Slashdot Mirror


User: OhPlz

OhPlz's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
1,509
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 1,509

  1. Re:Let the market decide. on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 1

    Sales and gas taxes aren't levied by the feds. My state doesn't even have a sales tax. In theory, the gas tax goes to fund the roads. If there are no roads, the gas stations probably wouldn't be selling a whole lot of gas. With no roads, the gas stations probably wouldn't be able to get gas themselves.

    You're reaching for analogies but they're not there. Your gas tax example might explain why some of us now pay "pole fees" when we pay for electricity, but they don't justify taxing a form of energy into oblivion under the feel good fantasy of clean air.

    I'm on my second hybrid vehicle and there are a number of EVs in my town. The market can work if we let it. Solar isn't popular in my area because as I mentioned, it hasn't worked out for the few that have tried it. The last thing we need the feds doing is mandating it or using taxes to effectively mandate it.

    It should be the people's right to choose. The pollution argument is weak since we've all been forced to pay more for pollution controls on newer vehicles, had to give up our light bulbs, etc. It's never enough. Why not skip directly to population control? Would even that make you happy, or would you still say it's not enough?

  2. Re:Let the market decide. on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 1

    Paying for things like roads or fire protection is not punitive. Forcing people to purchase things that they would not otherwise purchase is punitive. The feds never would have been given the authority to tax if anyone thought that power would be abused this way. This isn't by consent of the governed. We're becoming subjects instead of citizens. Regardless of your political viewpoint, that's not a good thing.

  3. Re:21 Gigawats? on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 1

    The only buildings I've ever seen in the northeastern US with roof hatches are commercial buildings. I'm not sure if the building code even allows them for single family homes. I'd be surprised if they did. Sounds unsafe. Someone might fall.

    In this area, people use extendable snow rakes or they get someone to climb up on the roof and shovel it off. This past winter, the snow was up to people's roofs, so clearing the roof off was more and more difficult as the storms kept happening.

    I'm not against solar, but we need to trial it in different regions and climates before going all in. The early adopters in my state have soured it somewhat because after fighting with the zoning boards and utilities, they never recouped the costs even though the people pitching them said they would. We also have utilities refusing to do hook-ups claiming the infrastructure in the area can't take the additional energy.

    Now we've also got spammers on phone, email, and TV pushing solar. Anyone trying to do it right is going to be lumped in with those scam artists. Not good for credibility.

  4. Re:Let the market decide. on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 1

    Are you agreeing or disagreeing?

    If you're going to use punitive taxation to force the market to "decide" on something, that's not democracy. What next? I get taxed extra if I don't vote Democrat or don't belong to a labor union? If people don't like the system of government that we're supposed to have, the appropriate solution is to amend the constitution, not to grossly pervert the intentionally limited functions of the federal government to get around its intentional restrictions.

    This has little to do with the topic du jour at this point. The real question is:

    Who still wants to live in a free country?

  5. Re:Google did it on Apple Testing Service That Allows Siri to Answer Calls and Transcribe Voicemail · · Score: 1

    I'm not a Google Voice user, but I'd be surprised if at least some of the functionality wasn't already there. Some of those are "obvious" features. The only difference I can see is that Apple has a name for their assistant and Google does not.

    In a few months we'll probably see a story where Microsoft is implementing a system where Cortana will take your voicemail and transcribe it.

  6. Re:Let the market decide. on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 1

    Police and military aren't part of the market system since they're functions of the government. Energy is part of the market system, you have choices. For now.

  7. Re:21 Gigawats? on Clinton Plan To Power Every US Home With Renewables By 2027 Is Achievable · · Score: 0

    Good for him. There are a lot of older buildings in the north east where this just isn't going to work. This last winter, it was too much for roof rakes and you couldn't hire a crew to clear a roof because they were all booked weeks out, and then it would just snow again anyway. Get another winter like that and now you've not only got snow load but also the weight of solar panels.

  8. Google did it on Apple Testing Service That Allows Siri to Answer Calls and Transcribe Voicemail · · Score: 3, Informative

    Isn't this basically Google Voice? Google records the message, transcribes it to text.

