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User: vesuvana

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  1. Re: Twerking? on Bitcoin, BYOD, Phablet, Selfie, and Twerking Find Place In Oxford Dictionary · · Score: 1

    This morning the radio played Morgan Freeman reading aloud the new dictionary definition of twerking. I recommend googling it- worthwhile!

  2. Re: Fit to drive? on Pastafarian Wins Battle To Wear Colander In License Photo · · Score: 1

    lol two separate issues! Let's hear it for improved access to mental health worldwide :-)

  3. Re: Fit to drive? on Pastafarian Wins Battle To Wear Colander In License Photo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe the men in the culture who insist women cover up lest they get aroused should have *their* heads examined

  4. Re:Sad day on NPR's "Car Talk" Glides To a Halt · · Score: 1

    I agree. When I had to drive anywhere early on Sat mornings, listening and laughing aloud to their show made the drive more pleasant. Gone will be a corny kind of innocent humor that is still sorely needed these days, plus their formidable car knowledge. I often was amazed at how they could diagnose something based on a caller's illogical blabberings. It added to their mystique. Sometimes the passage of time just sucks.

  5. Re:Child? on No Charges For Child-Whipping Judge Caught On YouTube · · Score: 1

    If he really is a serial abuser, then there's no excuse and I agree with you. Would I have spanked her? No, not at 16 and not for downloading music. Though I really do think discipline is lacking in parenting today and I do have some compassion for parents who get pushed by their kids into craziness. Everyone looks scary and awful when we lose our tempers. Most of us just don't put it on video. :-) Mostly I think we need to be careful not to just reflexively play into her obvious manipulation of the situation. Youtube? really? That's not how real victims heal. That's how clever vindictive people get public opinion on their side. It's easy to jump on the bandwagon of defenseless female, but her current actions really speak loudly to how calculating she is. I'd be surprised if she doesn't make money off this. It's a sad situation all around. I hope they all get the help they need.

  6. Re:Child? on No Charges For Child-Whipping Judge Caught On YouTube · · Score: 1

    The truth lies somewhere between the extremes. My father beat me with a belt too a few times, and a) I never did those things again and b) they were things of serious enough consequence that a "talking to" or "time out" were not sufficient punishment. Today I am a respectful productive member of society able to form full meaningful relationships with others. So I'd argue that it didn't leave me with the severe psychological scars that so many non-spanking proponents wave around. I have to work daily with "millenials" who have never been punished more severely than a time out and are members of the generation where all participants "win" just for showing up. They are a nightmare to work beside: egotistical to the point of being rude, whiney, and demanding praise for even the slightest effort. They are also the most intolerant and disrespectful bunch I've ever encountered anywhere in the US and have the worst impulse control of all generations in the workforce. So I'd say our recent generation's experiment with permissive child rearing was a total failure. I dread having these people become our leaders. Would I beat my child with a belt? No. But would I spank them when it's something that deserves swift high-level punishment? Absolutely, and without a bit of guilt or worry about scarring them emotionally. And I really do think the daughter in this case is a little sh*t for petulantly getting even with her father in this manipulative manner that's (imho) completely out of scale with the incident. I think her current actions show that she was a trouble maker as a child too and probably didn't get spanked nearly as often as she deserved.

  7. Re:Lots of reasons... on How to Heartlessly Arbitrage Used Books With a PDA · · Score: 1
    Haha, yes that would be whining. However what I was getting at is that the intent of a bookstore is to sell books to people who love to read, ie for personal use or perhaps as a gift. This is similar to the situation of a garage sale whose general purpose is to sell items that one doesn't need any longer to someone who has a use for them; again the intent is for personal use.

    I don't think that anyone would say the primary purpose of a bookseller or a garage sale is to provide items to dealers/resellers looking solely for the most valuable items. And many would agree that those sorts of vultures reduce the enjoyability of both bookstores and garage sales. So imho, if there is a way to limit that sort of patron, eg via banning barcode scanners, so much the better.

  8. Re:Lots of reasons... on How to Heartlessly Arbitrage Used Books With a PDA · · Score: 1
    I completely agree. The ban is a good thing and should be universal. People take useful technologies and twist them to unintended, nefarious, and clearly selfish, uses. To me, intent is an important aspect to consider. I am tired of being forced to be either a wolf or a sheep because some people insist on bending or breaking the spirit of the place or event. Bookstores--especially used bookstores--exist to benefit devoted readers of books! They are not in business to fall prey to vultures looking to make a quick buck. Apps that allow barcode scanning were developed to help end consumers decide whether to purchase an item for personal consumption, for that price, in that store. A tool for empowering personal fiscal responsibility doesn't belong in the hands of resellers.

