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User: janimal

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  1. Re:New boss, same as the old boss. on New Pope Selected · · Score: 1

    There were replies to this above. JPII was actually quite progressive, as far as Popes go. Judging his progressiveness based solely on the way the church has handled homosexuality or contraception is quite a narrow view. Consider that popes before JPII didn't venture outside the Vatican very often, didn't address the faithful in their own language and didn't so openly help bring about the fall of the most dangerous and destructive evil empire in history (USSR: 30M+ intentionally starved citizens + countless political murders hell-bent on eliminating the thinking classes).
    You're griping that he didn't react to gays quickly enough? Give him a break. The guy had more important things on his mind, like saving the friggin' world, where he had some ground-breaking achievements. You want to judge JPII? You must be out of your mind.

  2. Re:Aside from patent carping, has anyone tried thi on Mobile Sharing: "Bezos Beep" Vs. Smartphone Bump · · Score: 1

    Phone 1: Hello, how do you do?
    Phone 2: How do you do.
    Phone 1: Shake?
    Phone 2: Shake.
    Phone 1: Let's get down to business.
    Phone 2: Give it to me.
    Phone 1: I just sent you an email, can you please check it?
    Phone 2: Ah, got it. Wow, it's 10MB.
    Phone 1: Yep.
    Phone 2: Thanks, see you.

    No bandwidth necessary. You can do it with text to voice and voice recognition and still fit 10MB in 20 seconds.

  3. Re:Maybe FedEx will deliver them on Canadian Space Agency Shows Off Prototype Rovers · · Score: 1

    Distance.

  4. Re:No Surprise There on Apple Exits "Green Hardware" Certification Program · · Score: 1

    So, if you want to sell to large orgs, you need to pay a license fee to some NGO. Sounds like a racket. Personally, I don't believe the current "green" computers are that green. If you think stuff gets recycled after you toss it, you might be in for a surprise. The only practical green computing move I've seen is one where instead of a 500W desktop I can do with a 60W laptop.

  5. Re:No Surprise There on Apple Exits "Green Hardware" Certification Program · · Score: 1

    Has anyone tried to pry the battery from the case with a spatula? It might be quicker than unscrewing one and might not rupture it. Although it will break some wiring.

  6. Hello Osborne Effect! on Google Unveils Nexus 7 Tablet, Nexus Q 'Social Streaming Device' · · Score: 1

    Now, why would I want ICS on my current or next Android phone?

  7. Re:Confusion reigns supreme on Georgia Apple Store Refuses To Sell iPad To Iranian-American Teen · · Score: 1

    Does that mean that if a man walks into a gun shop and asks for a rifle, so that he can go shoot his neighbour and then makes good on his promise, the gun shop won't have problems? What you are saying may be true when the transaction is anonymous, but when it comes to big crimes, it gets a little more iffy when you knowingly aid the perpetrator in his/her plan.
    I didnt RTFA or talk to the sales clerk, but if he had reason to believe she was going to commit a crime, he better be worried about helping out. It doesn't matter if the girl told him what she was going to do, or implied it, or remarked offhand to someone else. To see my point, just try an offhand remark to a friend about a bomb in your suitcase at an airport. If security staff overhear it, you will be in a world of trouble and this isn't just in the USA.

  8. Re:has no user-replaceable parts at all on Analyzing the New MacBook Pro · · Score: 1

    Yea.. N900 battery not fall out. USB port fall out. Shitty quality. Not buying Nokia any more.

  9. Re:Oh come on... on The Shortage of Women In IT · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The primates argument is a strong one against social conditioning. My wife and I both believe that women are genetically less apt to like certain types of work than men. Her IQ approaches a mensa measured 200 and she used to be far better at maths than I ever was, but she couldn't care less for maths or computers. She places the reason for it in that she's more interested in things she can directly apply to her life and to people she interacts with. Evidence of the superficiality of her not liking computers is that as soon as computers became a social tool, she began taking an interest in them more. She has always pushed for a better smartphone, and now she's doing a .com startup. She just isn't doing it for technical reasons, but for the interaction that she can get.

