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User: Syncerus

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  1. Re:Hans Reiser's proposal on Geekiest Marriage Proposals Ever · · Score: 1

    In poor taste? Absolutely.
    Nevertheless amusing? Absolutely.

  2. Don't be so grumpy! on Samsung Rains Paper Airplanes From Space · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Come on, admit it. The little kid inside you thought this was really cool. :D

    If this doesn't bring a smile to your face, then you're not a real geek.

  3. Synchronization with HTMLX on Mozilla Aims To Release Four Firefox Versions In 2011 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Mozilla should move the other direction. They should follow the W3C lead and dispense with versions altogether and simply release "Firefox" that displays "HTML".

    What could possibly go wrong?

  4. Rejected by peer reviewed journals ... on Italian Scientists Demonstrate Cold Fusion? · · Score: 2, Informative

    Also, the site on which this report was published is owned by the authors.

    http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/01/24/italian-scientists-claim-cold-fusion-breakthrough/?test=faces

  5. Re:Old dog, new tricks on Should Younger Developers Be Paid More? · · Score: 1

    That's probably true, but you can't program either as well or as quickly as this one.

    All kidding aside, this isn't a troll. There's a shift in one's thinking that takes place after learning 5 or 6 languages; it becomes ever more profound after you've worked in a number of languages for years. At last count, I've learned at least a major portion of some 19 languages. I've actually been paid to work in something like 10 or 11 languages, depending on what you consider to be a dialect rather than a separate language.

    My point isn't that learning multiple languages makes one cooler. It's that it causes one to internalize and genericise problem solving methodologies, which makes one a better and faster programmer.

    Let me ask you this question: do you expect to learn nothing over the next 10 years? Do you expect to become a worse programmer? All things being equal, a good new graduate will only get better over time.

  6. Old dog, new tricks on Should Younger Developers Be Paid More? · · Score: 0

    I can learn a new technology faster than any new grad. If a skill is hot, I can be better faster.

    And write 3x as much **production** quality code.

  7. The problem with both parties ... on Sarah Palin 'Target WikiLeaks Like Taliban' · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem with both parties is that we can't keep the dumbest 2% of us off the television.

  8. It's all about revenue on ACLU Sues To Protect Your Right To Swear · · Score: 1

    The irony of this is while the law itself is very much a 1st Amendment issue, the enforcement is almost certainly revenue related. Just as traffic enforcement is "driven" by revenue generation rather than public safety (in which there is no real interest), this situation has the feel of a localized sin tax designed to fill the coffers of the enforcing districts.

    In English, it boils down to a legalized shake down.

  9. Re:Is anything not political? on California Moves To Block Texas' Textbook Changes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately, most of the politicians on both sides of the aisle ARE stupid, evil or both. Do you seriously think the US Congress could withstand a combination IQ / US constitutional history competency examination as a prior qualification to hold office?

  10. What a Troll! on Microsoft Freeloading In Washington State Courts · · Score: 0, Troll

    Do you go out of your way to find the way in which you can legally give the government the most possible tax revenue?

    It is absurd to suggest that any public company not do the maximum they can to minimize their tax liability. You obviously have an ax to grind with MS, and that's fine, but digging up this kind of garbage is ridiculous. The same statements that you have made about MS can probably be made about 95% of the Fortune 500.

  11. Re:It depends entirely on investment capital ... on 2009 Nobel Ribosome Structures — Patented · · Score: 1

    By what means does the patent system "encourage the development of new inventions, and in particular to encourage the disclosure of those new inventions" ?

    When you quote "Inventors are often hesitant to reveal the details of their invention, for fear that someone else might copy it", to what do you ascribe the fear?

    My post described the lower level mechanism of the goals to which you refer.

  12. It depends entirely on investment capital ... on 2009 Nobel Ribosome Structures — Patented · · Score: 1

    Remember: the primary valid purpose of patents is to allow the recapture of investment capital plus additional profits in proportion to the utility of the discovery.

    If making these scientific discoveries is highly capital intensive, then patentablity is both useful and desirable because it encourages initial investment; eventually the patent will expire.

    So, I would argue the key question isn't the nature of the discovery, but rather the necessary investment to make the discovery. A logical corollary is that most business process patents are a sham and are economically destructive ...

    In all the patent hate, don't forget they have a valid use and purpose.

  13. How SF has changed with the Times on What Belongs In a High School Sci-Fi/Fantasy Lit Class? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It would be interesting to emphasize how SF has evolved with society. From Vern and Wells in Victorian Europe, to Heinlein's "Starship Troopers" and "Stranger in a Strange Land", which demonstrate both sides of American culture in the 1960's. John Brunner's "Stand on Zanzibar" is a terrific period piece, and Zelazny's "Lord of Light" is also a blast.

    In my view, SF took a serious downward turn from the early 1980's, but there are exceptions, to be sure. With the entire range of SF at your disposal, there's no reason to select junk when there are so many gifted authors to study.

