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User: Razalhague

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Comments · 330

  1. Re:Amazing! on Confirmed: Earth's Oldest Rock In Australia · · Score: 1

    Whenever you see a science headline that says something retarded, you should assume bad science journalism, rather than bad science.

  2. Re:Law of large numbers on Why Improbable Things Really Aren't · · Score: 3, Informative

    Law of truly large numbers is the applicable law here, but the mistake is understandable.

  3. Re:I need NASA's permission to mine the moon now? on NASA Now Accepting Applications From Companies That Want To Mine the Moon · · Score: 1

    Maybe you're thinking of the Outer Space Treaty? Wikipedia says it forbids any government from claiming a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet, but doesn't say much about private entities AFAIK.

  4. Re:Egocentrism on How Weather Influences Global Warming Opinions · · Score: 1

    And no true Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge.

  5. Re:I'm personally way more interested in Hövd on Building a Better Bike Helmet Out of Paper · · Score: 1

    Looking at the videos, I don't see why they don't airbag the whole head.

    Because certain death from suffocation is worse than potential death from head trauma.

  6. Re:Are they claiming more territory? on Photos Stream Back From China's Lunar Lander · · Score: 1

    Frankly, the ability to withdraw from the treaty is irrelevant. The stern words and looks would just come when they withdrew from the treaty, instead of when they claimed their bit of the moon (actually, they'd probably receive some of the words and looks then, too).

  7. Re:Are they claiming more territory? on Photos Stream Back From China's Lunar Lander · · Score: 1

    The treaty doesn't say anything about them not being able to mine the shit out of the moon.

    Never said it did.

    It just says they can't claim territory or place nukes in space (which you can be damned sure we've already breached) It also says the parties retain rights over whatever the launch into space, so should they start building mining platforms and shipping stuff back, we couldn't touch the equipment without breaching the treaty.

    We wouldn't need to touch the equipment, just implement trade sanctions on whatever they mined out (or the resulting products made from them).

  8. Re:Are they claiming more territory? on Photos Stream Back From China's Lunar Lander · · Score: 1

    I said mild.

  9. Re:Are they claiming more territory? on Photos Stream Back From China's Lunar Lander · · Score: 2

    Considering that China has signed and ratified the Outer Space Treaty (which explicitly forbids any government from claiming a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet), they'd probably get a few stern words and looks. On the other hand, if they actually manage to mine and transport something back, then there might be some mild repercussions.

  10. Re:PDroid on Google Cuts Android Privacy Feature, Says Release Was Unintentional · · Score: 2

    I guess the news is that Google released similar functionality as a built-in, then removed it. Sounds nasty.

    They didn't release it, per se. The code was there, but it was only accessible with third party tools. Not saying disabling access to it was the right choice, but it isn't as nasty as it sounds.

  11. Re:The Way India Works... on Indian Government Lifts Nokia's Asset Freeze, Factory Can Transfer To Microsoft · · Score: 2

    No notification in that case either.

  12. Re:The Way India Works... on Indian Government Lifts Nokia's Asset Freeze, Factory Can Transfer To Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Made you look!

    No you didn't, because when someone posts anonymously, they don't get notifications about replies, so they will most likely never know that you replied. Remember, only reply to ACs if you think it will help some other reader. Replying to them in the hopes that they will read your reply is delusional.

  13. Re:It'll cost them more in the long run on Munich Open Source Switch 'Completed Successfully' · · Score: 1

    There's a good reason why Microsoft is the standard for business computing and that's because their products are almost always better than open source.

    No, it's because Microsoft is better at running legacy software (or at least that's how businesses see it). And business computing is all about legacy software.

  14. Re:A decade long product cycle sounds good to me on Moore's Law Blowout Sale Is Ending, Says Broadcom CTO · · Score: 1

    No, you don't grasp that, I DO NOT UPGRADE, THEY DO.

    and you carry the cost, whether it be in the form of actual money, or increased amount and obnoxity of ads.

  15. Re:The real issue on The Challenge of Cross-Language Interoperability · · Score: 2

    Because some syntaxes are better at expressing some concepts while others are better at expressing other concepts.

  16. Re:Most of this will be about internal politics on China Creates Air Defence Zone Over Japan-Controlled Islands, Issues War Threat · · Score: 1, Informative

    Yup. This isn't about the land, this is about the sea around it.

  17. Re:If I were Google on Microsoft, Apple and Others Launch Huge Patent Strike at Android · · Score: 1

    They wouldn't be able to sell anything on the US market, which is considerable.

  18. Dread Pirate Roberts on FBI Seized 144,000 Bitcoins ($28.5 Million) From Silk Road Bust · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wonder if this "Dread Pirate Roberts" is only one person, given how the name was used in The Princess Bride.

  19. Re: Sounds counter-productive... on US Executions Threaten Supply of Anaesthetic Used For Surgical Procedures · · Score: 1

    Hmph. Stupid facts always ruining my jokes :(.

  20. Re:Sounds counter-productive... on US Executions Threaten Supply of Anaesthetic Used For Surgical Procedures · · Score: 1

    Europe doesn't have magic fairy dust that lets them manufacture drugs nobody else can.

    Yes they do. It's called "patents".

  21. Re:Taking Linux seriously on Torvalds: SteamOS Will 'Really Help' Linux On the Desktop · · Score: 1

    Valve controls a big part of PC game sales through Steam. They can use that by providing incentives (like taking a slightly smaller cut of the sales) to devs who support linux. Maybe different levels of incentives for those who support linux, those who treat linux equally with windows (same release dates, features, patch dates), those who favour linux, and maybe eventually for linux-exclusives.

    Valve is a pretty patient corporation. They're not expecting linux to dethrone windows overnight.

  22. Re:It's a great resource if used wisely on Wikipedia's Participation Problem · · Score: 1

    I was surprised when I first saw how extensive the coverage on Buffy is, but there's actually a pretty good reason for that.

  23. Re:It's OK. on Balancing Choice With Irreversible Consequences In Games · · Score: 1

    If a game is going to do that, then it should make it very clear that you're screwed, so you don't spend ridiculous amounts of time trying to find a way forward that doesn't exist.

    And you shouldn't be able to save an unwinnable game, though this is less important in a game with frequent and numerous autosaves.

  24. Re:If I wanted consequences on Balancing Choice With Irreversible Consequences In Games · · Score: 1

    HAAAX!

  25. Re:Free to play=one fewer revenue streams. on The New Reality of Gaming · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I find myself extremely reluctant to pay any additional fees if I've already paid for the base game.