  9. Re:HAHAHAHA! on Will Autonomous Cars Be the Insurance Industry's Napster Moment? · · Score: 1

    Geometry changes, especially with snow and ice. Last winter, Boston made a bunch of roads one way only because the snow was so deep there was only one lane. Most roads and driveways were impossible to see around requiring people to inch forward and hope they didn't get hit. There are so many things to consider, you can only write so much code and slap on so many sensors.

    You're getting close to requiring the thing to be sentient. IMO, getting all that right is beyond our current capabilities. Not to harp on traction control, but many vehicles have a kill switch for it. Why? Because it does the wrong things in some conditions. Granted it's usually a dumb system that mostly just reacts to wheel spin, but that's what we'll be saying about self driving. Well, that's because it's just using LIDAR and GENIUS-TECH. If it had GENIUS-TECH-2 it'd be better. But that's why we still have this steering wheel..

    We'll get more assistive technologies like lane control and automatic braking, but I think it's pure fantasy to think that full automation is something we'll be enjoying any time soon. I'd put it well beyond a decade. Probably beyond most of our lifetimes. Now excuse me, I must be off in my Mr Fusion powered anti-grav car.

  10. Re:HAHAHAHA! on Will Autonomous Cars Be the Insurance Industry's Napster Moment? · · Score: 1

    Did I mention that we don't require a permit for firearms for open carry?

  11. Re:HAHAHAHA! on Will Autonomous Cars Be the Insurance Industry's Napster Moment? · · Score: 2

    There are conditions where it helps to have some speed, especially climbing hills. You also don't want to be riding the brakes on icy surfaces. One numb-nut does that, and next thing you know, everyone is going off the road. Much simpler traction control systems haven't even perfected this yet, let alone how to drive when the signs and lane markers are covered by snow and ice. Maybe self driving cars will be a warmer climate thing long before it's common in the north.

  12. Re:HAHAHAHA! on Will Autonomous Cars Be the Insurance Industry's Napster Moment? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The state doesn't require it, but the banks do if you have a loan on the car. Same thing if you're leasing. That probably accounts for a large portion of those carrying insurance. I tended to carry insurance anyway even when the vehicle was paid off because the risk versus the cost made sense. The state can require individual motorists to have insurance if they do cause damage and are found to not have the finances to cover the loss.

    This whole topic seems silly though. Driving is way too complicated for cars to be driving themselves anytime soon. This is going to be one of those things that's always ten years away.

  13. Re:HAHAHAHA! on Will Autonomous Cars Be the Insurance Industry's Napster Moment? · · Score: 3, Informative

    New Hampshire does not require auto insurance.

  14. Re:Sounds great! on Munich Planning Highway System For Cyclists · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Screw that. When are those lazy anarchist pedestrians going to start paying sidewalk and crosswalk tax? And when are they going to have registration plates so we can report jaywalkers? I'm getting rather tired of people thinking they're just free to move about anyway they want to. Don't even get me started on adults offering piggy-back rides. Clearly unsafe. Also, peds should have to wear belts and helmets and hi-viz.

  15. The upgrade process asks you if you want "express settings" or if you want to make choices. If you're wanting to keep certain apps as defaults, you go the non-express upgrade route. It takes a few minutes at most. The only reason for Mozilla to be worried is that MS has the new lightweight browser while Mozilla now has the bloated piece of crap. The only problem with MS's new Edge browser is the lack of ad block.

  16. Premature deaths? Are we arguing the 2nd amendment or abortion? I'm going to ignore that bit of your reply since it's insanely inappropriate given the left's stance on the sanctity of life.

    You're a bit mixed up. You mention the "legal landscape" and dive right into murders and mass shootings. Those things aren't legal. Those things also often happen in supposed gun free zones. I would argue that leaving large groups of people in an area and eliminating a means of self defense is the bigger problem. It's been said a million times but it's true, guns don't kill people. People kill people. You're vilifying the wrong thing.

