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User: sverdlichenko

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Comments · 98

  1. Re:Gun-free zone? on 10 Confirmed Dead In Shooting at Oregon's Umpqua Community College · · Score: 1

    Mass-shooters are not criminals, they are mentally ill.
    And there are a lot for shades between criminals with free access to guns and criminals without access to guns. Personally, I'll prefer criminals to have as much trouble as possible obtaining gun, and for common psycho it is better to be near impossible without committing a crime, so he could be caught before shooting starts.

  2. Re:All mathematical fields are necessary nowaday on You Don't Have To Be Good At Math To Learn To Code · · Score: 0

    And what are you coding exactly? Anyway, it's okay. There is a lot of actors who are doing it for living and have to google a lot of words about acting too. It is just a pain to watch, but no one have to.

  3. Re:It's true on You Don't Have To Be Good At Math To Learn To Code · · Score: 1

    Sorting have nothing to do with it. Such problem can arise every time one chooses between list, vector or set to store data. It is required to know how fast or slow operations on them are, and to understand it one need to know what all this funky math symbols mean.

  4. Re:It's true on You Don't Have To Be Good At Math To Learn To Code · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Unfortunately, high school math isn't "basic understanding", it's in fact advanced. Most people do not have any idea how to multiply matrix to vector, or that matrix may be multiplied to something, or that matrix isn't just movie title. Or how parabola and hyperbola differ. Basic understanding is fourth-grade arithmetic (mentioned in the article) and this is absolutely not enough.
    Sure one can code without learning math. And one can play in trash movies without learning acting. So much as I can apply a cast to someone's broken leg guided by google search result, but really should not unless we are in the middle of the zombie apocalypse. And I (and most people) should not sing in the opera even in the middle of the zombie apocalypse.

  5. Re:It's true on You Don't Have To Be Good At Math To Learn To Code · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Then your desktop app works fine with 50 items of whatever it processes but becomes really shitty when loaded with 1000, because there is algorithm inside with quadratic complexity and you do not even know what quadratic is. Been there, seen that.

  6. Re:why not crack down on the rioting protesters? on After Protest, France Cracks Down On Uber · · Score: 1

    Let me google it for you: http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/26/... This photo in particular: http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnne...

  7. Re:Too late, too little on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 1

    It's all about precision. Knowing something will come near Earth, say inside Moon's orbit, and knowing something will hit Earth are two very different knowledge. Would be very disappointing to get a nuke to the object only to change near miss to direct hit.

  8. Re:Too late, too little on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 1

    Look at the Orion project, they intended to use this bombs in thousands. With much weaker payload, but the mass of the ship is a few orders of magnitude less too. I seriously doubt 20 nukes would be enough for any really dangerous thing at the range we can be sure if it would hit the Earth or not.

  9. Re:Effect of nukes on NEOs on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 3, Funny

    With a NUCLEAR DRILL!

  10. Re:Effect of nukes on NEOs on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 1
    Same hit spread over entire hemisphere probably would be much less catastrophic: small objects will burn in atmosphere instead of bringing their kinetic energy down to earth. We can hope for a hot summer instead of tsunami followed by a long "dust winter". The problem is how to blow up this NEO to the small enough pieces.

    Given our nuclear stockpiles, I'd rather build big enough Orion spacecraft and just ram the thing. It may be enough to make it miss if hit early enough. Earth is quite small and fast moving target after all.

  11. Too late, too little on Should Nuclear Devices Be Kept On Hand To Protect Against Near Earth Objects? · · Score: 2

    How could 10 or 20 nuclear devices help against any significant near earth object?

  12. Re:No one cares on Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chaffee Proposes That US Go Metric · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, this is exactly "go fuck yourself" kind of answer this quote saying about, ESPECIALLY in "numbers will be 2% off, so it doesn't matter if we do not calculate it at all" part. Thank you for providing such a perfect example.

  13. Re:No one cares on Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chaffee Proposes That US Go Metric · · Score: 4, Informative

    In metric, one milliliter of water occupies one cubic centimeter, weighs one gram, and requires one calorie1 of energy to heat up by one degree centigrade — which is 1 percent of the difference between its freezing point and its boiling point. An amount of hydrogen weighing the same amount has exactly one mole of atoms in it. Whereas in the American system, the answer to ‘How much energy does it take to boil a room-temperature gallon of water?’ is ‘Go fuck yourself,’ because you can’t directly relate any of those quantities.

