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User: cerniagigante

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Comments · 23

  1. nice but somewhat old idea on A New Process Turns Sewage Into Crude Oil (newatlas.com) · · Score: 1

    People have been burning dung for fuel since the paleolithic.

  2. ellenistan on Man Arrested In Greece For "Blasphemous" Facebook Page · · Score: 1

    The Greeks had better spend their law enforcement powers to catch tax evaders, not faith evaders.

  3. Re:Religions are generally false on Pakistan's PM Demands International Blasphemy Laws From UN · · Score: 1

    "The earth is warming because Hell is getting closer" that is most likely wrong (although a scientifically minded would choose "unproven" rather than wrong), but would you argue with the Hell is getting closer because the earth is warming?

  4. The real threat on Booted From Airplane For Wearing Anti-TSA T-shirt · · Score: 1

    I presume this was nothing compared to what his wife did to him later.

  5. Re:It would... on Egyptians Find New Ways To Get Online · · Score: 1

    You're right, we all long for the brilliant competence of Bush, Rumsfeld and Rice. Very smart people indeed. Let's hope Palin comes in and puts some competence back.

  6. C64 is more Scientology than Baptism on Greed, Zealotry, and the Commodore 64 · · Score: 1

    your religious analogy needs some work as a ZX Spectrum I always saw the C64 with a mix of envy and skepticism: true that it did represent the superiority of America's technological power over good-old Europe (and the sprites were really cool), but the ingenuity it took Sinclair and the ZX programmers to squeeze so much in so little and for something a kid could afford made it the true believer's choice (while C64 was for the rich hollywood stars who needed to distinguish themselves from the crowds).

  7. Re:Abandon all your cash on Estonian Economist Suggests Abandoning Cash · · Score: 1

    imaginary numbers do exist in finance: they call them subprime mortgages in banking jargon.

  8. Re:Science on Sir Isaac Newton, Alchemist · · Score: 1

    homeopathy is not healing method, it's a tax on the mentally impaired who go to a pharmacy and buy sugar pills. i fail to see any spiritual endeavour (expect for the marketing gurus behind it).

  9. Re:Oh, I'm shocked to learn this on Sir Isaac Newton, Alchemist · · Score: 1

    i think the lecture took place in Canada. ps: Why did you stop at Mexicans what about Mayans, Guatemalans, Guaranyans, Quechuans, Incans, Aymarans, Mapuches, Inuit, etc.? They're American too.

  10. what will Sarah Palin do with them? on Solar Power On the White House · · Score: 1

    use them as shooting targets?

  11. Re:Dirty Move on Italian MEP Wants To Eliminate Anonymity On the Internet · · Score: 1

    You don't get it. And that's good, because if you did understand it, you would be an Italian, living under the freely elected neofascist government of Silvio Berlusconi. That's the whole point of this law. The Italian right-wingoes (best Eurofriends of former USA president George Bush, but the way, for their anticommie, antiarab and antidarkguys instincts) are on the move to protect themselves from all those skeletons in the closet.

  12. what about carbon capture via phone-book schemes? on Canada's Largest Cities Seeing the End of the Phone Book · · Score: 1

    atmosphere CO2 -> feeds trees -> feed paper plants -> feed phone-book production -> stored in houses/underground

  13. the French like doing it as well. on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    Anglophones are not the only people afflicted by inconsistent spelling. The Francophones have their lot of trouble as well. "La Dictée" is something any French-speaking kid is tortured with in schools to redress the failings of their tongue's orthography, yet, with all probabilities a French is bound to make spelling mistakes as abundant as North Americans do. There is no strict equivalent of the "spelling bees" in France, but there is "La Dictée" by Bernard Pivot, whereby he recited the text on TV for the French to write the text and then the correction was done live for everybody to check their results. Same idea but in a more "egalité"-rian spirit. Also there are spelling championships, which make the "Scripps Bee" pale in comparison, but more directed to adults and open to all nationalities (not only French natives).

  14. Re:Spelling contests on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    So you think Eurovision is more fun?

  15. Re:Bees are nonsense on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    That's harsh. I thought school punishment was reserved for believing the Selection of Species is the only valid scientific explanation for our existence.

  16. Re:They are willing to do the needful on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    They do indeed use "needful", but that doesn't stop them from spelling "necessary" correctly.

  17. Re:According to the latest article in "Duh" Magazi on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    You don't get it. You, not they, have the problem. In fact, if those who speak intelligibly don't get the support line job. The phone people are carefully selected so as to deter rude North American and British customers from abusing them, by confusing and bewildering said customers.

  18. Re:According to the latest article in "Duh" Magazi on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    Funny, I thought all immigrant's children were forced to read Afferbeck Lauder, as part of the "catching-up with the locals" curriculum. But again clichés abound and, as a Strine colleague of mine told me, we (the Northern hemisphere lot) have a tendency to glorify the southerners for their oddities more than they would like it.

  19. Re: who's Jensen? on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    Could you give a precise reference please? Or at least Jensen's first name? (It's the Danish equivalent of Johnston... not easy to track down.) I'm interested in what you wrote.

  20. Re:According to the latest article in "Duh" Magazi on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    This makes German culture an Asian one then.

  21. Re:According to the latest article in "Duh" Magazi on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    It seems then that while a nonnative accords the verb to the grammatical object (lot), a native goes for the intended object (errors). In an acquired skill (in this case English as a nonmother tongue) the tendency is that of emphasizing more the technical aspects, whereas "naturals" (English-tongue natives) go for the contents, confiding that their peers will "interpolate" the mistakes and see the meaning through anyway.

  22. Re:According to the latest article in "Duh" Magazi on Why Are Indian Kids So Good At Spelling? · · Score: 1

    Indeed, in Britain Indian kids prefer outplaying the natives at Cricket.

  23. Re: you need just a bit more than common sense on Where the Global Warming Data Is · · Score: 1

    Since your common sense is so good, I hope you can concentrate for some lines and read (understand!) the following. When you put the Champagne bottle in the ice, the bottles temperature decreases. This doesn't mean that the whole system is not increasing its amount of "heat". In fact, most of the heat brought by the Champagne (and the room) goes *first* in melting the ice in the bucket and for a while (as long as there is ice) the temperature of the bucket is roughly 0C (32F). Once *all*the*ice* is melted then the temperature starts rising. What's happening now with the Earth is (roughly speaking) the same phenomenon. Temperatures ought to increase, but the polar ice caps act as a shock absorber. In fact, data (in all collecting centers) show that the polar ice cap is retreating quite fast. Get it? Enjoy the Champagne while it lasts.