    I'm the opposite: I enjoy making airplane models, or thinking up abstract things I think it helps me to understand the world, but she's right to say that I don't work at the level, where the result of my work has a direct and immediate effect on life. This post, for example is a veritable waste of my practical time.

    Our conclusion is that women tend to fields that somehow include a large amount of social interaction and pragmatism, while men are perfectly fine doing things in which they can be alone and where the practicality is more removed (although not necessarily absent). More than that: women can relax in highly social work, while men are more able to relax in loner work. The ability to relax and enjoy doing something is the biggest indicator of how we are wired, as opposed to conditioned, to behave.

    IT is a lot about working alone. Even though you work in teams in IT, the large majority of guys who go into IT do not like to interact with others (the typical developer drives me nuts, when I try to get him to understand how what he's doing is practical). When I build IT teams, I find that I need both social types and loner types, with an emphasis on universality of each. The team ends up consisting of someone who speaks business and is responsible for communication and a team of folks who prefer to work semi-alone and develop based on the documented requirements. It just so happens, that it's easier to find girls to fit the business analyst role than the lone developer role. The girl analysts do like IT projects, but they like them for different reasons than the guys. The girl's ability to think logically, work hard for their money and like the IT systems we produce tends to be similar to guys, but with different emphasis.

    I think the resulting small amount of women in IT is simply because IT requires less social interaction than project management or sales. I find that women are no less driven, intelligent, and capable than men. They just gravitate to more social types of work, which IT often isn't.

  10. Sputtering bunsen burner on At Long Last, a Private Cargo Spaceship Takes Off (Video) · · Score: 1

    I'm assuming the noise is more due to the mic cutting out than actual sound that the rocket made. Are there mics that can capture the roar, so it can be played back in DTS? :)

  11. Re:Tesla on Disentangling Facts From Fantasy In the World of Edison and Tesla · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure his over the air power transmittion would eliminate TV or radio. It was supposed to be thorugh capacitance vibrations. Transmitting information via an electromagnetically vibrating atmosphere might hit the same hurdles as ethernet over power lines. Off the top of my head I don't see any reason other than business that his towers of power wouldn't work along side of radio communication. But then again, I almost failed electromagnetics.

  12. Re:Facebook on Golden Age of Silicon Valley Is Over With Facebook IPO · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Consider FB somewhat like waiving your miranda rights. It really doesn't matter how careful you are about what you say, because you really have not control about how it will be used. If push comes to shove, anything you say can and will (not might and may) be used against you. You can never really escape this, so this post is also subject to a potential thought policing. Nevertheless, relinquishing control of your communication is something best avoided, so you can have a hope in controlling how it is used if you do get into trouble.

    Life is like a box of dildos, you never know which one they'll use on you.

  13. Re:In Italy? on Supervolcano Drilling Plan Gets Go-Ahead · · Score: 1

    For me, my children, my grandchildren, my great grandchildren, and their great grandchildrent, and many many more... yes.

  14. Re:Interesting technology on Microsoft-Funded Startup Aims To Kill BitTorrent Traffic · · Score: 1

    Yes. I didn't last too long on the arcades. A Mortal Combat match against a buddy never really lasted 15 minutes. I can't remember if you could just take your time and not have it time out, but that wasn't the goal exactly. I remember the games being short enough, that the depletion of quarters were more of a buzzkill than the game was a buzz. If you got good enough to spend 15 mins at a game, you probably spent a good deal of money to be good enough to do that.

    Anyway, looks like I got modded -1 disagree up there.

  15. Re:Interesting technology on Microsoft-Funded Startup Aims To Kill BitTorrent Traffic · · Score: 0

    Dude, I live in a slavic country now, but I've lived in Canada as a kid, and I really haven't noticed games to be too expensive in slavic country. You want to see expensive gaming? Remember the 80s? It cost a full quarter to play for one minute at the local arcade. And NES games cost $80. This is all in 1987 dollars. Those were expensive games.

