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User: wytcld

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  1. Re:SLAPPed hard on Michael Mann Defamation Suit Against National Review Writer to Proceed · · Score: 3, Informative

    We look forward to your publication of the flaws you have discovered in Dr. Mann's math. Ah, but you can't publish them, because you're just making this stuff up. Or is it because every single reviewer for every scientific journal is a member of a deep conspiracy to undermine the fossil fuel industry because ... well if you have to ask you don't understand how these dark conspiracies work!

    Here's Mann's new book on The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars.

  2. Re:good on Michael Mann Defamation Suit Against National Review Writer to Proceed · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because it's an official meme of the Heartland Institute that scientific concern about radical climate change constitutes a "religion."

  3. Re:good on Michael Mann Defamation Suit Against National Review Writer to Proceed · · Score: 2, Informative

    The hockey stick has stood the test of time. The facts hold. The data continue to support it. Here's Mann recently, and discussion.

    Here are myths about the hockey stick debunked.

  4. FIRST sucks on Code.org: Give Us More H-1B Visas Or the Kids Get Hurt · · Score: 1

    I was talked into running a FIRST-based Jr. First Lego League Robotics club at my 3rd-grader's school. The materials provided were awful. For instance, the instructions suggested handing each kid a few Legos to put together, then having them talk about what feelings they had when gazing at them. Considering the high skills serious 3rd-grade Lego users have, they were immediately bored by the program materials and beginners-level kits provided. We ordered more advanced materials mid-stream, but it took them weeks to even ship them out right. They lost the order, then sent something else instead the second time around. FIRST puts on great airs, but they don't deliver much. There's no evidence they've put any serious thought or effort into it at all. It's just a vanity thing for Kamen. A disgrace, really.

  5. Re:first shot on Hearing Shows How 'Military-Style' Raid On Calif. Power Station Spooks U.S. · · Score: 1

    you should work on changing your nations behaviour to reduce the incentive for such raids

    That's the most bogus suggestion imaginable. There is no end to the number of "behavior changes" that I would require, as a leader of a group capable of such raids, once I knew that you were likely to make those changes to remove my "incentive for such raids." The very willingness to change a nation's behavior to avoid them is an infinite incentive to conduct and threaten to conduct them.

    My group is perfectly willing to cease threatening your power grid just as soon as you provide us with "justice" in the form of nuclear parity. You have nuclear bombs. We don't. Give us some of your bombs, and we'll have no incentive to continue threatening your power grid. We'll threaten your capital then instead. Far more satisfying to us.

  6. Re:Interesting, but I heard another tale on Who's Selling Credit Cards From Target? · · Score: 1

    If that's the case, that it's an extra chip in some of the scanners, how many other retailers use scanners from the same factory? Will it be Walmart's CC scans that get dumped on the market next time around?

  7. Re:Officials say? on Officials Say HealthCare.gov Site Now Performing Well · · Score: 1

    Then why to the rich from various countries with socialized medicine come to the US for treatment again?

    The rich from various countries go to various countries, including the US. There are thousands of different medical conditions. The best specialist for any particular condition can be anywhere in the world. Nobody's saying none of the doctors in America are first-rate.

    But life-expectancy in the US is lower than in our Western European peers with universal health care. So is the question, "What is the best system of medicine in terms of medical outcomes for billionaires?" Or "What is the best medical system in terms of medical outcomes for average citizens?"

    If you're a billionaire, the first question is entirely to the point. Because billionaires determine the agenda of the Republican Party, FOX News, and the Wall Street Journal, we're having this debate still. Our European peers, whatever their political and economic shortcomings, server average people better. As for billionaires, there's no question but that we've got more of them, that they're happy here, and that they mold our system to server them well.

  8. Re:Officials say? on Officials Say HealthCare.gov Site Now Performing Well · · Score: 1

    Young people are the poorest age group. Middle aged and older people are the wealthiest age groups. Why should relatively poor young folks continue to pay more and more and more to subsidize their relatively rich elders?

