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User: ryllharu

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Comments · 31

  1. Re:Like to see it go back to the dawn of time on Google Earth's Timelapses Offer a 32-Year Look At Earth's Changing Surface (pcmag.com) · · Score: 1

    My kingdom for a "Brilliant Troll +1" mod.

  2. Re:Pretty interesting on Ecuador Acknowledges Limiting Julian Assange's Web Access (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    As the others have said, Wikileaks isn't out of play at all.

    They've released 1000-2000 emails a day since Assange's internet access was cut. The large media groups just aren't covering any of it. Given that they're estimated to have 35,000-50,000 emails, and have put out some 18,000, they'll continue right up to Election Day.

    That said, I also think Ecuador's reasoning for cutting his access is understandable. They don't want it to look like they are condoning Wikileak's activities, regardless of the motivation behind it or the winner of the US presidential election.

  3. As crazy as it sounds, amid all their other stuff, Jezebel has a number of really good articles that are filled with tips and guidance about laundry. Stuff that I was somewhat surprised to not really find anywhere else.

  4. Re:Why does Slashdot use a "Taboola" or a "Janrain on Google, Yahoo Cry About Ad-Blocking (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    ThinkGeek was sold to Gamestop.

  5. Re:Tax inversion on Activision Buys Candy Crush Developer For $5.9B (inquisitr.com) · · Score: 2

    If they're doing this so they can pull off an inversion, that make so much more sense. The purchase at all, the size of the deal, etc.

  6. Re:National Geographic magazine lost all credibili on Rupert Murdoch Buys National Geographic Magazine · · Score: 1

    I'm going respectfully disagree here.

    There has been a very noticeable change in the format, presentation, and content of the magazine.

    Issues the last two years have been shorter, with one long article filling up half the magazine, and supplemented by several short articles that are often mostly pictures. The "Food" and "7 Billion" longform themes were interesting...but the biggest change to National Geographic Magazine lately has been the lack of diversity in their content.

    For better or for worse, the staff have decided that every article has to be linked to climate change somehow, often in the final paragraph of an article that otherwise has no relation to the topic. I certainly don't mind articles about the history of some truly stunning national parks in Canada and how they will be impacted over the next fifty years, but I have to admit that I kind of struggle to see the relevance of connecting the history and study of Trajan's Column to climate change.

    Another huge loss for the magazine was removing letters to the magazine. It went from the full spectrum, to only complimentary letters, to only some sparse infographics, to nothing at all.

  7. Re:Colleges are being run like businesses on Stopping Universities From Hoarding Money · · Score: 1

    It is common. My university asks me if I'm working in my field and occasionally how much money I make every time they ask me to donate.

    I tell them "Yes.," "Prefer not to say.," and "I won't be donating at this time," every time they call.

  8. Re:I don't believe it. on Poor Pilot Training Blamed For Virgin Galactic Crash · · Score: 1

    Just want to highlight the quick mention you made of the Navy. The US Navy's safety programs are mature and thorough enough that NASA has several meeting with Navy personnel about their SUBSAFE program after the Columbia disaster to improve the NASA programs. It says a lot about the Navy's SUBSAFE program that the best rating stops at merely "satisfactory."

  9. Re:Reverse be true on High-Fat, High-Sugar Diet Can Lead To Cognitive Decline · · Score: 1

    "The Big Fat Surprise" by Nina Teicholz is a real eye-opener on this. The author traced back where the whole "Fat is bad!" discussion came from over the course of an 8 year investigation. She found a single, dubiously-prepared study from a man named Ancel Keys that conveniently was released about the same time as President Eisenhower's health scare. Keys worked his way to the President's personal physician, and carefully convinced him. Eisenhower's doctor publically declared Keys work "brilliant."

    From there he wormed his way into getting the American Heart Association to declare his study as fact. After that, Ancel Keys went on a world tour to confirm his hypothesis, deliberately excluding the countries that had diets that contradicted his initial study.

    The result is that a lot of scientists jumped on the chance to get easy funding and perpetuated the idea that fat is bad.

