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User: WeirdJohn

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Comments · 185

  1. Re:Caps Lock Key on Does Your PC Really Need a SysRq Button Anymore? · · Score: 1

    Being disabled, I find the caps-lock key very handy. My right hand does not work properly, and typing things like "B.M. Forester" is much easier than holding down the shift key. I have never used AOL.

  2. Re:From someone with an implant.. on Keeping Pacemakers Safe From Hackers · · Score: 1

    I'm looking at getting a spinal neurostimulator fitted myself in about 12 months. The idea that unknown people could alter the signals in my CNS is scary. Apart from your scenario, what if it's turned off when driving? The chances I could concentrate with all the pain coming back at once have to be slim.

  3. Re:Given certain situations... on What Does Google Suggest Suggest About Humanity? · · Score: 1

    If I got the script for epilepsy then it would be free. Unfortunately this is not the case.

  4. Re:Given certain situations... on What Does Google Suggest Suggest About Humanity? · · Score: 1

    If the question was asked by someone in the UK this would not be the case. In civilised countries access to health care is not predicated on wealth. I get neurosurgery 4 times a year and it costs me nothing. I stay in hospital at least 3 weeks a year in addition to this and it costs me nothing. My monthly visits to my GP cost me nothing. My Neurontin costs me $5 per month. I have no health insurance other than that which I am guaranteed by being a citizen of a humane society.

  5. Re:Do we want the government watching us? on Australian ISPs Soon To Become Copyright Cops · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, you do have a say. I contributed to the Green Paper on the Service Card, which was in danger of being owned by Motorola and Gemsmart. It was people like me, giving valid clear technically correct explanations of the failings of that "backdoor ID card" that resulted in it being a no-go. When have YOU been a part of the process - there's nothing to stop you! Have you petitioned parliament? Written to your local member? Shown up to ALP branch meetings and asked polite, informed but pointed questions? It's when everyone says "we have no power over the people we elect" that we give up our power. Fact is that if enough people go on record (by the 3 means I listed above) then politicians listen, purely out of self interest.

  6. Re:dog lover science. on Dogs As Intelligent As Average Two-Year-Old Children · · Score: 1

    She tries very hard. Usually the dog runs away trailing blood, or is rescued by the owner, who also gets pretty badly attacked when they take the dog away. Bayda is a cat with serious attitude and elite fighting skills.

  7. Re:dog lover science. on Dogs As Intelligent As Average Two-Year-Old Children · · Score: 1

    I disagree. One of our cats can open sliding doors, and can undo the latch if it's locked. This animal also knows when my kids should be home from school, and waits outside the gate. She gets upset when the kids try to cross the road when there's traffic about. To me this suggests that she has a reasonable grasp of cause and effect and can conjecture about the future.

    She also eats dogs by the way, and acts as a guard cat - often the first sign of a visitor is Bayda going into guard mode. She watches visitors and has been known to try to keep guests away from our kids.

  8. Re:bankrupt then what? on RIAA Awarded $675,000 In Tenenbaum Trial · · Score: 1

    Aye. Even though we sit on very opposite sides ideologically, I've noticed the same thing. People should moderate based on the quality of the post, and not because they disagree. There are arguments for and against socialised medicine, and which is better depends on varying factors for the individual, and the culture he or she abides in.

  9. Re:bankrupt then what? on RIAA Awarded $675,000 In Tenenbaum Trial · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have to point out that to The Rest Of The World (i.e. the vast majority of people on the planet) the word "Freedom" does not mean what Americans say it means. Frankly, over the last 50 years we've seen American "freedom" in action in Vietnam, Somalia, Central America, Waco, Utah, Iraq etc., and we don't want it thank you.

  10. Re:Full res video and more info. on Linguistic Clue Pushes Back Origin of "World's Oldest Computer" · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Most likely the destruction of the great Library of Alexandria ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria_library ) in the late 4th century. Consider the things that were there - Heron's plans for the first car, complete works of Aristotle and Archimedes - and in order to show how pron is not new, the works of Sappho.

  11. Re:Obvious answer on The Best First Language For a Young Programmer · · Score: 1

    In other words, you recommend Smalltalk. But seriously, for the very young, Squeak with EToys is a great first language. But when you need to get close to the metal, other languages are better learning tools. And for 15 year olds, I don't know that the simplicity of Smalltalk would be doing them favours.

  12. Re:No No No! on Using Sound Waves For Outpatient Neurosurgery · · Score: 1

    From what I've seen given my limited experience (as I don't think weed is a good answer when you've got teenaged kids):

    1) Great weed is less effective for pain reduction than many other things, although you may not care if sufficiently stoned. Or it might make it WORSE - just depends if the senses are numbed or heightened. Not worth it in my experience.

