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User: Chonnawonga

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Comments · 85

  1. Re:Nobody will care on Seniors Search For Virtual Immortality · · Score: 1

    Maybe some historians want to dig through it, but I wouldn't.

    As a historian, let me just say this: no, I really wouldn't want to dig through that crap. What people WANT to say about themselves--their pre-packaged, self-conceived advertising--is rarely the most interesting, reliable, or relevant material.

  2. You'd think it would be obivous on Oxford Tests Self-Driving Cars · · Score: 2

    You'd think it would be obvious to the folks at Oxford: if you're building 3D maps, and storage is getting relatively cheap, why not just build 3D maps of whole regions so the car knows its way around? Then the human can pick any route, rather than having to teach the computer.

  3. Re:SpaceChem = Tablet on Humble Bundle For Android 3 Released · · Score: 1

    Running OK on my Galaxy S III. I expect it'll be really annoying at later levels with complicated setups, though. ...oh, and apparently letting your screen lock is a bad idea, because the game restarts. Damn.

  4. Re:Catch? on Can Anyone Catch Khan Academy? · · Score: 2

    No argument here. And by extension, it's been a competition since before recorded history.

  5. Re:Catch? on Can Anyone Catch Khan Academy? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since when has education become a competition?

    Since it became a business.

  6. Re:Ontario region? on 2.4 Million Ontario Voters' Private Info Compromised · · Score: 1

    /. editors need to edit

    You must be new here - that's really expecting far too much.

    Oh, I don't expect them to DO it. I just want them to lose sleep at night.

  7. Ontario region? on 2.4 Million Ontario Voters' Private Info Compromised · · Score: 3, Informative

    FYI, Ontario is a province. net-security.org should appreciate the value of precision, and /. editors need to edit.

    Sincerely, an Ontarian. (Yes, that's a word.)

  8. Re:Of all the things to hide under floorboards.... on Medieval "Lingerie" From 15th Century Castle Could Rewrite Fashion History · · Score: 1

    Few people ever actually saw money in their whole lives; a dowry would most likely have been in the form of clothes, cloth and similar things.

    This is a common misconception. By the late medieval period, huge numbers of payments--even by humble peasants--were in silver coin. This was helped by new silver mines in German-speaking areas of Europe.

  9. Re:Oh you got me... on British Ban Spikes Pirate Bay Traffic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sadly, btjunkie, one of the best of your list, recently threw in the towel due to all this nonsense.

  10. Re:Ötzi no bang Utz's wife again! on Oldest Intact Red Blood Cells Found on Iceman · · Score: 1

    Scan reveal Ötzi asshole who no respected bro?

    Funny, but based on a "Flintstones" understanding of neolithic humans. Recent research suggests hunter-gatherers generally have and had little concept of monogamy as we know it. Check out Sex at Dawn: http://www.amazon.com/Sex-Dawn-Stray-Modern-Relationships/dp/0061707813/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1335976553&sr=8-1

  11. Re:and...eh? on Climate Panel Says To Prepare For Weird Weather · · Score: 1

    The short answer is no. There is some speculation about the causes, but it probably wasn't because of CO2 changes, and certainly nothing like the anthropogenic CO2 loading that we see today. It also wasn't a global phenomenon, but localized to northern Europe. Our data for global climate that far back is very unevenly distributed, though: we know the most about northern Europe, and much less about the rest of the world.

  12. Re:You've never been to Canada, have you? on Climate Panel Says To Prepare For Weird Weather · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I live in Canada. As you say, all of those areas are already highly productive. What I was referring to is new productivity as a result of climate change. Areas that might become warmer--and thus suitable for agriculture--are currently boreal forest. It would take decades of natural processes for that boreal forest soil to develop into anything that could support agriculture for more than a season or two. North of this is tundra, which might have a better soil profile, but doesn't have enough daylight for agriculture regardless of temperatures or precipitation.

  13. Re:Just one question... on Climate Panel Says To Prepare For Weird Weather · · Score: 1

    * "negative-reinforcement" should read "negative-feedback"

  14. Re:Just one question... on Climate Panel Says To Prepare For Weird Weather · · Score: 2

    There's no way to know. What we consider "normal" weather is the product of negative-reinforcement systems. Once climate change breaks us out of those cycles, anything goes. Our ability to model weather isn't nearly sophisticated enough to predict it.

  15. Re:and... on Climate Panel Says To Prepare For Weird Weather · · Score: 2

    No. The point is that weather will get weird. As the global climate warms, weather patterns will break out of their normal negative-feedback-enforced cycles. Freakish temperature streaks, extreme precipitation, drought, and irregular winds will make agriculture much more difficult and unreliable everywhere. For a fun preview of what we're in for, check out the events of 1315-22 in Europe (hint: it's commonly called "The Great Famine").

