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  1. Re:I don't buy it on Human Water Use Accounts For 42% of Recent Sea Level Rise · · Score: 1

    Well, well.

  2. Personal Water Use - on Human Water Use Accounts For 42% of Recent Sea Level Rise · · Score: 1

    Water use anywhere is sustainable within the recharge and filtration parameters of the aquifer/surface supply. And the cost to bring the water to US drinking water standards. Trouble has been that water rights laws are traditionally written in scientific ignorance, and politics will trump science for the time being, usually to the detriment of real individuals in favor of the most recent sub-category. If you want an entertaining read on the subject, try 'Centennial' by Jamess A. Michener. Skip the dinosaurs, and the murder mystery, and go to the aquifer part. But global warming has consequences for water beyond sea level rise. Now that the Great Lakes don't freeze over each winter, evaporation continues all year. Malaria is coming back to the Ukraine now that the swamps don't freeze and kill of the mosquito population. The Brits are making wine. No worries there, though, cause none will make it offshore, both as a consequence of local demand and external standards. The overwhelming preponderance of humanities' unsustainable global activities are a result of concentrated waste injection (feed lots, chicken & pig farms, sewerage outfalls, and everyone pees upstream of NO), or water use/diversion (as in the movie Chinatown). The circulation of water is like blood in an animal. It can take a certain level of bleeding, cuts & scrapes, or pathogenic attack, and survive. But what we're doing in both willful ignorance and greed (privatization of water supplies in South America) is accelerating the detriment that global warming represents to inland fresh water supplies, and will sicken and kill the beast. Hell, women have anti-freeze and flame retardent in their breast milk because our water filtration / treatment systems aren't meant to keep that stuff out. So, look for water wars next, and for your water bill to start looking like your cellphone charges, and for businesses to crop up to make water re-use (toilets) more common. The earth makes a great natural filter, unless poisoned with heavy metals. Or mining runoff. Look to the coal industry for a huge contribution to lowering water quality, both as a function of runoff, and of drastic geological changes that cap or divert natural surface flows. Look for the poisoning of entire ecosystems by fracking. They (Warren Buffet, et. al.) were smart, and got grandfathered in before the burning tapwater, and surface hydrocarbon venting started. It takes 1 PPM of any petroleum component to make water undrinkable, and it's a bitch to remove the lighter molecules either by filtration, RO, or catalytic settling. So, don't pour your crankcase oil down the storm sewer, recycle it. Don't water your lawn, let it die off in favor of locally hardy species. Stop treating for minor pests, and go organic for gardens, with natural remedies for pests. Jacques Cousteau said that the earth, if scaled to the size of an egg, would be different from a stone only by the addition of a single drop of water, and a speck of dust. Love him, or sick-to-death of his preaching (while using some pretty energy intense equipment) he understood how complicated and complex the water issue is. A few hundred nodes on a Cray would be a good start for local basin study, and something bigger for the global picture. It's as complicated as atmospheric weather, but while interconnected, is much more difficult to quantify. It's mostly underground, and you can't rubber ducky it as easily. And, God Almighty, stop Monsanto and their brethren, who developmpatented GMO corn, etc, so their Roundup will not affect the plant. But it's only creating 'super pests' that drink roundup like koolaid.

  3. Finally, a sensible chip.. on Ford Building Cars That Talk To Other Cars · · Score: 1

    Personally, I like the added sense of security I feel while drafting a semi at 85, (knowing I'm getting that extra 10 MPG) and Ford's radar brake interlocked cruise control is keeping me at a steady 22 feet off the back end of a load of X-Boxes on their way to Laredo, While I dare to text...To hell with all the wireless self-drive tech, just lock my ass onto a cross-country semi, and I'll swing like Tarzan from vine to vine. I just need something bigger to push the air. (see silent movie w/Ben Turpin using magnets in engineless car for same purpose)

  4. Re:How did they find the length of the passphrase? on British Teen Jailed Over Encryption Password · · Score: 1

    Could it have been as simple as 50 little asterisks all in a row?

  5. Re:This is a STATE tax, not a federal tax on Ballmer, Bezos Fund Effort To Undermine Bill Gates · · Score: 1

    Henry Ford tried to create a car for the masses. He had to do a little 'if you build it, they will come', but he intended to build a car that would, by its nature, create a market that had not existed before. Hell, there were only a few hundred miles of paved roads in the country then. But Ferrari, on the other hand, had no such pretensions. He built for the glory of winning races, and sold just enough of his cars to homologate them.

  6. Re:OMG YES! on Airbus Planning Transparent Planes · · Score: 1

    When the 747 was first put in service for commercial flights, there were lower deck seats that faced forward, and which had a spectacularly intimate view of landing and takeoff runways. These seats were quickly and universally removed, or the windows permanently replaced with non-transparent aluminum. The problem wasn't vomiting so much as screaming uncontrollably and leaving skidmarks down the aisle during landings. But I don't guess Boeing cares much if Airbus makes the same mistake. At least in Boeing's case, the affected group was a small subset of passengers.

