DNA that doesn't fit right. Something that looks changed very (relatively speaking) recently. Stuff that doesn't look random but planned. I can't put it better than that, it's like cop work.

    I don't have a dog in this hunt, just answering your question. I see some flaws in both beliefs. For instance, for the E's, age/size of sun doesn't jibe with proclaimed age of "life on earth", dates conflict from when the sun would have been too close (because of previous size way way back, larger than now) and intense, it would have fried off any life. For the IDers, they just can't see how extremly minute mutations lead to what they call transgenic species. to them it's a hard and fast coded species, when reality is sub species are where it is at, and they can breed together. And if you follow the chain, every form of life is a sub/sub/sub and etc/sub species down to the individual. That's because there are no truly identical organisms, even clones have observable and demonstrable differences.

    And as to "designer", I mean, sheesh, anyone can go outside and look up at night. Do logical people REALLY believe we are the only intelligent life in the entire universe? That belief is arrogant luddism. And we don't even live in the old part of what is visible. I think it is more likely there is a combination- we have plenty of evidence for readily observable random mutation driven evolution, plus many "designers" who have left their markers for us to discover. And our old historical records/stories for just about every culture that left decipherable records ALL attempt to explain that if you take the time to really try and parse them.

  83. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I'm not an astrophysicist or a biologist, I'm fairly certain their's a lot of evidence and math behind supporting those theories (they are the very dominant in their fields after all, so any fundamental flaws would have been pointed out a long time ago).

    That being said. You're post is the epitomy of the misunderstaing people have with science. Evolution and big bang are not observations and are not fact. They are theories, the ID people are right about that (although completely wrong about what that means).

    However, big bang and evolution are our best attempts to explain the observations and predict further observations, not observations in and of themselves. I mean, no one's seen the big bang. More importantly, no one's seen evolution either. It's impossible for either. Their abstract concepts and cannot be directly observed - no theories could. Not to mention that proof by observation in science is considered flawed in principle, thus the need for repeatability and falsifiability. Repeatability so that one innacurate or flawed expirement doesn't support/disprove a theory, falsifiability so that the theory explains something useful.

    On a sidenote, a very interesting lecture by Hawking on life (mainly evolution, big bang, and religion).

  84. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who has this nerf-hearding rootkit installed on my machine, I don't want money from a lawsuit. I want Sony either uninstalling the rootkit or begging me on all fours to buy their music. That and a little bit of blood for posterity.

  85. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Damer+Face · · Score: 1

    The big bang and evolution are indeed facts as they are observations.

    The Big Bang is an observation? The process of evolution is an observation?

    We can observe that all matter diverges from a single point.

    No we deduce that from a set of observations. In the case of evolution, as many biologists admit, that set is painfully thin.

    You are very naively ignoring half of science, which is the theory part. And as an observation gets more complex, the theory becomes a greater part of the observation.

    I've apparently done single photon interference, but I've never observed a single photon interfering. I've allegedly measured the speed of light, but never actually observed the speed of light, or even observed light to be travelling in any way.

    The world doesn't cut up into little tiny rational observation quanta like you seem to think. Your presentation of scientific empiricism is crass and infantile.

  86. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by SHP · · Score: 1

    *Evolution is an observable fact, you're incorrect here.*

    Partially correct. Microevolution - variation within species - is an observable fact. Evolution as a mechanism for the emergence of new species has NOT been observed. It is theorized, and that is where the current debate arises.

    The evidence for macroevolution is no stronger than that for creation. Evolutionists look at the (ahem) hierarchy of life forms and infer a slow progression from less advanced to more advanced. Creationists look at the complexity of life forms at every level and infer a creator. In both cases the theories are reasonably inferred from scientific observation.

    If the definition of science allows only theories incorporating natural processes, then science must either admit that it is a trojan horse for atheism, or that it is potentially doomed to an eternal search for a truth it can never acknowledge.

    In other words, science must either disclaim entirely the possibility of the supernatural (atheism), or admit that science may be (by definition) incapable of discovering the truth.

    Thanks for listening.

  87. MOD PARENT UP! by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 1

    This is one of the most reasonable, rational, balanced, and true comments to found here so far. Mod him up!

    --

    The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      maybe you should learn to be a tad bit more critical.

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

      Your grandparent poster is correct - if you can't rebut what he says, avoid empty knee-jerk criticism.

    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True? True!?!

      Do some research, bud. Start with googling "observed speciation".

    4. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      my sincere apologies for not being a tad bit more transparent in my attempts to humour.

  88. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am also a True Believer and attend a worship service every Sunday.

    You say this as if you're "one of them" so to speak. You are not. Being religious, being Christian, even being of the same denomination does not make you "one of them." If you were one of them, you would be with them.

  89. MOD PARENT UP! by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 1

    This is another great post I've seen here. It's very true. I must have stepped into the wrong slashdot.

    Mod him up!

    --

    The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
  90. MOD PARENT UP! by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 1

    Very interesting comment. Mod him up!

    --

    The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
  91. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by fossa · · Score: 1

    Why can't science and God coexist? The laws of physics are God. God is the laws of physics. I don't see why God is always a character sitting on a throne looking down upon us. God is nature, or at least, nature is a part of God. Why then is it so bad to study this in a way that asks questions and poses falsifiable answers within this observable portion? An atheist may well look at science as a way to explain things without the God of Gaps; fine. A theist may well look at science as a way to be closer to God; fine.

    P.S. I was under the impression that DNA similarities across species was at least a bit of evidence for macroevolution. Science is about deductive reasoning. The reason for X is Y. Well is it? Let's check Z... nope. How about A? nope; B? nope; C? nope; Does that mean Y is really the reason for X? No. But it does mean that it could be. And it also means that if the check for D turned out true that we'd have to rethink our "Y causes X" statement. But with Intelligent Design or Creationism, there will always be parts of nature not yet understood via natural explanations that can be attributed to a higher power. Thus no evidence exists that if found would destroy either.

