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User: buchner.johannes

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  1. Dupe on Canonical Sues Cloud Provider Over 'Unofficial' Ubuntu Images (ostatic.com) · · Score: 3, Informative
  2. We have some observational constraints on the speed of light.
    11 billion years ago (when the universe was 2 billion years old), the speed of light was about the same as it is now. https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.087...
    Otherwise, the light crossing certain objects would be different. This result is essentially independent of cosmology.

    I guess that the cosmic microwave background also places limits. If the speed of light had been infinite at that time, I suspect the last scattering would be affected. This is ~300.000 years after the big bang.

    But at the time of inflation ... sure, could be infinite, I guess.

  3. Re: Game Changer on Feeding Seaweed To Cows Eliminates Methane Emissions (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 1

    So you are hung up on reverse last-Thursdayism or a nirvana fallacy. Gravity could stop working any minute, we do not have proof it will work tomorrow. Science can not bring the type of proof you are looking for.

  4. Re: Game Changer on Feeding Seaweed To Cows Eliminates Methane Emissions (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 1

    10-15 years ago, when these models where created, they predicted the future. Now that future is here, so we are checking their predictions against real observables.

  5. Re: Game Changer on Feeding Seaweed To Cows Eliminates Methane Emissions (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 1

    And those from 10-15 years ago have successfully predicted the increase observed over the last decade. Not only that but they also predicted the warming in individual locations, the increased weather extremes, etc.

    That's very heart warming, but not proof of the success in predicting even more extreme outcomes. Before I jump on the panic and tax band wagon I'd like to see some real proof, not expectations.

    That these models have correctly predicted the future is the proof that they work. Why is that not "real proof"? Not sure if you are hung up on last-Thursdayism or a nirvana fallacy here. Fine, there may be another model or different parameters which are the true ones. So what? The used parameters gave the correct predictions, so we can't be way off. And climate scientist do study and worry about such systematic errors. Do you honestly expect that another parameter will suddenly give a sine curve in temperatures, saving us in 2020 without any action?

    Sure scientists discover new effects and you see them in the news, but they are usually minor modifications. The main message and outcome has not changed in decades, i.e. accelerated warming, increasing sea levels, more extreme weather.

  6. Re:layout == replacement? on A Windows 10 Alternative: Ubuntu-Based Zorin OS Linux Distro (betanews.com) · · Score: 0, Troll

    You will have to admit though that tablets and smartphones these days feature apps that are easy/intuitive to use and often beat clunky desktop apps with slow development cycles. Bringing such features/approaches to DEs would avoid being stuck with 1990s desktops. Maps, weather, interactive notifications and lessons learned from Mylyn are a good thing for the diversity of Linux desktops.

  7. Re: Game Changer on Feeding Seaweed To Cows Eliminates Methane Emissions (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 2

    Climate models contain plenty of physics. And those from 10-15 years ago have successfully predicted the increase observed over the last decade. Not only that but they also predicted the warming in individual locations, the increased weather extremes, etc.

    Every model is an approximation of the real world with some degree of accuracy. These ones are useful and give insight into the most important physical mechanisms at work.

  8. Re:Panel on top is a feature? on Raspberry Pi Foundation Unveils New LXDE-Based Desktop For Raspbian Called PIXEL (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    Features like "new icons", "new Applications Menu", "panel on top" etc requires hiring a programmer, there's something wrong with your desktop environment. These are all trivial configuration options which any user should be able to make for themselves.

    Does the fact that my configuration files differ from the default ones mean that I created a new desktop environment?

    You also need to repackage that package, which is not trivial.

  9. The US has better air quality because of fortunate wind conditions, not because it pollutes less, if If I remember the article correctly. Same applies to Europe (and Reading) - where the air is polluted does not necessarily correspond to where the pollution accumulates!

  10. There's your problem right there. How about concentrating on giving us a good *browser* instead, like you used to?

    That's exactly what they are doing, they are stopping other projects (Thunderbird, Firefox OS) to concentrate on severe refactorings of their core product, Firefox and the underlying Gecko, to catch up again with Chrome, and deliver a better browser. It is harder to restructure a codebase if you need to maintain several products that depend on it.

  11. Re:The article conveniently ignores Python on 400,000 GitHub Repositories, 1 Billion Files, 14TB of Code: Spaces or Tabs? (medium.com) · · Score: 1

    As I said above, PEP8 only applies to the Python project, not all projects written in Python. There is no recommendation for Python code other than consistency.

  12. Re:The article conveniently ignores Python on 400,000 GitHub Repositories, 1 Billion Files, 14TB of Code: Spaces or Tabs? (medium.com) · · Score: 0

    PEP8 only applies to the Python project, not all projects written in Python. There is no recommendation for Python code other than consistency.

  13. Astronomers use parsecs because they have a clear definition based on a physical, measurable distance. When you say light year you have to specify what a year is (there are several kinds, some change over time). In many cases it does not matter and light years are sufficiently accurate given the distance uncertainty and they are more intuitive.

  14. Re:Data rate or transmission delay? on NASA Reconnects With 'Lost' STEREO-B Satellite (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 2

    You are correct. 189 million miles (from TFA) is 17 light minutes. The STEREO satellites are positioned opposite Earth from the Sun http://stereo-ssc.nascom.nasa....

  15. Re:FSF/GNU are happy with corporate directed on Linux Turns 25, Is Bigger and More Professional Than Ever (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    er, Linux is just the kernel.

    No, Linux is an overloaded name that can refer to the kernel or the operating system as a whole. And it is used in both ways by many Linux advocates and enthusiasts. Context usually makes it quite clear which is being used.

    In this discussion's context,

    You can't weasel your way out of this one. The summary is about Linux, then the discussion was about Linus and his Linux. Stop trying to make this about GNU.

  16. Re: Honest Question on Fedora 25 To Run Wayland By Default Instead Of X.Org Server (phoronix.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    Eh? You can do this in GNOME3. Just press super and drag between desktops. Or do Shift-Ctrl-Alt-Up/Down to switch virtual desktops and bring the window with you.

  17. Re:Law and Equity on TOS Agreements Require Giving Up First Born -- and Users Gladly Consent · · Score: 0

    IIRC in the EU the second has been ruled by courts ...

  18. If it is SSL/TLS, it doesn't matter. It's the same as when you send the actual password.

  19. Siri on Apple Won't Collect Your Data For Its AI Services Unless You Let It (recode.net) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Isn't everything ever spoken to Siri sent to Apple? Also probably stored to improve the algorithm ...

  20. Re:Meaningless on High IQ Countries Have Less Software Piracy, Research Finds (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Correlation is not causation, therefore there are many possible explanation. Wealth correlates with IQ (better education but also nutrition), and wealth probably correlates with piracy. Out comes a correlation of IQ and piracy.

  21. ... is just numerology. Fails for Neptune and exoplanets.

  22. Re:Other third party site breach on GitHub Presses Big Red Password Reset Button After Third-Party Breach (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    There is http://www.adeptus-mechanicus....

    If companies were smart they would reset and ban all passwords in those lists and the most common password topologies, as listed here and here

  23. Re:Honestly? on Firefox Finally Confirms 'Largest Change Ever' Featuring Electrolysis In v48 (zdnet.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are over 2,400 open bugs right now, and that doesn't include the many thousands that they've supposedly fixed in the past.

    Chromium has 51353 open issues, Firefox has >10000, webkit has >10000. So according to your logic, Rust is the best!

  24. If you want a browser following the unix-philosophy, you want to go with http://www.uzbl.org/

    But then again, Linux (not GNU/Linux) and X also do not follow the Unix philosophy ...