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User: Bloater

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Comments · 831

  1. Re:just Turing? on Alan Turing Apology Campaign Grows · · Score: 1

    Nobody has ever been wronged by my policies - I'm not apologising to anybody.

  2. Re:Um.... on Harsh Words From Google On Linux Development · · Score: 3, Interesting

    and I don't understand what's wrong with that.

    It's like saying "There are so many different operating systems for so many different types of hardware that the computer market is too fragmented - so we won't produce any software"

    It's silly. If you want those users then you make the software, if you don't then you don't. simple.

    BTW, I'm in the throws of switching to Vista after being an Ubuntu user for many years. They don't like my bugs but Microsoft actually seems to care.

  3. Re:And not entirely correct on Should We Just Call Dog Breeds a Different Species? · · Score: 0

    We are all members of a single ring species that encompasses all of life on Earth. It’s just that the ring is separated by time, rather than geography or physiology.

    So, at some time in the future we'll evolve into a creature that can not only recreate the Tyrannosaurus Rex but also mate with it?

  4. Re:Because mathematics runs on proof, not faith. on Open Source Textbooks For California · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is impossible to calculate a decimal expansion that depends on the value of pi without rounding the value of pi.

    therefore

    forall e such that member-of(everybody, e) : (calculating-decimal-expansion-depending-on-pi(e) --> rounds-pi(e))

  5. Let him do it on Adblock Plus Maker Proposes Change To Help Sites · · Score: 5, Funny

    And just install "NagBlock Plus".

  6. Re:Because mathematics runs on proof, not faith. on Open Source Textbooks For California · · Score: 1

    I'd say your biologists are correct. Everybody rounds pi when calculating a decimal expansion that depends on its value, including yourself.

  7. PAWAM on German Gov To Ban Paintballing After Shooting · · Score: 1

    In these dangerous times when our children are receiving blunt traumas from even their classmates in ever increasing numbers due to violent games that desensitise our children to violence, especially video games that are so easily and cheaply available to even the youngest of children, I urge you all to join PAWAM.

    Parents Against Whack-A-Mole is a non-profit organisation dedicate to protecting our children from the modern depravity and cruelty that is now pandemic in today's society. Membership is free, but, even if you don't wish to join, please make a donation today so that we can continue to help those suffering the effects of violent desensitisation.

    Yours Faithfully
    Tristan Wibberley (General Secretary - PAWAM)

  8. make em want to leave on Why Is It So Difficult To Fire Bad Teachers? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Give 'em a broom instead of a class. They'll get the point.

  9. Re:Got that? on Want a PC With 192 GB of RAM? · · Score: 1

    Believe it or not, I have not set up an instant SMS upon each Thinboy00 slashdot posting... It took more than an hour to see your message.

  10. Re:Got that? on Want a PC With 192 GB of RAM? · · Score: 1

    0.0001% of statistics are made up by taking a recent software release version and stripping one of the dots.

  11. Re:Can somebody explain this to me? on 20 Years After Cold Fusion Debut, Another Team Claims Success · · Score: 1

    At the time, some people could reproduce it apparently (I recall reading that a team at MIT did) but even then it was intermittent (as it was, too, for Pons and Thingy). I don't know how accurate the MIT account was.

  12. Re:Not too bad... how about 1,000 MBps? on BT Shows First Fiber-Optic Broadband Rollout Plans · · Score: 1

    Well, the Japanese have lots of savings. That sort of wealth is easily available there. Over in the west all we have is debt so we can't get that kind of service as quickly.

  13. Re:Not too bad... how about 1,000 MBps? on BT Shows First Fiber-Optic Broadband Rollout Plans · · Score: 2, Informative

    We already have fiber broadband over large parts of the UK. I had it installed nearly two years ago by Virgin Media.

  14. Re:First step: Understand why women have babies. on Women Skip Math/Science Careers To Have Families · · Score: 1

    Everybody that has their first child is one of those people that don't have kids. Since you credit having had one with providing the knowledge of the fun that ensues it is clear that the first child is not had for the fun, but the decision is made for some other reason...

    Aka, pay attention at the back.

  15. Re:charging on New Electrode Lets Batteries Charge In 10 Seconds · · Score: 1

    Hell, it could /require/ them to buffer the grid.

    People could book energy for particular slots of time. The cost of managing grid electricity would plummet.

    The electric company would have to manage it to ensure that it really does draw the power it books, and draws it at the right time. But that's okay - it takes the risk out of it for the home-owner and pools it. For the grid operator, the risk is a tiny fraction (you need an awful lot of simultaneous failures to cause them a problem). The grid operator will also be well equipped to estimate the remaining risk, budget it, and limit the customer's liquidity at optimal times to minimise it - things the customer general isn't able to do.

  16. Re:Al poduction consumes lots of energy on A New Way To Produce Hydrogen · · Score: 1

    I'm talking about taking renewable energy to manufacture hydrogen at source. Rather than use electrolysis, this discovery might form a part of a better process.

  17. the only possible application? on A New Way To Produce Hydrogen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To use water and aluminium as energy storage. We already have a pretty good global aluminium infrastructure.

    If water could be combined with aluminium to produce hydrogen on demand, then you refuel by replacement of the aluminium oxide waste with fresh aluminium and refilling the water tank.

    Then you still need a better method to convert aluminium oxide to aluminium - but here's the great thing about this research. Better ways to convert in one direction usually lead to better ways to go the other way too (eg, microdots convert electricity to light better, but also the other way round too).

  18. Re:Al poduction consumes lots of energy on A New Way To Produce Hydrogen · · Score: 1

    Depends how easily that aluminium oxide can be converted back to aluminium - if it is easy enough then this is a better cycle than electrolysis and might finally make hydrogen a sensible alternative energy storage medium than oil.

    so we'll have to wait and see.

  19. Re:Didn't RTFA.... on Building Linux Applications With JavaScript · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But javascript is an awfully convoluted language. Why does it become easy when you put a language like that into the equation?

  20. Retro! on Asus Reveals the Eee Keyboard · · Score: 1

    I've still got my spectrum... Will this thing support my kempston joystick?

  21. Re:the "copyright infringement is stealing" argume on Entire Transcript of RIAA's Only Trial Now Online · · Score: 2, Funny

    Is it okay if your camcorder recording includes the anti-piracy notice?

  22. Re:Honestly... on Entire Transcript of RIAA's Only Trial Now Online · · Score: 1

    What is this "woman" thing you speak of?

  23. Re:Been there.. on Inside the Active Volcano On Montserrat · · Score: 0

    I'm wasting my mod points now by posting, but I can't let that lie. A volcanic eruption that can kill everybody spouts vast quantities of CO2 - that's how it kills them - it suffocates them.

    The guy in prison would be the first to go because CO2 is heavier than air and would fill the gaol as soon as possible.

  24. Re:Lick the terminals on this baby on EEStor Issued a Patent For Its Supercapacitor · · Score: 1

    Depending on the internal resistance perhaps your wire just melts really quickly, breaking the circuit.

  25. Re:Stores Twice the Energy of a Lithium-Ion??? on EEStor Issued a Patent For Its Supercapacitor · · Score: 1

    That appears to be the sort of claim they are making, although I think they say the total volume will only be 20% less.

    And they claim the practicalities, efficiencies and economies of Li nano-titanate and Li nano-phosphate batteries - which have half the specific energy of Lithium-Ion again. That's four times the specific energy of like-for-like batteries.

    We're just going to have to see if it works and see what the price is.