    Take gravity for example. I presume you don't dispute its existence. I do. I submit that what you call gravity is naught but completely random whims of particles and objects. It just so happens that the completely random whims have created the illusion of gravity through pure chance. One of these is science (e.g. Newtonian gravity), the other is not (conspiracy of randomness). If you were to drop an apple and see it float, you would be forced to question Newtonian gravity. However, nothing could possibly happen that would contradict the conspiracy of randomness. It may indeed be true; but it is not science.

  92. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not the same thing. Not even close. Try to be rational instead of looking ridiculous. Oops, too late.

  93. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You completely missed the point of my post. My question is that in the article about the decision, it does not state that they are going to start teaching intelligent design.

    FTA: The board "approved new public-school science standards Tuesday that cast doubt on the theory of evolution." It then states that it "was a victory for "intelligent design" advocates" and then goes on to explain what ID is.

    I'm just asking if there is somewhere besides the slashdot title that says they actually adopted intelligent design. The article certainly doesn't say it, only that ID advocates were happy with the decision.

    And there's no need to flame by nitpicking my post. Fine. There are ideas that scientists have about how life began, not theories in evolution about how life began. Whatever. That was not my point. I'm not even arguing a side. I'm just curious what everyone else is reading that I'm not. Or is everyone just reading the slashdot title and ignoring the article?

  94. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    "Oops, your bias is showing. You've assumed evolution to be true."

    that's your assumption. still, you would come across much more credible than this if you would actually pose an *argument*

  95. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    i will not argue against ID. it's crap, although you may believe anything you like. it's impossible to argue against a belief, because belief infers and absolute Truth, which is something i refuse to believe in *grin*

    you write: "In other words, science must either disclaim entirely the possibility of the supernatural (atheism), or admit that science may be (by definition) incapable of discovering the truth."

    let's split this up in two, shall we?
    - where did you get the idea that science claims or disclaims the possibility of any sort of supernatural phenomenon? science is about making sense of (verifiable) *observations*. most scientists i know (and i know quite a few :-) ) cannot tell if there's a God or not, most certainly not scientifically.

    - science *is* by definition incapable of discovering the Truth. thruth is a construct. there is no such thing.

  96. Why TV looks like high res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The analog signal has an infinite number of colors
    and this tends to give an antialiasing effect.

    This is perceived as a higher resolution so that is why we think that NTSC or (PAL in our area) looks like VGA or close to it.

    Khawar Nehal

  97. Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You linked to the Office 2003 PATENT license. This has nothing to do with Office 12 formats because they are different. It doesn't even mention any license for Office 2003 formats!

    All it says is that if any technology required to read or write the Office 2003 XML formats is patented by Microsoft, you get an automatic perpetual license to use those patents solely for the software to process those formats. Anybody who makes, sells, or distributes that software gets the license. This license can only be revoked if you sue them regarding these patents.

    Why does MS grant you rights to read and write but not to edit? Probably for the same reason that Unix has read and write permission, but not edit. Or because Windows has functions called ReadFile and WriteFile, but no EditFile.

    dom

  98. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by pintomp3 · · Score: 1

    now that's funny, i don't care which state you're from (modified larry the cable guy line)

  99. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >cannot tell if there's a God or not

    Hmm, for a sufficiently vague definition of god that's true. But no believer would be even the slightest bit interested in such a god. And as you should be aware, gods are generally rather well defined, they do exactly as the believer tells em to. And there's only a limited number of them (a few thousand), most of which have already been thoroughly debunked.

    I propose that one only needs to show that the god of the believer you're talking to cannot exist as advertised by that believer. After all, the only way through which we unbelievers can know about this supposed god is through the protestations of the believers. If those protestations turn out to be a crapload of brown stuff (and that can generally be quite easily acertained) then there's no reason to think that the god they profess to believe in exists. The onus of proof after all falls on those that make the claimes.

  100. the truth, in iambic pentameter, bitch by tod_miller · · Score: 1

    *sigh* despite firefox (yes you, I am looking at you evil version 1.0.7) b0rking the fuck out of this post (in its cute, 'OMG look, I can just close magically' trick) I write it again... without the preamble...

    The title about the torrent guy getting sentenced is totally misleading.

    I rewrote the first two lines, because I forgot what I originally wrote

    ==t3h fucking po3m==

    I fucking hate firefox, because of late,
    Its one success is making me irate.
    Its obvious his crimes were copyright,
    Not protocol or application, right.


    Well better than nothing. Thanks firefox, you bastard.

    *sigh* poont you shortsighted bastards. Why bother? because some peoples only claim to fame is being born with opposable bloody thumbs. And we all have to live with stupid people like that every day.

    please type the word in this image: gymnast
    random letters - if you are visually impaired, please email us at pater@slashdot.org

    PS: yeah, watch the moderators put this in flamebait hell, I am beyond caring.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  101. Intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is better than non-intelligent design.

  102. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by jacekm · · Score: 0

    > How do you propose to prove that God spontaneously emerged from nothing? And let's not have > the "oh he was always there" chickenshit answer - if that can happen with God, it can happen > with the Universe. No, it cannot. The idea, that Universe existed "forever" is contrary to science. "Big Bang" is long proven, known scientific fact and belif to contrary is just a religious nonsense. The same applies to the idea that Universe just come to existence from nothing. This is also complete nonsense that can be easily disproven by modern science. It violates practically every law of physics. Please, do not force your atheistic cult full of unscietific nonsense on the society ;-) JAM

  103. Why isnt the sony rootkit spyware/malware? by jonwil · · Score: 1

    The rootkit (among other things) hides all files matching $sys$*.* (including itself) as well as various registry keys.
    It (via the DRM) installs (without telling you) a filter driver right deep into the windows CDROM drivers (they dont tell you how to uninstall it and if you remove it, it can screw up your CDROM drive)
    Plus, it reports to sony & co various things (naturally, sony wont tell you exactly what they are or why sony is collecting them).

    In my book, this has all the properties of spyware/malware & should be identified as such (and removed properly) by anti-virus and anti-spyware programs.