    2) Oral preparations can work, but it's really hard to get the right dose and not turn into a blob stuck to the couch.

    3) Nasty old weed that's a bit moldy, and that you wouldn't smoke a lot of because it will give you a headache does work, but you become quite lethargic.

    This leads me to believe that's it's not the THC in weed that helps. It's not a really spectacular effect. And I'm not convinced that it's not a bit like narcotics - rather than reducing the pain, you just don't care about it any more.

  13. Re:Offload the capacitor? on MIT Electric Car May Outperform Rival Gas Models · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A capacitor that big is not very different from a bomb. Every home should have one.

  14. Re:No No No! on Using Sound Waves For Outpatient Neurosurgery · · Score: 1

    The person I responded to was making the point that the immediate return from this procedure was possibly more than they would earn. My point was that the economic return to society is greater because of a flow-on effect. I also made the point that in my case, the returns would be greater due to people being inspired to greatness if I could return to my profession full-time (and not be drug-affected). Furthermore I made the point that to a chronic pain sufferer, relief from pain is not measured in purely economic terms.

    The return from such a procedure has to be measured in many ways, not all of which are purely numeric. But the return to society via taxes is in many cases the most easily measured, and the least subjective. Even those who don't have professions that have identifiable subjective returns (like mine) will still contribute via taxes, whereas they probably don't if they can no longer work.

  15. No No No! on Using Sound Waves For Outpatient Neurosurgery · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As someone who lives with chronic pain, let me say you are so far off the mark.

    I do respond to medication, but the only pain-killers that work are very heavy - Fentanyl.

    I haven't had a full time job for many years. I never will without advances in the treatment of pain. If a procedure like this may mean I can work again, and pay taxes. Then I can afford expensive medical insurance.

    More importantly, my kids then have a Dad who works full-time. They see that working leads to reward. They see that working hard at school can lead to a better life. At the moment my 16 y.o. sees no point in trying, as life can throw a curve ball and fuck you over. So if I could get something closer to a "normal" life, my kids will see me modelling better work-ethics and will be more likely to emulate my success. They see there's a point to trying to achieve their level of personal excellence, earn more money, pay more taxes and have more productive and potentially happier lives.

    That's 6 people now pay more taxes.

    Now I'm a maths teacher by vocation. If I was able to teach full-time I would be able to show several hundred kids a year that maths is easy, maths is fun, and that they can use it to solve real problems in everyday life. A few of these kids will go on to do amazing things, just because I can do what I am good at doing, and I can do it well. Over say 20 years there would be a significant number of people who have happier lives, earn more money and pay more taxes.

    That's say 300 people now pay more taxes.

    It's been shown in the literature that children of professionals are significantly more likely to undergo tertiary study and become professionals. So the children of the kids that were inspired to greatness by having a great teacher are more likely to have happier, more productive lives with higher paying jobs.

    So there are potentially thousands of people who are paying more taxes, who are making great discoveries, and are generally happier, just because my pain is better managed without putting knives inside my head.

    Look past the short-term benefits to the individual, and look at the potential returns to society and humanity as a whole, and the pay-off of a (admittedly) expensive procedure becomes enormous. And the return to the individual who suffers otherwise incurable chronic pain is not something measured in $$. To not wake up crying because I didn't die in my sleep would bloody marvellous. It's the possibility that there will be advances that help me that has kept me from suicide, and I'm not Robinson Crusoe.

  16. Re:Old news on Study Catches Birds Splitting Into Separate Species · · Score: 1

    The definition is that different species will not mate under natural conditions and produce viable and fertile progeny. The 2 new species of Eastern Rosella do not recognise each other as potential mates, and so will not mate under natural conditions. Put them a pair of the two colours in a cage and feed them hormones they will mate and produce young that can (and will) mate with the other two kinds. But in nature this intermediate form is extinct.

    If the definition was "can't not won't" then Sally and her Donkey would be the same species! j/k

  17. Re:Old news on Study Catches Birds Splitting Into Separate Species · · Score: 1

    The birds from either side no longer recognise each other as potential mates. Those from Eastern New South Wales are mostly green, those from South Australia are mostly red. The region where habitat was destroyed is over 800 km wide by the way, the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Scheme is, like most things Australian and agricultural, very large.

  18. Old news on Study Catches Birds Splitting Into Separate Species · · Score: 3, Informative

    This was observed with the Eastern Rosella several decades ago, when the Murrumbidgee Irrigation scheme split the population in two. There are now two distinct species, that will not mate to produce fertile and viable offspring under natural conditions.

