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User: Taylor123456789

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Comments · 86

  1. Interesting side note on Subway Sues Canada Network Over Claim Its Chicken Is 50 Percent Soy (yahoo.com) · · Score: -1

    McDonalds can't call its milk shakes "milk shakes" because they contain no milk. Instead, they are called "shakes".

  2. The federal government is broke. Why don't these tech giants put their money where their mouths are and pool the money themselves to fund the program?

  3. Re:Umm, what? on So Long Voicemail, Give My Regards To the Fax Machine · · Score: -1

    Scan and email is more prevalent than fax. I don't know anyone with a fax but most people have 3-in-1 machines.

  4. Campaign infomercial on Clinton Foundation: Kids' Lack of CS Savvy Threatens the US Economy · · Score: -1

    Is this Slashdot.org or Hillary2016.org? Chelsea tweets a statistic about women in tech: ALL HAIL THE CLINTONS!

  5. Re:Stupid reasoning. on Los Angeles Raises Minimum Wage To $15 an Hour · · Score: -1

    I make a million dollars a year. I still buy the same amount of sodas as I did in college.

  6. Re:Seems he has more of a clue on Pope Attacked By Climate Change Skeptics · · Score: 0

    Bad data routinely gets questioned by other scientists.

    http://retractionwatch.com/

  7. Re:Seems he has more of a clue on Pope Attacked By Climate Change Skeptics · · Score: 0

    I really don't see the distinction. You can question both the data (evidence) and the conclusion as part of the scientific process [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method].

  8. Re:Seems he has more of a clue on Pope Attacked By Climate Change Skeptics · · Score: -1, Redundant

    Skepticism is part of the scientific process. So, those that denounce the skeptics are the ones actually being "anti-science". I am a skeptic based primarily on the principle that it is nearly impossible to predict chaotic systems with accuracy [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_theory]. Climate science is continually evolving. I read all the time about climate discoveries that change our understanding of this area of knowledge. When you start attacking people that disagree with you, all you are left with is dogma, which is more dangerous and harmful than debating an evolving science.

  9. The government should not be a market player on Obama Unveils Plan To Bring About Faster Internet In the US · · Score: 0

    I like the idea about letting in market competition. However, Obama's proposal is to allow the government to "compete" in the market. The problems are many. Government makes the rules, so it should not compete in the market place. Government competes unfairly because it is immune to competitive pressure since it does not have to show a profit. It can sell its services for less than cost and drive out private sector competitors. When Obama says, don't worry the government will take care of it, hide your wallets.

  10. Re:Dirty Little Secret on Intuit Charges More For Previously Offered TurboTax Features, Users Livid · · Score: 0

    The U.S. I.R.S. does provide free fillable forms online. I've been using it for years because I got sick of the TurboTax wizards I had to walk through for hours. Better than Turbo tax, and you get the instructions straight from the IRS instead of a summary from Intuit.

    https://www.freefilefillablefo...

    *the forms have not been uploaded yet, and won't be until January 20 if you go to the site now.

  11. What about open ground on Low Cost Ground Robot Chassis That Can Traverse Challenging Obstacles · · Score: 0

    It looks great going on a sidewalk or up stairs, which is fine if you live in the city. But, it looked like it was having trouble going over open ground. With such a low clearance, I don't think it could do much in the yard, or over uneven or natural terrain.

  12. Re:Frivolous? on Climate Change Skeptic Group Must Pay Damages To UVA, Michael Mann · · Score: 0

    Moderated to Troll? I am a lawyer and what I am stating is my legal opinion. But you obviously know better than I do.

  13. Frivolous? on Climate Change Skeptic Group Must Pay Damages To UVA, Michael Mann · · Score: -1

    Other than the headline, I didn't see anywhere in the article, or the judge's linked order, that the lawsuit was considered "frivolous". The amount of damages they were ordered to pay was $250, a nominal amount. In fact, the article said the lawsuit set a "precedent" by exempting academic research from FOIA requests. It seems like an important case, not frivolous.

  14. This does not disprove Sasquatch on Alleged 'Bigfoot' DNA Samples Sequenced, Turn Out To Be Horses, Dogs, and Bears · · Score: 0

    All this study shows is that some samples alleged to be sasquatch were not. There are many other samples of "unknown" DNA, which also proves nothing, since there is no control sample. This study has no bearing on whether sasquatch exists or not. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

    In fact, there are thousands of eyewitness reports by individuals and groups, including park rangers, law enforcement, and military, hundreds of good pictures, and dozens of good videos of a large bipedal creature in the remote forests of America and Canada. This creature fits the physical and behavioral criteria for a primate, probably a relic population of Gigantopithicus. You can see some of this evidence at BFRO.net and other sites. Remember, the lowland gorilla was considered a myth just over 100 years ago.

