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  1. The carbon cycle is part of the bigger picture on Study Rules Out Global Warming Being a Natural Fluctuation With 99% Certainty · · Score: 1

    The AGW advocates always present the AGW discussion as some sort of 'vote' by scientists in which the percentage of something or other is the most important thing. TFA in this case points to a '99 percent' certainty that the world is screwed unless we do what they say. ALL of this is based on computer models of the earth's climate that have not been accurate at forecasting because of their crude modeling of the atmospheric water cycle. Water is the most important 'greenhouse' gas, by hundreds of times, due to its a) prevalence, and b) massive greenhouse effect. But...the AGW advocates ignore the effect of water with their general assumption that a)it's always been there and b) always will be there, and c) does not change and focus all of their attention on carbon dioxide and the hawaiian concentration measurements showing a steady atmospheric increase. However, they completely ignore the carbon cycle. ALL of the carbon that we are exploiting was in the atmosphere in the past and was eventually 'sequestered' through natural processes that continue to this day. ALL of the carbon currently in the earth's crust will eventually be released into the atmosphere, either by the actions of man or by natural processes. For example, there are thousands of locations around the world where hydrocarbons (primarily ch4 but larger hydrocarbons as well) are naturally released into the atmosphere continuously. ALL of the carbon currently in the atmosphere will eventually be returned to the earth's crust. Carbon is constantly being cycled into and out of the earth's crust. Man's exploitation of hydrocarbons are just part of the cycling out of the crust. Moreover, there is absolutely zero evidence that the carbon concentration in the atmosphere is a constant value but rather has obviously changed dramatically over time. The earth's climate may warm over the next century or it may cool (through change in solar output) but there is nothing that we are going to do that is going to change it even 0.1 C. Politically, however, this is an enormous issue because new laws driver by AGW fearmongers will potentially give governments much more power than they already have over the distribution and use of energy. In the United States, we have already seen the beginnings of regulation of carbon dioxide 'pollutant' emissions.

  2. Re:Microsoft does not want kids coding... on Should Microsoft Give Kids Programmable Versions of Office? · · Score: 1

    You either miss or ignore the point (probably both). If you want kids to write code, you make getting the means to do it EASY to do. If you create obstacles, they won't. Including a simple and powerful tool in Windows that lets the code be run by anyone who has the same tool on their windows makes it EASY. Pointing to some website somewhere where someone could download and investigate some Microsoft title with obtuse and onerous licensing terms is not about 'making it easy.' Moreover, taking kids to some corporate website and making them enter into some sort of contract with the corporation is...depraved.

  3. The biggest problem with Windows XP on Meet the Diehards Who Refuse To Move On From Windows XP · · Score: 1

    Let's be honest here. The biggest problem with the Windows XP installed on your computer is that Microsoft is not receiving any more revenue from you. If you buy an 'upgrade' Windows 8, they receive a new licensing fee. That's the problem that Windows 8 fixes.

  4. Re:Microsoft does not want kids coding... on Should Microsoft Give Kids Programmable Versions of Office? · · Score: 1

    So...which of those titles are included with every copy of Windows? Which of those provide kids with a simple and powerful way to create something impressive? For which of those can they share the results back and forth with their friends? If Bill Gates was a teenager now, he would be on xbox live and there never would have been any Microsoft.

  5. Microsoft does not want kids coding... on Should Microsoft Give Kids Programmable Versions of Office? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...based on what they DO rather than on what they SAY. They used to supply a simple basic interpreter with every copy of MS-DOS that cost nothing and was simple to use. That is long gone and nothing has ever taken its place. If kids want to code now, the options are expensive, complicated, and are not included in the price of 'Windows.' Moreover, Microsoft distributes sophisticated video games that suck up the time and creative energy of the very kids that would otherwise be likely to code in the first place. One might think that Microsoft would encourage high schools to offer coding curricula by distributing tools to high schools for free/low cost and providing training and guidance for teachers. Instead, Microsoft distributes Office for low cost and we are talking in TFA about what Office can do as a development tool. One has to conclude, based on its actions, that the very last thing Microsoft wants is for a lot of bright american kids to be actually writing powerful creative code for Windows.

  6. The Internet takes away...and gives on How the Internet Is Taking Away America's Religion · · Score: 2

    It's a sword that cuts both ways. On the one hand, the internet brings everyone out into the middle of a diversity of thought. On the other hand, it provides a powerful way to find out more about what you believe...and everyone believes something as our ability to have first-hand experience and new ideas in our own short lives is very limited. We have to rely mostly on other people's ideas and experience passed down through time and shared. Ultimately, if God is acting in our midst, then the internet will be a means for God to reach more people and enter their hearts.

