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User: Princeofcups

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Comments · 1,347

  1. Re:DNA Testing on Measles Outbreak In NYC · · Score: 1

    Maybe we'll have the capability to cheaply trace each confirmed case back to the source through the DNA of diseases. Turn a few ambulance chasing lawyers loose on folks causing outbreaks for whatever reason and a few people might change their tune.

    Punishing the victims. The people who need to be punished are the conmen who promote the anti-vaccine agenda. They are all making bank off of books, interviews, paid lectures, etc.

  2. Re:Dunno on Measles Outbreak In NYC · · Score: 0

    I don't see how we could get through to them, they've already jumped the bandwagon on at least one dubious claim, facts and research clearly aren't swaying these people. Letting them contract the disease and then tell them why they can't be cured of it, and may die, might have a much larger impact. Sucks that it has to put the rest of us at risk first though.

    You assume that these people can rationally interpret the situation. The reason they caught measles is because the "gubment" refuses to give them safe vaccinations. It is ALWAYS someone else's fault.

  3. Re:A bit of common sense maybe? on Measles Outbreak In NYC · · Score: 1

    - fines for not vaccinating your children

    All fines are a tax on the poor. Just like parking/speeding tickets, rich people can ignore the law and pay it off with loose change.

    1 - better education in general
    2 - campaigns to discredit the anti-vax conmen

  4. Re:Math ? on Men And Women Think Women Are Bad At Basic Math · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But it is plural - Mathematics

    In the rest of the world its called Maths

    The rest of the world do not all speak English. Pedantic pedantics.

  5. Re:Just start the war already! on Ukraine May Have To Rearm With Nuclear Weapons Says Ukrainian MP · · Score: 5, Informative

    But fuck, even Poland at least tried to fight back when the German blitzkrieg rolled in.

    "Even Poland?" What does that mean? Poland had a huge military, which is why Germany had to take them out before tackling France. They fought back very well. They were just not of the same caliber as the German officer corps, and were slightly behind in the tech race. The "horses verses tanks" scenario is highly overblown. Poland's infantry and artillery were adequate for the time, but no one really expected Blitzkrieg to work as well as it did. If Poland had a Guderian, it could have turned out very different.

  6. Re:Maybe it's time to take away her soapbox on Author Says It's Time To Stop Glorifying Hackers · · Score: 1

    There seems to be no end to pinheads like this who run around and pontificate about crap they know nothing about.

    New York Times. Enough said. :-)

  7. Re:US blame culture. on Author Says It's Time To Stop Glorifying Hackers · · Score: 1

    I look forward to the day when America gets back to the point where people start taking responsibility for their own actions again, instead of always looking for someone else to blame (and sue) for their own stupidity.

    Judging from the increasing number of brain-dead liberals infesting America, I think you're gonna be waiting a LONG LONG time......

    Thank you for a prime example of my "misuse of terms that people don't understand" post above.

  8. Re:Victim blaming on Author Says It's Time To Stop Glorifying Hackers · · Score: 1

    Why the hell is there a trend nowadays to call it "victim blaming" to give people advice on protecting themselves? Is it really such a bad idea for people to do things to protect their passwords?

    I guess telling people to run antivirus is now "victim blaming", too.

    It's just misuse of the term by people who don't understand what it means. See: irony, meme, feminism, communism, fedora, ...

  9. Re:You keep using that word on Author Says It's Time To Stop Glorifying Hackers · · Score: 2

    "Hackers" are called Makers now. We lost that language war, but we have a new term now.

    Because "maker" isn't a completely generic term, that wouldn't get confused with ANYONE WHO MAKES THINGS. Sorry to yell. Some people are hard of hearing.

  10. Re:You keep using that word on Author Says It's Time To Stop Glorifying Hackers · · Score: 1

    The commonly-accepted usage of words is determined by the majority. Whatever "hacker" used to mean, it now means someone who bypasses computer security systems to commit crimes.

    Hacker is someone who drives a hack, a horse and buggy or else car for hire. Another term for cab driver.

  11. Re:Yes, of course! on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 1

    We just pour water into cattle and nothing wet ever comes out. Instead, all the water is converted directly into meat.