    Reminds me of the problems with resellers attending garage sales: it takes all pleasure out of leisurely perusing sales, and perhaps finding something you'll take home and actually give new life to, to fight shoulder-to-shoulder with dealers looking for items they can turn a profit on. And from the one garage sale I have held, I can tell you dealers drive hard bargains in the most unpleasant way to get you to sell to them at ridiculous, disrespectfully low prices. They are selfish leeches and shouldn't be allowed at garage sales either.

  9. Re:some really do get zero care on US Gov't. Ending Its Hands-Off-the-Internet Stance · · Score: 1

    Both good points.

    It was some years ago and honestly, I think it was legal at the time. "Patient dumping" became a cause celeb shortly after, but the practice continues still today, especially when they think the uninsured patient isn't in a position to know they can sue.

    Berkeley is beyond mecca for the pathologically politically correct. I found that out quickly when, soon after moving there, I was chastised by fellow restaurant patrons for politely saying no to a mentally deranged homeless man who had walked in, sat down at my table and demanded that I feed him. I've even been spit on for nicely saying no. But the private hospitals are for the elite rich who can afford to behave like benevolent messiahs to those "beneath them" when it suits them. They are definitely not for those unwashed masses, or even middle class uninsured college students.

    which is why I live in Colorado now :-)

  10. Re:Let me translate... on US Gov't. Ending Its Hands-Off-the-Internet Stance · · Score: 1
    I think you translate well; these are all the catch phrases that Democrats routinely trot out to show how much they care about protecting the poor little citizen. Of course really what they want is to control and tax every interaction they can.

    It's peeved them ever since www and graphical browsers came along that they weren't controlling or making money off all this human interaction. The technology (and their lack of understanding of it) cut government out of the loop from the start.

    I really think the Wachowski brothers had it right with The Matrix imagery. Our government sees us as nothing more than perpetual energy sources for its own sustanence and immortality. So I'm all for limiting their power while we still can.

  11. some really do get zero care on US Gov't. Ending Its Hands-Off-the-Internet Stance · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sorry but I need to throw in my two cents: as a college student I started to miscarry my baby, so I showed up at the local hospital in Berkeley. I wasn't even allowed in to see a doctor to be stabilized or sent by ambulance to the county hospital in Oakland. They literally couldn't hurry me off their property fast enough. I had to have someone drive me the half hour to Highland. It was shocking and awful.

  12. Re:This is exactly the spirit of the law on Overzealous Enforcement Means Even Legit Music Blogs Deleted · · Score: 1
    What I was getting at was that if the assumption by government was that people were trying to do something good or at least harmless, like creative expansion on a theme, instead of assuming that anyone sharing copyrighted music was out to rip off the government from its rightful royalties, then we would be seeing a different legal landscape play out.

    I think our government operates from an assumption that is both paranoid (we're all trying to steal what they're entitled to) and unreasonably controlling (a stance that dates back to Puritan times where citizens weren't to be trusted with autonomy).

    So actually, government's attitude is ruining both society and the music industry by stifling freedom of expression.

  13. Re:This is exactly the spirit of the law on Overzealous Enforcement Means Even Legit Music Blogs Deleted · · Score: 1
    Very interesting massage of data. What strikes me is that this decrease shows up despite the greater ease in "sampling" from other artists that modern technology has afforded. You would think that there would be a greater CPY or at least that the practice of sampling would eliminate the decrease seen since copyright law took effect. So the damping effect of copyright on creativity may be even greater than your estimate.

    And it may be reasonable to conclude that the more government tightens its control of who can play or listen to music, and certainly over who can modify it, the greater the decline in creativity in society as a whole. Not good, grim outlook in fact.

    I suppose it will take someone well funded enough to fight this all the way to the Supreme Court. Given their surprising interpretation of the First Amendment recently, I suspect they would rule in favor of creative freedom.

  14. Re:This is exactly the spirit of the law on Overzealous Enforcement Means Even Legit Music Blogs Deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I completely agree. A major problem is that our system rewards the most egregious control freaks with more and more power.

    We seem to operate out of a misplaced Puritan holdback of 'any freedom is evil' and 'humans are inherently evil and must be controlled lest they be themselves', which could only equal evil in this mindset. It's completely ass backwards and results in a total thwarting of creativity.

    Without an atmosphere of assumed trustworthiness, how can our society thrive and move forward at all? The music industry (and the film industry) are symptomatic of a much bigger problem. I believe it needs to be fought against aggressively and nipped in the bud before government usurps any more control by crushing individual freedom and creativity. But I don't have any good ideas of how to stop this nauseating trend.

  15. Especially since I'm a gal on Do You Hate Being Called an "IT Guy?" · · Score: 1

    I've overheard it even in companies where I've worked for years, usually in the form of "go get the IT guy" or "I think the IT guy said to do it that way." And no, I don't sport the gender-blurring unibrow. I figure it just reflects how all those lowly non-IT types see us as one single flavor of non-human. That's ok: fear breeds compliance.

