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User: danbert8

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Comments · 2,168

  1. Re:Maybe we SHOULD fear guns on Stormtrooper Arrested · · Score: 1

    I was familiar with all the fake guns in Goldeneye 64. I was so disappointed to find out that a PP7 was not a thing...

  2. Race Baiting on Stormtrooper Arrested · · Score: 2

    I'm just waiting for the media headline: "How Would the Police React if the Stormtrooper Was Black?"

  3. Re: It won't happen on Why Americans Loathe Cable Companies · · Score: 5, Informative

    Except that the city having Google Fiber isn't every house having access. Google announced that Google Fiber was coming to certain neighborhoods in Atlanta. Guess what, AT&T and Comcast both announced new faster speeds for less money! But only in the same neighborhoods that are getting access to Google Fiber. It's obvious they have the capability and would still make money, but have no incentive to unless someone comes into the market offering something better. And if they do up their speeds and lower their prices, they sure as hell aren't going to offer it to the poor bastards that don't have a choice.

  4. Re:It's the economy, stupid on Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chaffee Proposes That US Go Metric · · Score: 3, Informative

    Every civil engineering school there is? It gets worse when you go to surveying. Those guys use stupid units like "US Feet" which are ever so slightly different than "International Feet" but both of which are defined in terms of the Meter.

  5. Re:Meh on Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chaffee Proposes That US Go Metric · · Score: 0

    No metric is only easier if you are doing decimal math. If you are doing fractional math, the imperial system is vastly superior. What's 1/2 of a meter? 50cm. What's 1/2 of a foot? 6 inches. What's a 1/3 of a meter? 33.33333333333333cm. What's 1/3 of a foot? 4 inches.

  6. Re:Such a nice, sugary story.... on Disney Making Laid-Off US Tech Workers Train Foreign H1-B Replacements · · Score: 5, Funny

    Where are the dead parents? That's what I want to know...

  7. Re:Fire, water, earth, air, boron on GameStop Swoops In To Buy ThinkGeek For $140 Million · · Score: 1

    Every time I pass through customs I really want to say "moolteee pass" when I hand the border agent my passport...

  8. Re:Maybe science went off the rails... on Can Bad Scientific Practice Be Fixed? · · Score: 1

    For me, I am looking for a basic reasoning in an experiment. 1) They came up with an actual concept to test. 2) They made a hypothesis based on some sort of reasoning. 3) They determined what they actually had to measure to test this hypothesis. 4) They developed a procedure to isolate that measurement from other variables. 5) They took a critical look at the data. 6) They drew a valid conclusion from that data.

    These are surprisingly rare things at science fairs. The highest scores I have given have been to projects where their conclusion was that they were unable to confirm or deny their hypothesis. This is the same problem as the premise of this article, that people believe science has to conclude something. No, some of the best science out there concludes that no conclusion can be drawn from the experiments. It doesn't mean you failed, it means that you either need to refine your test or look for other explanations. It is not only a perfectly good result, but it takes a lot of intellectual integrity for a student to admit that their findings were not significant. They have a very hard time articulating this, but it can be coaxed out of them.

    Most students just take their data, put it in excel, have excel "best fit" a linear regression (regardless of if their data is linear) through their data and then conclude based on what is just noise in their data recording or worse, they extrapolate that line well outside of the data recorded in their experiment to make sweeping statements.

    Maybe statistics should be a required course in high school... Or maybe earlier.

  9. Re:STFU Obama, you're a fucking traitor!! on Obama Asks Congress To Renew 'Patriot Act' Snooping · · Score: 4, Informative

    Right, just because a 3rd party holds my data for me doesn't mean it's fair game. The bank can't authorize a search of my house just because I have a mortgage with them.

  10. Re:New fangled technology on Hyundai Now Offers an Android Car, Even For Current Owners · · Score: 1

    Yes, I purchased a new stereo. What I was pointing out is that older cars don't have anything preventing you for adding new technology. Sadly, newer cars do. Newer cars create increasingly complicated "infotainment" systems like this that are rarely upgradeable (this story is an exception, not the rule) and extremely difficult to replace. Old cars had simple usually fairly standard radios that made it easy to pop it out and upgrade technology every 10 years or so.

  11. Re:Selling my Hyundai on Hyundai Now Offers an Android Car, Even For Current Owners · · Score: 1

    Stop your subscription and you'll see...

  12. Re:Selling my Hyundai on Hyundai Now Offers an Android Car, Even For Current Owners · · Score: 1

    So no On-Star (GM) or any car with satellite radio (all of them?) for you...

  13. Re:New fangled technology on Hyundai Now Offers an Android Car, Even For Current Owners · · Score: 1

    I have a 97' Miata with no CD or tape deck. It does radio, line in, and has a USB port for whatever mass storage device you want to play music from. What more could you want?

  14. Re:natural learning on Elon Musk Establishes a Grade School · · Score: 1

    Yes, but teaching children at their own pace doesn't fit the industrial assembly line educational model based on a yearly agricultural schedule.

  15. Re:Maybe science went off the rails... on Can Bad Scientific Practice Be Fixed? · · Score: 1

    An inexpensive, non-toxic example of a non-Newtonian fluid is a suspension of starch (e.g. cornstarch) in water, sometimes called "oobleck" or "ooze" (1 part of water to 1.5–2 parts of corn starch).