    Young people with the lowest income get insurance under Medicare for free under the ACA (unless you're in a state where the population was stupid enough to elect a governor who has blocked that out of meanness and spite). Those with slightly higher income get it with high subsidies, so it doesn't cost much. The only young people who pay full fare are those with high incomes. If you're a young person with high income, you're in the only segment for whom insurance payments are possibly going up under the ACA, aside from those who are older and had junk insurance that basically didn't cover anything before. You're also, if a young person with high income, paying more for recreational drugs, fine dining and clubbing than your new insurance rates will come in at. If you give up one of your nights on the town each month to afford health insurance ... yeah, I feel your pain.

  9. TaxAct on Ask Slashdot: Can You Trust Online Tax Software? · · Score: 2

    I use TaxAct too. Not the online version, but the standalone. However the first year I used it I filed online through them after preparing it locally. The following year I went to file online again and found someone else had beaten me to it. Someone who had information that could only have been obtained from access to my prior year's return. Took me most of a year and help from a senator's office to straighten it out.

    Now, where did the perp get access? The laptop that I only boot into Windows once a year to do taxes, and then only on a well-firewalled home network (I'm a network engineer, I have confidence in my work here)? From the IRS itself (which, if it were that vulnerable, should lead to far more identity theft even than what we see now)? Or from 2nd Story Software? Odds are it's 2nd Story Software which was compromised somehow. Since then I still use their product, but only file on paper. So this isn't a caution about just preparing returns online. Filing online is similarly dangerous.

    Coincidentally, that same year I found a place where they misinterpreted state tax code. Confirmed that with my state's tax office. Contacted 2nd Story about it. Their response was, "We have expert advisors in every state. We trust them over your state's tax office." Fortunately returns are coded by which tax software is used, and the state office assured me they could spot and correct the mistake for all those using TaxAct, now that they knew to look for it.

  10. Re:FTFY on U.S. Will Not Provide Financing For New International Coal-Fired Power Plants · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why would the U.S. want to finance potential competitors?

    Because they're also potential customers - for electrical and generating equipment to start with (most of these loans are for equipment they buy from us), and for all sorts of other goods once their wealth increases.

  11. Re:FTFY on U.S. Will Not Provide Financing For New International Coal-Fired Power Plants · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Coal isn't the smartest tech to develop in the truly undeveloped areas anyway. Cost per kilowatt calculations in the first world assume that a high-voltage grid is already in place. Even with a high-voltage grid in place, solar and wind are close to parity with coal in many parts of the first world now. Lacking the high-voltage distribution, localized solar and wind - and biomass in some places - are overall at the advantage, because they can be used closer to where they're generated. Nobody puts a small coal-powered generator in their backyard, or next to their factory or hospital. On the other hand I have friends with solar in their backyard, and they live normal American lives with it, firing up gas generators only a few dark winter days a year. Most of the third world doesn't have dark winter days.

  12. Re:YOLD! on Battlefield Director: Linux Only Needs One 'Killer' Game To Explode · · Score: 0

    Valve is, in my brief acquaintance, evil. My 8 year old wanted to get Euro Truck Simulator 2, having seen it on YouTube. So figuring that SteamOS is just going to be a Ubuntu variant anyway, we installed Steam on his Linux laptop, and bought the game from them. They said it ran on Linux. If you're lucky, it might. The game developer doesn't even sell it for Linux. It's just Valve that claims it runs on Linux. The developer says there's a problem with compatibility with the Mesa libs, which they blame on Mesa, and have no ETA for a fix. Valve says tough shit, you didn't buy the game, you just "subscribed," so no refund, even though they falsely advertised it as running on Linux.

    Finally after challenging their fraud with my credit card issuer, they backed down. But they're total scamsters. Selling games for platforms where they know the games won't run, or would know if they checked the game authors and their own forums, and then claiming that their bogus click-through contracts mean that they can defraud you just as much as they like, thank you, and suck on it.

    Anyway, SteamOS is apparently just going to be Ubuntu, which already has steam debs, plus some hardware specs to help manufacturers build game boxes running it. Big PR, but a smart manufacturer who wanted to could already install Ubuntu + steam on game-capable hardware. If this means that Valve will put resources into improving the Mesa libs so that games they claim work on Linux actually will, that would be cool. But not in line with their character as they're currently displaying it. They clearly don't give a fuck if stuff won't run, as long as they've already pocketed your money.