    The right way to avoid this kind of negative PR etc in the future is to:
    A.Dont attempt to hide any DRM or copy protection that is installed.
    B.Tell people upfront about it and give them the option to either install it and play the CD or not install it and not play the CD on their PC (something like "This CD is copy protected and requires software installed on your computer in order for it to function on a PC. The software does . If you do not wish to install the software, this CD can still be played on a regular CD player." with an ok/cancel button would work)
    C.Make it possible to uninstall the software completly and cleanly (with an attached "if you choose to uninstall this software, any copy protected audio CDs will no longer play on this computer" or something)

    That way, people can see that its installing this software and exactly what the software does (e.g. "The software includes drivers designed to detect when an attempt is made to copy a copy protected CD with CD copying software." or whatever") and can uninstall it later if they like.

    Anyone smart enough to know that you dont have to install the software in order to use the CD (and that not installing it allows you to rip it and defeat the copy protection) is smart enough to know how to bypass the installer (turn off autorun, hold down the shift key, terminate the installer before it installs anything, rip it using an alternative OS that doesnt install the protection software etc etc).

    Anyone else (i.e. the people who dont know much about ripping CDs beoynd how to use the ripping program included with their fancy new MP3 player who the DRM is designed to thwart) is going to blindly click ok when the sony installer says "if you want to play the CD on your computer, you need this software" and get the DRM anyway.

    The smart people know how to get around it and avoid it (and the rootkit does nothing to stop these people) and the dumb people will install it anyway no matter what it says. So there is no need for sony to use techniques to hide the program and drivers. Or to hide what the program does.
    Or to make it impossible to uninstall. (again, the smart people will be able to avoid installing it in the first place and the dumb people will believe the "if you remove this, the copy protected CDs wont work on this computer anymore" spiel from sony)

    In any case, I havent bought any sony music products recently so I can feel good about not supporting this crap (or does buying sony DVDs mean you are supporting this crap too...?)

  104. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Secrity · · Score: 1

    I believe that one of the biggest reasons that the Church of England doesn't jump on hare brained ideas such as "Intelligent Design" is because the Church of England is not a fundamentalist church. It seems that only fundamentalist christians are pushing the "Intelligent Design"/anti-evolution agenda. For some reason, the United States has developed a whole series of fundamentalist christian churches that believe that the christian bible must be interpreted literally AND that they must force everybody else to also be a fundamentalist christian. "Intelligent Design" and Kansas redefining Science to allow for the existance of the Easter Bunny and Unicorns are just new ways for American fundamentalist christians to try to circumvent the separation of church and state in order to brainwash others to be fundamentalist christians.

  105. 3 Months?? by darthnoodles · · Score: 1
    Torrent user goes up the river. stinerman writes to tell us that the Hong Kong man who was recently arrested for making several movies available via BitTorrent has had his sentence handed down. Chan aka "Big Crook" uploaded Daredevil, Red Planet, and Miss Congeniality which landed him 3 months in jail.

    3 months for sharing movies, or 3 months for sharing THOSE movies?

    I think he deserves more for having shared those steaming piles of film to people.

  106. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by mothas · · Score: 1

    My biophysics courses back in grad school did in fact cover evolution at the biochemical level. It's a student exercise to calculate the probabilities that an organism of a given complexity can arise under given assumptions. Essentially the organism has a DNA 'key' of a certain length, and you need to determine the time required for known evolutionary processes to break the key. Lots of assumptions needed, but once you state them, the calcuation is relatively straightforward (i.e. more than half of the PhD students can get it right in a few days). What I found interesting was that the outcome is typically that there has not been sufficient time since the Earth cooled for today's DNA to have arisen through random mutation. There were various hypotheses that can 'fix' the calculation: a) Life began off-earth (so it had more time elsewhere), or b) Life did more of its evolving in high-radiation and/or high temperature regimes than geologists allow for (more mutations per generation), or c) Lots of the DNA does not contribute to speciation (so there are lots of keys - you only have to generate one), or d) Intelligent design...

  107. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution as a mechanism for the emergence of new species has NOT been observed.

    What do you have to say about:

    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htm l

    and

    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html

    Care to attempt to refute these observations of emergences of new species?

  108. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a common fundie tactic and really has nothing to say about evolution. What you studied was the probability of putting things together at random. Natural selection, the 'driving force' of evolution is not random. Mutation is, more or less, random but this only creates the the raw material from which selection can operate. Evolution doesn't say anything about random strings of DNA spontaneously forming into the correct sequence (sensu stricto, this is what he creationists/ID people are saying).

    Reaching back into your calculational history, answer this example question I give my gradutate students when I teach population genetics. If a mutation results in an increase in either survival or reproductive output by some arbitrary percentage, say X%, what is the number of generations required for half of the population to have this new mutation? If you can figure this out, then you realize the futility of this supposed approach to attacking evolutionary theory.

  109. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

    > > "In other words, science must either disclaim entirely the possibility of the supernatural (atheism), or admit that science may be (by definition) incapable of discovering the truth."

    > let's split this up in two, shall we?
    - where did you get the idea that science claims or disclaims the possibility of any sort of supernatural phenomenon? science is about making sense of
    (verifiable) *observations*. most scientists i know (and i know quite a few :-) ) cannot tell if there's a God or not, most certainly not scientifically.

    Well, the science textbooks he is talking about push a unobserved and *unverifiable* theory of macroevolution which exclude direct supernatural cause. Which brings you back to the parent posters point.

    > - science *is* by definition incapable of discovering the Truth. thruth is a construct. there is no such thing.

    Your statement isn't true, then.

  110. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    How the heck to you propose to prove that life spontaneously emerged from nothing?

    The discussion is on evolution vs. "Intelligent Design". Evolution says nothing whatsoever regarding life spontaneously emerging from nothing. In fact, there is no hypothesis in biology that makes such a claim.

    Misrepresenting the position of science only makes you look unqualified to speak on the debate with any level of credibility.

