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User: RoadNotTaken

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  1. Re:Why it was made big on The 'Back' Button the Most Clicked Firefox Icon · · Score: 1

    This is one reason I'm not crazy about the over-use of AJAX we're seeing everywhere. It looks cool but often breaks the normal flow of navigation in ways that aren't intuitive. I'll stick with CGI, thanks.

  2. Try explaining programming... on Do Scientists Understand the Public? · · Score: 1
    Have you ever tried explaining a programming concept to someone that doesn't code? It's hard.

    Explaining science is hard too.

  3. Re:Amazing on BP Says "Top Kill" Operation Has Failed · · Score: 1

    It's like operating on a patient and going 'Trust me, I'm a doctor'.

    Isn't that exactly what doctors do? Patients die. Shit happens. We're only human and our power is limited.

  4. Re:No closed OSes ever?? on FSF Response To Steve Jobs's Letter · · Score: 1
    OK well how about a refrigerator that can access recipe sites via the web. Or your car's navigation system that can get your routes from your desktop via the web. These things are coming. Would you argue that all of these devices should allow the user to have full access to the entire web and all the problems that may come with it? Do you want to get a virus on your refrigerator?

    Now, I think whether or not a phone is such an appliance is an open and interesting question. But surely you think there are SOME devices that should be closed and only have access to certain protocols/sites.

    Steve Jobs is in favor of closing off one device that has numerous other important functions, not the whole internet....

  5. No closed OSes ever?? on FSF Response To Steve Jobs's Letter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    He's implying that no-one should access the web with a closed OS under any circumstance. That seems ridiculous. There are many items that may benefit from web-access that don't need full/open access. I think right now people are arguing over whether or not a phone is such an item. Personally, I don't want root access to my phone. I'm happy to give up full freedom on my phone in exchange for it NEVER failing to do what I need it to do.

  6. Re:Mac mini HTPC = perfect solution on One In Eight To Cut Cable and Satellite TV In 2010 · · Score: 1
    Yeah the keyboard might be the weakest link. I don't find range to be an issue, but there is a slight latency and I get a lot more typos for some reason. It would be a pain to use for extensive coding or word-processing, but for e-mail/chat/etc it's fine.

    I use an Adesso SlimTouch which has a built-in touchpad, which was the killer-feature I was looking for. Overall I'm very happy with it. It's a lot like using a laptop because I can sit-back on the couch and use it without needing a separate mouse (which requires a table/desk of some sort).

  7. Re:My setup: Better than a TV with a TiVo. on One In Eight To Cut Cable and Satellite TV In 2010 · · Score: 1

    mod up

  8. Mac mini HTPC = perfect solution on One In Eight To Cut Cable and Satellite TV In 2010 · · Score: 1
    I hooked up my Mac mini to my 42" flatscreen and this has basically replaced cable and a normal computer for me. I sit on my couch with my wireless keyboard and either surf the web, skype, or watch Netflix/Hulu/etc.

    Interestingly everyone that comes over and sees the set-up wants it for themselves. It still takes *a little* geek savvy to install a system like this, but not for long. Once people get more exposure to this sort of thing they'll never look back.

    It's much more enjoyable to watch TV-shows via Hulu/Netflix than it is once a week with long adverts, anyway.

  9. Re:Tablets are dead on Microsoft's Touted iPad Rival Courier Becomes Less Than Vapor · · Score: 1

    um, maybe not word processing...

  10. I for one... on Lego Robot Solves Bigger and Harder Rubik's Cubes · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...welcome our Lego overlords.

  11. Seems pretty consistent to me on California's Santa Clara County Bans Happy Meal Toys · · Score: 0
    With banning cartoon-style advertising of cigarettes. How would people feel if they started giving away free MP3s with purchases of booze (or whatever 21-year-olds are into)...

