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User: Azheim

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  1. Re:History on New Microsoft Silverlight Features Have Windows Bias · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately, some of us have to.

    I'm a med student, and many of my lectures are viewed and reviewed at home via MediaSite, a Silverlight-based lecture management system from Sonicfoundry. While our lectures do play in Firefox, Safari, and Chrome with the Silverlight plugin, advanced features (such as the ability to play the lecture at whatever speed you wish) are only available in Internet Explorer. The crippling of Silverlight in competing browsers has forced me to return to IE.

  2. Re:It's the chemicals!? Bollox to that! on Environmental Chemicals Are Feminizing Boys · · Score: 1

    Not any plastics, but polycarbonate is a polymer of Bisphenol A -- and Bisphenol A was investigated as a synthetic estrogen before it was used in plastics. We've know that it had serious biological effects since the 1930s, but I suppose that was just another inconvenient, profit-reducing fact.

    I agree with every other point you made but felt that this needed addressing.

    E.C. Dodds and W. Lawson stumbled upon BPA’s estrogenic activity while conducting a study of estrogenic structures in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Dodds and Lawson compared estrogenic activity in rats of various organic compounds, by subcutaneous injection - a lot of subcutaneous injection. It's been a little while since I've read the article in question (Dodds, EC., & Lawson, W. (1936). Synthetic Å’strogenic agents without the phenanthrene nucleus. Nature, 137, 996-996.), and I'm at home at the moment so I don't have access to my University's database, but I believe that the amount they injected was half a liter of BPA solution.

    Dodds and Lawson's account was the sole study on BPA's in vivo effects until the 1960s and 70s, when a few, mostly allergenic, studies were done on BPA in response to its expanded use. So for over 20 years, the only evidence that BPA had any ill effects at all was a study in which half a liter of the stuff was injected into a lab rat - it's hard to imagine a substance that wouldn't be harmful in such amounts. As a matter of fact, it wasn't until 1997 that low-dose effects of BPA were identified by the laboratory of FS vom Saal. All this to say that I don't think it's fair to attribute the widespread use of BPA to willful ignorance of "another inconvenient, profit-reducing fact", as you suggest.

    That said, I'll reiterate that I do agree with the rest of what you wrote. Having worked with BPA for a year, I've seen its effects in lab animals first hand. I am encouraged by recent steps taken by the FDA (stated plans to reevaluate its toxicity in June 2009), EPA (announced ongoing evaluation for the development of "action steps" in Septemper 2009) and other organizations (Nalgene no longer uses BPA in its products) to evaluate, inform, and protect.

  3. Re:Can you actually do anything useful? on Commodore 64 Runs Again On the iPhone · · Score: 1

    >>>LOAD "VIRUS",8,1

    That thing still hanging around? Jeez. I wrote that when I was like, 10. Damn internet - nothing disappears. I shoulda known buying that 0.3 k modem was a bad idea.

    I opened up this article just to see what witty comments you had written about your namesake.

    One post. Barely two lines. That's it? C'mon, you're giving the German Killers more "love" than the C64!

    Needless to say, I am disappointed.

  4. Re:it's almost like... on Pirate Bay Closure Sparked P2P Explosion · · Score: 1

    Why do they need the author's permission to copy it in the first place?
    If someone tells me a fart joke, why should I get their permission to tell that joke to someone else?

    If you care about what the person who told the joke thinks about you, yes.

    If someone tells me a joke, and I like it, I'll almost always ask "Do you mind if I use that?" before passing the joke along. Reason being that I don't want my friends thinking of me as a joke thief - the guy who always uses other people's jokes. Granted, that person may have gotten that joke from someplace else, and they'll usually tell me where it came from if they can remember. Then when I tell the joke to other people, I'll source my material, either before or after. This all sounds complicated, but it really only takes 10 or 15 seconds - well worth it for a good, honest laugh.

    If you don't think that joke stealing is a big deal, just look up "carlos mencia steals" in Google, and check out the response that you get. His reputation has been ruined (in most, not all, circles) because of the material he's stolen.

