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User: Phoenix666

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  1. Price Point on Electric Cars: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Still Low? · · Score: 1

    I test-drove a Leaf in Michigan this summer and the car was awesome. It accelerated faster than my Honda Fit and was totally quiet. If I lived in the suburbs and commuted the average distance to work everyday, I would spring for one in a second. But we live in Brooklyn, and the lack of charging space, limited range, and higher price point are still sticking points for us. If I could afford a Tesla Model S I could get around the first thanks to its high range. So we're waiting until we can either afford a Model S or Tesla puts out a mass-market model we can afford now. After the gas shortages after Hurricane Sandy I am itching to ditch the ICE.

  2. God I hope not on Hotel Tycoon Seeks Property Rights On the Moon · · Score: 2

    The day terrestrial laws apply to extraterrestrial space is the day humanity curls up into a little ball and dies. Space is vast, and the ability of dissidents and frontiersmen to charge out into it and carve life from cold balls of rock gives hope to all those who despair of the cause of freedom here on Earth.

    And if I'm the intrepid guy who makes it to Mars and builds a sustainable colony there, the last g*damn thing I'm gonna worry about is filing paperwork with retard bureaucrats in Washington DC or the UN. They can all go hang. In fact, I would post a sign on the outskirts of my settlement: "Lawyers, politicians, and bureaucrats shot on sight."

  3. Makerspaces on A Makerbot In Every Classroom · · Score: 1

    I think a makerspace in every school makes more sense. No, fossils, a makerspace is not the same thing as shop class. Teaching kids to code, work with CAD programs, and see the result print out on printers not only teaches STEM more effectively to the kids who are wired to like STEM anyway, but makes the process more accessible to kids who are, say, arty or sporty. So putting 3D printers like Fab@Home's would make more sense than MakerBot because it's more versatile, and gene-sequencing machines, centrifuges, autoclaves, and such for biohacking because future manufacturing could well be bio-based. CnC machines and lathes come into the mix as well. Lastly, dedicating a significant portion of instruction time to the makerspace rather than as an option for "kids who aren't nerdy" is the only way to cement America's place in the technological future.

  4. Government on Pentagon Readies Contingency Plans Due To BlackBerry's Uncertain Future · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My favorite part of Blackberry's troubles is that it will cripple the federal government. All the politicians and their lackies run around with Blackberrys sutured to their hands, texting each other in meetings and rudely breaking off in mid-conversation to answer texts because they're incredibly important people and you're not. It's not intentional of course, but Blackberry's failure will do more for productivity in Washington DC and to bring the people living in the Beltway bubble back down to earth than all the NGOs, PACs, and citizen action groups combined.

    With the NSA revelations, government shutdown, plummeting approval ratings, and now Blackberry's shutdown, DC is teetering on the edge of collapse (thank god). I'm wondering what will be the straw that breaks the camel's back. Student loan bubble bursting?

  5. Game Stores on How Blockbuster Could Have Owned Netflix · · Score: 3

    The next retail model to go belly up are GameStops and the like. When Steam is fully up and running there will be no reason to buy your own copy any more, which means the lucrative secondary market many game stores rely on for profit margins will go away.

    Incidentally when Steam is fully transitioned to Linux it will have an effect on prevalence of MS in the home, too.

  6. Sea Change on Blockbuster To Close Remaining US Locations · · Score: 1

    They are the slow-mo collapse of an Age. The very idea of paying for content has become passe for anyone under the age of 30. My wife and I pay for Netflix because it's convenient. Everyone I know younger than us goes to the movies on Bit Torrent. Yes, that's anecdotal, but larger socioeconomic trends lend credence to personal observation.

    Student loans and massive unemployment for millenials has put severe pressure on their disposable income. And it's been going on for at least 7 years. That's the formative years of the generation's early adulthood spent in penury when their predecessors have formed brand attachments and gotten started on careers making increasingly better wages. Check the news articles about how car ownership among younger cohorts is declining steeply, or how student loan default rates are rising sharply.

    That means that those age cohorts are learning how to live differently than their older siblings or parents because they have to. They rent instead of own, they bike instead of drive, they torrent instead of paying. It all goes hand-in-hand, and the longer our system insists on beggaring them, the less likely they are to change even if/when conditions improve.

    Of course, there's also the possibility that our system will not stop beggaring them and will move up the age cohort scale to completely beggar others too. Reverse mortgages are off to a great start to nuke the traditional wealth transfer that occurs when one generation leaves this earth to its descendents.