  111. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by phylomon · · Score: 1

    I have to say that I have no arguments with the idea that we may have been intelligently designed, but the Intelligent Design (ID) movement is not scientific. Materialistic evolution SHOULD be criticized, but not with the ulterior motive of promoting religion. The problem with ID is that it makes the same mistake you made (with all due respect). You said: *****"By eliminating materialistic evolution, the only remaining hypotheses are by definition non-materialistic, or "supernatural", or even "non-scientific".***** Just because one scientific theory of the emergence of species has weaknesses, or even if it is completely discredited, one does not have to jump to supernatural explanations. One merely looks further for a scientific explanation. To be completely clear, looking for evidence of a process of design by intelligence is scientific. To claim supernatural processes, (as ID does) is not scientific, it is religion.

    --
    My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
  112. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Whose theory of evolution are we talking about? The Continental School? Neo-Darwinists? Darwin may have shied away from that problem, but the neo-Darwinists seem to think they've got the origin of life all wrapped up. How? By applying the ideas of evolution and competition to chemicals. Sic.

    This is a semantic game playing on the fact that as you get to "simpler" and smaller forms of life, the distinction between what is "life" and what is "non-life" becomes unclear.

    Ultimately you have a point where you do not have chains of molecules making imperfect copies of themselves (the chains, not the individual molecules). When you have that, you get evolution. If you don't have that, then you don't have evolution and describing what caused those molecular chains to come into existence is not in any way a part of the theory of evolution.

    So saying that evolutionary theory posits a mechanism for the origin of life is not as incorrect as you lot are trying to make out.

    Evolution deals with diverse sets of populations resulting from common ancestry as a result of imperfect replication. Discussing the origin of life necessitates a distinct point where imperfect replicators did not exist. If there are no imperfect replicators, then there's no evolution, so evolution cannot formally address the entirety of the origin of life. It just might be the case that the distinction between what can be called "life" and what can't might have to be adjusted.

    Of course, then you have the bonehead creationists who insist (despite being totally unable to provide a professional reference to support their claim) that the theory of evolution covers the formation of the planet, the solar system and the universe as a whole. But that's a whole long rant for another time.

  113. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by swillden · · Score: 1

    belief infers an absolute Truth, which is something i refuse to believe in

    The existence of absolute, invariant truth is the fundamental axiom of science. Without that, we have no reason to expect that observations can be replicated and that theories can't be falsified one day and validated the next.

    I don't think you really mean that.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  114. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by NewWorldDan · · Score: 0

    Most physicist regard it as a non-question. The Big Bang was the beginning of everything and the phrase "prior to the big bang" is semantically null.

    Which is just as much of a cop-out as "God made it all" although presented as being self-evident truth and therefore intellectually superior.


    Interestingly enough, several years back, one of my Physics TAs was doing his dissertation on the behavior of a perfect vaccuum and whether in a perfect vaccuum a proton and antiproton might simultaneously generate and then anihilate each other. I don't recall him having any success though. The point here being that we can at least theorize and then try to create experiments to understand this stuff.

    But here's what amuses me on a personal level. It takes many examples and experiments to prove a theory. However, it only takes one example to debunk a theory. Interestingly, evolution, ID and creationism can all be debunked in one shinning stunning example: the duck billed platypus. Unless of course, you happen to believe that your God has a rather sick and twisted sense of humor - which could explain a lot about this planet. I can find no other explanation for the existance of this animal. Another couutner example: the dodo bird. At least evolution explains its extinction, just not its origin.

  115. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    a theory is a theory. observations are verifyable, theories are means by which the observations are translated into a working model. in my opinion, a working model that plausibly explains the origin of species is formed by darwins' ideas (and the countless number of evolutionary biologists after him). a theory based on (shaky) arguments against a plausible theory is not viable. it doesn't matter whether GGP, you, or me are right.

    anyway, time and meme selection will weed out the idea that's least acceptable. whether it's on scientific grounds or not...

    then you write in reply to my little paradoxical attempt at humour:
    >> - science *is* by definition incapable of
    >> discovering the Truth. thruth is a construct.
    >> there is no such thing.
    > Your statement isn't true, then.

    ah, you got the point! mission accomplished ;-)

  116. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by cr0sh · · Score: 1
    I am not meaning this to be flamebait, but first you say:

    I am also a True Believer and attend a worship service every Sunday.

    then you go on to say:

    That said, ID is NOT true science. It is simply a score of men who wish to get nonsense into our textbooks.

    How do you do this?

    I am serious. I am not saying religion is "nonsense", but it is most assuredly mythology. How do you get up each morning thinking to yourself "yes, this over here is science, and this is how the scientific method works, but I will ignore all of that knowledge and understanding when it is regarding this subject over here"...?

    It is intriguing to me that individuals all over the world - many who are extremely and highly intelligent, some who are actual scientists - can hold on to this form of "doublethink", and compartmentalize their minds in such a way as to allow them to hold two self-contradictory paths of thought at one time. Let me also note that at one time I practiced a solitary form of Wicca, which is something I no longer do - but for the life of me I cannot figure out how and why I matured past such delusions and have moved on to secular humanism (for lack of another term). At the time I was practicing, I myself was holding those self-same contradictory notions - but I don't know how or why.

    Do you know or have an understanding of such? Furthermore, do you think you will mature past it as I feel I have (I can say that I would probably have said "no" to this question when I was in your place)?

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  117. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Hillgiant · · Score: 1
    You do not have similar problems because when fundamentalist prodestentism reared its malformed head in England, you sensibly lopped it off, mounted it on a pike, and sent the rest of them packing off to America.

    Thanks alot! (jerks)

    --
    -
  118. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Hillgiant · · Score: 1
    The process can be understood without touching on how the process started.

    We can know a lot about how chickens make eggs and how eggs develope into chickens without even touching on which came first.

    --
    -
  119. Re:Teh city landfill welcomes your business ventur by mink · · Score: 1

    You would be amazed. My new Intelligent Lifting theory explains it all.

    --
    Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  120. Something up with this page. by mink · · Score: 1

    Suddenly there is a gray box half way down the article (covering part of a post), the pointer disappears when I go into the bounds of the box, and at the bottom of the article under the /. links in the black area was a picture of guys at a football game with the letters ROD SEX on their chests.
    I checked my machine for spy ware and add ware but I can find nothing. Did someone sneak something in?

    --
    Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  121. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by javaxman · · Score: 1
    In short, they claim to have counter-examples to the fundamental premise of materialistic evolution.