  19. Re:Effectiveness for emotional stress? on Swearing Provides Pain Relief, Say Scientists · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I beg to differ on your first point. I have CRPS, and as a result know a bit about physical pain. Over the years I have been on prescription Tramadol, Morphine, Oxycontin, Fentanyl, Gabapentin, Lyrica and Ketamine. I also get periodic blocks, which are injections of Lignocaine to ganglia. And thats not counting injections of Phenol to destroy nerves, Botox and steroids.

    Only the anaesthetics actually stop pain (Ketamine and Lignocaine), and have other sides effects. Nerve destruction doesnt last. The AEDs reduce pain by reducing the firing of every nerve in the body, including the CNS, so there are no orgasms and your memory suffers.

    Narcotics don't actually stop or reduce the pain. What they do is you don't have to care about it any more. And they have their own side effects, not the least being that you no longer care about the things you should care about. Even if smacked off my gourd on Fentanyl (which is a horrible drug), if I focus on my pain it's still there, but I just don't care about it. Narcotics reduce or eliminate the affect, not the effect.

    Pain is not "easily" overcome chemically. There is a price to be paid. Mind tricks only work to a partial extent, and you can't keep your attention fixed on something else all the time without tripping over things and having accidents.

    I find it interesting that swearing is shown to be efficacious, as it shows that the emotional release works. I have to wonder if swearing releases encephalins.

  20. Re:Let's Start With an Apology on Bletchley Park WWII Staff Finally Recognized · · Score: 1

    Alan Turing was well known for his genius both before and after Bletchley, especially for his work on computation and biological mathematics. It was at one of his guest lectures at a school where he made his famous remark "the brain is much like a bowl of cold porridge". Although the exact nature of his wartime work was secret, it was no secret that he was Britain's answer to Einstein and Von Neumann, and was widely paraded as an example of British excellence at a time when the country was still ravaged by war and stricken with debt.

    The story I was told was from an Engineer who worked under Flowers, and built Turing's contradiction identifying components. He has passed away, but I have no reason to disregard his interpretation of events in favour of those of people who were not there.

  21. Re:Let's Start With an Apology on Bletchley Park WWII Staff Finally Recognized · · Score: 1

    According to someone I knew who worked on Colossus with Turing and Flowers, Turing was attracted to teenage boys, and didn't feel good about it. Meanwhile the British Government kept sending him to Boys Schools to "inspire the young men". This was, so I was told, what drove him to suicide - like forcing a reformed junkie to work in a pharmacy.

  22. Re:No mention of X-platform on Mono Outpaces Java In Linux Desktop Development · · Score: 1

    The Java VM was a good idea, but Sun never bothered to port other languages to it. With Mono you get a choice of languages, a common library, and apps that really can run anywhere without a whole lot of extra work.

    You mean copying the Smalltalk VM was a good idea. And there are many dynamic languages that run on the JavaVM now.

  23. Re:Inferior translated holy works on British Library Puts Oldest Surviving Bible Online · · Score: 1

    Mohammed's sayings were collected, written down and placed in a big chest. When the Quran was written down, there was an attempt to put the sayings in order, but there is little doubt that the context and sequence was lost. Hence apparent contradictions, such as "protect the people of the Book" (Jews and Christians) and "Christians can only be enemies, never friends".

  24. Re:freeballer on FDA Considers Banning Acetaminophen-Based Pain Killers · · Score: 1

    Yes, a pain management specialist. Make sure that they are fully qualified (i.e. an anaesthetist as well as a pain specialist). Mine is a pain specialist, orthopaedic surgeon, anaesthetist and GP, so he knows a lot and can take a holistic approach.

    I take 10mg of ketamine as a troche 4 times a day. It whacked me for the first 2 days, but now I feel sober (although short term memory suffers a little - so I write important things down). The doses used to trip are much larger - on the order of a half a gram. I spend time in hospital periodically on a ketamine drip that delivers 19mg per hour - that is a bit trippy after a couple of days, but it's mainly things that *are* there moving around, not seeing things that *are not* there.

    If AEDs do nothing it suggests that your pain does not have a significant neuropathic component - a pain specialist can look at what has and hasn't worked and come up with strategies that could (perhaps) help.

  25. Re:This is really a problem for Renal Patients on FDA Considers Banning Acetaminophen-Based Pain Killers · · Score: 1

    You left out several "very"s. A lot of people have difficulties functioning with Duragesic patches, and a lot spend a lot of time throwing up on it. Fentanyl is to morphine as aspirin is to vicodin.