    Sharing may not be selfish, but taking sure is.

  5. Re:And this is why medical pot has a hard time on Colorado Newspaper Looking for Marijuana Reviewer · · Score: 1

    All I'm looking for is one study showing that pot produces significantly more damage, either personal or social or both, than alcohol.

    http://journals.lww.com/jrnldbp/Abstract/1990/04000/36__and_48_Month_Neurobehavioral_Follow_up_of.3.aspx

    Took me 5 minutes on Google Scholar. Maybe not what you're looking for, but it meets the criteria you've outlined. If I wasn't supposed to be studying Biochem right now I'd try to find you a better one.

  6. Re:More on the "iPod for books" on Will Books Be Napsterized? · · Score: 1

    The "40,000 stolen song" argument is weak. I have never seen an iPod filled to capacity, and those that are anywhere near close have always had a significant amount of video content on them. The maximum capacity of a device is a poor means of implying criminal activity. To put it another way: Just because your work computer has a 250gb hard drive, that doesn't mean that you must have 250,000 images of porn on it.

    I don't own an iPod Classic, but if I did it would be 10% full with 100% legitimate music. The remaining 90% is why I would never buy/need an iPod Classic.

  7. Re:Original Blog Posting on Postmortem for a Dead Newspaper · · Score: 1

    We wanted something we could read in the bathroom without being judged... I'm sorry, but paper still beats lappie on this one.

  8. Re: Is prolife was really what's about "right?" on Discuss the US Presidential Election · · Score: 1

    Very few pro-life Christian conservatives that I know would propose legislation against abortion in cases of rape, risk to the life of the mother, or in extremely rare cases like the one you mentioned where it is known the baby will be born dead. The issue that I take is with the other 99% of abortions. Your argument is a straw man, and it's the most common logical fallacy I've encountered in the abortion debate.

  9. Re:A researcher says what? on Nanotech Paint To Kill Bacteria · · Score: 1

    And yet, the founder of a nanotechnology company is preaching the "too many antibiotics only make bacteria stronger" dogma, and cross-applying it to antibacterial paints. She can't be all wrong, can she? What does she know that we don't?

  10. Re:Hello... Evolution? on Sarah Palin's Stance On Technology Issues · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Although it may garner some lolz from those who agree with you, associating your opponent's stance with straw men does not make your argument any stronger.

  11. Re:Procedural Generation vs Virtualized Textures? on Top Technologies of Next-Gen Gaming · · Score: 1

    I think that "composing" was a poor choice of words. This sounds more to me like the VST technology that Steinberg invented years ago. The computer isn't actually writing anything; it's only arranging blocks of music that a human created. Instead of loading 4 hours of music and flipping through the tracks, you load a high quality sample of every note you want to play on every instrument you intend to use. Then you input MIDI data, which designates the appropriate instruments to call up, and tells them which notes to play. Because MIDI data is incredibly small (50kb for a 5 minute rendition of Schubert's impromptu in D that I just pulled up), you could load as much music as you wanted to compose without ever worrying about space. (Of course, quality instruments would more than compensate for that. Good VST instruments can require more than 1GB each, just for 88 notes.) Additionally and more significantly, MIDI data can be recombined on the fly, changing moods, or even adding or removing individual instruments, as much as desired. Sequencing the music by starting with a drum line, then adding strings, then a guitar, etc. would also be a possibility. This could allow for more versatility in sound; drums might drop out when you approach an NPC, a flute solo might enter in when you approach a goal, as the guitar drops out. These changes might all seem like insignificant things, but I know that after playing a game for hours, and having heard all the pre-recorded music through a few times, I start to wish that it would catch me off guard every now and again. Applying MIDI in this way could do just that. Done right, music would never again be completely predictable and ultimately the gaming experience would become even more immersive.

  12. Ironically... on ASIMO to Conduct Symphony Orchestra · · Score: 1

    I was wearing this shirt while reading this. (Seriously!) http://www.randomshirts.com/store/product.php?productid=16354&cat=249&page=1