  7. Re:You gotta compete on the global marketplace! on GE Closes Last US Light Bulb Factory · · Score: 1

    It wasn't the government breaking the windows. In the 1950's in Illinois, the glaziers' union (more powerful than government then, apparently) required that pre-hung glass (as in, factory scab labor) on all new home construction be manually removed and replaced by union glaziers. Thank god that, as time has marched on, theft has replaced the union wielded hammer as the #1 cause of window shrinkage on the jobsite. Except in northern New Jersey, where it's stray bullets, and thrown cannolis.

  8. Re:Cry me a river... on AMD Hates Laptop Stickers As Much As You Do · · Score: 1

    Try the cabinet hardware dept at your local home improvement superstore. Little door/drawer bumpers work, and if your laptop outlasts them, they come on sheets of 20 or so.

  9. Re:hrm... on UVB-76 Broadcasts New Voice Message · · Score: 1

    If their nukes haven't been upgraded or maintained better than some of their other Cold War hardware, their detonation point could be anywhere between launch, and 'holy motherland, Boris, that one made it!'. And the Ukrainians have probably chopped the ones they could get at. Battlebotski.

  10. Re:Location on UVB-76 Broadcasts New Voice Message · · Score: 2, Funny

    If it's anywhere near Chernobyl, bears & wolves won't be much problem. The trees, though...

  11. Re:For the children on Why the World Is Running Out of Helium · · Score: 1

    Because no generation should be denied the fun of inhaling helium to speak with a goofy high-pitch voice.

    I was introduced to Senator John Glenn just after having inhaled a balloon full of helium at the FL Democratic Convention years back. "Why, hello Colonel Glenn" came out as you'd expect. He was amused. Momentarily.

  12. Re:Egregious on BSOD Issues On Deepwater Horizon · · Score: 1

    Transocean was contracted by BP to drill the well. BP would have been the seller of the crude from the well. BP was technically contracting the labor and equipment for their benefit, and was ultimately responsible for evacuating the heavier drilling mud from the hole after the concrete seal (that later failed) had been placed at the bottom of the cased portion of the well. Mud withdrawal was a BP decision by their PM on the platform, and because seawater is less dense than mud, it was less able to resist the upward pressure in the well. The well casing was forced upwards within the wellshaft, and apparently was contorted enough to send metal shrapnel upwards into the shutoff valve, bricking it. In other wells, seawater works. In this one, they went through strata of 'unconsolidated' rock that made for a less well shaped hole, and for lateral loss of huge amounts of mud into cracks in the formation. It seems to me like a perfect shitstorm, where the safety valve used did not include an acoustic shutoff, the formation, besides being deep, was fractured and relatively unstable, and they pulled the mud out of the hole, assuming the seawater would hold down the pressure.

  13. Re:No surprise on Feds Bust Chinese Firm's Hybrid Car Data Heist · · Score: 1

    The American colonies first manufacturing ventures were largely of copying British items the colonists needed, or liked. The Brits began to rankle at losing their potentially huge market, and so began taxation of locally made items that competed with the British goods. It's not an Asian mindset, it's a pretty universal one. Let the R&D costs be paid by someone else, seek out disgruntled ex-employees, buy a single copy of something and take it apart for reverse engineering (why early Toyotas sounded like Mercedes). Isaac Newton said 'Nature abhors a vacuum'. Capitalism just sucks harder.

  14. Re:Two more on Sticky Rice Is the Key To Super Strong Mortar · · Score: 1

    And my ex put several potato and rice rich casserole science projects down the drain/disposal, then had the nerve to ask what happened when the dishwasher barfed. My penance was to crawl under the house and saw off the cast iron trap, then rebuild during several round trips to the local iron monger. Now I know why plumbers have a love/hate relationship with disposals.

  15. Re:How many blunders will the American gov't allow on BP's Final "Top Kill" Procedure For Gulf Oil Spill · · Score: 1

    The failure of the well can be placed as widely as credulity will allow, but if RFK, Jr. is truthful in this article (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-f-kennedy-jr/sex-lies-and-oil-spills_b_564163.html) then Bush & Cheney's efforts to roll the dice with equipment requirements for drilling were largely responsible. They allowed a culture of oil industry turned government regulators to permit drilling without a shutoff valve that is mandatory elsewhere. And, because I live in Texas and know some oilmen, I heard that the valve failure was predicted by an engineer in his letter of resignation from the manufacturer over his firm belief that the valve was underdesigned. Whether scruples or something else, there is a paper trail. BP has had more than its share of refinery explosions in Houston in the last 5 years. May be time to rebrand, mates.