  7. Is it wise to use Systemd? on Linus Torvalds Suspends Key Linux Developer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Systemd replaces init and is the first daemon to start up in user space during boot and the last daemon to shut down. When its developer sees nothing wrong with breaking the kernel debug during boot merely because its developer feels that he's entitled to use the same parameter name and the kernel boot be damned, you REALLY have to wonder about the wisdom of using systemd.

  8. Re:Constitutional crisis approaches... on NSA Confirms It Has Been Searching US Citizens' Data Without a Warrant · · Score: 1

    The oath for Federal Officials:

    "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter: So help me God.

    That makes things pretty clear.

  9. Constitutional crisis approaches... on NSA Confirms It Has Been Searching US Citizens' Data Without a Warrant · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Either communications (phone, email, twitter, etc.) are private and protected by the Constitution...or they are not. It cannot be both ways. If they are protected by the constitution...and the government, through its agency, the NSA, refuses to uphold the constitution, then a constitutional crisis is upon us...and the way forward on that is bleak since the constitution has been the basis for the existence of the United States for the last 2+ centuries. Here, we have the government essentially saying that their needs entitle it to disregard the constitution that they are sworn to uphold. Probably the only way to really resolve this is to arrest and bring the responsible officials into court on charges of treason...and it's not clear who or what would do the arresting and prosecution.

  10. Every state has its hazards... on Geologists Warned of Washington State Mudslides For Decades · · Score: 2

    Western Washington has millions of people living in slide zones, living on old slide deposits, living in front of future slides. It's easy to point to one active slide area and say 'damn fools shouldn't have lived there' but the reality is that we live in the shadow of glaciers from the recent past that resulted in widespread deposits of soupy soil. Western Washington is also a high-hazard area for huge earthquakes, as are many parts of California. Do people expect everyone to move? Or what about Oklahoma or Kansas in the path of tornadoes? Or Minnesotans subject to stinging blizzards and arctic chill? Or...? You get the idea. You try and identify the hazards, mitigate them, and warn of them. In the case of the Oso landslide, there never should have been clearcut logging above the slide-prone area, there should have been monitoring of the water levels, and there should have been drainage mitigations installed years ago...as there have been in many other similar areas including just up the road from Oso. So...don't tell people to move until you're prepared to tell Californians or Oklahomans or English or Japanese or whoever to move.

  11. Re:How can they be certain no one survived? on How Satellite Company Inmarsat Tracked Down MH370 · · Score: 1

    Might there be emergency water supplies on the rafts? Perhaps they have small solar-powered desalinators on the raft as emergency equipment (many do)? Perhaps it rained and the passengers collected rainwater?

  12. How can they be certain no one survived? on How Satellite Company Inmarsat Tracked Down MH370 · · Score: 2

    The calculations show the southern flight path and consequently a water landing. But...how can they be so certain that no one survived? Isn't it possible that the airplane made a controlled glide into a non-powered water landing and that the life rafts deployed and allowed some of the passengers to survive? That has happened before. Admittedly this is very unlikely but can anyone at this point say it is impossible as the Malaysian government is doing?

  13. Deep skepticism... on IPCC's "Darkest Yet" Climate Report Warns of Food, Water Shortages · · Score: 1

    "...pointing to a future stalked by floods, drought, conflict and economic damage if carbon emissions go untamed."

    assuming for argument's sake that warming is occurring, why would/should the impacts be all bad? A warming climate should make vast areas of the planet more habitable, reduce heating and shelter requirements, increase areas for agriculture and allow increased yields, etc. Why wouldn't there also be some benefits?

    "Scientists and government representatives will meet in Yokohama, Japan, from tomorrow to hammer out a 29-page summary.

    Is this meeting 'science' or 'government?' It cannot be both.

    "The work comes six months after the first volume in the long-awaited Fifth Assessment Report declared scientists were more certain than ever that humans caused global warming."

    The alleged scientists have allegedly been 'more certain than ever' for at least 10 years. In fact, anyone who doubts is usually referred to as a 'denier.' Are a greater percentage of the 'scientists' in agreement or are those in agreement merely firmer in their allegedly scientific convictions?