    The myth that all fats are bad has been present in the world opinion ever since. And a great deal of it is all PR bullshit.

  10. Re:Bullshit on In 10 Years, Every Human Connected To the Internet Will Have a Timeline · · Score: 1

    Vernor Vinge covered this possibility well in Rainbows End in a seemingly-casual mention. While it was true that you could look up anything about anyone at any time, there were vast part-time volunteer organizations that filled the internet with false information to drown out the truth. The information was all out there, you just couldn't believe any of it.

  11. Re:Is nursing high-paying? on SOTU: Community Colleges, Employers To Train Workers For High-Paying Coding Jobs · · Score: 1

    Doctors memorize facts so they can put two and two together. The nurse keeps track of what they've been doing to you or giving you.

    The doctor may save your life, but it is the nurse that will keep the doctor from killing you on accident.

  12. Re:Kentucky Fried Dodo on The Mammoth Cometh: Revive & Restore Tackles De-Extinction · · Score: 1

    Nightjars and ducks don't have a problem with nesting on the ground, and I'd say it is safe to say that most of those species haven't gone extinct.

  13. Re:Quintessential classic military sci-fi book? on Movie Review: Ender's Game · · Score: 1
    It may not be a very popular opinion, but I'm willing to make the counter-claim. You are unfortunately making the same mistake with "State of Fear," pushing your own biases to misinterpret the message of the book. It might be one of the most easily misunderstood science fiction/political thriller books written in the past few decades.

    The real message of "State of Fear" is that science is being politicized, corrupted by money from both sides, and its findings used to scare people, politicians, and others into giving political action groups more money and power. That the subject of the book is about Climate Change is just because it was a popular subject at the time, and there was a great deal of research and graphs that can easily be manipulated to prove either side of an argument. It could have been about anything else, electromagnetic waves coming from cellphones, vaccines, etc. If the book had been written later, it very likely would have been written about frakking.

    The heroes of the story are all stauch advocates of improving the environment, and it is stated numerous times that their goal isn't just to prove that Climate Change is real, but to prove it with such a convincing argument that there is no room for anyone to disagree. They weren't looking to publish studies and papers in journals. They were going for a slam dunk on a prescedent-setting trial.

    The villains of the story are only looking for more donations and power within their community so that they can sway the discussion to a direction that benefits them further financially and influentially.

    What "State of Fear" does advocate is funding science anonymously, allowing scientists to do science, rather than even risk feeling beholden to a certain group that very clearly is looking for a particular outcome in the studies they are funding. A worthy goal.

  14. Re:This is interesting. on Researchers Show How Easy It Is To Manipulate Online Opinions · · Score: 1

    My kingdom for a few mod points.

    This is the same strategy I use for both videogames, movie reviews, and even book/product reviews on sites like Newegg and Amazon. It gets right to the point of what might impede my enjoyment of a particular title or product. Most people won't even bother to comment on something if they were satisfied with something, but their feelings weren't extreme enough to merit fawning praise or raging disgust/disappointment.

  15. Re:So .... on How LucasArts Fell Apart · · Score: 1

    My timesheets have to be submitted by Friday at noon, despite that I often work after hours work on Friday nights because that's our change window. They want accurate timesheets in place before the work is done, and get upset when you have to change it later. I've been told on more than one occasion that I need to provide 100% accurate data, even if that means providing it before I know. If I don't know how late I'm working, how can I provide you with a value for how many hours I worked until I'm done? I can't tell you in advance if we'll be done at 9pm or 1am depending on what we're doing.

    This is exactly why my company has timesheets due on Tuesdays for the previous week. How your situation can exist is simply beyond me.

  16. Re:What is your favorite superhero? on New York Times and Twitter Attacked By Syrian Electronic Army · · Score: 1

    That's an excellent strategy...when the various websites use the same set of questions. In my experience, you're very lucky to get three consistent options for those kinds of substitutions.

