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User: Dr.+Hellno

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Comments · 294

  1. Re:Liberated by Bandcamp on Music Industry Sees First Revenue Increase Since 1999 · · Score: 1
  2. Re:Distinguishing conflict from disagreement on Dr. Richard Dawkins On Why Disagreeing With Religion Isn't Insulting · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Black is not a color.
    Silence is not a sound.
    Atheism is not a religion.

  3. Re:This is as good a forum as any.. on Foxconn Workers On Strike Over iPhone 5 Production · · Score: 1

    I'd rather have an Android but will gladly go to the iPhone if it means getting a rocking phone that actually fits in my pocket

    Maybe it's time to trade your oshkosh b'gosh for grown-up pants? You're a big kid now.

  4. Re:expanding on your words: on Pakistan's PM Demands International Blasphemy Laws From UN · · Score: 3, Informative
    Corroboration: this story from This American Life. The first act has a few funny anecdotes about absurd things people believed for longer than would seem plausible.

    Kristy Kruger: It was about a group of five to seven people, kind of standing around the keg, just talking. And somehow a discussion of endangered species came up, in which I posed the question, is the unicorn endangered or extinct? And basically, there was a big gap of silence [...]and then everybody laughed. And then that laughter was followed by more silence when they realized I wasn't laughing. And I was like, yeah, oh God, unicorns aren't real? Oh no.

  5. Re:Because on Why America's School "Lag" Has Never Mattered · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Though everything you said might be true, the sources you provided give no indication of that.

    When it comes to top brains, on the other hand, USA is indeed #1 by a huge margin.

    Actually that link shows it has several of the top universities, ranked by files they put up on the web (and the visibility thereof). Top brains? not proven. Even if those are the universities where the top brains congregate, it's far from clear that those brains are American ones.

    It's also doing rather well in R&D

    That source, a Wikipedia article whose own source is no longer accessible at the relevant hyperlink, says that the U.S. spent more than any other country on R+D in 2010. In percentage of GDP though, you're down around fifth or sixth. Ok, so you spend a lot on R+D. But is it effective? efficient? no answer there.

    tech achievement

    Ok well this is measured, in your source, by 4 things:
    1) Patents granted and royalty license fees received from abroad, both per capita
    2) Number of internet hosts per capita and percentage of exports that are "high or medium technology"
    3) Telephones and electricity consumption per capita
    4) Years of school and enrollment in math and sciences.

    I'll give you number 2 and maybe even 4 as a reasonable measure of technological development, but with a broken patent system churning out meaningless patents, and a wealthy population hooked on cellphones and wasting electricity, the deck is stacked here in favor of the U.S. in a way that has nothing to do with technology. And you still come in behind Finland.

    corporate governance

    Wikipedia offers a spartan PDF with literally no context or explanation. Corporate governance by what metrics?

    And for what it's worth, your suggestion that some people aren't important in an assessment of national intelligence is bunk. It's often up to the public to make informed political choices about scientific issues, from evolution to global warming to birth control to etc. etc.
    It's important that the entire populace, hookers and all, is educated enough to make the right decisions.

  6. Re:Now see, This is why you are a boob on Is There Still a Ray of Hope On Climate Change? · · Score: 1

    [...]the One World Government/Police State that is proposed as the answer to totally regulate carbon, wrecking the first world, transferring most of the remaining wealth to the developing world, etc. leaves us an impoverished socialist hellhole[...]

    Bunk!
    So much bunk.

    Maybe some people are proposing something like that. I've definitely seen quotes like "cap first world economic activity". But while you're arguing with an imagined, monolithic group of "greenies", people in the other corner are busy having a heated conversation that goes something like: "Well, people don't believe science. So what ELSE can we do?"

    Isn't this article proof enough that people are talking about lots of ways of addressing the problem? Government investment in green tech on a larger scale, that's one way to go. Nuclear is another, and despite what you think about "greenies", I'd bet that most people who've accepted the AGW science would also accept nuclear solutions. If that's not enough of a debate for you, there's also been plenty of research and discussion about "climate engineering" based solutions. Some people are even saying "preventative action is impossible... so how can we prepare?"

    Honestly, there's a simple fact you've missed: you can't trust one side to report to you on what the other side is saying. Never trust fox about what a democrat said, or MSNBC about what a republican said, or Drudge about what AGW scientists say.

