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User: knutkracker

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  1. Re:This is an extremely important accomplishment. on IBM Builds First Graphene Integrated Circuit · · Score: 1

    Most programs run thousands of times, some programs will run millions or billions of times. If you actually calculated the global collective waste due to slow heavily abstracted languages running across the globe that cost is significantly than it would've been to write it properly to begin with.

    Yeah, but that's a cost to the user who pays for the hardware, not to the company that writes the software.

  2. Re:Ahhh crime. on Man Ordered At Gunpoint To Hand Over Phone For Recording Cops · · Score: 1

    Bambuser is one. Not sure if you can set it to prevent deletion of the cloud recordings from the phone, which you would need in order to make it totally cop-proof

  3. Re:It's legal for foreign money to be spent lobbyi on Plotting a Coup In the Internet Age · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If your foreign policy involves invading their country and killing thousands of innocent people (or funding others to do it instead), then why shouldn't they have a say?

  4. Re:Flying Cars Energy Hogs By Nature on At Last, Flying Cars? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A fuel-efficient prop-driven VTOL looks something like the Cartercopter. Basically a plane-autogyro hybrid so you get the fuel efficiency and speed of a plane along with (almost) vertical takeoff.

    The rotor gets spun up to high revs with heavy counterweights at either end whilst on the ground, then the power is disconnected and transferred to the rear propellor. Increasing the collective sharply on the main rotor causes a jump takeoff and the rotor acts as a wing at cruising speed. Neat!

    When the technology matures, this could be a very common mode of transit as they're apparently very easy to fly, but getting costs down to 'flying car' level would be tricky as they look like being half a million a piece.

  5. Re:Defense? on Defending Against Drones · · Score: 1

    Maybe they should just spend a few millions getting those young angry guys laid...

    Interesting that you mention that. An article I read a while ago about the psychology of terrorism (in the Psychologist a year or two ago) pointed out that:

    • Some Muslim sects/countries allow polygamy
    • Birth rates being 50/50 Male/Female, polygamy inevitably leaves some men without a mate
    • Given women's preference for wealthy men and the time it takes to become wealthy, those men without a mate are likely to be young
    • Young men are genetically programmed to want sex
    • All Muslim sects/countries outlaw sex outside marriage
    • Some interpretations of the Koran promise 72 virgins (unlimited sex) in paradise for 'martyrs'
    • Young men without access to sex get angry and frustrated

    Put it all together and in some places you have a recipe for suicide bombing that's difficult to combat. Getting them laid would be great if you can find a way of getting Allah to OK it. Getting polygamy outlawed and reducing income inequality would be a good second best.

  6. Re:Proxification? on Iran Slows Internet Access Before Student Protests · · Score: 2, Informative

    You act as if the US stole freedom from someone. No. We're not perfect, we've got a hell of a lot to criticize, but give it a rest with the anti-American crap.

    Removing a democratically elected leader in favour of a crazed despot so that you can keep getting cheap oil is stealing freedom from someone. The UK were just as much to blame for Iran, so it's not like it's just a US thing, but it was a seriously bad thing to do and still hasn't been put right. Your points have some merit, but the anti-American (and anti-UK) stuff is not un-justified simply because some other countries were/are badly run before/after the attempts to interfere with their governments. What would things have been like if we had left well alone?

    From people I've spoken to, the anti-American feeling in Britain comes from a mixture of:
    1. The US does do the things mentioned by the GP far more than any other country does. Killing civilians is always wrong and the reasons are rarely good enough to counterbalance the harm, so it winds people up to see it happening.
    2. Americans often take the line that it's not such a big deal for other people/countries to be devastated like this, as if it doesn't matter or it was needed because they're not very civillised anyway (like you hint at above). To be fair, I think all people feel this way about their own country's military action, but seeing as the US does so much more military action these days, it just shows more. Still not nice to hear though.
    3. The 'freedom' thing. Most people's definition of freedom involves being able to choose their own political leaders and to not get bombed, so it's clear to an impartial (non-American) observer that the Freedom often spoken about means 'freedom for us to live as Americans' and not 'Freedom for everyone to live as they choose without interference', which is what it should mean. It kind of adds insult to injury when people claim that e.g. Iraq was about Freedom, when it was clearly about Oil.