    They make that claim, but is it backed up by anything even remotely resembling real science?

    Your Flying Spaghetti Monster comment is spot-on, by the way.

    One doesn't attempt to directly prove the existence of God through ID. ID argues that the non-existence of a higher-power can be disproved.

    Uh... I fail to see how "prove the existence of X" logically != "disprove non-existence of X". Honestly. X exists or does not. This is independent of the *fact* that the evidence to "disprove non-existance" is pretty much "we don't understand this process, so it must be X at work!", which is hardly scientific.

    I mean really. Come on. Be honest with yourself for a second...

  122. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by javaxman · · Score: 1
    If scientific observation indicates that current theories are inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures, why would you want to supress that information?

    Who is suppressing that information?

    My science teachers were always very clear that there's a limit to what we currently know, and that there is still a lot of interesting work to be done in research science, as there are many things we don't know about every single science subject you could study.

    Did someone try to teach your kid that we know everything there is to know about the origin or life?

    Are you implying that teaching pseudoscientific or religious-based explanations for the origin of life ( or any other less-than-certain scientific topic ) is the right way to combat some supposed "suppression" of "information" ? Does that really make sense to you ?

    Or would you just like to see your religious-based views taught in public schools? Be honest, please...

  123. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by snilloc · · Score: 1
    Ok, I slightly overstated the ID position, but not as much as you think. The designer could have been a super-advanced race of aliens, wholly material and not supernatural. However, it seems to me that the "aliens" explanation is even more fantastic than a supernatural one, and not substantially more "scientific".

    It seems pretty clear that life here has undergone substantial evolution. Either this evolution was guided, or it wasn't. ID claims to have eliminated the unguided part, leaving only some sort of guide.

    Either ID has succeeded in disbunking unguided evolution, or it hasn't. This debate takes place in the realm of evidence and logic. It seems to me to be a stretch to suggest that unguided (materialistic) evolution is wrong* while also suggesting that some other non-supernatural (or alien, if you want to go there) "scientific" forces brought about life as we know it.

    * (By "wrong", I don't just mean "not fully flushed out", but logically impossible.)

    Maybe the ID'ers are full of crap, but the discourse on this matter has been very lowbrow, especially coming from the would-be defenders of "science".

  124. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by snilloc · · Score: 1
    They make that claim, but is it backed up by anything even remotely resembling real science?

    They would say yes. Frankly, the discussion about this evidence is way above 99% of the population, including myself. I watched something on TV (Cspan?) where both sides were presented by folks w/ PhDs, I think both were college professors. Again, I'm not here to defend ID balls-to-the-wall, I'm just sick of the Spaghetti Monster people making arguments that are totally irrelevant.

    Uh... I fail to see how "prove the existence of X" logically != "disprove non-existence of X".

    I was (uneloquently) trying to make the point that you don't just go digging up a piece of God, proof positive. ID makes more of a negative argument, which is totally in-bounds in any field of study... math, science, philosophy. But yes, the end result is the same.

    This is independent of the *fact* that the evidence to "disprove non-existance" is pretty much "we don't understand this process, so it must be X at work!", which is hardly scientific.

    ID claims to have found irreducably complex systems. (I'm not about to discuss whether they've got the goods or not.) An irreducably complex system is logically inconsistent with everything that has ever been said about materialistic evolution. This is very much a scientific discussion, even if much of the public discourse isn't.

  125. Re:You Forgot to Mention the California Class Acti by glitchvern · · Score: 1
    In other words, the lawyers are lining up to ease the pain of the affected consumers by securing a $2 off coupon for the next DRM'ed CD while collecting $12 million for themselves.

    Not anymore, the recent class action lawsuit reform law passed by Congress makes the coupon scheme illegal. They'll have to give customers cash or find a new way to screw them over.
  126. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution as a mechanism for the emergence of new species has NOT been observed. It is theorized, and that is where the current debate arises.

    Sigh.

    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htm l
    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html

  127. Links to alternative models by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 1
    > The idea, that Universe existed "forever" is contrary to science.

    You are wrong. There are multiple theories which fully take into account all observations while positing an ever-existing universe.

    As an added bonus, they have testable differences from the standard Big Bang theory, some of which (such as low-frequency gravity waves) we're working on detectors for even now.

  128. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by phylomon · · Score: 1

    I think you and I pretty much agree. I don't believe that ID has debunked unguided evolution. I believe that irreducible complexity has not been demonstrated.

    My only suggestion is that there are other possibilities that may be explored, maybe panspermia (I know, it only shifts the time-frame), maybe something we just don't have any concept of now. There is a lot of evidence available now that suggests panspermia is not so far-fetched. http://www.panspermia.com/. There is a large part of the genome that is highly preserved and we don't know what it does (so-called junk DNA).

    --
    My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
  129. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

    Evolution as a mechanism for the emergence of new species has NOT been observed.

    Wrong.

  130. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

    The point of contention seems to always lie with people who don't believe that we evolved from monkeys, which is fine

    Well, no, it's not, as that means they completely misunderstand evolution and thusly shouldn't be talking about it at all until they educate themselves.

    Evolutionary theory is that monkeys and humans evolved from a common ancestor.

    Saying that evolution says we're descended from monkeys is like saying you're descended from your siblings instead of your parents. It is simply not true.

    we were explicitely informed that it's a theory

    Fine, as long as they give the scientific definition of "theory". From Wikipedia: "In scientific usage, theory is not the opposite of fact. Theories are typically ways of explaining why things happen, usually after the fact that they happen is no longer in scientific dispute."

  131. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

    I was under the impression that DNA similarities across species was at least a bit of evidence for macroevolution.

    A good point.

    I've seen it phrased in what I thought was a clever way of getting the point across: If a student handed in an "original play" that had 95% of the same words in the same order as Shakespeare's Macbeth, would you consider it a) plagarism or b) a trick by Satan?