  7. Seconded on Feinstein and Rogers: No Clemency For Snowden · · Score: 1

    No clemency for Feinstein, Rogers, Obama, Bush, Cheney, Clapper, Alexander, or any other the hundred or more other people who swore oaths to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. They are the rankest, vilest of traitors and have done more damage to our country than anyone else in history. They deserve the death penalty.

  8. China's Single Time Zone on A Plan To Fix Daylight Savings Time By Creating Two National Time Zones · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, China's 5 time zones operate on a single time zone, which works great if you're in Beijing, but sucks balls if you're one of the poor schmucks in Urumqi who has to get to work at 3am.

  9. Sen. Feinstein on UK Prime Minister Threatens To Block Further Snowden Revelations · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They're reporting this evening Sen. Feinstein is backpedaling on surveillance after defending the NSA's crimes all summer. Did one of her grandchildren chew her out for turning the country into a police state? Or is she so stupid that she hasn't actually paid attention to the issue and its implications til now? Or is it a dodge to deflect the criticism until the public forgets and moves on and all can return to status quo ante?

    Honestly, I'm kind of to the point where the situation won't be made right until the people at the NSA responsible for this are in prison, the NSA is dismantled, and everyone in the Whitehouse and Congress are impeached and thrown into the deepest, darkest hole we've got.

  10. Silencing the Press on UK Prime Minister Threatens To Block Further Snowden Revelations · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So Gen. Alexander releases a propaganda video saying he believes the journalists releasing the stories ought to be silenced, and now the UK is echoing that? It seems to me that we are well on our way to the point of no return.

  11. Reaction Inversely Proportional to Size of Truth on Israel Helped the NSA Spy on Former French President According To Documents · · Score: 1

    The thing about all this is, the speed of the reaction is inversely proportional to the size of the truth. When a reality star is caught with drugs, the reaction is instantaneous. When Congress self-destructs, it takes months and years for the reaction and its consequences to fully unfold. What we're talking about here is the ripping away of the entire illusion under which we've been living the past 60 years. It's big, and most people don't even want to try to wrap their heads around what it means; but denial won't make it go away. This is a turning point in history, mark my words.

    From here, more forward-thinking people and groups will begin moving in different directions than before and when the changes come they will be breath-taking. Recall the fall of the Berlin Wall. Glasnost and Perestroika had been going on for years at that point under Gorbachev, and suddenly in the space of a few weeks the Berlin Wall fell, and nearly every country locked away behind the Iron Curtain was free. It took another two years for Romania and Russia to sort themselves out, but they did.

    What shape will those changes take, exactly? Who knows. But eventually Washington DC must fall and its masters brought to justice. We may suffer through a true police state with gulags before then, but eventually we will have a new social compact. I hope that the reset is clean, with none of the old masters surviving into the new system. Those sociopaths threaten the entire species.

  12. Wutend on German Report: Obama Aware of Merkel Spying Since 2010 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've been reading Der Spiegel for 25 years. I've never seen them get angry about anything, not even when Russia shut off the natural gas pipeline running to Central Europe to mess with the Ukraine and whacked Germany in the process. They're white hot mad about this. The German Interior Minister is talking about bringing the NSA to justice. The SPD is pushing to drop trade talks with the US unless Washington does something real about it. Meanwhile, Obama wants to talk about immigration and fly off to visit schools in Crown Heights rather than deal with this directly. Caught in lie after lie after lie about the NSA he owns this now, and he owns the consequences for the entire world if he doesn't deal with it.

    Consider, fellow Americans, what goes if Germany goes. That's NATO and the EU. That's all our happy European client states cheerily playing along when Washington wants to force the President of Bolivia's plane down and search it. That's an economy bigger than ours, a continent whose population is much bigger than ours, suddenly not playing ball with us any more and pushing back hard on everything. That's a profoundly different world for American geopolitical power that will have material consequences for every American.

    This, the government shutdown, the near default, the promise of more of the same in February, it all has everyone who has been on our team the last 50 years looking for the exits at once. The American government has proven it can't even get a website right; there's no way in hell they can deal with all of this at once. A fat, happy American middle class would have been a bulwark against it, but the elites have spent 20 years scraping out their substance. Most of us are running mighty thin. The risk of a trigger event, like the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand or the Rodney King verdict, bringing it all down is growing.

