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User: MrHanky

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Comments · 2,585

  1. Re:Price Controls? on California's Hot, Dry Winters Tied To Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Seattle is rainy as fuck, though.

  2. Re:Inquisition on Lawmakers Seek Information On Funding For Climate Change Critics · · Score: 1

    Financial disclosure is standard procedure in scientific publishing. Problem is, of course, that few AGW denialists ever publish anything in scientific journals.

  3. Re: Hardware? on The First Ubuntu Phone Is Here, With Underwhelming Hardware · · Score: 1

    Yep. This is blogspam.

  4. Re:Good try, but a bit dissapointed... on Ridley Scott Adapts Philip K. Dick's 'Man in the High Castle' For Amazon · · Score: 2

    Blade Runner is a Frankensteinian tale about creation revolting against its creator, questioning the meaning of death, whereas Do Androids ... is about empathy as an essential human quality in a world where everything is artificial. Much of the novel is about Deckard's desire to buy a pet, required for spiritual fulfilment according to the religion of Mercerism. Death is as unimportant to the book as Mercerism is to the film.

  5. Re:Civility shouldn't have borders on Linus On Diversity and Niceness In Open Source · · Score: 1

    That's only true if you're surrounded by arseholes.

  6. Re:Good try, but a bit dissapointed... on Ridley Scott Adapts Philip K. Dick's 'Man in the High Castle' For Amazon · · Score: 2

    Eh, it's not like Blade Runner was a faithful adaptation either. For one, its theme is completely different from the book. Still, it's one of the best SF movies and one of the best adaptations ever.

  7. Re:Freedom on How Amazon's Ebook Subscriptions Are Changing the Writing Industry · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it'll be excellent for independent 'writers' who get picked up only by random chance, when it's 'free' anyway, and detrimental to the likes who know how to spell Stephen King's name.

  8. Re:people still watch that crap? on Behind the Scenes With the Star Trek Fan Reboot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes. All those faults, and still the best science fiction serials ever. Doesn't that say a lot for the potential of the genre?

  9. Re:Who? on FBI Confirms Open Investigation Into Gamergate · · Score: 1

    Out of interest: how old are you?

  10. Re:Head on No More Foamy Beer, Thanks To Magnets · · Score: 4, Funny

    The CO2 from kegged beer will have less C14 as the carbon will be from fossil sources. This makes all the difference in the world.

    (Maybe not.)

  11. Re:So much for his career on Former iTunes Engineer Tells Court He Worked To Block Competitors · · Score: 2

    Funny how whenever Apple is into shady anti-competitive practices, it's always someone else's fault.

  12. Re:Great on UK Announces 'Google Tax' · · Score: 1

    Mmm, wrong.

  13. Re:Why? on Raspberry Pi-Powered Body Illusion Lets You Experience Parkinson's · · Score: 1

    Most slashbots are absolute morons when it comes to art, social sciences and humanities. It's as if they've had a collective lobotomy.

  14. Re:Go back in time 5 years on Debian Votes Against Mandating Non-systemd Compatibility · · Score: 1

    The things I've seen about 'design flaws' have usually been about it being counter to the unix tradition of small programs doing one thing and one thing well, which only ever was true for small cli programs used to manipulate strings of text. It's not so much a proper neckbeard criticism, just some regurgitated nonsense that people will repeat because they've seen it modded to +5, insightful, and repetition is after all the surest way to seem insightful.

    Broken shit is to be expected from software. Hopefully most of it gets fixed sooner now that so many have to use it.

  15. Re:Go back in time 5 years on Debian Votes Against Mandating Non-systemd Compatibility · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And that's why no criticism of systemd is to be taken seriously: it's always about how terrible it will become in the future, never about actual problems it might have today.

  16. Re:Why? on Apple Disables Trim Support On 3rd Party SSDs In OS X · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Any pre-64 bit Intel laptop from Apple had a lifespan of 5 years before it was forced into obsolescence by an arbitrary OS X cut-off. These days, support go all the way back to the first 64 bit laptops (2008), but it's still far too early to tell whether they last twice as long as alternatives.

  17. Re: here we go on How To End Online Harassment · · Score: 0

    His reason for lying is because he's one of them. Besides, if someone involved with 4chan is doxxed, then the first suspect would be someone else from there. #gamergate is 4chan.

  18. Re: here we go on How To End Online Harassment · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Right. As if someone who even bothers following more than 30 people involved in #gamergate isn't involved himself. I.e. not exactly a trustworthy source. I'm not questioning you, btw, I'm saying you're making shit up.

  19. Re: here we go on How To End Online Harassment · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The funny thing is that the #gamergate proponents feel that being rightly labeled as misogynists is harassment that justify death threats. They're a bunch of dilusional morons, the lot of them.

  20. Re:When is something well-known enough to not cite on The Most Highly Cited Scientific Papers of All Time · · Score: 1

    You use Google for research? Seriously?

  21. Re:When is something well-known enough to not cite on The Most Highly Cited Scientific Papers of All Time · · Score: 1

    Hm, maybe I live is a web search world, but I never found myself wishing for that kind of thing. It tended to be I'd read a paper finding it through web searches, on the website of a researcher I knew to be be important in the field, or cited elsewhere.

    But that's just not practical when you want a current overview of a huge field. With EndNote, you typically dump the entire list of search results from the database, and then start reading abstracts (included in the reference file), sorting relevant from irrelevant, and then download PDFs to read (which are then stored along with the references). It's a research tool and a retrieval tool. BibTeX isn't.

  22. Re:When is something well-known enough to not cite on The Most Highly Cited Scientific Papers of All Time · · Score: 1

    How do you mean? Is this for some sort of display purpose other than in the bibliography of the paper? BibTeX is mostly just the database and tools for turning that plus a document into a bibliography. Beyond that it doesn't do any "management".

    Exactly. The ability to view the database, sorted in any order imaginable, or ordered into groups, either manually or through live searches. It's a very useful tool when writing a review with hundreds or references, and is nice to have even if you've got just a few dozens.

  23. Re:When is something well-known enough to not cite on The Most Highly Cited Scientific Papers of All Time · · Score: 1

    Yeah, BibTeX is more reliable than EndNote, but it's cumbersome to use and extremely poor at, well, managing references. Perhaps there are frontends with dupe control, sorting by arbitrary fields, grouping, etc., but then you're into the old Unix problem of having the choice of a gazillion applications that do one thing each, usually poorly, and with different combinations everywhere. A monstrosity like EndNote does pretty much everything you can want from a reference manager (much of it in a confusing manner, granted), which means you can get help: it's the same everywhere.

    BibTeX might have most styles you can think of -- in English. When I last used it, I had to hack my own, not something I would recommend to your average researcher. Keep in mind that most of them are quite poor with computers. Asking them to use LaTeX is like asking Unix programmers to think of the end user: it's neither relevant to them, nor helpful.

  24. Re:When is something well-known enough to not cite on The Most Highly Cited Scientific Papers of All Time · · Score: 2

    Typesetting isn't a process computers excel at. LaTeX is good, but not nearly as good as a good designer equipped with InDesign and loads and loads of time. It's faster and cheaper, yes, and certainly good enough for most academic journals (probably not Nature). Unfortunately, it also offers nothing (except decent typesetting) for fields that don't deal much with maths, whereas Microsoft Word offers a few nice tools, is somewhat easy to use, and has rubbish typesetting.

  25. Re:Ho-lee-crap on The Largest Ship In the World Is Being Built In Korea · · Score: 1

    > it is indeed the case that nonlocal businesses are more likely to use Maersk for shipping, since there are so many more of them.

    Thanks for the confirmation. You really are an idiot.