  16. Asus and the Death of the Netbook on Asus Says Netbook Is Dead, Hello Wearable Computers · · Score: 1

    Anybody tried Asus Customer Support lately? Anybody able to FIND Asus Customer Support? Seems 'YOYO' to me. (You're On Your Own)

  17. Re:You don't need 1,750 cc baby! on Scientists Postulate Extinct Hominid With 150 IQ · · Score: 1

    If I recall the discussions of cross sections of Einstein's brain, the obvious difference with 'normal' human brains was a more convoluted structure. More folds and turns. Some sicko carried his brain around like James Brown's corpse, and I'd have to reread the book to find out where it ended up. But in Einstein's case, his higher function came at the price of reduced day-to-day competence. Call it not 'Being There'. There was a small group of 'spotters' who would appear in the mornings and evenings along his walking path from his Mercer Street house to the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton. These folk would manually make sure he took the correct turns, thereby preventing those embarrassing pre-GPS wanderings off the reservation. They did it with a greeting before a corner, a taking by the arm, and after the maneuver, a 'see you later'. He also appeared at Trenton High School in 1944 or 45, and requested to be allowed to participate in a patriotic pageant being put on in the school auditorium. He was not in time for a speaking or dancing part, as the curtain was going up in minutes, but he was given a small American flag and told to stand with others at the end of each row of seats on the center aisle. The director, who stood at the far end of the aisle from the stage, and looked down the double row of hand-held flags, said that one flag was conspicuous in its repeated slow droop out of position and quick jerk back throughout the performance. Princeton remembers him fondly, also, as the anonymous friend to many passing ships' radiomen. At least one seaman who was invited to visit while on shore leave was flabbergasted to find that he had been having such funny and 'normal' conversations with so renowned an intellect.

  18. Re:Never mind the sourcecode on The Nuking of Duke Nukem · · Score: 1

    When times get tough in a certain part of a certain state, a state whose governor had to go all the way to effing Argentina to get laid, many of the wives and girlfriends make the rounds of all the strip clubs looking for a chance to strip for tips. It was an eye-opening revelation when I heard it. Took most of my cynicism away. Guys, seriously, can you imagine getting to the point where showing your tiny little geeky tee-tees to drunk women wearing sunglasses indoors for the chance to have a five stuck somewhere is cool? Unless you have to tape it to your ankle to keep it in check, and unless you have, at minimum, a decent body (the male equivalent of average bodied female with Shakespeare sized veranda) it's just panhandling with your clothes off. To music. But the one that hoovered a Heiniken from the table next to me was worth the admission.

  19. Re:mmmm on Super-Earths Discovered Orbiting Nearby, Sun-Like Star · · Score: 1

    But virgin what?...sheep, vinyl, olive oil?

  20. The tabbed interface, 0.3.56 on Will Tabbed Windows Be the Next Big Thing? · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is all beginning to sound like Lotus Notes. Boy, was that a fun environment.

  21. Video Professor on Calling Video Professor a Scam · · Score: 5, Informative

    I ordered a 'free' Video Professor Access learning set about 10 years ago. The set came with 3 discs in a single package. 2 of the discs were free, but in order to keep the 3rd, the last lessons, I would have had to pay the $29.95 for the set. In other words, if you want the free part, it's only the introductory and intermediate lessons. Additionally, each disc installed several programs I would have to characterize as spyware. Not just the first, but each disc. Before they would run any lessons. So, I sent the 'free' software back. And then I got to struggle with their hands in my pocket through 3 more 'free' (unordered) sets, each of which showed up on my credit card statement before the (unordered) sets arrived. Each subsequent time I called to protest I was told to keep the discs. Of course, they were worth more as infections than as product. I finally canceled the credit card to stem the pilfering. 'Scam' is kind.

  22. Re:I *AM* a video professor on Calling Video Professor a Scam · · Score: 1

    And are you an earth or firesign?

  23. Re:Presumably... on Synthetic Stone DVD Claimed To Last 1,000 Years · · Score: 1

    In your scenario, do you think they'll have to reinvent the 8-track?

  24. Re:I wonder... on Radio-Controlled Cyborg Beetles Become Reality · · Score: 1

    Or having the RC Beetle you've just spent $1.4MM wiring and sent on a Top Secret Critical National Security Surveillance Mission, become infatuated with a pile of mule shit, and there goes the op. And think about it, if each bug has his or her own handler, what kind of network will be necessary to loft a believable swarm? Can't you imagine 4000 trailers full of gear in Nebraska tasked with infesting Osama's kid's quince? These guys really ought to read Foundation again.

  25. Re:What is very sad on Massachusetts Police Can't Place GPS On Autos Without Warrant · · Score: 1

    We routinely volunteer our movements with the use of shoppers discount and debit/credit cards, RFID toll devices on our cars, turned on cellphones (and call logs), and voluntary presence in an increasingly 'on camera' landscape. Seems hard to believe that a GPS 'implant' is considered any more intrusive, except that its purpose is more explicitly for evidentiary information gathering. Mass and Houston police, who were recently prevented by public outcry from deploying 'Predator' type continuous surveillance drones over the city, are probably Googling the same searches...'network + camera + 1989 Volvo 145 + rusty red + driver in curlers + body in trashbags in rear'...