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User: Hatta

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Comments · 19,722

  1. Re:The GPL is like the Slashdot Beta: Unwanted! on LLVM & GCC Compiler Developers To Begin Collaborating · · Score: 1

    Compare it to any violation of rights you wish. The GP's assertion that corporate profits trump rights is pants on head crazy.

  2. Re:The GPL is like the Slashdot Beta: Unwanted! on LLVM & GCC Compiler Developers To Begin Collaborating · · Score: 0

    Well, the money is flowing along that highway. Hope you are willing to financially wither for your unrealistic and unsustainable ideals.

    You could have said the same thing about slavery, child labor, anything OSHA regulates, etc. What's good for corporations is not the same as what's good for people.

  3. Re:The GPL is like the Slashdot Beta: Unwanted! on LLVM & GCC Compiler Developers To Begin Collaborating · · Score: 2

    We would have LOVED to support the standard and commit code back, but the restrictions on our own code were unsustainable

    In other words, your project could not be viable without oppressing your users. Sounds like good riddance.

  4. Re:Open borders... one way? on LLVM & GCC Compiler Developers To Begin Collaborating · · Score: 1

    While theoretically GPL could subsume BSD code produced from the collaboration

    Yeah, ask Theo DeRaadt about that.

  5. Re:Not Obsolete At All on Do Hypersonic Missiles Make Defense Systems Obsolete? · · Score: 2

    Today's anti-missile systems will be useful for many years to come.

    Are today's anti-missile systems useful? Or are they just meant for posturing? I remember during the first Gulf War that not a single PATRIOT missile shot down a SCUD. Is there anything better today?

  6. Re:"poorly surveyed"? Sounds like us... on Dried Meat "Resurrects" Lost Species of Whale · · Score: 1

    Slashdot has long been in decline anyway. They are taking the risk of driving everyone away, in the hopes of attracting a new audience. It won't work, but I can see how it is at least a rational attempt to recover some of their sunk costs.

  7. Re:Extrajudicial punishment. on Judge Says You Can Warn Others About Speed Traps · · Score: 1

    if you think they're ticketing for something they *know* isn't a crime

    Whether they know it or not is irrelevant. Every person falsely accused deserves compensation. If charges are dropped, dismissed, or you are acquitted, you deserve 100% of any costs you incurred because of the accusation.

  8. Extrajudicial punishment. on Judge Says You Can Warn Others About Speed Traps · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This ruling won't stop cops from ticketing you, forcing you to leave work to appear in court, and paying the court costs after the ticket is dismissed. Cops can and do write invalid tickets simply to be dicks, and there's nothing you can do about it.

    Our justice system needs to ensure that the victim of a false accusation of a crime is made whole again.

  9. Re:No, because they are not compatible on Should Nuclear and Renewable Energy Supporters Stop Fighting? · · Score: 2

    So, hook the nuclear power plant up to batteries, a flywheel, or pump some water uphill for hydroelectric when needed. Or shit, just provision for maximum capacity and release waste heat when it's not all needed. This is not a serious practical objection to nuclear power.

  10. Re:I am reminded of pigs and engineers here on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 1

    Creationists, in my experience, would be happy to be corrected on actual, observable, testable science

    In my experience, creationists believe that humans and dinosaurs coexisted. Try correcting them about what the fossil record actually shows, you won't get anywhere.

    an atheist believes there is no God, so any option that leads to a God conclusion must be false

    Not true at all. I've never met an atheist with an active belief in the absence of gods. Not even Richard Dawkins goes so far. What atheists do is withhold belief until there is evidence, and no evidence exists for the existence of any god or gods.

  11. Re:Debate? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 1

    Speciation. Where is the speciation?

    It's in the fossil record.

    We lose dozens of species every year, and we have yet to see a new one arise.

    Which is exactly what you'd predict from the theory of evolution. Natural selection is an iterative process that takes many generations to dramatically shift allele frequency. There's no reason to believe that we could observe it on human time scales.

    How do you like that for contradictory evidence?

    It's entirely consistent with evolution by natural selection. Not only consistent, but supportive. If speciation occured in just a few generations, which would be observable by human scientists, natural selection could not be the cause.

  12. Re:Can a creationist explain me? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First off, there is a lot of confusion about what "creationists" actually believe.

    If you tried believing only in what there is evidence to support there would be a lot less confusion.

    From a Christian standpoint, we've got two parts - primary doctrine, and secondary doctrine.

    See, you've got this entirely backwards here. If creation is fact, you should be able to infer the Christian doctrine from observations made in the real world. Forget about what's in the book, and just look at the world. Do your observations lead you to the same conclusion the book does?

