Slashdot Mirror


User: aaron+alderman

aaron+alderman's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
124
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 124

  1. Re:Damnit on Social Media Can Help You Fake Your Own Death · · Score: 1

    and more Oprah

  2. Re:Hey, wait a minute on Disputed Island Disappears Into Sea · · Score: 1

    Assuming you are not trolling...

    There is no event which would disprove global warming nor is there any event which would prove global warming. Global warming is global, so individual weather events are statistically insignificant.

    Both the observations you mention are symptoms of weather instability. It is not inconsistent to say that some areas will receive more snow/rain and others will receive less and that these areas may be the same in different years or even months.

    As for the likes of Al Gore, I must ask - Why you are taking him to be an oracle of science? I'm sure you are an intelligent person and if you wish to have an intelligent opinion then you should be relying on reliable sources, not on a politician-cum-climatologist.

  3. Re:Probably good for Google. on IE Not Faring Well In the EU Ballot · · Score: 1

    Mozilla is for the sci-fi channel.
    Opera is for talk shows and Safari is for nature.
    Duh!

  4. Re:LEDs can't be DIMMED Barry White rolling in GRA on Toshiba Ends Incandescent Bulb Production After 120 Years · · Score: 1

    Lose some weight so you look good naked?

  5. Re:Don't they already have one? on China To Connect Its High-Speed Rail To Europe · · Score: 1

    That's not High Speed Rail.

  6. Re:A high speed railway on China To Connect Its High-Speed Rail To Europe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Religious nutbags become ineffectual when you introduce prosperity and equality to their followers at the expense of meddling, war and neocolonialism.

  7. Re:UK's HS2 on China To Connect Its High-Speed Rail To Europe · · Score: 1

    It's amazing what you can do when you don't care about human rights, property rights and environmental concerns.

  8. Re:Invert rose-tinted-glasses on Programming the Commodore 64: the Definitive Guide · · Score: 1

    50k Libraries of Congress would be quite a bit. Almost the size of Windows 7 code I imagine.

  9. Obligatory atheist flamebait on An Early Look At Civilization V · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm glad they got rid of religion. Hopefully we can get rid of it in this world too.

  10. Re:How is the LHC not on here? on The Top 5 Technology Panics of 2009 · · Score: 1

    Yeah but atmospheric particle collisions are natural whereas the LHC is man-made!!!

  11. Re:density of Styrofoam on Kepler Finds Five More Exoplanets · · Score: 1

    Starbucks planet?

  12. Re:Okay, is it just me on G-WAN, Another Free Web Server · · Score: 1

    kdawson. CHECK

  13. Re:hmm on Facebook Stock Going Public? · · Score: 1

    They already have.

  14. Re:Write about what you know on Hawking Says Humans Have Entered a New Stage of Evolution · · Score: 1

    As everyone knows, only those who have studied at the finest fashion houses in Europe can comment on the Emperors New Clothes.

  15. Re:Hmmmm... on Microsoft Rebrands Live Search As "Bing" · · Score: 1

    Too late. Bill Cosby owns it already.

  16. Re:tremendous waste. on Robot Soldiers Are Already Being Deployed · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a WOPR of an idea.

  17. Re:TRIfecta? on Finding a Personal Coding Trifecta · · Score: 1

    It was a test to see if anyone would read the article.

  18. Re:ANZSA on An Australian Space Agency At Last? · · Score: 1

    I know we play union and cricket together, but that doesn't mean we need to include South Africa in this too.

  19. 133? on The First Phone Call Was 133 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    Call me again in five years.

  20. What If... on Australian Gov't May Employ a Homegrown Quantum Key System · · Score: 0

    QKD is considered the world's toughest security because the slightest attempt to intercept the one time keys, coded into lasers at the quantum level, will disrupt the beam.

    What if you cross the beams?

  21. Re:Out of date info on The Scope of US E-Waste · · Score: 1

    Outsourcing.

  22. Synchrotrons are great environments on Synchrotron Gets Sci-Fi Writer In Residence · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From from my own experience doing research at a synchrotron, I call tell you there is nothing "day to day" about it. We get roughly one week to do as much as humanly possible in an environment which drains you (16+ hour days under high fluorescent lighting with the incessant hum of vacuum pumps and machinery).

    The scientific environment is electric. Things get done - ideas flourish and are crushed in minutes as a gaggle of intelligent scientists throw ideas around and call on their years of experience. Copious amounts of coffee are consumed and everyone stands there silent when the a-ha moment arrives and all the hard work comes together.

    It might be hard for an outsider to appreciate this, and there is a chance this isn't the norm when it comes to the average synchrotron experience.

  23. Re:No known "Health issues" on Hippies Say WiFi Network Is Harming Their Chakras · · Score: 1

    Nor does selective memory, confirmation bias, psychosomatic induced illness, willingness to belief, distaste for progress mean that they exist too.

  24. Re:Residents, not hippies on Hippies Say WiFi Network Is Harming Their Chakras · · Score: 1

    It's called scapegoating. Its where you blame your problems on someone or something else. Perhaps one of the most troubling aspects of humanities ability to notice false patterns (ever since Martha moved into town there has been nothing but bad luck) and to not end up on the other end. The whole mythology of Christ, which our societies have emerged from, revolves around an elaborate scapegoating. Problems never get solved (unless its psychosomatic) and people are killed or run out of town due to these irrational beliefs.

  25. Re:See "Bad science" on Hippies Say WiFi Network Is Harming Their Chakras · · Score: 1

    Until something goes bad (flood, drought, poor tourism) and they need a scapegoat in the form of say a "witch" and run them out of town or kill them. This type of thinking is never good and can lead to "good people doing bad things" because they were too stupid to stop and think if what they are claiming is based on evidence or reason instead of superstition. So no, this type of religious thinking isn't "not that bad" and leads to so-called justifiable homicide from incorrect premises. (Witches should be killed, fortunately witches do not exist, etc)