    If US foreign policy shifts towards helping other countries for the sake of it rather than for strategic benefits, then I think the anti-American feeling will start to fade.

  7. Re:Have a great trip! on Geek Travel To London From the US — Tips? · · Score: 1

    Also, consider visiting Avebury and Stonehenge (In that order). Very atmospheric and arguably the oldest computing devices in the world.

    For extra geek fun, read up on relevant archaeoastronomy first e.g. Gerald Hawkins so that you know what the scientific function of the sites was and can put it all into context.

  8. Re:All mine were cheap! on Student Loan Interest Rankles College Grads · · Score: 1

    Hah! another victory for capitalism - profits for all!

    Here in the UK with our appallingly 'socialist' government, the interest rate on student loans is currently -0.4%. Demand better!

  9. Re:Not the first middle east nuke on Report Claims Iran Has Data To Build a Nuclear Bomb · · Score: 1

    Find me an empire in the past that did that?

    Find me an empire that didn't.

  10. Re:Why should I care? on Math Indicates Pollster Is Forging Results · · Score: 1

    I find it disturbing, too, that the media just reports the polling companies' results, without reporting things like what questions were asked, in what order

    This makes a big difference.

  11. Re:Sounds more like on How To Hire a Hacker · · Score: 1

    They have been mis-educated, and are easily distracted.

    Like me, after spending 3 hours on /.

  12. Meta-Bit-Torrent Protocol on Pirate Bay Archive Goes Online · · Score: 1

    It would be interesting to see someone develop a distributed site mirroring protocol so that anyone with a server can opt-in to being a TPB mirror by downloading the archive and then getting real-time updates from one or more mirrors as more torrents are posted. The same distributed network idea for the tracker index sites as gets used for the file downloads.

    With it being so easy, the sites could go offline after very short intervals. Imagine several thousand TPB mirrors at any one time, each one only up for a week or so before being retired. Try and stop that!

  13. Won't work on US Tests System To Evade Foreign Web Censorship · · Score: 1

    I can't see this being very popular. If people care enough to sort out an external news source to email them, then they care enough to set up a proxy or VPN. Why settle for someone else's choice of news to be mailed to you when you can go and get your own?

    The issue is not whether the censors can be evaded, it's the cost/benefit of bothering. Most people don't care enough to try.

  14. Re:How many soldiers die if 187 F-22s aren't enoug on F-22 Raptor Cancelled · · Score: 1

    I'm sure if we spent less on the military, and more on social programs that don't work that we'd be speaking German.

    Germany in 1939 was the only world superpower, and was in the process of invading everyone else and making a serious bid for world domination. They needed stopping.

    However, none of the over 20 countries that the US has bombed since then has been even remotely similar. How many of them were actually a threat?

    Sadly, in the eyes of the non-US countries, the role of terrorist world superpower is now in American hands rather than German. If you disagree, you might want to remind yourself what terrorism is: tactics designed to coerce people through fear. As just one example, the 'Shock and Awe' policy used in Iraq in 2003 was described by it's designers like this:

    Shock and Awe must cause ... the threat and fear of action that may shut down all or part of the adversary's society or render his ability to fight useless

    The fact that it is done by a state, rather than a dispersed trans-national ideological group like al Qaida makes no difference - the effect is the same. Defence spending is a very good idea, but the military spending you're talking about is used to fight wars of aggression, often with little regard for civillian caualties. That needs to stop.

    This whole pacifist, Utopian, lets hold hands while the rest of the world stabs us in the back makes me throw up a little.

    What exactly does 'stabs us in the back' mean? Who's bombing who here?

  15. Re:Poor Title on F-22 Raptor Cancelled · · Score: 1

    Great Powers have nuclear weapons, so conventional wars aren't possible

    Total rubbish.

  16. Re:Selective Values on The Technology Keeping Information Flowing in Iran · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's the story. A good story bypasses the rational parts of our brains, goes straight to the emotions and grabs us.

    The subtext of the Iran story is about the surprise of realising that a people we previously thought of as hostile (and frankly a bit too Muslim for comfort) are as much against their crazy muppet of a ruler as we are and decidedly less Muslim than the scary hard-line ones (relaxed dress codes, keen to party). It's the underdogs fighting The Man and we especially identify with the underdogs, because they use Twitter and speak English on TV. It has resonance.