    If you knew what the other side was actually saying, you wouldn't be having this ridiculous joust with a strawman.

  7. Re:That's *it* for me and Blizzard, man!! on Diablo 3 Banhammer Dropped Just Before RMAH Goes Live · · Score: 1

    This should help.
    The most important part is that you need to ensure your account credentials are being saved to your computer. Probably not the best thing for security, but what do I know. If I remember right, following those steps should allow you to start steam in offline mode when you don't have a connection.

  8. Re:No Alaska on Warmest 12-Month Period Recorded In US · · Score: 1

    At time of writing, I saw two or three people declare this proof of global warming. Most people simply defended AGW, without using the 12-month period as evidence. They do this as part of the eternal argument with the other side, which uses every mention of temperature, climate, or weather to shit all over people who listen to scientists.

    There's plenty of good evidence for AGW already without jumping at every outlier on the temperature charts.

  9. Re:No Alaska on Warmest 12-Month Period Recorded In US · · Score: 1

    All that says is that the U.S. has a really abnormally hot 12 months starting in Nov. 1999, and had an even abnormally hotter 12 months starting in May 2011. Neither of these things say anything on their own about temperature trends even in the U.S., let alone globally. It's just supposed to be interesting that the 12-month average U.S. temperature record was broken, the same way it's supposed to be interesting (but isn't) when local papers say "Rainiest Year in UK Since 1903 :(" or "California June Sunniest Ever!"

    Maybe it's also useful for scientists who use the NOAA report, who might investigate other variables to see if that "hottest 12 months" correlates with increased insect populations, or lower cancer rates, or whatever.

    I think the problem is that you're trying to have an argument about what this data means with someone who never showed up. Not EVERY story about temperature or climate has anything to do with the politics of AGW.

  10. Re:Anti global warming target practice on Warmest 12-Month Period Recorded In US · · Score: 1

    It's called The State of the Climate report because it contains information on the state of the climate. If you'd ever bothered to read it, you'd know that the "Global" section contains lots of data on global temperature, sea ice extent, precipitation, and more. Of course, since the information is compiled by the U.S. government, it also contains in-depth information about weather and climate in the U.S. (believe it or not, global climate isn't the only kind of climate).

    So no, the label doesn't convey any lie. But you certainly do, whether by ignorance or intent.

  11. Re:Good science and hats off to him on Warmest 12-Month Period Recorded In US · · Score: 2

    Usually part 3 is the establishment of a neo-pol pot regime, or national socialism, or some financial scam to make the rich richer and the poor poorer, or most commonly meaningless feel good frippery that will do absolutely nothing but "raise awareness".

    [...]

    Despite my/our disagreement being with Part 3, we get slandered and our words are twisted around

    YOU get slandered? Wow, how hard that must be for you. If only those Nazi libs knew what it felt like to be slandered, I'm sure they'd never do it you again.

    By the way, the Pol Pot talking point is one that you might want to reconsider. It makes you sound like a foaming rabies case. Why parrot all the other fringe Repubs when there are plenty of other socialists both real and fictional to pick from?

  12. Re:No Alaska on Warmest 12-Month Period Recorded In US · · Score: 1

    What? Why do you think it matters when the period begins? And how do you think it indicates anything "opposite of what the standard AGW crowd will take away" from it? Since it's just the US (contiguous, at that) it doesn't indicate *anything* with regard to AGW. So how about you just leave it at that, instead of trying to stretch thin evidence and make flimsy claims.

  13. Re:Seriusly America on Heartland Institute Learning To Troll On Billboards · · Score: 1

    The Austrian school of economic thought is not the only one with claims to legitimacy, so hold your horses. Keynesian economics is at least as legitimate, even if you personally can't believe it. If government spending kickstarts the economy, then it's worth paying the (very low!) interest on debt and then repaying the principal somewhere down the line. The question is, can it fire the economy to that degree? Well, no one can agree, but Krugman isn't "shit-your-pants-insane" for thinking so.

    Here's another point Krugman makes that I think is pretty good: Without some inflation, businesses and individuals just sit on tremendous amounts of capital, since that's the safest thing to do. If inflation was higher, you wouldn't see companies sitting on cash reserves billions of dollars thick- they'd be investing that money in economic activity, hopefully job creating activity. Obviously there's such a thing as too much inflation, and we can quibble about where that is. But the conservative position- that 4 or even 5% inflation would mean the apocalypse- neglects the fact that companies are holding on to their cash right now, and that hurts growth.