  13. Piggyback Wifi on NYC's 250,000 Street Lights To Be Replaced With LEDs By 2017 · · Score: 1

    Pity they don't piggyback public wifi onto the lights with those LED wifi bulbs in the news a couple days back. It nicely resolves right-of-way concerns and power supply requirements.

  14. Turnabout is Fair Play on Citizen Eavesdrops On Former NSA Director Michael Hayden's Phone Call · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is exactly what is required. We all need to out these people, all of them who work for the NSA and CIA, and subject them to constant surveillance, harassment, and ostracism. Perhaps an open source project to map and publicize the personnel of these agencies, as an exercise in democratic resistance to creeping tyranny. Heck, we can even enlist the assistance of kindly freedom-loving people around the world to ensure it will be impossible to shut down. The American government needs to understand the American people are onto them and deem them the enemies of freedom they are. Whether further, more stringent measures are required remains to be seen.

  15. TSA, NSA on TSA Airport Screenings Now Start Before You Arrive At the Airport · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The science and the math behind the tools of control are not classified. There is no classified physics, chemistry, and math. You and I can access them and learn. The components and sensors and knowledge required to build resistance measures are open source. You and I can see them, understand them, and employ them. In Today's--though perhaps not in "Tomorrow's"--America, you can still acquire the tools you need to resist and defeat Tyranny.

    Take stock. Search your own heart. Can you live in a world where you are not free? Most of you will choose controlled comfort. You will cede control over your very existence to some remote, faceless drone within a bureaucracy, be it government- or corporate-controlled. Still there are a few who would rather die, no matter how much they have to lose, than acquiesce to petty, stupid tyrants.

    I have a wife and kids. I love them dearly. I want to live a long life with them. But if I could trade my life for their freedom, I would do so in an instant. Those of you who are like me, assess and consider. We have been in a bubble of denial, but now that time is over. We all must choose whether to stand and be counted, or to kneel and submit. Choose the former and you're an American, choose the latter and you're a slave.

    Decide.

  16. Political Terms and Their Meaning on A Ray of Hope For Americans and Scientific Literacy? · · Score: 2

    You don't get to redefine political terms on the fly to mean something utterly different than what the rest of the world understands them to mean. If you do that then you might as well start calling the sky yellow and grass grey, because it amounts to the same thing, which is Orwellian doublespeak a la "Freedom is Slavery" and "War is Peace."

    Here is the standard understanding of the political spectrum, since you don't seem to know what that is, or because you're being cute, "According to the simplest left-right axis, communism and socialism are usually regarded internationally as being on the left, opposite fascism and conservatism on the right."

    That means authoritarianism is not the sole province of the left (to which "liberal" belongs) or of the right (to which "conservative" belongs). The entire rest of the world understands that fascism and socialism are distinct political philosophies that stand on the opposite ends of that left-right political axis. Conflating the two is ludicrous and bespeaks profound ignorance of political science. It is nonsense. It is like asserting that democracy=fascism=socialism=monarchy=theocracy because they all have hierarchy and are not the one truly moral and good political philosophy, anarchy. You see? I have just done exactly what you have done by claiming Republicans are "left of Stalin," and it's ridiculous.

    "Conservative" does not mean what you think it means, as a catch-all for everything sweet and light in the world like chocolate fudge sundaes and bunny rabbits and sweet, blond haired blue-eyed children gamboling on a sunny meadow. "Liberal" also does not mean what you think it means, as a catch-all for everything dark and evil in the world like taxes and public education and rules and safe food in your grocery store and helping out a random person whose car died on the side of the road. They are both political labels that describe political philosophies that are different, not smears. This is easily understandable by acknowledging that liberals also like sundaes, bunnies, and children, and that conservatives also like education and help random strangers whose cars are broken down on the side of the road.

    Please quit perpetuating the idiotic meme that claims otherwise. Calling Obama a socialist fascist marxist muslim, all of which are mostly diametrically opposed (marxism espouses atheism, for example), does not tar him with anything because all of the tar has already wound up on you.

  17. Second that on Redesigned Seats Let Airlines Squeeze In More Passengers · · Score: 1

    A few years back my wife got us a 2-for-1 compartment deal on Amtrak from NYC Penn Station to New Orleans. We didn't realize that made us effectively first-class passengers until we showed up at Penn Station to check in and they ushered us into the first class lounge to wait. Extremely plush furniture, complimentary drinks, free newspapers, TVs, wifi, etc. Porters took our bags to the compartment for us, and we had a steward serve us throughout the trip. Free sodas, first call to dinner (which was included), power and TVs/DVD players in our compartment, and a bathroom in our compartment. It was wonderful. We left New York in the evening and arrived in New Orleans in city center the next day. Took the streetcar to our hotel. No taxi, no airport shuttle, no AirTrain BS. Fantastic.