  17. Re:Largest operative Airplane is not USA-made on In the World of Big Stuff, the US Still Rules · · Score: 1

    For high tolerance work, automated equipment is key to production speed. But these aren't really production machines in the traditional sense - they're all low volume, and likely customized for each buyer. That means hand work.

    Even automated equipment makes mistakes. When it comes to final fit ups in very robust, complicated machinery like they're taking about here, there will be hand work on even mass produced parts. Screws, bolts, actuators, etc.

    Lots of assemblies get shimmed.

    Tolerance stack up is an everyday problem when you have a couple hundred to a million components. Doesn't matter if your business produces hundreds of units a year, or one unit every two years. Little amounts add up to significant offsets.

  18. Re:i don't really like bill gates that much but... on Bill Gates Says Tablets Aren't Much Help In Education · · Score: 2

    When I went to junior high, the Berlin Wall was still standing in my textbooks, even though the USSR had already dissolved years ago.

    So, textbooks are kept for many years, often well past their time. I could roll that same hardcover textbook into a tube.

  19. Re:Can Sony stop itself? No... no they can't on PSVita Released In the USA and Europe · · Score: 1

    Name a GBA game with an NES-era "password" system. Go ahead. Seriously, "early SNES games", maybe, but they were well out of THAT nonsense by the release of the GBA.

    I can. Pocky & Rocky with Becky. Great game, and the password system worked rather well. It wasn't even hex, it had addtional symbols as well. The "save feature" did not work as well. You'd lose certain items, powerups, and progress. The password system had none of those issues.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocky_%26_Rocky_with_Becky

  20. Re:Every student forced to buy Apple on Apple Nets 350K Textbook Downloads In 3 Days · · Score: 1

    Read carefully. K-12 textbooks are price capped. Apple was pretty explicit about "high school" books and did not speak to college textbooks.

    University textbook publishers are already making a bundle. Apple isn't foolish enough to challenge that institution...yet.

  21. Re:Never been scared by a videogame, not once on The Psychology of Horror In Video Games and Movies · · Score: 1

    A pity so few seem to mention the Fatal Frame series (particularly the first two). I can barely play those games for more than 15 minutes at a time...and even less at night.

    You get a feeling of helplessness almost right away, as the protagonists are so much slower than the ghosts. You only have a camera to keep you safe, ghost often move erratically or attack in unconventional ways, and most of them can take you out if you make even a single mistake.

      But it is really the sounds that get to you. You expect one to meet you around the corner. You passed by encountering one before, and you hear a creak as you're rounding the corner...and then nothing comes. That's horror in gaming.

  22. Re:Time honored tradition? on Capcom 'Saddened' By Game Plagiarism Controversy · · Score: 1

    How many Angry Birds clones are there?

    I certainly hope you meant Crush the Castle clones, the Armor Games flash game predates Angry Birds by a considerable margin.

  23. Re:Not Solaris - SunOS on Tron: Legacy · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong (it's been a few years since I saw the first), but wasn't the CEO's console to the MCP also a touchscreen keyboard? I distinctly remember it being embedded in his desk, just like Flynn's secret office in Legacy.

  24. Re:May I offer a rebuttal? on Wii 2 Unlikely For 2011, Maybe In 2012 · · Score: 1

    ...motion control add-ons that cost hundreds and don't support current games. Thus, they will get minimal support from users and developers. Remember, the most successful add-on of all time was the Sega CD, which only sold 500,000 units. Microsoft and Sony would probably be thrilled to get even half that in this economy.

    Microsoft has announced that they have sold around 1 million Kinnects in the first 10 days. They're hoping for 5 million by the Christmas holiday.

    I'd say they're doing alright on an install base so far.

  25. Re:It's a whole lot more basic than that on Critics Say US Antimissile Defense Flawed, Dangerous · · Score: 1

    Well, submarines are neither cheap, nor easy. Nor are cruise missiles launched from them.

    Sorry, not only can they be launched from submarines, they have been launched from submarines since the 1991 Persian Gulf conflict.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-109_Tomahawk