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User: Tibixe

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Comments · 19

  1. Save Africa with your likes! on Your Facebook Likes Conveyed As Simulated Hugs · · Score: 1

    Can this double as a life jacket? If so, you could actually save some African orphans with your likes. At least the ones thrown overboard from pirate ships.

  2. Re:Using Periods? on Analyzing Tweets To Identify Psychopaths · · Score: 1

    Are you two schizophrenic?

  3. Re:Google sells people, more data more money on Google Joining Fight Against Drug Cartels · · Score: 1

    This is a PR and marketing strategy.

    No, this is eliminating the competition. Google needs Internet addicts, therefore moves to eliminate competing addictions.

  4. Re:Seems like a plan to me on Chinese Censors Are Being Watched · · Score: 1

    If this is a plan, it's either a plan for quiet transition to free speech or a bad plan. This kind of censorship is ineffective in the long term. All this can achieve is that anti-government rioting starts not at political rallies but in excited crowds like at the fall of the Berlin Wall. Party officials seem to think that since everyone knows the CCP is corrupt, letting the speak is harmless. This is wrong because the net makes criticism of the government "common knowledge" in the game theoretic sense. This makes dissenters more willing to speak since they know the extent of support they have.

  5. Don't be so optimistic on CERN: Neutrinos Respect Cosmic Speed Limit · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Had the error been in the opposite direction, indicating neutrinos slightly slower than previously thought, this experiment would never have been scrutinized so much. Then some theoretician might have even got a Nobel for explaining the result. That's how science moves backward.

  6. Is this the work of Timothy Gowers? on Publisher Pulls Supports; 'Research Works Act' Killed · · Score: 2

    This is very probably the result of a widespread boycott of Elsevier started by Cambridge mathematician Timothy Gowers and other researchers. Supporting RWA was one of the reasons they were fed up with Elsevier.

    How it all started: http://gowers.wordpress.com/2012/01/21/elsevier-my-part-in-its-downfall/

  7. Re:Not early enough. on Brain Scan Can Detect Autism In Infants · · Score: 2

    If you do understand differential equations at a glance, please have a look at the Navier-Stokes equations. The Millennium Prize might compensate you for your not even "perceptively long" time.

  8. Come on, companies don't hire criminals on Ask Slashdot: Companies That Force Employees To Join Social Networks? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm fairly young and I already start getting reactions along the line of "Are you a criminal or what?" when I tell people I don't have a facebook profile. Also, I'm pretty sure the police would be watching people without public social network presence for they are hiding something for sure. Fortunately for me, they're probably too lazy to get up from facebook.

  9. Misleading as usual on Hungary Uses iPad To Draft New Constitution · · Score: 1

    Hungary's constitution was completely rewritten in 1989: the current one has only 1 common sentence with the 1949 constitution, the one stating that the country's capital is Budapest.

    Hungarian politicians are sometimes *too* enthusiastic about the wonders of the West. One time, our President even treated the half-wit nazoid Bernie Ecclestone like a king, simply because he's into Formula 1. This time, they must have read that Eco essay stating Apple is like Catholicism.

  10. Deicide tends to be controversial on The Hidden Reality Draws Ire From Physicists · · Score: 2

    From the TFA:
    "Multiverse theories aren't theories—they're science fictions, theologies, [...]"

    Theology is the keyword here. Postulating a multiverse with many similar universes to this one basically eliminates any objective significance this particular planet Earth with its history has. You can nuke everything and "know" that our culture will continue in other universes. So accepting a multiverse theory would destroy ethics: it would kill God.

  11. Re:Also to provide them with food and drink and to on Are You Ready For the Digital Afterlife? · · Score: 1

    This is basically about the selfishness of the living.

    First, we think of how the death of a person will affect us, not whether the person is happy after his death or not.
    Second, there is fierce competition for resources; taking from the dead (who cannot protest) was always easy.

    I think we may be too obsessed about "immortality" i.e. making people remember us and we are really afraid of the spiritual afterlife as described by, say, Egyptians.

  12. Compare that with Ancient Egyptians on Are You Ready For the Digital Afterlife? · · Score: 2

    It is interesting that the primary concern about death in many ancient cultures was to ensure that wise and proper advice is given to the deceased for the afterlife.

    The primary concern of modern culture is just the opposite: the impact the deceased person has after his death.

  13. Re:he's right on Mathematics As the Most Misunderstood Subject · · Score: 1

    Let's just say that if I received $10 every time I read a philosophical misunderstanding of Gödel's theorem, I would be a rich man by now. I've heard many times that it means NO axiomatic system is consistent and complete. Duh. I have also met a philosophy student (who studied mathematical logic as part of the university curriculum) could tell the difference between the Axiom of Choice and the Banach-Tarski Paradox. I've tried for hours to explain a philosophically inclined would-be engineer that 1 is greater or equal to 0. He said it isn't, because it is *greater* than zero, not greater or equal. Duh. Yet, most of my knowledge that I couldn't have learnt from books came from a maths teacher who is both a serious mathematician and a serious philosopher. Mathematics and philosophy should be inseparable; the fact that they are treated as separate fields shows that we, as a society, understand neither.

  14. Re:Free on Oyster Card Hack To Be Released, In Good Time · · Score: 2, Funny

    So do serial killers, by the way.

  15. 400 to 600 Linux users? on BBC "Not In Bed With Bill Gates" · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users. I read news.bbc.co.uk and use Linux. so I am the 0.2% of the users mentioned there :P
    There must more than 600, because a "Latest BBC Headlines" bookmark comes "preinstalled" with Firefox.
    (At least with the ones I've seen)
  16. Advantage of less advanced countries on Germany Seeks Expansion of Computer Spying · · Score: 1

    I doubt that there is anyone who works for the government AND can write a proper virus/trojan in Hungary :) Definitely not one for Linux :p

  17. Why? on '55 Science Paper Retracted to Thwart Creationists · · Score: 1

    What's the point of doing that? He could just say "I think what I stated there is true, and even then I don't think that proves anything creationist say."

  18. Storm on Storm Worm Being Reduced to a Squall · · Score: 1, Interesting

    An unstoppable botnet... quite beautiful. (Well, unstoppable as long as Windows is not exactly secure.) I know it's probably done for money, but wouldn't it be funny if ten years later someone announced he made the Storm to compute big prime numbers, and he found 10000 more than ever? :) By the way, what is the use of big computers/networks if not maths?

  19. Re:C++ long-in-the-tooth? on Firefox Working to Fix Memory Leaks · · Score: 1

    Use Haskell. It's a purely functional language, so no variables, no garbage, nothing to worry about :)