  132. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

    > a theory based on (shaky) arguments against a plausible theory is
    > not viable. it doesn't matter whether GGP, you, or me are right.
    Darwin's theory is only plausible if you accept a non-supernatural origin of the species as axiomatic, and then ignore the problems with it. For more information: http://answersingenesis.org/

    > anyway, time and meme selection will weed out the idea that's
    > least acceptable. whether it's on scientific grounds or not...
    I hope it's on scientific grounds.

    > then you write in reply to my little paradoxical attempt at humour: :-/ Yeah sure, after-the-fact humor covers a whole multitude of logic flaws.

    >>> - science *is* by definition incapable of
    >>> discovering the Truth. thruth is a construct.
    >>> there is no such thing.
    >> Your statement isn't true, then.
    >ah, you got the point! mission accomplished ;-)
    Indeed. Now only if you'd get the same point ;-D

  133. Falsifying Evolution - What evidence would do it? by phylomon · · Score: 1

    Finding his example with transponsons would still be pretty ugly for evolution, but as you indicate it could be explained as a freak transfer event for two reasons.

    I'm not even sure that I would call it a freak transfer. According to Lynn Margulis, a prominent, main-stream bioligist, "Viruses today spread genes among bacteria and humans and other cells, as they always have... We are our viruses". She said this in a book written in 1998. For me, transposons of just about any stripe would not falsify evolution, with the following exception:

    If you found the same viral DNA insertion in whales and in humans - and in fact found it inserted in precisely the same location - and it was absent in chimpanzees - that would be a huge problem for evolution. The insertion of the same viral DNA at the exact same location cannot reasonably be dissmissed as a random occurance, and finding multiple such examples would be overwhelming evidence.

    That would, for me, be strong evidence of intelligent tampering with the genome. I don't expect to find that, though. IF we do someday find evidence of design, I think it will be along the lines of a genetic "terraforming package". A library of a lot of useful genes, with some viruses to shuffle them around, loaded into some hardy bacteria and seeded into the cosmos. I think this model has the potential to explain what we see around us without requiring a miracle and without completely invalidating evolution. This theory (panspermia) has the added benefit of being falsifiable. If we get out there and don't find bacteria, it obviously didn't happen that way.

    You mentioned common descent. I'm not so sure, with what we now know about transposition, that common genetic descent is a requirement. We have already found strange bits of DNA where they have no right to be. Eukaryote genes in prokaryotes and the like. Chlamidia trachomatis, for example, contains more than 30 eukaryotic genes.

    URL:http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content /full/1998/1022/1 membership required

    URL:http://www.panspermia.com/whatsne4.htm#%2098 1023txt A short synopsis here

    --
    My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...
  134. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Damer+Face · · Score: 1

    > The point here being that we can at least theorize and then try to create
    > experiments to understand this stuff.

    Well we can't perform experiments in a perfect vacuum can we, except as abstract, unreal thought experiments.

    Just like we can't perform experiments on the creation of space and time.

    We can approximate, but we shouldn't then rush into ontological assertions: the map is not the territory, the model is not the reality. If there is a reality. Einstein's belief that there is such a thing was proven to be wrong according to the canon.

    I think the point is that scientists are much freer to make this sort of speculation than most of their religious counterparts, although there is still an orthodoxy in science, and dissent from that orthodoxy is basically treated as heresy.

    Look at the recent treatment on these pages of Randell Mills. A stream of invective and name-calling, but how many people had actually looked at his CQM and criticised it on scientific grounds, and how many people just yelled crank without any technical knowldege of the errors he may be making?

    None of this is directed at the parent, by the way, I'm just using it as a foil to further my rant.

    > Unless of course, you happen to believe that your God has a rather sick and
    > twisted sense of humor

    Well let's not mistake Abrahamic Creationism for creationist theories in general, of which there are probably thousands. Many of them do include joker gods who take the piss out of humankind and the planet in general.

  135. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Damer+Face · · Score: 1

    This is a semantic game playing on the fact that as you get to "simpler" and smaller forms of life, the distinction between what is "life" and what is "non-life" becomes unclear.

    What is semantic game-playing? What does "this" refer to?

    My stating that there is more than one school of thought on the theory of evolution and that people should therefore clarify what they mean by "evolution"?

    Or the theory of replicators?

    Defining what you mean and understanding the limits of those definitions is not "semantic game-playing", it's the basis of rational discourse.

    But look, if one thinks the theory of the evolution describes speciation, from humans continuously down to simpler and simpler entities until one has clearly moved from the domain of biology to the domain of chemistry, then one is using the theory of evolution to explain the origins of life.

    To pretend otherwise is disingenuous at best.

    Ultimately you have a point where you do not have chains of molecules making imperfect copies of themselves (the chains, not the individual molecules). When you have that, you get evolution

    You are saying:

    "When you have [a point where you do not have chains of molecules making imperfect copies of themselves], you get evolution"

    which you later contradict:

    "If there are no imperfect replicators, then there's no evolution".

    and describing what caused those molecular chains to come into existence is not in any way a part of the theory of evolution.

    I don't think anyone is claiming that the genesis of molecular chains is part of the theory, apart from a bunch of Watchtower propagandists.

    But whilst their genesis might not be, the existence of molecular replicators _is_ included into the evolutionary model by people like Dawkins, and he then applies imperfect replication and the directive force of Malthusian competition continuously up from the molecular chains into the domain of complex living organisms. So in Dawkins world, evolution does talk about the origins of life. That's my contention.

    If there are no imperfect replicators, then there's no evolution, so evolution cannot formally address the entirety of the origin of life.

    However, in this model, at the point of the origin of life there is replication and there is therefore evolution.

    To be honest, I'm struggling to understand your argument, largely because you contradict yourself, use pronouns that don't refer to anything obvious, and keep begging the question.

  136. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Alsee · · Score: 1

    How the heck to you propose to prove that life spontaneously emerged from nothing?

    That's like attacking chemistry on the basis that it does not explain the origin of elements.

    Chemistry starts from the existance of elements and explains how those elements behave. Chemistry says absolutely nothing about the origin of elements. The theory addressing the origin of elements is nuclear fusion. Nuclear fusion was many years later than chemistry in being developed as a successful established field to be taught in highshools.