    "Seas will creep up by 26cm-82cm by 2100."

    The global absolute sea level has increased by 24 cm since 1870 and disaster has not yet struck. Land use changes, buildings and cities move over time. The sea level has dropped significantly at times over the last 20 centuries and has been much higher at times during that period. For example, the ancient ports of Rome and Ephesus (two of the 5 largest Roman cities 20 centuries ago) are now high and dry. Why would we think that sea level should be a constant? The current rate of increase has been essentially constant over the last 13 decades. An increase of 26 cm in the next 9 decades is not much of a change from the present rate.

  14. "High Chance" more like 'Fat Chance' on 43,000-Year-Old Woolly Mammoth Remains Offer Strong Chance of Cloning · · Score: 1

    First off, no one has ever cloned an actual living elephant. Horses have been cloned by implanting a cell nucleus from a living cell in a host egg cell and then implanting that in a surrogate mother. That process results in about 1 viable embryo for every 1,000 attempts so it is hardly a sure thing. In TFA however, they are talking about taking a nucleus from a 43,000-year-old frozen cell and implanting that in an egg cell of another species and then implanting the hoped for embryo into a living elephant. There are not that many elephants to try this on worldwide, most of those are in zoos, and even normal reproduction of these elephants is problematic with the population plummeting due to a lack of fertility. The bottom line is, don't expect to see the wooly mammoth at your local petting zoo anytime soon.

  15. Ballmer is the symptom of Microsoft's disease on Steve Ballmer Blew Up At the Microsoft Board Before Retiring · · Score: 1

    The guy is just not tech-oriented. He was not excited about cool stuff that tech can do to make lives better. No, he was excited about making money...and that's the problem with Microsoft today. One gets the impression that 'making money...and lots of it' is the main focus of all of the top execs. Tech is different. It has to excite...to be cool...to stir passion...to truly change people's lives for the better...and the money will follow. Jobs was that way. Google is that way. Microsoft still makes all of their money selling Windows. When Windows was new, it was bringing a gui user interface to millions of computers that did not have that...as was Apple with their Mac. That was a transforming thing. Now, though, gui is expected. Everything has that. It's not new. People still buy and use Windows, though, because 'Windows' is a standard that gives people a familiar, comfortable experience...except that now it no longer does. So, Microsoft has trashed their own ersatz 'standard,' tossed the compatibility 'chair' out of the window, and embraced a lot of me-too mobile stuff that everyone else is already doing longer and better. Those are the actions of execs who are trying to milk more money out of their captive cows and don't give a second thought about actually doing something that transforms peoples lives for the better.

  16. This is a short-term vs long-term investment thing on Tim Cook: If You Don't Like Our Energy Policies, Don't Buy Apple Stock · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Those 'conservatives' at the meeting were really agitating for Apple to make decisions based on their short-term ROI rather than their long-term ROI. Short-term decisions are necessary but a healthy company rarely does them. For example, many companies, including Apple, spend a lot of money on research. Research costs a lot of money, has an uncertain return on the expenditure, and a lot of time passes before that return is ever realized. From a short-term perspective, companies should never spend money on research but should instead just pass all of the money on to their shareholders. Yet, if companies operated in that way, they would go out of business fairly quickly. So...that is the beauty of the free enterprise system. It leaves companies free to operate in what they see as their overall best long-term interests and often, those are as Apple's Tim Cook presented them rather than as the 'conservative' shareholders wanted. When shareholders gain too much influence over the daily operations and decisions of the company, it usually leads to the company's demise as shareholders seek to transfer cash assets to their pockets and leave the company limping along and struggling to continue. However, that just means that the company's competitors pick up the business that the wounded company can no longer compete for. Ultimately, it's a self-correcting system, as long as there is a competitive marketplace with no one company grown so large as to monopolize all of the business.

  17. Sounds like telephones in the old Soviet Union on The Spy In Our Living Room · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The landline telephones in the old USSR didn't hang up when the user put the handset back in the cradle and so people routinely put a pillow over them.

  18. why-can't-we-get-along and let go? on "Microsoft Killed My Pappy" · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Okay, I'll burn what's left of my karma and point out the reason why we can't get along...because Microsoft HAS NOT CHANGED. They are still the price-gouging, competition stifling, astro-turfing, anti open standards, monopolizing enterprise that they have always been. What HAS changed is the rise of Mac OS X, iPad, Google Chrome, etc. that have created some real alternatives to Microsoft.

