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User: Vertex+Operator

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Comments · 27

  1. Re:Before anyone asks... on Billions Donated to Charity · · Score: 1

    You're not considering the "hidden" taxes that result in higher prices
    for goods and services. Taxes, fees, etc.

  2. An Inversion Square on A Solution for the Ten Letter Acrostic Puzzle? · · Score: 1

    Mine:

        detasseled
        exercitate
        tectonical
        arthrolite
        scorpionis
        sinoiprocs
        etilorhtra
        lacinotcet
        etaticrexe
        delessated

    See:

    http://rec-puzzles.org/new/sol.pl/language/english /spelling/sets.of.words/squares

  3. My try on BSA Asks Kids to Name Copyright Weasel · · Score: 1

    Hitler the freedom-crushing ferret.

  4. Re:Parry Aftab on The Saga of Katie.com · · Score: 1

    Don't you mean "hangnail of the internet"?

    Lighten up, btw.

  5. Parry Aftab on The Saga of Katie.com · · Score: 1

    From http://www.aftab.com/

    "Parry Aftab is one of the leading experts, worldwide, on cybercrime, Internet privacy and cyber-abuse issues."

    A gather this means she's an expert on
    committing cybercrime?

  6. Fate? on The Saga of Katie.com · · Score: 1


    "Katie Tarbox" anagrams to "Rob, take taxi".

    Fate, I tells ya.

  7. I'll start on NASA Eyes Cash Prizes Of Its Own · · Score: 3, Funny


    $10 to the first company that develops a
    spaceship that flies to Mars and back.

  8. Re:Smart? on The Mathematics of Futurama · · Score: 2, Informative

    By symmetry each of his grandparents (not
    including himself) must have contributed 1/3
    of his genetic information.

    And that be the way it 'tis.

  9. Works great with Konqueror! on Flash 7 for Linux Released · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just toss those two files into /usr/lib/browser-plugins and away you go.

    Works fine with Mozilla, Firefox, also.

    Didn't test it with Epiphany etc.

  10. Can your Indian beat my Indian? on Secondary Exam Results In India Mean An SMS Flood · · Score: 5, Funny

    Go to

    http://cbseresults.nic.in/class12/cbse12.htm

    Enter 1200003

    GRADE
    301 ENGLISH CORE 087 A1
    041 MATHEMATICS 095 A1
    042 PHYSICS 097 A1
    043 CHEMISTRY 095 A1
    044 BIOLOGY 097 A1
    500 WORK EXPERIENCE --- A2
    502 PHY & HEALTH EDUCA --- A2
    503 GENERAL STUDIES --- A2

    Can anyone find another Indian that beats my
    Indian?

  11. I read the title as ... on Robot Sales Are Exploding · · Score: 1


    Exploding Robots for Sale.

  12. I dub thee on Darl McBride Interview · · Score: 2, Funny


    Sir Comical McBride.

    "We will slaughter IBM."

    "We will great Linus with death and shoes."

  13. Considering that Linux is OS and SCO Unix is not on SCO Shows 80 Lines of Evidence? · · Score: 1


    I'd say it's far more like that some overworked
    SCO Unix coding monkey stole some code from
    Linux than the other way around. What would be
    the point of stealing such a miniscule amount
    of code? If it's only 80 lines it can't be
    anything critical or extraordinarily clever.
    Two operating systems coded in the same language
    will of course have lines of code that are
    identical, or nearly identical. They have to
    perform many of the same functions, and function
    dictates form.

  14. The entire article is a troll, of course on Running a Research Lab on Free Software? · · Score: 1

    I've never known a mathematician or physicist
    who didn't use Linux or a Unix variant (like
    Solaris). The same goes for theoretical
    computer scientists.

  15. Of course there will be a lot of failures ... on New NASA Shuttle Program "Doomed To Failure" · · Score: 5, Funny

    NASA isn't run by rocket scientists, after all.
    Oh, wait, ...

    -Chris

  16. Re:Will Science Never Learn? on Journal of Applied Physics, NASA, and the Hydrino · · Score: 1

    Exactly, scientists are usually as confused as most people about where the quarter came from that got pulled out of your ear. Your generic street hustler isn't, but they could easily be fooled by bad science. You need a team - Professor Starsky and Hutch the Hustler.