  15. So? on Climate Journal Publishes Referees' Report In Response To "Witch-Hunt" Claims · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I read an interview of him, and the rejection of the paper was a small part of his complaints. He is basically saying that anyone who questions anthropogenic global warming dogma is ostracized. This is the basis of McCarthyism and witch hunts. It also questions the foundation of the global warming "consensus" so often cited. The fact is that questioning orthodoxy is part of the scientific process. Ironically then, those who attempt to ostracize global warming skeptics for being "anti-science" are the ones themselves being anti-science.

  16. Let me be clear on Kerry Says US Is On the "Right Side of History" When It Comes To Online Freedom · · Score: 0

    I simply have no idea what John Kerry said of substance here.

  17. IRS has free online tax filing on Slashdot Asks: How Do You Pay Your Taxes? · · Score: 0

    I use the IRS's free online tax filling service:

    https://www.freefilefillablefo...

    It's free, does the math, and links to instructions in case you have a question. There's even a troubleshooter that will check for errors. You can print to pdf when you are done.

    I have a very complex tax situation (stock grants, home office, etc) and it can handle anything. You can create a log in, save the form, and come back to it many times to keep working on it. The only draw back is it will only do individuals, not corporations or LLCs.

  18. Now here's a surprise on UN Report: Climate Changes Overwhelming · · Score: 0

    A government panel calls for more government control over society due to the crisis of the day.

  19. Re:Start teaching civics again too! on Oklahoma Schools Required To Teach Students Personal Finance · · Score: 0

    Agreed, but civics is just a small part of government. We need to teach basic law: contracts, torts, property, criminal law, the constitution, etc.

  20. Re:Predictive Power on How Well Do Our Climate Models Match Our Observations? · · Score: 0
  21. Re:This will work on Revolutionary Scuba Mask Creates Breathable Oxygen Underwater On Its Own · · Score: 0

    Well, I said divers could stay down an indefinite amount of time, not an infinite amount of time :) Of course there are the biological limits you mention. I've never used a rebreather, but I understand that they have about a 2 hour time limit at 200 feet, and that they are too complicated and expensive for the typical recreational diver. I'm sure extreme divers can put together a rig to stay down longer, but it would probably be too dangerous for most divers. The beauty of a membrane system is that it would be simple, safe, and relatively inexpensive. You are basically replacing the dangerous pure O2, toxic CO2 absorbant, and expensive triple-redundant computer systems of a rebreather with a cheap membrane that controls itself using physics. The only issue is size. I think there may be a market for this type of advancement of the technology if put on the right platform.

  22. Simple technique for avoiding this on AMC Theaters Allegedly Calls FBI to Interrogate a Google Glass Wearer · · Score: 0

    "Am I under arrest"?
    "No."
    "Good bye".

  23. This will work on Revolutionary Scuba Mask Creates Breathable Oxygen Underwater On Its Own · · Score: 0

    I have been working on a device like this as a side project for some time. The concept is feasible. I could build a device tomorrow using off the shelf parts that would allow you to breathe underwater using a membrane. This device would use commercial oxygenator membranes to interface the sea water in a closed circuit rebreather. Using Henry's Law, oxygen will flow into the diver's air supply and CO2 will flow out, adjusting to ambient levels, which is nearly the same as the atmosphere (partial pressure) in most recreational diving environments.

    However, the biggest problem to overcome before building a product you can sell is not technological. As some have mentioned, the amount of dissolved gasses in seawater is small. My partner (PhD in fluid mechanics) and I have calculated that a diver swimming along at an average rate would need a lot of membrane material to breathe properly underwater, even at 100% efficiency. I have a design using existing commercial membranes that can fit the required material into a device about the size of a small refrigerator. This is obviously too large to fit on a diver's back.

    To make such a device portable, I envision making an underwater drone carrying the membrane module. It would follow the diver who would be attached by a hose and a tether. It could also be driven by the diver like an underwater jet ski. The diver would limited in his movements, but could stay underwater for an indefinite amount of time. It could also extend the maximum diving depth to 500 feet by allowing for a longer ascent time.

    If anyone is interested in collaborating on this, email me.

  24. How do they know I'm texting? on NY Police Get Tall SUVs To Combat Texting While Driving · · Score: 0

    What if I am, say, using the phone's GPS, or making a hand's free call? Also, does anyone else have a problem with cops peering into your private vehicle to see what you are doing?

  25. Does this solve a problem? on Startup Touts All-in-One Digital Credit Card · · Score: 0

    I have 5 credit cards and I have never thought, gee, these take up too much room in my wallet.