    I will take that luxury over the misery of flying any day. Any day. Unless they bring back zeppelins and replicate the civilized experience of the train.

    I can dream.

  18. Cost of Components on Predicting the Future of Electronics and IT by Watching Component Demand (Video) · · Score: 1

    I was particularly struck by the cost per unit he cited for 32-bit processors: $0.49/processor. At that cost profile the possibilities for DIY swarm and fabrication projects is compelling; a vision of autonomous mesh nodes spreading throughout our cities, powered by ambient backscatter chips, and forming the ultimate redundant network danced through my head.

    Exciting times.

  19. 'Galactic Bulge' on First 'Habitable Zone' Galactic Bulge Exoplanet Found · · Score: 1

    That's what she said...

  20. BS on Hillary Clinton: "We Need To Talk Sensibly About Spying" · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hillary Clinton is as dirty and corrupt as they come. I used to work for the Clintons, so I assert that with more inside-baseball knowledge than the average bear. Want an example? Bill Clinton is now in bed with the guy who started and funded the Vince Foster witchhunt against them. See, most humans with any scruples would not choose to do that. But gold rules.

    Hillary will say whatever she needs to say to get enough sucke...er, voters, to vote for her. Then if successful she'll turn right around and dish out more of the same 'ole, same 'ole on Americans. Electing her to President is no solution at all.

    Stop pretending it is.

    The only solution seems to now be, given that neither the judiciary nor the legislative branches have put a stop to it, to have everyday Americans converge on DC and burn the place to the ground. Also, the Hamptons, and Newport, and Westchester, and every other gated community where DC's true masters sequester themselves.

    Then we can all sit down at a new Constitutional Convention and figure out America 2.0 where crap like this can't happen again.

  21. Good Thing He Wasn't Stopped on Could Snowden Have Been Stopped In 2009? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Snowden is a hero. It's a damn good thing he wasn't stopped. Else, the American people would have had no chance to stop the fascism that is enacting a slow-mo coup d'etat of our democracy. Time will tell if we can do anything about it now anyway, but at least we have the knowledge if not yet the means.

    We will know victory when the Jamie Dimons and Lloyd Blankfeins of the world and those on Capitol Hill and K Street who enable them are swinging from the trees that line the National Mall.

  22. Re:Fab@Home on 3D Printing a 'Terminator' Arm ... Or a Whole Body · · Score: 1

    Yes and computers existed before the Apple IIe. But it was Apple that made computers a household item. So pointing out, hey, ENIAC pre-dated Apple so they're no big deal misses the point in the same way you're missing it.

    MakerBot did not invent 3D printing, but they are popularizing it by making it affordable enough for mass adoption. What we're looking at right now is the Apple IIe of 3D printers.

  23. Warmer? on Nobel Winners Illustrate Israel's "Brain Drain" · · Score: 3, Funny

    I guess you haven't heard the joke:

    A journalist asked a Russian, American, and Israeli, "Can you please give us your opinion on the food shortage?"

    The Russian replied, "What is an 'opinion'?"

    The American replied, "What is a 'shortage'?"

    The Israeli replied, "What is 'please'?"

  24. Fab@Home on 3D Printing a 'Terminator' Arm ... Or a Whole Body · · Score: 2

    Fab@Home's approach makes more sense to me: have multiple attachments that can extrude a variety of materials. So you have one set of nozzles that print the circuits and another that prints the structural components. Layer-by-layer deposition that's used now would probably not survive because of the different amounts of contraction as different materials cool, or the possibility that the deposition of a metallic material would re-melt structural material and distort it.

    Rate of printing is also a limiting factor now, but at least one of the models I saw at the Maker Faire in NYC a couple weeks ago was addressing that problem by having multiple nozzles. But give it time. We're in the very, very early days yet. 6 years ago Bre Pettis, the founder of MakerBot, was teaching public school in Brooklyn. We're only a couple years past when the first model hit the market, and with the rate of evolution we've seen so far it won't be long at all before the whole world has changed.

  25. It's not dead... on If Java Is Dying, It Sure Looks Awfully Healthy · · Score: 1

    ...it's just compiling.