    No, we take collected fresh water, give it to cattle, who piss it away, which evaporates and is carried away by the winds. Really, how hard is this to grasp?

  12. Re:News for Nerds? on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 2

    How is this a Slashdot topic?
    Last time I checked, dietary considerations and irrigation policy weren't high on the agenda of a site that usually talks about electronics, rockets, and Star Trak...

    Because intelligent people still care about issues besides their own hobbies? And this community has a perspective that is not represented on the usual news sites.

  13. Re:Astroturfing... on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 1

    This is part of a campaign trying to whitewash industrial consumption of water. Most water used in agriculture/cattle feed is not consumed in any sense of the word. It evaporates back into the atmosphere.

    Which then follows the winds to other places. The problem isn't that we are destroying water, it is that we are taking it from a place where it is scarce, and distributing it elsewhere.

  14. Re:Misnomer on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 0

    Blaming meat eaters for poor agricultural practices is wrong.

    First off, cattle should NOT be eating diets wholly of corn and alfalfa. Cattle are grazers and should by and large be eating grasses and the like.

    So you will be the first in line to get the sub-par meat? Thought not.

  15. Re:NO on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have a very difficult time believing this. This sounds like junk, alarmist science. The problems are more than just meat. We cannot even begin to understand what impact human beings have on the environment.

    Wah, science is hard. I don't understand, therefor no one does.

    Yes the human impact is well understood. The question is only how bad it really is, and what can we do to slow down the destruction. We're not even talking about reversing it yet, just slowing it so that we have more time to study.

  16. Re:"Exporting" water? on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 2

    I though most of it came from snow melt on the western half of the continental divide.

    Exporting 100 billion gallons, is, of course, utter bullshit. The only water that gets actually exported is the water weight of the exports. There is additional water lost through evaporation due to agricultural irrigation, which exceeds the non-irrigated evaporation rate. That last one is the real target, and the concern of this veginazi.

    No it is not. Maybe not all, but a large percentage of the water is lost to evaporation, which is then spread around the world. That is, California is not a closed ecosystem. Most of that water follows the winds. This leaves you with a desert.

  17. Re:Shill on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The statement that they export 100 billion gallons of water in alfalfa is silly. There is a sod farm down the road from me and they water grass like crazy. Is all that water in the grass? When they cut, roll and ship the sod does the water go with it? Nope. Some of the water is used by the grass for it's growth, a lot evaporates and a lot goes into the ground returning to the water table. This is pure propaganda of the worst kind. What about the cattle? How much water is in a pound of ground beef? Hundreds? Of course not! It may take hundreds to grow it but the cows piss out almost all the water they take in. That water doesn't ship with them. There is a cost to grow these things and it does take water but water is replenishable although if you overpopulate an area (California) it will become scarce. Maybe deserts were meant to be dry? This article is sensationalism.

    Sorry, but you seem to have missed the point that the alfalfa is being shipped to China for a profit. Or to put it another way, any water conservation project means cheaper water for the alfalfa growers, which means more profits for the corporations that own the farms. This is corruption at it's worse, to the detriment of the people of California, as well as the environment, in the name of profits.

  18. Re:Interesting Math (like there's another variety) on Meat Makes Our Planet Thirsty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's a simpler solution... less people.

    Oh here we go again..
      You want to be the first to volunteer to reduce the population by one? I hear a CPAP mask and a tank of helium are an easy way out..
    Good luck trying to convince people to not have children, especially the Bible Belt people who literally believe it's their God-given right to litter the Earth with their offspring. Also good luck convincing any other group of people in the world not to have children for similar reasons, and also because of this insignificant little matter of "propagation of the species" that just happens to be the most basic drive of any living thing.
      So what's your solution, smart guy you might say? We need to find a way to get off this planet.

    Yeah, here we go again. There is no infinite growth scenario for any species. Education is the solution, not throwing your hands up and saying "it's hard, so why bother." Culture needs to change to encourage individual achievement, not "get all the money I can to pass onto my children." Look at Japan. Population growth is declining, and there are no draconian rules on procreation like in China. As a matter of fact, the government is encouraging procreation.