  17. Will Science Never Learn? on Journal of Applied Physics, NASA, and the Hydrino · · Score: 3, Insightful


    You don't send a scientist to investigate questionable science, and what may or may not be a scam. You send a scientist *and* someone familiar with con artists, scammers, sleight of hand, misdirection, etc. How many times does this have to be said?

    -Chris

  18. With all this information, Laura Betterly on The Economics of Spam · · Score: 1

    Phone: 727-733-5335

    LAURA BETTERLY
    717 WEATHERSFIELD DR
    DUNEDIN FL 34698

    laura@dataresourceconsulting.com

    Is in danger of being signed up on a bunch
    of snail-mail spam lists. Perhaps porn-related?
    Someone should warn her!

  19. :( on Loki Files For Chapter 11 Protection · · Score: 0

    I bought several Loki games, myself. It was always a pleasure gaming under a real operating system (real shell, could handle multiple CPUs, virtual desktop, great stability, etc.).

    I suppose it's implied by the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. The universe moves to a state of greater entropy, and the computer universe moves to a state of sucking more.

  20. Re:Qualifications on Florida Election Votes Certified · · Score: 1

    Gore actually did much better than Bush in college. Gore graduated cum laude from Harvard, but Bush never earned higher than a B in his major at Yale.

    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University

  21. Some Proposed Reasons on MP3s In Foreign Countries · · Score: 2


    1) Most other countries have a smaller percentage of the population owning computers. Thus it's a smaller issue.

    2) Most other countries don't seem to have flat rate plans for internet access as is common (even expected) in the US. Furthermore, local calls in the US are free (modulo your monthly bill). Downloading MP3s is thus more expensive, and hence less commonplace (and less of an issue).

    3) Piracy is more commonplace in many other countries, since the US economy is comparatively
    strong. Thus it's less of an issue.
    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University

  22. How do you squeeze blood out of a stone? on The Leased Life? · · Score: 1

    Answer, you start with a person, and keep squeezing until you've squeezed them dry. Society has to keep coming up with more, and more creative, ways of squeezing money and productivity out a person. Hence, longer working hours, products which you rent and no longer own (once you own something, the revenue stream dries up). So now, even products which traditionally people have owned are moving towards being leased and rented (houses, cars, software). It's a sad, but predictable trend.

    What's a gimper?
    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University
  23. Misleading spam is very much a crime ... on Is Forged Spam a Crime? · · Score: 1

    Since spam by itself is considered criminal in certain parts of the world, cloaking yourself behind a false address is potentially criminally damaging to an innocent third party. This, at the very least, should open you up to civil charges from this third party.

    What's a gimper?
    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University
  24. But, according to _Time_ magazine ... on Y2K Rollover - Post Your Experiences Here! · · Score: 1

    the century is over, hence the millennium is de facto over as well. After all, they just announced Albert Einstein as the "person of the century".

    If anyone wants me, I'll be in my Y2K compliant bunker.
    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University

  25. Re:a scientist who cant explain self to 7yr old... on Shimura-Taniyama-Weil (STW) Solved · · Score: 2

    That's completely idiotic. Understanding STW on a level deeper than "all chipmunks are really woodchucks in disguise" would require several years of graduate mathematics, and those several years would have to be doing the right type of mathematics. People, even smart ones, need to accept that there are simply some things that they couldn't understand, even if they worked very hard for a very long time.

    The most advanced mathematics courses geek types typically take is differential equations, which usually consists of fairly mindless equation manipulation is hence is quite literally nothing like what a typical mathematician does. This is really unfortunate, as much of mathematics is quite beautiful. Great mathematicians are great artists, but appreciating the art has an extremely steep curve.

    As for applications, people need to accept that going from understanding something to using an indirect consequence to build a sturdier lunch box could takes hundreds of years. It's a long chain, after all; math to physics to engineering to corporations to consumers.

    There are deep and extremely important connections between number theory and physics, e.g. vertex operator algebras, string theories, zeroes of zeta functions, eigenvalues of large random matrices. Understanding these connections, in math as well as physics, is thus key to future progress.
    --
    Chris Long, Departments of Mathematics & Statistics, Rutgers University