  16. it's true what they say on Tetris Turns 25 · · Score: 1

    Crap. Now I really feel old, even though technically I'm not. So the old adage really does hold!

  17. Re:Lasers on Phoenix BIOSOS? · · Score: 1

    There's a fundamental difference between a brand new technology and yet one more way to get around Windows' inadequacies. We know that Windows sucks yet has the world's majority of software written for it. This is not going to be a Windows killer. Great if some people buy this, but I don't think it's going to make Phoenix much money or make Microcrap quake in their mink-lined boots.

  18. Re:SplashTop on Phoenix BIOSOS? · · Score: 1

    It's a solution without a problem. They tried similar tacts on the Mac twice, the latest being Parallels (god save us from Bootcamp) and VMware still has no real user base, especially given knoppix and linux live. It just seems like a non-issue. Corporations won't support it and individuals will make the decision to run one OS or the other based on how much they hate microstiff or the apps they have to run.

  19. Re:The real article, and what it does and doesn't on New Pattern Found In Prime Numbers · · Score: 1

    Harsh critic--the article doesn't boast about solving theorems or offering 100% certain proofs. It is sufficient to bring to greater notice that this pattern, which had gone unnoticed, has now been noticed. Maybe someone will do something further with it. Sooner or later it's likely that this piece of information will get incorporated into something economically useful. But for now, as pure science, noticing the pattern that had not been noticed before is good enough for publication.

  20. Re:Still Important on RIP the Campus Computer Lab, 1960-2009 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am currently a fulltime college student and all 3 of our large (200+ node) computer labs are totally full from 7:30 am to 11 pm. It would be a burden for every student to have to buy all the software we need for classes (MS Office is not worth any $$ but we have to use it). Also, it is always slower to connect to the campus network from a wifi laptop than a hardwired connection. Labs also provide immediate IT support if a printer suddenly gets uninstalled, as well as a centralized place where instructors can make themselves available while students work on assignments in a new or specialized application. I think any school that abandons computer labs in 2009 will have to restore them by 2010.

  21. Now, back to the actual gun on Prescription Handguns For the Elderly and Disabled · · Score: 1

    I think it's fine to have a debate about gun rights, but my question is about the ergonomics of this modified gun in particular. The trigger is ok at the thumb, but I am concerned about the stability of aim with the barrel between two relatively weak fingers that don't get a lot of practice in holding items still between them. So, speaking as a gun owner, I think it's fair to say that this weapon, or medical device or self-protection device or whatever you want to call it, will need considerable practice to master and probably ongoing training with it to keep the fingers strong enough to steady the thing in an emergency.

    Another question that comes up, what caliber is this gun? What is the recoil like? I sure wish it was a 2-handed hold instead of 1.

    And lastly, there are a large number of young people with rheumatoid arthritis or other degenerative joint diseases that would be able to use this. So, while made for the elderly, whose hand joints tend to be less mobile than the young, it could be a benefit to quite a large swath of our population.

  22. Re:Be a teacher on Fun Things To Do With a Math Or Science Degree? · · Score: 1

    Doesn't it seem that aptitude is aptitude, above a certain very rudimentary level? If one has a heart for something, and is even an average student, one can succeed at it. this pigeon-holing of science vs art vs math vs language is all so artificial and unhelpful. And it's funny, because at the every most elite levels, these distinctions are totally meaningless.

  23. More,better net access in the US on How To Build a Web 2.0 Government? · · Score: 1

    If he really wants Americans to participate in the Web 2.0 community, Obama's first acts should include improving high speed access for the masses. How embarrassing to lag even behind Estonia (no offense to Estonia). We need more people hooked up to high speed net access and high speed needs to be just that, instead of sometimes so-so speed.

  24. Re:Be a teacher on Fun Things To Do With a Math Or Science Degree? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Interesting... In 1980 when I, a female, applied to an engineering program at CCNY, I was told by the Dean of Engineering that I couldn't possibly become an engineer because I had gotten an 800 (perfect score) on the English part of the SAT in high school. Now many years later, I am giving up writing, which even as a tech writer working with engineers has been a total bore to me, and I'm back in school enjoying the hard sciences once again. Two morals to this story: 1. She should do what interests her, no matter what her grades are in anything. 2. It is never to late to change direction, so don't worry about her. She'll figure it out on her own.

  25. Different age & fitness criteria for cyber tro on Ask the Air Force Cyber Command General About War in Cyberspace · · Score: 1

    Major General Sir: If this is a new non-physically confronting environment to fight in, then will the definition of a suitable recruit be modified? Older people and even physically disabled people could compete in this arena on equal footing with the standard young and physically fit military recruit. I, for one, would be interested in signing up, if that were an option. I believe there is a wealth of talent for fighting cyberwarfare among those older than 29 and unable to do 10 pull-ups or run 5 miles. Thanks.