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User: inventorM

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  1. Re:I call Band-Aid on US Nuclear Industry Plans "Rescue Wagon" To Avert Meltdowns · · Score: 1

    Don't bring Chernobyl into this. The Chernobyl reactor design was considered unsafe fifty years and three design generations ago, and nobody in the West was building those designs even then. What caused the disaster was that the managers decided to remove multiple layers of safety devices and controls to run unscheduled and unapproved tests, and when the plant caught fire, the response teams had no protective gear, and little equipment to put the fire out. Had the same disaster occurred in the West (assuming that the NRC had approved a basically unsafe reactor design in the first place), the personnel and equipment available to the response personnel would have allowed them to put the fire out without the huge radiation dispersal that occurred at Chernobyl. Additionally, were you to visit the area today, you would see that the area has recovered from what damage was done, and that the local flora and fauna have long since returned to their original state (no more mutant trees or critters than could be statistically expected in most of the world). If I said something empirically wrong, please provide references to research from reputable sources (such as UN science groups) based directly on data.

  2. Re:It's a fanstastic subject on Elon Musk: Future Round-Trip To Mars Could Cost Under $500,000 · · Score: 1

    Another reason to go to Mars is just to explore it. There's no way to know what's there until men start exploring the surface and subsurface of Mars. A distinct possibility exists that certain metals that are rare on Earth could be found on Mars in such forms as to make mining for those metals and shipping them back to Earth profitable.

  3. Re:I hate to burst their bubble but on High School Students Send Lego Man 24 Kilometers High · · Score: 1

    True. My college freshman engineering class sent a balloon up 110,000 feet and recovered it, all for less than 250 USD. What would be newsworthy would be if the group built the equipment for a low cost, or achieved an extraordinary altitude. However, I am glad to see high school students taking an interest in engineering and science. Having worked on a similar project myself, I can say that pulling off this kind of project requires significant planning and teamwork, and I congratulate the students for their successful effort.

  4. Giving information to the government on Survey Shows Support For New Privacy Laws · · Score: 1

    So I would be giving my personal information to the government so that I could have more privacy? Like the government doesn't know enough about me already.

  5. Re:And here I was, on Games: Sony Confirms PSPGo Gone; New Consoles Expected 2014 · · Score: 1

    The problem with creating such a device is not the technological factors, but rather the ergonomic factors. The reason a mouse-keyboard combo gives you such control is that your desk it at just the right height to work at. It is harder to work with controls if they are at waist height instead of mid-torso height.

  6. Re:Blacksmiths and coopers on Jesse Jackson, Jr. Pins US Job Losses On iPad · · Score: 1

    The technologies that "replaced" blacksmiths has allowed them to take a time that blacksmiths used to spend making mundane things like hinges and nails, and spend that time making beautiful wrought iron fences, for example.

  7. Progress on Jesse Jackson, Jr. Pins US Job Losses On iPad · · Score: 1

    Obsolescence is the result of progress. How many carriage manufacturers still exist? When automobiles were first introduced, they were direct competitors to carriages. However, since automobiles have proven themselves to be better than carriages, the carriages have become obsolete, and therefore are no longer produced, except as historical replicas. The carriage manufacturers all went out of business or converted to building automobiles. When a new technology replaces an old technology, businesses must adapt, or go out of business. Please not that a few companies still produce carriages. Physical media will always have a special place. Everyday reading may become increasingly digital, but digitizing ordinary books allows special books to have prominence on the physical bookshelf.

  8. Re:WTF on NASA Wants Spacecraft For Mars Return Trip · · Score: 1

    Haven't you heard of what SpaceX has been doing? They already have contracts to send probes to the Moon, as well as launching satellites into Earth orbit.

  9. Re:I seem to be in the minority. on Police Chief Teaches Parents To Keylog Kids · · Score: 0

    There isn't much that can be done to prevent a determined child from going around the protection. However, the software should not be considered a panacea for Internet problems, but rather a reminder to the child to do right while using the Internet. The knowledge that somebody might be watching tends to prevent many problems before they occur.

  10. Nothing Wrong with This on Police Chief Teaches Parents To Keylog Kids · · Score: 0

    A parent's job is to ensure that his child matures into a responsible adult. A parent has the responsibility to know what his child has been doing so that he can reward the child for doing right and punish the child for doing wrong. For a parent to supervise his child's Internet access is not different than for him to watch over his child while the child plays in the park. A child might bypass some of the dangers of the Internet, but a child is not able to discern many of the complicated dangers that abound in society. Therefore, a parent should use tools such as keyloggers to supervise a child's Internet access. This is not a breach of privacy, but another way for a parent to unobtrusively care and watch over his child.

  11. Re:What scientists... on New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education · · Score: 0

    The point I was trying to make is that unless a scientist is able to directly observe the beginning of the universe, there is no way for him to prove that the universe was or was not created. A scientist can only observe the current universe and extrapolate into the past. There is no way to know with absolute certainty that any any event occurred, unless we have data from an observer who was present at the event.

  12. Re:Its not the speed that is the problem. on Obama Calling For $53B For High Speed Rail · · Score: 0

    Why should we imitate a country run by a totalitarian government?

  13. Re:What scientists... on New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education · · Score: 1

    Although creationists do believe that a supernatural being created the universe, some have postulated theories explaining how that being could have used natural laws to finish the creation of the universe. I refer you to an excellent book Starlight & Time from the esteemed astronomer Dr. Ray Humphreys.

  14. Cause/effect mixup on White House Fingers PlayStation As Obesity Culprit · · Score: 1

    The problem is not with the Playstations, but with the children who sit in front of those consoles and the parents who allow their children to sit in front of a console for most of the day. Playstations make children obese the same way that snack foods make children obese. If a child is allowed to eat too much snack food without exercising, then that child, unless he has a very fast metabolism, will become obese. The problem is that the parents do not make the children exercise.

  15. Re:In a Volvo? on Building the Zero-Fatality Car · · Score: 1

    What if you were under a bridge or in a tunnel?