    Evolutionstarts from the existance of life and explains how that life can and will change over time to create the vast range and complexity of life we see today. The very word "evolution" means change. Evolution says absolutely nothing about the origin of life. The theory addressing the origin of life is abiogenesis.

    Abiogenesis has little or no place in highschool science curriculums because it is currently a an extremely undeveloped field with little explanatory power and has made few predictions and has received minimal experimental confirmation and had insignifigant agreement and acceptance by the scientific community. Just like we generally do not teach String Theory in highschool science class. It is not a developed and supported and broadly established theory.

    If scientific observation indicates that current theories are inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures, why would you want to supress that information?

    For the same reason I'd want to "suppress" the information that nuclear fusion is somehow inadaquate explain the the sun.

    Oh there are certainly a very a couple of scientists going with this "Electric Universe" thing, and they have certainly published some claims chalenging the nuclear fusion model of powering the sun, but those papers and been evaluated and dismissed by the relevant scientific community. Two or three scientists... out of the all of the physiscists on the planet... two or three who have their claims peer reviewed and rejected does not amount to a genuine scientific controversy. Stellar nuclear fusion is the indisputed accepted scientific theory. It is fully accepted by at least 99.9% of all physicists.

    Oh there are certainly a very small handful of scientists claiming evolution inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures, and they have certainly published some claims challenging evolution, but those papers and been evaluated and dismissed by the relevant scientific community. Two or three scientists... out of the all of the biologists on the planet... two or three who have their claims peer reviewed and rejected does not amount to a genuine scientific controversy. Every single time one of them attempts to cite a biological system and claim it could not have evolved it is immediately demonstrated why they are mistaken. Even Behe... the ID'ers star antievolution biologist... Behe admited on the stand in Kansas that his own research indicated that "Irreducably Complex systems" would naturally arise through evolution quite rapidly in a realistically sized population. Evolution is the indisputed accepted scientific theory. It is fully accepted by at least 99.9% of all biologists.

    If you think there are scientific observation indicating that current theories are inadequate to explain the complexities biological structures then you have not been reading anything written by mainstream biology professionals. You have either been reading vague empty claims, or you have been reading examples that have been peer reviewed and resolved.

    There is no controversy over evolution in the scientific community. All, I repeat *ALL* of the controversy is in the political arena and in public oppinion. There is a religious fundamentalist group rasing millions of dollars in donations and waging a PR campaign. They are wedded to a "literal" interpretation of the Bible that says that God did not.. that God COULD NOT... have chosen to use evolution as his means of creating the universe he

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  137. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is nothing to the ID papers other than lame attempts to cast doubt on evolution. There is nothing in ID other than "we don't think evolution can explain that" and a "well God must have dione it".

    And all of the ID criticisms of evolution have been peer reviewed by the scientific community and they have all been found flawed.

    Highschool classrooms are not the battleground to fight and resolve science. Highscool teachers and students are not equipped to judge String Theory. That is done in the scientific community by knowedgable experts and professional scientists in the field. Highschool science class is for making students familiar with established science.

  138. Kansas Accreditation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope that they do not have a way of wiring that as well. With the present 'faith based' administration in the white house and congress patting each other on the back and letting the likes of 'Kill 'em all 'n let Gawd sort 'em out' Pat Robertson get off with a pat on the back for askin' for the asassination of a head of a sovereign state, it is more than likely the policy could get legs and go nationwide. At that time it would be a good time to emigrate from here, for
    liberty would not liver here anymore. What with torture, officially sanctioned kidnapping and holding incommunicado of American citizens being presented by administration officials and openly backed by the Vice President, where has our Constitution gone. You know, the one we all swore to protect and defend with our lives when we all enlisted.....at least when I enlisted.
          Back to the subject. Just don't hire help if they are from Kansas. The whole place has gone to Oz. Just don't accept Kansas transfer students without remedial reading and remedial science. I say remedial reading because anybody with an ounce of sense and a good reading background could see through the dogma rooted arguments and thinly veiled threats of religious radicals posing as 'scientists'. With all the 'malpractice' suits out there, how about one worthy adding another category to the list: educational malpractice or
    miseducation.

  139. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by javaxman · · Score: 1
    ID claims to have found irreducably complex systems. (I'm not about to discuss whether they've got the goods or not.) An irreducably complex system is logically inconsistent with everything that has ever been said about materialistic evolution. This is very much a scientific discussion, even if much of the public discourse isn't.

    Look, clearly you've bought what the ID folks are selling ( and again I ask, honestly, have you bought into this in part due to your religious views? ), so it's not productive for me to spend much more time arguing this with you, *but*...

    this whole "irreducably complex systems" argument? It's totally bullshit, and, no matter what someone with some sort of degree said on TV, *not* 'inconsistent with everything'... 'about evolution'... microevolution, maybe, but not really. The key example the ID gang likes to talk about is the eye. Really, there *are* rudimentary eyes, and slightly more advanced eyes with only 'cones', and really, it's not clear why they think the eye is so 'irreducably complex' that it means, uh, someone must have designed it... that's a hell of a conclusion to reach from "boy, this is a complex organ".

    Really, their argument is a little like "all the atoms in this crystal are lined up *exactly* in a matrix formation! That's too weird. It *must* have been arranged that way by an intelligent being!". Which of course ignores the possibility that more basic self-organizing properties of matter are at work...

    To summarize: of course they'd say yes, they have proof. Any scrutiny of that 'proof' shows that, really, they have nothing. We all have to determine if they 'have the goods', and after reviewing the evidence, even *they* know they don't have the goods ( check the science journals if you want ), they're just trying to make it look like there's some doubt about evolutionary theory so they can introduce their own religious-based pseudo-pseudoscientific ( I call it that because it tries to be pseudoscience ) ideas taught as "science".

    If they weren't all about obviously pushing a religious agenda, it'd be more difficult to figure out what's going on, but let's face it... these I.D. folks? Easy-to-spot religous nuts, funded by and founded by well-known religious nuts. Not scientists. People with an agenda. Not people concerned with your children learning about science. If you're fooled, you wanted to be, or you weren't really paying attention...