    Just to give you some perspective, when I was a teenager, it took me half a year of bagging groceries at a local supermarket to collect up $1500 to buy myself a windsurfing rig.. a beat up used one. Now that's an expensive hobby, and you're complaining that games are expensive? You must be joking! Get a life and stop pirating, because nobody's forcing you to do it.

  16. Re:Vehicle Use? on MIT Researchers Invent 'Super Glass' · · Score: 2

    They don't actually fly through the windshield. They take it with them. It's messy.

  17. They have the problem ass backwards. on Study Suggests the Number-Line Concept Is Not Intuitive · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, numbers are abstract. I'm not sure how a number line representation, which can take real shape would be an intuitive extension of an artificial concept. It isn't. Actually, it's the other way around, I would think. The number lines help us understand numbers and it's numbers that aren't intuitive.

  18. Re:Anyone who has ever taught math knows this on Study Suggests the Number-Line Concept Is Not Intuitive · · Score: 1

    The guy said "math is math" not "math is objective fact", and that there is "right and wrong", which did not imply moral issues. Yes, math is an abstract set of axioms and rules, but by golly, when you do a proof, it's either right or wrong; it's the implications that may be elusive.

  19. Re:rising tide floats all boats on U.S. Suspends JEEP Aid · · Score: 2

    Jeez, at those rates you can get Europeans too. They're closer to timezonewise to the West as well.

  20. Re:Another on Posting Photos of Olympics Could Land You In Court · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sounds like the music and film industry. Soon the IOC is going to start complaining that revenues are down, because people in the city see the results for free in newspapers and on the internet and therefore don't feel the need to watch the games with all the adverts. So results will become copyright. Mark my word.

  21. Re: Sexy? on MacBook Pro Fragrance Created · · Score: 1

    Heh. :) My wife dresses me. She was there with me the whole time and she really liked the muscular twins that helped her out. And yes, I'll put on a pink shirt if she says I look good in it.
    Actually, the quality of the A&F stuff is very high. 5 years on, and today I'm wearing one of the shirts I bout there for the.. cough... 80 quid. It looks good as new and is probably one of my best made shirts (compared with Tommy Hillfiger, Polo, and some no-names).

  22. Re:I don't want a combination fridge/TV set on IKEA Announces Furniture With Integrated TV, Speakers, and Blu-ray · · Score: 2

    This is a luxury apartment. Fully furnished. It's 45m square, so it's small, but it has over 20 light fixtures in the living room and 50+ in the bedroom (there are dimmable LED stars in the ceiling). The entertainment centers are built into the walls and you could only guess where the fridge is if given pictures. It's in good shape. Between tenants I prefer to invite my friends to the party pad instead of my house, because its NICER. My tenants were: a corporate real estate buff, who left a full bottle of Remy Martin XO cognac, a publicly traded company CEO, and now some expat Americans on the up take. The apartment rarely sees more than 3 interested parties before we sign the lease. But... you'll have to take my word for it :)

  23. Re: Sexy? on MacBook Pro Fragrance Created · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My thought on reading the headline was that this was a scent that Apple would drop into their new laptops. Not a bad idea, I thought.
    This reminds me of my first visit to the Abercrombie & Fitch store in London. They spritzed the clothing in there with their perfume. And the hot girls that helped me pick the clothes also had the scent on. The experience ingrained the smell into my brain as the smell of "sexy".
    Smell association is a powerful device. If you got Apple fans to associate Apple gear with a specific scent, they would crave the product if they just smelled the store around the corner.

    But the smell of plastic and aluminum? Boring.

  24. Re:Already tried on IKEA Announces Furniture With Integrated TV, Speakers, and Blu-ray · · Score: 2

    Says the guy, who probably slashed his fingers taking out ISA, PCI or AGP cards from his custom made tower PC.

  25. Re:Begging the question on IKEA Announces Furniture With Integrated TV, Speakers, and Blu-ray · · Score: 1

    When I was 15 the best TV you could get was a cylindrical Trinitron. All the other TVs sucked compared to it. Do you think most of my friend's parents bought Trinitrons?