  13. Re:Wait, what?! on Largest US Power Storing Solar Array Goes Live · · Score: 1

    Building any major energy infrastructure, a huge portion of the cost is labor. Now, if we simply imported Chinese labor, like we did to build the railroads....

    Unless you price what it would cost to build here with Chinese labor at Chinese wages, it's apples-to-oranges.

  14. Not "financed" by DOE loan guarantee on Largest US Power Storing Solar Array Goes Live · · Score: 3, Informative

    A loan guarantee is not financing. The DOE has provided no money. The financing is from private institutions.

    The loan guarantee means the private institutions get paid even if the project fails, true. But why should the project fail? This is proven tech that's cost competitive. It would take some true catastrophe for the loan guarantee to ever be called on.

  15. Re:Information on Collapse of Quantum Wavefunction Captured In Slow Motion · · Score: 1

    The many worlds model's absurdity is right in its name. It's the belief that we have no choice, make no choices, but just randomly find ourselves in a world where certain things have happened, while duplicates of ourselves, at each instant where different things might happen, including our own different actions, find themselves inhabiting each of those many worlds. That's to say, the many worlds model requires that the illusion of choice model is the correct one for human agency. And not in the Newtonian sense where it's because there is only one causal destiny. Rather it's a claim that there's no one destiny, but we can't choose among the many destinies, and instead must realize them all, in an endless branching into infinite futures, in none of which will we ever have any real freedom, or real choice.

    That contradicts everything we know about human psychology, as well as every possible evolutionary account for the advantage of consciousness. It contradicts evolution itself, since according to many worlds every possibility going forward is realized in one universe or another, even the possibilities which are, in a Darwinian sense, less fit.

  16. Valve is in over their head on Ask Slashdot: Can Valve's Steam Machines Compete Against the Xbox One and PS4? · · Score: 1

    So they're working up an Ubuntu variant. When my kid asked me to install Steam on his Ubuntu laptop to play Euro Truck II, which Valve claims runs on Linux, I went ahead, figuring "they're in this space, it should work." Well, almost. Filed a trouble ticket with them Sunday, and as of today, Wednesday, there's no response. I clearly told them which module simply crashes. The game is pretty useless without that working. If they think they understand how to build games for Ubuntu, or want to understand it well enough to succeed, they need to take bug reports seriously. Obviously they don't. So they'll, sadly, fail.

    If no response from them by the time a week's over I'll have to ask for a refund and contest it with my credit card company. At least I didn't use PayPal!

  17. Re:In other news... on Belgium Investigates Suspected Cyber Spying By Foreign State · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, major drug cartels and especially Iceland have massive data centers that rival what the US has. Right. That must be why so many of the job postings for those with related skills are in Columbia and Iceland.

    Look, we know that the NSA hires shills to mock all of us who are concerned with this stuff. You're probably not one of them. You probably just do it for free.

  18. Re:Sigh on Dialing Back the Alarm On Climate Change · · Score: 1

    The notion that climate scientists are concerned with pet agendas is idiotic, totally ignorant. I know climate scientists. They couldn't give a shit about socialism, capitalism or other political ideals. They aren't vegetarians, or particularly organic, or anything of the like. They just look at the science and the science leads them to the conclusion that humanity's in serious trouble. They tend to take that not as a call to arms, but somewhat abstractly, philosophically. And then they look at the people who accuse them of cooking the science, and they think something along the lines of "Humanity's not worth saving, especially if it won't save itself."

    These are big picture, long-term, wide-angle thinkers. They identify with life and consciousness in the universe, but tend not to be concerned so much with humankind's tragic present. Many aren't too concerned with this civilization, or even this form of life, although they tend to enjoy it intensely. They know that civilizations and advanced lifeforms will arise again. If this one isn't smart enough to deserve to survive, so be it.

  19. HTTPS forward secrecy to the rescue on NSA Foils Much Internet Encryption · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Your can configure your HTTPS server to use forward secrecy. Forward secrecy uses one-time keys, generated by between the website and the browser for the single session. Most modern browsers support it. But it generally requires compiling the latest version of OpenSSL and the compiling Apache 2.4.x against that, not using the Apache 2.2.x versions that are standard in most of the Linux distros. More detail also here.