    It shouldn't work that way, but it does. Compare to a certain recent internet phenomenon. Someone who we previously thought was ugly (and a bit too Scottish for most Western tastes), is as good a singer as any that the crazy muppet Simon Cowell could point to. It's the underdog fighting The Man and we especially identify with the underdog because she sings in a perfect English accent and embodies all of our fairytale ideas of how the world should ideally be.

    We don't care about Honduras for the same reasons we don't care about Fabia Cerra (Who? Exactly!) - the story has no resonance, so we ignore it.

  17. Re:Hmmm on The Technology Keeping Information Flowing in Iran · · Score: 1

    If you don't give a damn about world opinion, there is very little to prevent you from extreme military over reaction to keep the status quo.

    If they didn't give a damn, they wouldn't be blocking YouTube, Twitter, the BBC, etc.

  18. Re:The Grotesquely Ugly Truth on The Technology Keeping Information Flowing in Iran · · Score: 2, Informative

    Dupe.

  19. Re:The biggest issue of the 21st century... on Air Force Planning New Drone Fleet For Pakistan · · Score: 1

    The biggest issue of the 21st century is post-scarcity technology wielded by people still preoccupied with fighting over perceived scarcity.

    Are you implying that for the 1 billion people living on less than $1 a day, scarcity is 'perceived'? Fix the economic system that increasingly concentrates resources in the hands of the few and that sort of thing might be possible.

  20. Re:Shame they can't do it for other religions on Church of Scientology On Trial In France · · Score: 1

    1.) The Bible is pretty easy to access. In fact, you can often get it for free because its believers want you to read it.

    Not always the case. The Roman Catholic church was outraged at the idea of the common people being able to access the bible for themselves and strongly resisted attempts to translate it. They even burned the bones of the guy who translated it into English and made further translation into a heretical act.

    2.) I submit that believing some creator of the universe manifested its power in the form of a sacrificial holy man long ago is far less wacky then believing an intergalactic overlord imprisoned in a volcano who attached alien ghosts to primitive humans, causing all their problems.

    Not really. The Xenu-overlord thing is consistent with 50s sci-fi culture when LRH formulated the 'religion', just like the zombie-rises-after-death-to-save-us was consistent with the agrarian pagan religious myths that were common at the time of christ. It's only wacky if its unfamiliar.

    3.) In spite of all the shit they get, the Christians I've met in life have generally been very friendly and nice to me. Just good folks who believe what they believe. You have your bad apples, but that's true for every group in the world. Scientologists, on the other hand, will ask you if you rape babies and are trained to believe that anyone critical of the religion is a criminal who is hiding dark secrets.

    What about the inquisition? Or witch hunts?

    You have a point about most modern christians being very different, but in fact, Scientology follows the classic pattern of an early religion and given 400-500 years, may well end up looking a lot like middle America does today. Surely if we oppose one, we should oppose both.

  21. Re:Shame they can't do it for other religions on Church of Scientology On Trial In France · · Score: 1
    This is true to a point, but ignores the fact that it makes it harder for a child to choose to drop the religion than if they had been presented with a free choice later in life.

    As usual, Dawkins says it best:

    Natural selection builds child brains with a tendency to believe whatever their parents and tribal elders tell them. Such trusting obedience is valuable for survival: the analogue of steering by the moon for a moth. But the flip side of trusting obedience is slavish gullibility. The inevitable by-product is vulnerability to infection by mind viruses.
    -- The God Delusion. pp. 406

  22. Re:So which celebrity does he prefer? on FMRI Shows Man Loves Wife More Than Angelina Jolie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    References?

  23. Re:Really... on Have Sockets Run Their Course? · · Score: 5, Funny

    or person getting a hard attack

    Viagra overdose?

  24. Re:vrml on Google Brings 3D To Web With Open Source Plugin · · Score: 1

    Except that this google plugin does require the download and install of an exe file.

  25. Re:You must mean the iPhone on Windows 7 Starter Edition — 3 Apps Only · · Score: 1

    It's like a fridge or a TV. When you want some new feature, you chuck it and buy a new one.

    App store? What planet have you been on?