    I think people need to relax, they're not robbing you of any sort of personal liberty, they're just toning down advertising for products you shouldn't be consuming anyway. It's in the best interest of the whole world.

  12. Re:The reality is... on Review of HTC Desire As Alternative To iPhone · · Score: 1

    Car analogy: an old Honda can basically do everything a Ferrari can do. They essentially have all the same features. But one does it with style and feels good to use. Also, regarding your Treo. MP3 players were around for years before iPods, and we all know how that played out. Just accept it, form matters. Function isn't the only issue.

  13. Re:It is not a code! There is no crack! on DNA Cancer Codes Cracked By International Effort · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're right - that's probably where it started! That said, codon refers to the only (that I can think of) true code in biology. The other potential codes just mentioned (DNA methylation, histone mods, etc) are really more biochemical features that interact with proteins to regulate gene expression. The triplet code (code) is basically universal. TAA means STOP to every organism on the planet from worms to fish to bacteria to man. Histone mods and DNA methylation matter, but they're much more specific to particular cells/organisms.

  14. Re:It is not a code! There is no crack! on DNA Cancer Codes Cracked By International Effort · · Score: 2, Informative

    Let me follow-up with a car analogy: Imagine you found the blueprints for a car that had a slight problem (say occasional aberrant acceleration, for example). Sequencing cancer genomes is akin to *finding* these blueprints. But it gets worse, the blueprints are in a different language and have no idea what 70% of the parts in the plans actually DO. Yes - the blueprint is helpful. Very helpful. In fact there's not much you can do without it. But it doesn't immediately help you FIX the problem. The only feature of DNA that is truly a *code* that was had to be *cracked* was the triplet code for amino acids and that was cracked by Khorana, Holley and Nirenberg in the '60s.

  15. It is not a code! There is no crack! on DNA Cancer Codes Cracked By International Effort · · Score: 1

    World: please stop calling DNA sequences "codes" that can be "cracked". There is no encryption going on here and, if you really want to use that metaphor than what they're doing is not cracking (decrypting) the code, but determining its sequence. Sequencing 4 cancer genomes is an enormous achievement that will provide countless biological insights, but nothing was "cracked". I'm a biologist, but aren't there cryptographers out there that are annoyed by this terminology???

  16. Re:Am i missing something? on Japanese Guts Are Made For Sushi · · Score: 1

    It is believed that you're inocculated with your gut microbes at birth (largely from your mother) and this community shifts and stabilizes during your first year. More studies are needed on this sort of thing (and many are ongoing right now) but it is thought that the community of gut microbes you acquire can be quite robust and resist colonization by other, competing microbes. So, it's not preposterous to think that a certain population might be more likely to get colonized by a certain species of microbes than others. That said, if you lived in japan for a generation or two, or ate lots of sushi for a few generations there's no reason to think you wouldn't develop the same type of microbes in your gut.

  17. Re:Your logic is flawed. on Is OpenOffice.org a Threat? Microsoft Thinks So · · Score: 1

    I really wish I could disagree with you, but you're probably right on some level. To me, WinAmp peaked with v2.78. Office peaked with v2003. Photoshop and Illustrator peaked around ~CS1 or earlier. As soon as the open-source apps catch up to those feature-sets, I'm happy and can finally stop buying (pirating) the commercial versions. But you're probably right about new (younger) users and their new expectations about what hardware/software can/should do. As far as I'm personally concerned, though, as soon as OO can copy 99% of the features in Office 2003 (close, but not quite there yet) I'll never look back. And, I've got my breath held for Inkscape, etc.

  18. The reason why it's a threat is... on Is OpenOffice.org a Threat? Microsoft Thinks So · · Score: 1

    ...because MS Office can't continue adding new features forever. They'll try, but eventually their software will plateau and stabilize into an Office suite that has all of the features anybody would ever want. And then it will take OO a few years to duplicate all of those features and then it'll be a real threat. OO will always be a few years behind, until MS Office stops changing.