    Kitchen goo does not necessarily involve a chemical reaction. Baking soda and vinegar is an actual chemical reaction, and frequently used as an example, but making a "volcano" out of it is hardly a science experiment.

    Even if one does accept that oobleck has chemical merits due to being a non-Newtonian fluid, making it is not a science project. And yes, I have seen several of these lazy science fair projects found on Google at state level science fairs.

  16. Re:it's not "slow and calculated torture" on Greece Is Running Out of Money, Cannot Make June IMF Repayment · · Score: 1

    No, your analogy is flawed. Your mortgage is for 30 years, but you can't afford the payments as agreed. The bank isn't requesting anything extra fast. What they are doing is not letting you open new credit accounts to use to pay the mortgage payments. What Greece (and other countries) have been doing is taking out loans to make the payment on loans. That is not "rolling over," that is bankruptcy. Greece doesn't have the money to pay off the loans per the terms of the loan. The EU isn't changing the terms, they are just not increasing Greece's credit limit.

  17. Re:Maybe science went off the rails... on Can Bad Scientific Practice Be Fixed? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's part of it... But I believe the biggest problem is science fairs. Once heralded as a great way to get kids involved in science and the scientific method has been ruined by a culture of excessive safety, pandering to kids, and incompetent science teachers. First, every kids science toy has been neutered by safety culture. I'm not saying we should have kits with mercury and radioactive materials like we did in the 50s, but "science" kits where you make kitchen goo instead of actual chemical reactions is lame and boring. Kids are not fooled.

    Second, the increasing pressure to pass all kids or give them participation ribbons is very present at the science fair. Many kids are forced to participate, and in many fairs judges have to assign a minimum score of "good" or some such term. I have judged at the STATE LEVEL (as in, they had to do very well at the school and county levels) and have had to assign this minimum score which was still a gift. Kids come up with buzzword laden projects and make elaborate art projects that get ooohs and ahhs from non-technical people while doing no research and offering conclusions that are demonstrably wrong. Don't believe me? Go to a science fair some time and count the number of "experiments" showing ethanol has more energy content than gasoline. There are usually a dozen at the state science fair I judge. I also wonder how many projects are done primarily by the parents who don't want their kids to do poorly.

    Finally, the incompetency of science teachers... This is not applicable to all teachers, but especially in poorer areas and in under performing schools, science teachers have no science background and don't understand the scientific method. They don't understand research, citations, hypotheses, or conclusions. They don't even take the time to verify experimental results with a quick Google search. The comforting thing I've noticed from judging student science projects is that most of the kids KNOW their teachers are incompetent and bullshitted their way to a good score at the science fair. At the state level, they are completely unprepared for actual questions on subject matter by professionals in the various fields. I'm a civil engineer, and I've had to shake my head in disbelief that projects are off by an order of magnitude from what they should be and it is a shock for the student to hear that as no one has reviewed or questioned their work before the state level.

    What we need is a new science fair system where teachers can mentor students on projects, but teachers don't judge projects. Projects should only be judged by people familiar with the subject matter and the scientific method. If they can't scrape together the judges, maybe the science fair needs to go away or there needs to be an active campaign to recruit and support professionals to judge school science fairs. It should be no surprise that the science fair kids have grown up to do research that panders to public opinion, are lazy, have poor citations, and are filled with self-confirming results.

  18. Re:Blackberry bold on Ask Slashdot: What's the Best Dumb Phone? · · Score: 1

    I agree. The 9930 was the best phone I ever had. Rock solid with no need for a case, touch screen up top, keypad on the bottom. Excellent camera, simple interface, did everything I wanted without all the stupid games.

  19. Re:Sadly not much on What Was the Effect of Rand Paul's 10-Hour "Filibuster"? · · Score: 1

    The media is distrusted, but people still watch and are influenced in the same way Congress has a horrible approval rating, but incumbents keep winning elections.

  20. Re:Thank you - just PR for his presidential run. on What Was the Effect of Rand Paul's 10-Hour "Filibuster"? · · Score: 1

    That's why real libertarians will probably still continue to follow Gary Johnson. I left the Ron Paul ship when Gary came on the market. He is a far better libertarian than any Paul and leaves the religious stuff out of it.

  21. Re:More than PR on What Was the Effect of Rand Paul's 10-Hour "Filibuster"? · · Score: 1

    Except Randal Paul isn't named after Ayn Rand. It's just his shortened nickname given to him by his wife and became popular.

  22. Re:More than PR on What Was the Effect of Rand Paul's 10-Hour "Filibuster"? · · Score: 1

    Don't forget pharmaceutical companies... How screwed would they be if their $500/mo drugs could be replaced by inexpensive pot?

  23. Re:Tolls? on Oregon Testing Pay-Per-Mile Driving Fee To Replace Gas Tax · · Score: 1

    Many newer systems have a plate based option and they send you a bill in the mail.
    http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/GoodTo...

  24. Re:Government Intrusion on Oregon Testing Pay-Per-Mile Driving Fee To Replace Gas Tax · · Score: 1

    Unless you don't want the government taxing your vehicle off road, on private roads, or in other jurisdictions.

  25. Re:Vehicle Weight on Oregon Testing Pay-Per-Mile Driving Fee To Replace Gas Tax · · Score: 1

    If you want to consider Michigan, don't forget that they allow heavier trucks than the majority of the country. Nothing like sticking more axles and tires on a truck and jacking up the weight.