    The best part is that even if other regions (for example, Canada) have warmer weather, that doesn't mean agriculture will be sustainable there. The topsoil in that part of Canada is thin and highly acidic. You're not going to be growing corn and wheat there no matter what the weather patterns become.

  16. Argument about Unity? on Is SaaS Killing Native Linux App Development? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no argument about Unity. We all agree that it sucks. There is minor disagreement about the degree to which it sucks.

    Does that really stop anyone from writing Linux applications?

  17. Re:Continue GNOME 2? on KDE 3.5 Fork Trinity Releases First Major Update · · Score: 1

    It's happening. Check out the Mate project. Linux Mint is considering using it in future releases.

  18. The power users are (were) the evangelists on Are Power Users Too Cool For Ubuntu Unity? · · Score: 1

    Like a lot of /.ers, I'm the person my friends and family call when they have computer issues. I got tired of troubleshooting Windows (Another reinstall? There goes my Wednesday afternoon!) so a few years ago I started pushing people over to Ubuntu. After a quick sit-down and walk-through, people could pick it up, and the number of support calls I got started dropping off as things worked more reliably for grandma et al.

    When Natty came out last April, I made sure everyone was still on "Ubuntu Classic" to avoid Unity, which was very clearly Not Ready for Prime Time. I crossed my fingers and hoped Canonical would clue in or make some incredible improvements to Unity by October. That didn't happen. Now people are clicking to update, finding their desktops have changed, and getting weird glitches, bugs, and crashes. The number of calls I've been getting in the last few weeks has skyrocketed.

    Mark, when your power users leave you behind, they're going to bring their friends and families... aka your entire user base.

  19. Hours of fun for the whole family on Nanomaterial May Allow Devices to Rewire Themselves · · Score: 1

    Just think what you could do with a bunch of robots built like this and an "evolution" experiment!

  20. Re:Nice.... on Scientists Recover Black Death RNA From Exhumed Victims · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up! The Black Death had no discernable target of rich or poor. It also spread differently in the past: back then it seems to have been airborne, and there are no reports (that's NONE) about mass die-off of rats like we saw in the 20th and 21st centuries.

    The kicker is that diseases and their hosts co-evolve. We evolve immunities and tolerances, they evolve new tricks and less of a tendency to kill off their food supply (read: us). The DNA may be remarkably similar between the old and current versions, but that doesn't mean there aren't some key, albeit tiny, differences--just like between humans, chimpanzees, and bonobos.

    Oh, and yes, IAAEH (I am an environmental historian).

  21. Re:Amsterdam did that on Paris Launches World's First Electric Car Share Program · · Score: 1

    Hey, I'm not trying to tell anyone what they must or must not do. I'm just amazed that people will take on a reasonably high risk of being involved in a collision with a car while wearing no protection whatsoever, even for the single most important organ in their body.

    I think smoking is stupid too, but I don't advocate criminalizing it.

  22. Re:Amsterdam did that on Paris Launches World's First Electric Car Share Program · · Score: 1

    Wait, I was with you until... you think helmets are stupid?
    Look, everyone! Darwinism at work! The brain that doesn't protect itself...

  23. Re:HD resolution film doesn't mean it was shot as on HD Transfer of Star Trek: TNG To Arrive This Year · · Score: 1

    Good points, all around. So, where does the compromise lie? How do we make this look good without adding muppets or changing the storyline?

  24. Re:HD resolution film doesn't mean it was shot as on HD Transfer of Star Trek: TNG To Arrive This Year · · Score: 1

    However, just because film can resolve that much detail, doesn't mean the show was made with that in mind. In particular, it's likely they shot it for SD transmission and TV sets. Even a well-budgeted TV show like TNG would have had to allocate its budget wisely, and I doubt they would have wasted valuable money on (e.g.) set detailing that their audience would never see. It only had to look good in SD.

    Now, if you watch the footage in high definition, chances are we may see that the set looks a little shoddy, with visible joins if you look closely. Picard's set makeup might look a bit "cakey" and obvious. And (as others mentioned) any illegible in-jokes on the button text could suddenly become readable.

    I recently visited the Science Fiction Museum in Seattle, and was amazed by how clunky and cheap most of the Star Trek and Star Wars props looked. In SD, I had never noticed. In HD, I think the tricorders are liable to look ridiculous.

    That said, I wouldn't want them to change it. Once you start messing around with that stuff, you're tempted to go down George Lucas's path to the dark side, and I would really hate to see that happen to Star Trek, too. (Riker shot first, anyone?) Part of the beauty of these old shows and movies is in how they managed to create meaningful and engrossing worlds without high-end CGI, often on low budgets. Hiding that--let alone gussying it up--would be a sin.

  25. Re:if he's so concerned on Slate: Amazon's Tax Stance Unfair and Unethical · · Score: 1

    And when a drunk driver rams their semi, they lock him up the they Amazon Brig (TM)

    No, no. They just send him to The Cloud.