  19. No real context on Can Science Ever Be "Settled?" · · Score: 1

    Conceptual, qualitative, or practical? All very different things. Things with mass are attracted to other things with mass. That's settled, because that's how we define it. All the math that goes into that attraction? Will always be open to further refinement. Will a rock always fall if you drop it? Well, antigravity is theoretically possible, so maybe not.

    This is about as useful a question as "have you stopped beating your wife."

  20. The Long Con on Satoshi Nakamoto Found? Not So Fast · · Score: 1

    If I were organized crime, I would either create exchanges to ponzy people's coins, or else take over the exchanges at gunpoint. I'd also track down the creators and experts, and threaten/browbeat information out of them to break the system. Bit coin is like the keys to Fort Knox given to a couple dozen random people around the world. Hey, just saying.

    Of course after you take your initial cut, you'll find that taking the scheme legit (semi-legit really) is the way to cash in big. In that regard, bitcoin might succeed in the long run if they don't panic and pull out the supports on the way out. Think of Las Vegas, possibly on an even larger scale.

  21. Re:Ballmer is supposed to be a nice guy on Steve Ballmer Blew Up At the Microsoft Board Before Retiring · · Score: 2

    I have relatives who work for Microsoft who use the same gym Steve Ballmer uses. He does not have any sidekicks hanging around him, nor does he project any kind of superior airs there. Quietly shows up and works on some free machine, wipes the equipment with a towel like everyone else before leaving. I am not disputing "he throws chairs" or "shouts at the directors" etc. Both could be true.

    That makes him sound like a pretty ineffectual CEO. Seriously, shouldn't he be taking charge and reading the law to his reports? There is so much going on at MS, that I'd expect there to be a constant flurry of activity around the CEO. It sounds more like he was just "phoning in" the performance.

  22. Re:Microsoft still has a chance... on Steve Ballmer Blew Up At the Microsoft Board Before Retiring · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft still has a chance

    Microsoft is a huge successful company, and is not going anywhere. If anything, they will have to scale back in a few sectors.

    They need to make Windows Free, maybe even open source (ok, that's a pipe dream)

    Absurd. The near monopoly of Windows gives them the muscle to keep better products off the market. They are also the only player in town when it comes to PC OSs (sorry Linux), and the Windows tax is not something that they would or should give away for free.

    Then they need to invent all kinds of stellar business apps that integrate with it flawlessly...
    and license those apps to businesses. Businesses will pay for supported apps, because they like to be covered if something happens (thats how oracle makes money)

    That has never been their business model. Either buy the better app and rebrand it MS, or else crush the competition through their Windows monopoly, e.g. withholding parts of the API.

    Basically everything Microsoft is currently doing is wrong. They are digging their own grave and anyone with any tech savvy at all knows it.

    I really don't think that you speak for the "tech savvy."

  23. Re:What a surprise. on Steve Ballmer Blew Up At the Microsoft Board Before Retiring · · Score: 1

    Ballmer just comes across as a big fat baby with all the charisma of a loose turd.

    Will someone tell me why he was there in the first place?

    Ask Bill.

  24. Re:No place for 'almost', 'not quite' and 'nearly' on RadioShack To Close 1,100 Stores · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Blame the MBAs. Every time they take over a niche business, they want to turn it into the business model of the largest generic vendor out there. The Science Channel is no longer science, but looks like every other cable channel. Mini wants to sell bigger and bigger cars. Radio Shack is no longer electronics bits and pieces, but wants to be every other electronics vendor. A successful small business is never enough. The greedy buggers only care about their suicidal rush to the top.

  25. Re:Missing the point on 'Google Buses' Are Bad For Cities, Says New York MTA Official · · Score: 1

    And the point of the article is: if the employees recognize this and are living in the cities, why aren't the businesses going there?

    Because employees are willing to spend money on cars and gasoline. Why locate your offices in an expensive urban area with cheap and easy transport for employees, when you can put it in a cheap suburban one and the employees will spend a ton of money on driving? Google, Apple, Oracle etc. are unusual. They need to keep their young talent who want to live in the city, and do not want to own cars or drive. Hence, the busses.