    And for what it's worth, austerity can and does hurt the economy in all kinds of ways. Maybe it also helps in some ways, but here's the thing(s): public healthcare saves money, via preventative care, so long as the poor won't be left to die otherwise. Police forces save money (if they're working right) by preventing property damage, theft, and ensuring the safety of those engaged in commerce. Coherent public education strategies create money by preparing the workforce to be productive. Cutting these programs *costs* money, and it may cost more than it saves.

    If you disagree with me and you want to counter-argue, that's great. I only ask that you recognize I'm not "shit-your-pants insane" or "beyond help" to think any of these things.

  14. Re:I vividly remember on 'Gaia' Scientist Admits Mispredicting Rate of Climate Change · · Score: 1

    It's weird that you chose to a link to a site which argues exactly the opposite of what you're claiming: even when some scientists predicted cooling, six times as many predicted warming.
    It's strange how more and more, the "skeptics" are leading me to information that validates AGW theory! Just the other day, some particularly rabid commenters on the conservative blogs convinced me that the "97% consensus" number was totally unfounded and lacked a source. Since I'm the kind of *legitimate* skeptic to whom all claims are suspect but worth investigating, I attempted to track down a source myself and within three minutes had two published papers showing 97% agreement among the scientific community on AGW.

  15. Re:positive feedback loop on Massive Methane Release In the Arctic Region · · Score: 1

    The comments on that article show just how entrenched positions have become. A lot of conservatives got wind of it via Alex Jones, who painted the whole thing as "The cult of AGW wants to burn your house down," which is preposterous to anyone who bothered to read the article. It very clearly doesn't say that. Yet somehow there are many replies along the lines of... well I'll quote: "Come to my house with matches, pal. You'll be leaving on a stretcher under a plastic sheet." Also: "Wow Steve, you ride a bike and burn down people's houses. You really are a moron. Not just that but a dangerous psychopath to boot. Shouldn't you be in jail or institutionalized in a psychiatric facility?" And so on and so forth.

    I can't stress this enough... the two sides aren't even speaking the same language. It's was already apparent that both sides have their own talking points, their own debunkers, their own pejoratives, even their own scientists. What only became clear to me here was that they can look at the same sentence and come to totally different conclusions- not just about the import of the sentence, but about the literal meaning of the sentence.

  16. Re:How does a supernova cool the atmosphere? on How Nearby Supernovae Affected Life On Earth · · Score: 1

    not to mention the CLOUD project at the European Organization for Nuclear Research!

    Brought to you by the society for redundantly linking redundantly to redundant links

  17. Re:They have lost all trust, but they retain distr on In Nothing We Trust · · Score: 1

    it's pretty clear Mitt Romney will be selected at the party convention. (Romney is 1st; Paul is 2nd.)

    I'm not sure by what metric you mean, but if you're talking about delegates, Paul is fourth (says Politico) behind Romney, Santorum (campaign suspended) and Gingrich (campaign apparently still chugging along for some reason Newt only knows). Paul has half as many delegates as Gingrich, about a quarter as many as Santorum, and just under a tenth as many as Romney. It's a done deal, and unsurprisingly the result is the one the "lamestream media" has been predicting since before the primary even began.

  18. Re:Still not truly green on NASA Unveils Greenest Federal Building In the Nation · · Score: 5, Informative

    Everyone knows that the solar panels consume far more energy in their production than they ever produce in their lifetime

    Completely bogus. It takes maybe 1-4 years to recoup the energy cost of construction, and the panels can last 30 years.

  19. So tired of hearing about Orwell on Brazilian Schoolchildren Tagged By Computer Chips · · Score: 2

    1984 was puerile, unsubtle propaganda, and almost as laughably hysterical as the commenters who refer to it at least once per thread. Don't you realize how utterly boring and mindless it is to repeat, again and again, that "Orwell warned the world"?

    Do you think that gesticulating wildly in the direction of 1984 makes you look smart? It's a children's book.

  20. Re:I have an organ donor card... on When Are You Dead? · · Score: 1

    Well, I was under the impression that it was possible for a person to be non-responsive to those stimuli for other reasons. Wikipedia states that "barbiturate overdose, alcohol intoxication, sedative overdose, hypothermia, hypoglycemia, coma or chronic vegetative states" may mimic brain death, although there's no indication of how a differential diagnosis would be made in all those cases.