    We had an incident right down the street from my home. A guy held up a convenience store in the early morning hours. The clerk had a concealed weapon and defended himself. The robber got away and the clerk was fired for violating company policy. He has a wife and children. The robberies had been happening for weeks with no sign of letting up, the police clueless. Maybe you want to sacrifice those people working in those conditions. I don't. He had every right to defend himself and get back to his family alive.

    This is why we can't have a middle ground. The opposition always speaks of this perfect society that would exist if not for guns. It's fantasy. People will find different ways to kill each other. We banned guns from planes and lost thousands of lives to zealots with box cutters. You're preaching fantasy while people are trying to get by in reality.

  17. The only thing holding back the US is the border between North and South Korea. The US is in compliance otherwise. Honestly, what options exist there? The US won't commit more troops, so it'd either have to put our current troops in danger or we'd have to pull out. If the US withdraws, that would likely entice North Korea to invade.

  18. Re:Everyone is overlooking a key point on Musk, Woz, Hawking, and Robotics/AI Experts Urge Ban On Autonomous Weapons · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but you're wrong. As an example, NRA is in favor of better mental health background checks. The trouble is, they're vilified to the point where people don't even care to know the facts and instead proceed on assumptions. NRA also spoke out against Internet "hunting" when someone wanted remotely operated triggers to shoot at captive animals. They may not go to the same extremes that the 2nd amendment objectors want, but they certainly allow for middle ground. Their mission is to protect the 2nd, they're not going to be in favor of things that lead to killing sprees if there's an agreeable way to minimize that risk without diminishing our right to bear arms.

    I'm not sure whose legislative agenda you're talking about. I'm not aware that either org tells its supporters one thing and says something else to legislators. The legislators themselves pay lip service to these special interests just as they do with the public, the unions, etc.

  19. Re:Everyone is overlooking a key point on Musk, Woz, Hawking, and Robotics/AI Experts Urge Ban On Autonomous Weapons · · Score: 1

    If you knew anything about the NRA you'd know that they only promote responsible use of firearms. Yes, you can neckbeard that an oxymoron, but at least half the voting population here still believes there are very important reasons why the right to bear arms needs to exist.

  20. Re:May as well ban rain on Musk, Woz, Hawking, and Robotics/AI Experts Urge Ban On Autonomous Weapons · · Score: 0

    As exemplified by gun free zones.

  21. There are already treaties banning the use of land mines. This was one of Princess Diana's causes. Of course, that only applies to nations or groups that honor treaties or international laws, and would require other nations to enforce the restriction if violated.

  22. Re:Just get diagnosed with ADHD and be done. on Pro Gamers To Be Tested For Doping · · Score: 1

    Are you suggesting that they don't actually have asthma? A significant percentage of the population has asthma, it's not unexpected that a significant number of pro cyclists would have it as well.

  23. Re:It's easier to ask for forgiveness than permiss on California Legislation May Allow First Responders To Take Out Drones · · Score: 3, Funny

    It was an undocumented drone flying over a sanctuary city.

  24. Re:$805M budget on Smithsonian Using Kickstart Campaign To Save Armstrong's Moon Suit · · Score: 2

    Probably impractical, but imagine if more things in government were funded at-will. Then the projects the people truly care about would receive funding. People could point to the things they helped accomplish rather than feeling like they're pissing their money away into pork projects and padding the wallets of the well connected puppet masters. A space suit today, maybe Mars tomorrow.

  25. Re:U.S, the land of the bullshit on Report: US Military Is Wasting Millions On Satellite Comms · · Score: 1

    The ER isn't going to treat someone for a non-emergent issue unless it's something quick. They're going to point the person to urgent care or a public health clinic or whatever the equivalent is for the area. If it actually is an emergency, guess what? The ER treats them. You seem to think you can go to the ER for a flu shot and they're required to give it to you. Go try that sometime, tell us how it goes. If the person needs to be stabilized (by your words), then that sure sounds like an emergency to me. If they didn't seek out care before it became an emergency, that's their own damn fault. Like I said, there are services available. You just have to look for them. That requires effort though and this being America, I know that's a lot to ask.

    What the "right-wing" doesn't want is to have clueless people like you destroying health care for those of us who realize that it is not actually broken.