  140. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by ppanon · · Score: 1

    Ok, I slightly overstated the ID position, but not as much as you think. The designer could have been a super-advanced race of aliens, wholly material and not supernatural. However, it seems to me that the "aliens" explanation is even more fantastic than a supernatural one, and not substantially more "scientific".

    Oh I don't know, there's something called crown ecologies (such as certain coniferous forests) which are very static, even if metastable. If an alien species wanted companionship, they might go on a regular circuit of all the planets capable of developing life within a region and, when they came upon a planet that had reached a metastable state without intelligent life, shove it out of that state to re-activate/accelerate evolution by giving a new set of creatures a competitive advantage. For instance they might use a big meteor impact to change the weather and kill off very large fauna. That circuit between the stars might give them an almost regular arrival of a few hundred million years.

    Fact is, if there's nothing out there right now, maybe we should start doing that very thing. As things go, it wouldn't be a bad purpose in life to be an intelligence farmer. We humans have a long history at farming and so probably would any other intelligent species out there.

    --
    Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  141. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by snilloc · · Score: 1
    Nice straw man with the "eye" example - nobody has seriously used that in quite some time. But no, Irreducable complexity is not bullshit. I refer you to Darwin...

    "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down." - The Origin of Species

    I will also refer you to my original post:

    The smart critics reply that all of the supposed counter-examples can be refuted, or are at best inconclusive.

    In short, I'm sick of the uninformed masses denouncing an idea they don't even comprehend just because of who supports it. Reject it for the evidence; don't reject it because of its implications. (That I've been accused of falling prey to religious nuts for merely trying to point the discussion where should be is quite telling, and frankly, annoying.)

  142. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    "Darwin's theory is only plausible if you accept a non-supernatural origin of the species as axiomatic, and then ignore the problems with it. For more information: http://answersingenesis.org/"

    congratulations with your observations on the existence of a Deity (that supernatural origin of species). you're obviously more lucky than this mortal sinner is.

  143. Re:Look guys: intelligent design is NOT SCIENCE by javaxman · · Score: 1
    That I've been accused of falling prey to religious nuts for merely trying to point the discussion where should be is quite telling, and frankly, annoying.

    Then answer the question! Do you have religious motivation to defend I.D., or are you atheist/buddist/FSMist/newAgeist/whatever ???

    And that's a *very* cogent point; if you're not backing some religious view, ( actually, a specifically Christian religious view ) you are *not* going to find yourself backing I.D. That's a very, very telling *fact*, and you shouldn't ignore it- you should take it to heart, and at least have the guts to stand up and say "yes, I believe in the story of Genesis as told in the Bible and that's part of why I think I.D. is a valid theory". If you don't have that faith in your convictions and religious beliefs, then I have a hard time respecting you intellectually... because on it's own merits, there's very little to I.D.

    Nice straw man with the "eye" example - nobody has seriously used that in quite some time.

    Ok, so the eye was a straw man ( I honestly wasn't aware of that... when did the I.D. guys take that as a defeat? I saw it used here less than a month ago )... so, what's the new thing? The eye seemed like a pretty good candidate... and most other things, the heart, limbs, etc... they all seem more straightforward... what's supposed to be irreducibly complex? or, if

    all of the supposed counter-examples can be refuted, or are at best inconclusive

    then what's the point you're trying to make by bringing that up as the most serious 'scientific' leg of I.D.? It sounds like I.D. is pretty hard to defend scientifically, doesn't it? Why are you trying?

    I'm sick of the uninformed masses denouncing an idea they don't even comprehend just because of who supports it. Reject it for the evidence; don't reject it because of its implications.

    a) sometimes who supports an idea *is* important, and can tell you a lot about the possible result of adopting the idea.

    b) what about the informed masses denouncing an idea they do comprehend ? It's only the I.D. folks who are trying to make the evidence and theories sound *really* complicated... the evidence is pretty hard and easy to demonstrate, and I'm willing to bet that well over 25% of the general public grasp the concepts, which, for science, is a pretty large number. Personally, I've tried really, really, really hard to look for solid evidence behind I.D., and I'm afraid it just doesn't seem to be there, as much as I might like it to be.

    C) do you think people would reject an idea just because it proved the existence of some sort of deity?!? Are you kidding? As unsettling as it'd be to find that there is a god that just doesn't seem to mind us starting wars, etc, it'd be one of the most awesome discoveries of all times, and we'd all love it ! Well, most of us would, anyway. It'd be like finding aliens, or perpetual motion, only even cooler...

    Unfortunately, the simple fact is that I.D. is just some wealthy religous guys blowing smoke to try to get religious views taught as science in U.S. schools, and nothing more... and that's sad, because if mom and dad want to teach their kid about Genesis, that kid should be going to Sunday School already. And other kids? They don't need that teaching from the state, m'kay?

    In the long run, this *is* really all about trying to get religious views are taught in public schools, isn't it?

  144. Re:Falsifying Evolution - What evidence would do i by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > If we get out there and don't find bacteria, it obviously didn't happen that way.

    Not that it affects your point much, but if we get "out there" there will be a whole lot of places to look for bacteria. So many that ruling it out by exploration alone would be impossible. What if it was just one asteroid/whatever that came from a galaxy far, far away but its bacteria only came to Earth and deposited life nowhere else on the way? Then we'd have to get to that galaxy to prove it.

  145. Re:Falsifying Evolution - What evidence would do i by phylomon · · Score: 1

    Not that it affects your point much, but if we get "out there" there will be a whole lot of places to look for bacteria. So many that ruling it out by exploration alone would be impossible. What if it was just one asteroid/whatever that came from a galaxy far, far away but its bacteria only came to Earth and deposited life nowhere else on the way? Then we'd have to get to that galaxy to prove it.

    That is a good point. My assumption has been that if something like that were to happen, it would, of necessity, be a large-scale endeavor. But, yes, you are correct, we could find no bacteria and still not be able to completely rule out the possibility. Of course, extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. So, for me, if we don't find bacteria easily, panspermia is mostly invalidated.

    --
    My wife says I'm impossible. I'm not. I'm just extremely unlikely. There's a difference...