    Still, you make a good point; I trust that medical professionals have honestly and diligently considered all the angles, and that their criteria for death are the most accurate. I guess I was really just surprised to hear that they can determine the function of the brain with such simple, noninvasive tests.

  21. Re:I have an organ donor card... on When Are You Dead? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree completely, but I was a little surprised by the tests we apparently use to determine brain death. I assumed there might be an EEG to check for brain activity, but apparently they give you a wet willy and poke you in the eye, then turn off your air for a little while.
    I'm cool with all my parts going into other people once brain death occurs, but I guess I'd just like them to check a little more rigorously to be sure it has occurred.
    The article offers something of a solution: don't sign the card, but provide your family with instructions that your organs are to be donated after enough tests have been run to be sure your brain is kaput.

  22. Re:Apple TV is an iPad accessory on Third-Generation Apple TV Lands With a Thud · · Score: 2

    The iPad now has all the technical bits in place to become the household computing center for most people.

    As an iPad owner myself, I have to emphatically disagree. If people are satisfied by the computing experience offered by the iPad, their expectations are way too low.

    It has built in e-mail, web

    It's simply not good at browsing the web. It's slow, it's full of ads, it crashes so goddamn much (responding to the Slashdot poll crashes mine about 2 out of 3 times). Compared to a laptop, or certainly a desktop, it's a terrible browsing experience.

    video consumption, photo and video management, music

    It does video alright, but lots of web video outside of youtube just won't load properly half the time. It's difficult to control playback (pause isn't quick enough, seek bar is clumsy and inaccurate). And unless you plug in headphones, music or any video relying on sound will be greatly degraded.

    basic document creation

    Yeah... *basic* document creation. Touch keyboards just aren't good enough to type anything substantial, and let's not even get into the ergonomics of extended typing on it. It doesn't have the processing power to create music, and I wouldn't try any serious image creation on it.

    Some of these problems will get better, I assume one day they'll make one with enough horsepower that I can vote in the damn slashdot poll. But tablets are toys, they aren't real computers and they don't replace real computers for most of the applications you mentioned.

  23. Re:This is a problem in the US??? on Government Should Ban Skinny Models To Curb Anorexia, Say Researchers · · Score: 2

    Several hundred thousand women in the United States suffer from anorexia and ~20% of them will die of anorexia-related symptoms.

    Your mortality rate is a little bit high, I think. In the article, the authors of the study are quoted, saying that "About 6percent of those who suffer from anorexia nervosa die from it."
    The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders (ANAD), reporting results from the American Journal of Psychiatry, puts the mortality rate at 4%

    I don't mean to minimize the death toll here - 4% is still a tragedy.

  24. Better idea on Rearview Car Cameras Likely Mandated By 2014 · · Score: 1

    Electronically limit reverse speed. Most of these accidents are probably caused by some moron gunning it backwards out of the driveway. Once they can't do that anymore, the accident rate has got to drop by at least half.
    I don't trust those cameras because they make drivers lazy. They think they're getting complete information about what's behind them, but they aren't. Even if the view angle is 180 degrees, which it isn't, there's no way to represent that much information on a little screen in a way that adds to proprioreception.
    By limiting reverse speed, we not only eliminate *most* accidents caused by normal reversing, we also stop people from deciding to tear off backwards on a one way street.
    Yes some infants will still die. Some infants will always still die. You cannot save all the children all the time.

  25. Re:Yes on Are Rich People Less Moral? · · Score: 1

    In other words, even if everyone has the same level of ethics and morality, it will appear that the rich are less moral just because they're less affected by the penalties.

    If that was the mechanism involved here, one would logically expect that the rich would appear *less* immoral in situations where they could cheat to earn a reward. To paraphrase you, even if everyone has the same level of ethics and morality, it will appear that the rich are more moral since they're less affected by the rewards. However, as noted in the article, the researchers found in one experiment that the rich were three times as likely to cheat to win a reward. I'll admit that there is another possible explanation of their finding: that the rich will cheat more severely than the poor (hiding four aces up a sleeve as opposed to just the one, e.g.) But I don't really find that to be exculpating. The rich apparently either cheat more than or worse than the poor, even though they have less at stake.