    No big deal, right. Unless you want to actually calculate something.

  14. Re: Pennsylvania on MacKeeper May Have To Pay Millions In Class-Action Suit · · Score: 2

    How hard is it to read four lines of text? ZeoBIT is in California and it cares enough to send a lawyer to court, to give up and to agree to put 2 million dollars to the compensation fund. Let me repeat it again: California, settled, 2 million dollars.

  15. Re:Pennsylvania on MacKeeper May Have To Pay Millions In Class-Action Suit · · Score: 3, Informative

    In April 2013, ZeoBIT, which now lists its headquarters as Sunnyvale, California, sold MacKeeper to a company called Kromtech Alliance Corp. Kromtech was closely affiliated with ZeoBIT in Ukraine, and many employees of ZeoBIT transferred to the company, which lists its headquarters as Cologne, Germany.

    It is exactly like this. And even without it, having this lawsuit settled is cue enough.

  16. Re:narcissistic spectrum personality disorder on 'Aaron's Law' Introduced To Curb Overzealous Prosecutions For Computer Crimes · · Score: 1

    No, not THAT act of civil disobedience. He was facing 35 years in prison for the audacity of going for trial instead of pleading guilty, which is absolutely disobedient in the eyes of the prosecutor. And after THIS act he dared to kill himself rather than plead guilty without guilt. Dignity, integrity, just look up this words in dictionary, it may explain something.

  17. Re:so, the key to amnesty... on Microsoft Offers Pirates Amnesty and Free Windows 10 Upgrades · · Score: 1

    It's also a lessons learned from WinXP support story. Nobody is happy making patches to 10-years old OS, and stopping this was a major PR issue.

  18. Re:Man vs Machine? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    Oh sure, bring it on.Your order confirmation will show perfectly good Jul 1st timestamp. This is if my website was taking any orders at all, not everyone want to sell you something :)

  19. Re:Better way? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    You apparently don't understand that "monotonic" makes only one of the three "uniform, monotonic and deterministic". Deterministic is needed to write simpler programs and have less room for error. There is only so much programmers' power and if it is used to fight timescale issues, other, more useful tasks are delayed. Last leap second wasted a lot of man-hours for nothing.
    And stop telling me what to do unless you pay me.

  20. Re:Man vs Machine? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    Why exactly computers need to know precise moment of sunrise? My web server does not care.

  21. Re:Better way? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    Exactly my point. UTC is well-written standard, targeted to users in need of timescale matching astronomic time with sub-second precision, and their requirements are greatly different from ones IT have. Majority of computers do not give a shit about how Earth is rotated at given point of time, and that which care are controlling telescopes or ICBMs, where 0.9 seconds difference may be to big anyway.
    Timescale is an abstract concept, not a real world event series like email, and as such, it may be designed to fit whatever it purpose is. IT needs uniform, monotonic and deterministic time, and UTC fits badly, although better than local time with DST adjustments or some hypothetical timescale with floating second length.

  22. Re:Better way? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    How many seconds would be between 00:00:00 January 1st 2015 UTC and 00:00:00 January 1st 2050 UTC?

  23. Re:Better way? on Extra Leap Second To Be Added To Clocks On June 30 · · Score: 1

    What exactly is well-defined in current leap second nightmare? It depends on earth rotation changes, it is unpredictable, it requires keeping a database of leap seconds for all times known. Overall, it demands updating perfectly good system at random time intervals or facing inconsistent timestamps.
    I really wish TAI or some predecessor of GPS timescale was chosen for computer timescale. Leave astronomic events to astronomers.

  24. Re: Nuclear Power has Dangers on What Would Have Happened If Philae Were Nuclear Powered? · · Score: 1

    Not even close to nerve gas. The most important features of weapon-grade nerve gas is that it is not a gas but fine aerosol in first place, and it works not only when inhaled, but also on contact with skin. Even under these circumstances and with proper military deployment, it is expected to be 10000 doses needed to disable one soldier.
    People worked with chunks of plutonium and almost no protection for years, and even minor incidents with chemical weapons tend to leave some wounded and dead. I believe in case of launch failure unburned rocket fuel would be more dangerous than plutonium.

  25. Re: Nuclear Power has Dangers on What Would Have Happened If Philae Were Nuclear Powered? · · Score: 1

    And the most severe outcome of dispersing a "cupful of plutonium" would be what exactly?