  14. Inherrent charateristic of Open Source on Shuttleworth Suggests 1-Way Valve For User Experience Testing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because so many developers develop Open Source applications for personal satisfaction, they tend to focus on scratching their own itches.

    A characteristic of usability testing is that your goal is to scratch the itch of your customers; your preferences have very little significance in the context of the test.

    It doesn't take a genius to see a potential conflict in the two goals; on the other hand, a developer likes to see his code in actual use by actual human beings. To maximize this use, a developer must at least pay lip service to documentation and UI testing.

    Many developers never make this conceptual leap, however.

  15. Re:Total bullshit on Soviets Built a Doomsday Machine; It's Still Alive · · Score: 1

    Actually, you are very wrong. Compare the Socialist "modernization" of Russia under Lenin/Stalin from 1917-1960 with the Capitalist modernization of Japan from 1870 to 1914.

    There's simply no comparison between the two rates of social advance.

  16. Re:I bet... on $2,000 Bribe Bought Password To DC P.O. System · · Score: 2, Informative

    This wasn't a troll. It was a reference to a previous article.

  17. Proof Positive that Social Engineering Is Easier on $2,000 Bribe Bought Password To DC P.O. System · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This article is an ideal example of a social engineering crack. Consider the comparative difficulty of a technical cracking job and compare it to the simplicity and cheapness of what actually took place. The solution was actually quite elegant in a sordid way.

    I once worked for a company that was experiencing a surge of highly organized fraud originating from Romania. Before I left, we were preparing to develop a major anti-fraud application, etc., at great expense. At one meeting I suggested that we just hire a few Romanian private detectives to knock on some doors and quietly suggest to the lowlifes that it would be healthier to leave us alone; the other people in the meeting looked at me as though I were green.

    LOL.

  18. Let's hope so on US Nuclear Power Industry Poised For a Comeback · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The simple truth is that nuclear power is good technology that solves a variety of sticky problems. Anti-nuclear propaganda films irrationally scared the public in to rejecting a highly beneficial and useful method of power generation. With the passage of years, the public has come to the realization that the sky isn't falling and that a modern, safe nuclear power system is good economics and good social policy. We should celebrate this return to sanity: it's reason triumphing over irrational fear.

  19. The Previous Helmet on Military Helmet Design Contributes To Brain Damage · · Score: 1

    Was a simple metal hat with a (fiberglass?) liner. The current helmet provides far more protection than the previous model. Keep that in mind in the context of this criticism.

    Also, as a minor quibble point, the airborne modification of the helmet has additional padding on the interior which may affect the dynamic of the air gap between outer shell and liner. My assumption is that the study was performed on the standard helmet configuration, but it's worth observing that there are non-standard configurations in wide spread use.

  20. Re:That's why.... on Bing Search Tainted By Pro-Microsoft Results · · Score: 1

    A more interesting question to ask would be this: since Google lives and dies by AdWords revenue, will they ever manipulate their search results to increase the click count of their paid AdWords results ...

    For instance, if there is a search on "Apple iPhone", the logical first result is the Apple iPhone splash page. If, for the sake of argument, Apple were to have bought the #1 position for the search term "Apple iPhone", they would be displayed twice: once for the #1 unpaid result and once for the #1 paid result.

    It doesn't take a rocket surgeon to realize that one could easily increase the number of clicks on the paid search result by suppressing the unpaid result.

    Just a thought.

  21. If it Pays, then it Stays on Indian Tiger Park Now Tiger-Free · · Score: 1

    In the third-world wildlife either pays for itself or it vanishes, plain and simple. With a desperate population on the verge of starvation, any resource not viewed as life-improving will quickly vanish. That's why tourism and well-regulated sport hunting are so important to the management of wildlife in the third world. It's also why game ranches for commercial purposes are a necessary tool for the successful restoration of many endangered species. John Stossel's video article below is very illuminating, and offers a new way of viewing the issue.

    http://jezebel.com/5249594/we-can-save-endangered-species-byeating-them

  22. Forget about uploads ... on Cops To Start CrimeTube To Report Offenses · · Score: 1

    What about downloads? Does this mean we can watch every crime ever filmed? That would beat the heck out of COPS.

    Youtube better watch out.

  23. The best part of Capitalism on Senator Proposes Nonprofit Status For Newspapers · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best part of Capitalism is letting bad business fail. If the newspapers can't fund themselves legitimately through voluntary commerce, like any other business, they need to fail, as they deserve.

    With tax-exempt status, they exists solely at the mercy of government legislation. What are the chances they will criticize the government that grants them favored status?

    This is a recipe for State control of news dissemination.

  24. Re:This shall do on Want a PC With 192 GB of RAM? · · Score: 1

    If you were running Vista at home, you'd think the comment was funny too.

  25. Just a thought on Human-Animal Hybrids Fail · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe we should resolve the ethical concerns before we perform the science ...

    This is opening Pandora's Box.