    If you set up your webserver this way, and your visitors use the right browsers, they NSA's having good copies of the site's certificates won't gain them much. At least that's what Ivan Risti's saying. On TLS/SSL stuff, there may be no one better.

  20. Re:Come on, you jackbooted apologists... on One Strike Against No Fly List; More Scrutiny To Come · · Score: 3, Funny

    The power to fly, at the time of the Constitution, belonged only to a small minority of the people: witches. If the founders had been asked whether they wished to extend the power to fly to everyone, what should their answer have been? "Sure, let's all be witches"?

    Or would they have affirmed the right of witches to be left alone in the sky without interference? Would they have seen that as the prohibited establishment of a state-supported religion?

    Note to the "agencies": I accept piecework mocking the sincere concerns of my fellow citizens for their freedoms, thereby helping diminish their resistance to your superb safe-keeping of our insecurities.

  21. Re:Happy President on Obama's Privacy Reform Panel Will Report To ... the NSA · · Score: 1

    Oh, so Obama = "pure evil" now? Or is he only = "partly evil"? If only = "partly evil," are you proposing we should only vote for someone = "pure good"? If so, please provide one example, not including a founder of any major religion, of someone you would argue = "pure good."

    If it is true that all people are somewhat tainted by "evil," would you say we should never vote? We should never weigh the balance of the good and evil in one candidate against the balance of good and evil in another candidate, and make an affirmative choice?

  22. Re:And just what if they only used this for good? on Snowden's Big Truth: We Are All Less Free · · Score: 1

    If they have nothing to hide, why are they insisting on the privacy of even the opinions of the court supposedly overseeing their actions?

  23. 4th amendment - general warrants on Keeping Your Data Private From the NSA (And Everyone Else) · · Score: 4, Informative

    The 4th's ban ban on general warrants (that's what it means when it mentions "warrants" in its historical context) strongly implies a privacy right. General warrants were authorization from the crown for its agents to search any person or premises they desired to, blanket authorization. The 4th amendment bans that. The government has to have specific cause, evidence already at hand related to a specific person or premise, to search at all.

    That the government in general has no right to search means by very strong implication that you have the right to the privacy which results. What else is it but your privacy that the 4th amendment says the government can't intrude on? It's nonsense not to find a right to privacy as a necessary implication of our constitutional protection from general warrants.

  24. Re:Someone start a defense fund on USA Calling For the Extradition of Snowden · · Score: 5, Informative

    To be fair, this program is currently legal. I don't think it will pass Constitutional muster if it ever hit the courts, but that hasn't happened yet. The appropriate course of action would be to challenge this law in the courts rather than releasing classified data.

    You're aware that the ACLU and others have repeatedly tried to bring this before the courts, and been shut down by the Obama's people claiming that, since the program is so secret, whoever is bringing suit can't prove that the program specifically harmed them, and so has no legal standing to even make the case before a court? The courts, by accepting the argument that no one has standing to challenge these practices, have avoided having to rule on the Constitutionality of it all.

    Your "appropriate course of action" has been tried. It doesn't work, not because the courts rule these programs Constitutional, but because the courts accept Obama's argument that truly secret programs are beyond court review. If your view of the Constitution is that any law that infringes on our rights can be challenged in court, then you must accept that the courts, just as much as the administration, have found ways to slip outside the Constitution's bounds and responsibilities.

    So the appropriate course of action, in your view, given this, is ... what?

  25. Re:It's about consequences ... on Northern Hemisphere Pollution a Cause of '80s Africa Drought · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally, I don't buy into the global warming camp or anti-climate change camp. ... Given that it is based upon scientific principles, I'm going to have to plead: I'm human, I have limited resources to deal with the problem presented before me, it is based upon a system of knowledge that I find acceptable (i.e. science), so I accept it.

    So if, say, 50% of scientific papers are "intellectually honest," and 97% of scientific papers addressing climate change conclude that anthropogenic factors are the main drivers of variance over the last century or more, then how can you not "buy into the global warming camp"?

    Isn't the whole "anti-climate change camp" devoted to the notion that there is such a thing as major, wide-spread actions without consequences, contrary to your major assertion? Because on the level of global climate, somehow man's actions are perpetually too small to effect it, or a deity will counter any potential harm we do, or the planet will magically turn every potential disadvantage to advantage, or the like?