  19. They're atheists... on N. Korea Could Face Prosecution For 'Crimes Against Humanity' · · Score: -1, Troll

    From their point of view, people are nothing but cogs in their machinery of state to be used and abused as necessary to keep the machinery turning. A person has no more value to them than a horse or a cow...maybe even less. Moreover, this is not new. The North Koreans were doing the same thing to pows during the Korean War, many of who never returned. They invented 'brainwashing' which was basically continuous torture until the target was mentally broken. They are still holding the USS Pueblo that they illegally seized from the US Navy in 1968. The captain of the Pueblo provided graphic descriptions of the torture he witnessed while held in captivity. President Bush termed them part of the 'Axis of Evil.' They recently threatened us with thermonuclear devastation and have repeatedly launched missiles over international waters. The UN is still technically at war with the North Koreans. The latest UN report on atrocities is just another in a mountain of paper describing how wicked people do wicked things.

  20. Conspiracy theory... on Slashdot Tries Something New; Audience Responds! · · Score: 1

    Slashdot has been plowing ahead with their 'beta' site despite the obvious elimination of functionality for reading and responding to comments and the predictable complaints from /* members. The comments and discussion are, after all, the ONLY reason for slashdot to even exist. They say they are 'listening' but they obviously are choosing not to 'hear' and so we have to think that that is intentional. Maybe we should consider that the problem with the 'classic' (gotta love how that word characterizes everything) site is NOT that it has an unattractive appearance, uses too many resources, doesn't display enough ads, or is too difficult to support going forward but that it does the discussions too well. You provide a forum for intelligent people to share thoughts and ideas and...guess what...intelligent people share thoughts and ideas...and for some people (governments, scientologists, corporate pr departments, etc.) that is a problem. There are very, very, few sites that offer the ability to comment and share interactive comments with others in a construction and information fashion...and slashdot is one. We should consider that the 'beta' site is just another way of snuffing out one of the last few flickering lights of informative discussion on the internet.

  21. Facebook communications are very shallow on Facebook Is a Plague That'll Burn Out In a Few Years, Says Study · · Score: 1

    People need more substance in their social interaction than what is provided to them by using facebook. Eventually many facebook users will do what this user did and close their facebook account in favor of real conversations and face-to-face meetings.

  22. Re:Egocentrism on How Weather Influences Global Warming Opinions · · Score: 1

    "Hitler's armies famously used the slogan "Gott mit uns" ("God with us") on their uniforms, and had a cozy relationship with the Vatican."

    Hitler brutally suppressed Catholics in Germany during the years of his 'third reich.' Moreover, the Nazis sent thousands of Catholic priests to the concentration camps in Poland. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_victims http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/catholic-martyrs-of-the-holocaust

  23. Re:Egocentrism on How Weather Influences Global Warming Opinions · · Score: 1

    "Hitler's armies famously used the slogan "Gott mit uns" ("God with us") on their uniforms, and had a cozy relationship with the Vatican."
    Hitler brutally suppressed Catholics in Germany during the years of his 'third reich.' Moreover, the Nazis sent thousands of Catholic priests to the concentration camps in Poland.

  24. I don't get the whole 'new version' thing on Windows 9 Already? Apparently, Yes. · · Score: 1

    What is the point of a new 'Windows' version? Is it provide major new capabilities, change the user interface, help Microsoft, or what? Shouldn't Microsoft actually spend some time thinking about what its users want? Users want a) compatibility with all of their existing hardware and software, b) familiar interface, c) reliability, d) security, e) access to new hardware and software protocols, f) minimal cost. I am guessing that a 'Windows 9' will not provide any of those things except...possibly...in a limited way...e) since that's what Windows 8 provided. If that is the case, the Windows 9 is the answer to a question that Microsoft users are not asking and its very mention fills them with dread.

  25. Funny title...'laws of war' on Are New Technologies Undermining the Laws of War? · · Score: 1

    War is a brutal savage activity that spreads disease, decimates populations, lays waste to cities, destroys entire cultures and civilizations, will eventually destroy the habitability of our planet, and is the ultimate expression of the human desire to possess their neighbor's belongings and force them to do one's bidding. Yes, some countries have entered into agreements with other countries about the humane treatment of non-combatants and prisoners, and the limitation and use of certain horrific weapons but...in the end, the 'laws of war' fall into the same category as 'honor among thieves' as being an idealized concept to make the non-practitioners feel good but one with no actual meaning.