    Everything else, regarding God's implementation, and the methods He used to actually perform the act of creation...that's secondary doctrine, and in any room of ten creationists, you'll have a dozen answers.

    That's because they're all making it up. If you ask a room of biologists about the actual method by which speciation occured, you'll get one answer. Evolution by natural selection. That's because that's where the evidence actually leads.

  13. Re:Debate? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 1

    Any good critical thinker will change his mind when presented with contradictory evidence. But no such evidence exists. It's been 155 years since the Origin of Species was published, and not one observation has been made that contradicts evolution by means of natural selection. Every single observation made, including the discovery of DNA, has reinforced this basic idea.

  14. Re:Debate? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And how is that worse than never exposing these people to any contradictory information at all?

  15. Re:Debate? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 2

    Anyone with a web browser can see the falsity (indeed the sheer inanity) of Ham's claims

    They can, but probably won't. How many of Ham's congregation do you think have read talk origins? Why would they, when Ham has all the answers?

    So how do you get them to even listen to opposing arguments? This debate is a good way. Even if these people are coming just to see Ham speak, they have to listen to Nye in order to evaluate Ham's performance. In the process, some of them might realize that evolution isn't as crazy as they've been told.

    Yes, it gives Ham a platform. You know what, he already had a platform. There is no downside to this debate. Nobody who isn't already a true believer is going to be swayed by Ham.

  16. Re:Debate? on Watch Bill Nye and Ken Ham Clash Over Creationism Live · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It will be a complete waste of time. Mr. Ham isn't there to change his opinion of anything.

    It's not about convincing Ham. It's about exposing Ham's congregation to actual arguments. If fundie parents sit down and watch this with their kids, the kids might come away with a few new ideas. That's a good thing.

  17. Re:Longer and Longer Shelf-Lives on Why Games Should Be In the Public Domain · · Score: 1

    Hardware performance has never been an issue in relation to quality gameplay. No, you couldn't do GTAV on an Apple II. But you could do Roadwar 2000, and that's actually a better game.

  18. Re:They should call it an anti-retention device on Virtual Boss Keeps Workers On a Short Leash · · Score: 3, Funny

    You misspelled coprolite.

  19. Re:Worse is better on The JavaScript Juggernaut Rolls On · · Score: 2

    Funny, "worse is better" describes the phenomenon in your signature as well.

  20. Awkward and Creepy? on Startup Out of MIT Promises Digital Afterlife — Just Hand Over Your Data · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, at least they can recreate the readership of /.

  21. Re:Federal Analog Act? on How the Web Makes a Real-Life Breaking Bad Possible · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It should also be noted that these and other "designer" drugs are not very enjoyable. The reality is that all the "good" drugs (relatively harmless, few unpleasant side effects) are either illegal or heavily taxed and subject to production and distribution monopolies.

    We've only scratched the surface of what's possible. You're right, many of the current "research chemicals" are worse than their natural counterparts. JWH is absolutely less fun and more harmful than THC. Whatever they're passing around on blotter these days is no match for real LSD.

    But for that matter, LSD was an unknown research chemical once. And it's at least as good as any natural psychedelic. I have it on good authority that MXE, discussed in the article, is more enjoyable than Ketamine. At this point we don't know what the side effects are, but it's possible that it's safe.

    There are receptors in our brain that we don't even know what they bind. The receptors that we do know the ligands of, have allosteric sites that could bind novel chemicals. The drugs we know of could be improved upon, we don't know until we try.

    So yes, don't take "spice" or bath salts. But don't be surprised if something new and amazing comes out of these basement labs either.

  22. Re:Can someone please kill the fucker on Quentin Tarantino Vs. Gawker: When Is Linking Illegal For Journalists? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Advocating anything is protected by the First Amendment. Advocacy is speech.

  23. Re:Easy solution on US Forces Coursera To Ban Students From Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria · · Score: 1

    I've got an even easier solution. The US government should obey the First Amendment. Education is speech, and the US government is prohibited from restricting it.

  24. Re:so what about all my old devices? on Old-school Wi-Fi Is Slowing Down Networks, Cisco Says · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mobile equipment which only takes 802.11b was probably obsolete years ago.

    Obsolete is a meaningless term. Why replace something that is still as functional as the day it was made?

  25. Re:First amendment on DOJ Announces New Methods For Reporting National Security Requests · · Score: 2

    Whether the First Amendment is absolute or not is irrelevant. This is exactly the sort of abuse of power the First Amendment was intended to protect us against. If the government can stop us from discussing factual details about policy, the First Amendment means nothing at all.