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User: lurking_giant

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  1. Just imagine Gary Larson's take on that. on Researchers Make Spiders Produce Silk Strengthened With Graphene · · Score: 1

    From the far side Spiders on the slide..."If we pull this off... we eat like kings" http://i48.photobucket.com/alb...

  2. Re:39/100 is the new passing grade. on Results Are In From Psychology's Largest Reproducibility Test: 39/100 Reproduced · · Score: 3, Funny

    Should have had the teachers in Atlanta grade the results... http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05...

  3. I just flew in from Cleveland.... on New Study Suggests Flying Is Greener Than Driving · · Score: 1

    ...and boy are my arms tired!

  4. Re:Cool world on US Successfully Tests Self-Steering Bullets · · Score: 1

    This tech was developed in ww1... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...

  5. Re:Talk about creating a demand on Why Our Antiquated Power Grid Needs Battery Storage · · Score: 1

    Technology from 100 years ago... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...

  6. Re:call a spade a spade? on US Navy Researchers Get Drones To Swarm On Target · · Score: 1

    Kinetic energy penetrator... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K...

  7. Re:Agreed. on Steve Wozniak Now Afraid of AI Too, Just Like Elon Musk · · Score: 1

    Garbage in... Garbage out. ~ Build a man a fire, and he's warm for a while. Set a man on fire and he's warm for life.

  8. Re:Energy costs of transport on Dry-Ice Heat Engines For Martian Colonists · · Score: 1

    There would be very few costs associated with orbital mirrors made of mylar to boost the amount of sunlite in local polar power generation plants. The exhaust would re-condense to complete the cycle. Populate the poles and leave the equator alone.

  9. This is a minor issue... on Creationism Conference at Michigan State University Stirs Unease · · Score: 1

    Anyone who graduated from an NCAA member University should demand their tuition be refunded. http://www.businessweek.com/ar...

  10. Re:Just what I wanted on Nanoscale 3D Printer Now Commercially Available · · Score: 0

    So can it print the magazine for a mini-gun? No, wait, mini-guns are belt fed.

  11. Re:Results on Buffalo Bills Going the Moneyball Route With Analytics · · Score: 1

    No sir Inspector Gadget... I do not... and by the way that would not be a bomb threat... it would be a "Hail mary"

  12. Re:Edison to Deforest ... ALMOST! on Disentangling Facts From Fantasy In the World of Edison and Tesla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    “If Edison had a needle to find in a haystack, he would proceed at once with the diligence of the bee to examine straw after straw until he found the object of his search. I was a sorry witness of such doings, knowing that a little theory and calculation would have saved him ninety per cent of his labor.” Nikola Tesla

  13. Re:Basically a battery on Generating Alcohol Fuels From Electrical Current and CO2 · · Score: 1
  14. Re:Every time a bell rings on Should There Be a Sci-Fi Category At the Oscars? · · Score: 1

    Please don't mention "The Core"... one of the poster children for bad Sci Fi.

  15. Re:and thus goes the transfer... on Obama May Toughen Internet Privacy Rules · · Score: 1

    So the AC is all up in my grill about my UID... My handle says all. I started lurking on chips and dips back when many of you were just a gleam in your parents eye. I've paid my dues and my taxes for decades so screw you.

  16. Re:and thus goes the transfer... on Obama May Toughen Internet Privacy Rules · · Score: 1

    "We the people of the US" funded the inception and development of the Net thru the use of "our" tax dollars which DARPA invested into cutting edge communications research. Here's a quarter ($.25)to go buy a clue. All content is regulated even if you think otherwise. In fact... I'm sure you're doing it yourself at the moment. Self regulation is still regulation!

  17. Re:Jury made the same mistake as before on Jammie Thomas Hit With $1.5 Million Verdict · · Score: 1

    Perhaps if the files were uploaded to the cloud... Ala Microsoft 7 advertizing... then when the RIAA lawyers kick up the dust and sue, the rain can settle it.

  18. Impactor Ballistic Missle? on 9 Ideas For Coping With Space Junk · · Score: 1

    Launch a simple rocket on a ballistic trajectory that impacts the item you want to de-orbit. Only aim it to hit the target on the way back down so that the added momentum pushes them into a lower orbit... Another thought would be to use a gravity tractor concept like the one being proposed for moving asteroids. In this instance the goal would be to send a simple thruster device on a path to "not impact" the object you want to move... only use it as a gravity sling which alters the path of both objects in proportion to their mass. If you choose the path correctly, the target heads into the atmosphere and you have the thruster heading for another target. Work it out to do a grand tour style path so you get the most bang for your thruster fuel buck.

  19. Re:Tech enabling? on National Park Service Says Tech Is Enabling Stupidity · · Score: 1

    Antilock brakes and traction control have had little effect on the number or severity of accidents since the idiots will just drive to the limit of the equipment. The number of late model SUV's found in ditchs after the first snowfall of the season can provide all the proof necessary.

  20. Re:Supposed to work well below freezing... on Long In Development, Toshiba 'SCiB' Battery Debuts · · Score: 1

    Cept when you're car won't start cuz the old lead acid battery is too weak to crank and you are trying to call AAA for a jump.

  21. Re:Reality still wins. on Facebook Adds Delete Account Option · · Score: 1

    4 words... Look before you leap.

  22. Re:There is a good reason for that on Do Scientists Understand the Public? · · Score: 1

    There in no differentiation between the "News Media" and the "Entertainment Media"... It's all for show. No one from the "Media" can be trusted to be presenting information in an objective manner. Throughout history the news "As presented by the media of the time" has been slanted by the views of the presenter. In ancient days in the western world, the news was presented by the story teller "bard" who told the tales he had heard to the gathered croud in a village. Then came the crier who read from the scroll provided him by the scribes. Move on the the pamphlet and print media and the newspapers. All skewed to the views of the publishers whim. It's no different today except that the ease of content creation and the transitory nature of the "News". This has created a world where the infomation provided is so abundant and at times contradictory that no one can determine the truth about anything...

  23. And yet there's money to be made... on DTV Transition - One Year Later · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Cincinnati Enquirer reported on May 31st that http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20100531/NEWS01/6010323/Forger-s-company-got-562K-stimulus-contract/ a local company, Tekreation Center LLC, recieved $562K in federal stimulus money to provide installation demonstration services to those who needed help getting the converter boxes to work. Demonstrations! Not actual installations. Tekreation reportedly performed 1,453 demonstrations for installing a digital-to-analog converter. $562,000/1453=$386.79 per demo. The could have bought a decent digital TV for that price. Another massive waste of your tax dollars.

  24. Re:Summary & Article Leave a Bit to Be Desired on "Green" Ice Resurfacing Machines Fail In Vancouver · · Score: 1

    It seems that the Seattle Times article substitutes the name "Zamboni" with the generic "Ice grooming machine" much like people refer to "Google" as a generic web search no matter what search engine they use. The machines that failed were not made by "Zamboni" but were made by "Resurfice" which is a completely different company. Obviously a breakdown in the Times editorial (fact checker) department.

  25. Re:To much reinvention on One Way To Save Digital Archives From File Corruption · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the drive manufacturers could design a drive so that the it wrote the same data to multiple platters (give up capacity for redundancy). If you are writing to a 1 terabyte platter stack and it writes 3 platters of the identical data with the same signal to 3 write heads on one arm, you could store 333gb of double redundant archive. The controller would compare the 3 bit reads and choose the bits that match. Of course the bearings and motors and pickups could be made redundant or at least of the highest MTBF. Not RAID... "RAIP" (Redundant Array of Individual Platters).