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User: Hellsbells

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  1. I'm not American - I hold the same views as the rest of the world

    Nobody outside Russia believes that Russia has not invaded the Ukraine

  2. Russia is in the process of invading the Ukraine

    Forget about the US, its got nothing to do with the behaviour of Russia - You can't justify the evil actions of your country just because "another country once did it"

    This is how a psychopath will rationalize everything
    You've really got to break your mind out of thinking this way - Its not healthy

  3. You're talking about historical events from 60+ years ago - So because another country once did something bad almost a century ago, its okay to do it today?

    You can legitimise any evil deed using this thought process - It is the reasoning of a psychopath, and a sickening and dangerous way to think
    (Someone once murdered somebody, so its okay if you murder someone today)

  4. Re:When did the Senate vote on this? on Climate Deal: US and China Join Paris Climate Accords (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Treaties vs. Executive Agreements: When Does Congress Get a Vote?

    http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/...

  5. Re: re: Shneiderman, Shannon, Weiner on Xbox One Controller Cost Over $100 Million To Develop · · Score: 1

    If you're interested in Norbert Weiner there's an ieee conference with some good speakers organised for June next year:
    http://21stcenturywiener.org/

  6. Re: Shhh. on Fukushima Nuclear Plant Cleanup May Take More Than 40 Years · · Score: 1

    Pretty obvious lies. Why do people still bother spouting this garbage?

    There have been several studies done showing that the Prius has a significantly lower environmental footprint than the average car.

  7. Re: Now Apple should pay 1/10th of it's value on German Court Finds Apple's 'Slide To Unlock' Patent Invalid · · Score: 1

    This would just cause everyone to isolate their patents in holding companies.

  8. Re: screw google! on Google Launches 'Keep' To Rival Evernote · · Score: 2

    What does it matter if it is a paid service?

    Google has a history of dropping support for products suddenly, so why would anyone want to start using a product with a proven alternative, when its likely that in a year our two it will be suddenly dropped?

  9. Re:umm on Is Australia's CSIRO a Patent Troll? · · Score: 1

    Using this argument, government run trains shouldn't charge passengers, since the tax payer has already paid for the infrastructure.

    I don't see why the Australian government can't reclaim some of its initial investment by charging the consumer of the product, especially when most of the consumers are overseas.

  10. Re:umm on Is Australia's CSIRO a Patent Troll? · · Score: 1

    These radar techniques were also pioneered by the CSIRO in their radar division. They clearly weren't trivial, since they took a decade of development.

  11. Re:IMHO Apple is becoming a scummy advertiser on Australian Consumer Watchdog Sues Apple Over iPad Marketing · · Score: 1

    Is it false advertising to sell a hair-dryer designed for 110v US power in Australia knowing full well that it won't work properly in Australia?

    If the iPad doesn't work on Australia's 4G networks, it should not be sold as as 4G capable just because it can work in the US.

  12. Re:Infinity on Judge Rules Pi-Based Music Is Non-Copyrightable · · Score: 1

    Either way, using a 9-symbol encoding, you could find every song in existence using this sequence.

  13. Re:Infinity on Judge Rules Pi-Based Music Is Non-Copyrightable · · Score: 1

    If you drop all '1's from a random sequence, aren't you just moving to a numeric system based on 9 symbols instead of 10?

    You can still encode every song in existence using this sequence, you'd just have to change the encoding method.

    You could do something like removing every '1', which was preceded by an '8' in the sequence, but then its not a random sequence any more, because we've just added a regular pattern to it.

  14. Infinity on Judge Rules Pi-Based Music Is Non-Copyrightable · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Considering that pi represented as a decimal number is infinitely long, it would eventually contain the encoding for every song in existence.

  15. Re:Discussion versus action. on Foxconn Hires Top Spinners To Defend Its Image · · Score: 1

    I am less likely to buy a product produced by Foxconn, and awareness of these issues have tarnished a few brand names to me.

    Even a 1% drop in sales for a company like Apple would result in billions of dollars in lost sales.

  16. Re:First on Australian Govt Holding Secretive Anti-Piracy Talks · · Score: 1

    Yeah, he's a bit more complex than people make out.

    He's clearly very smart and excellent at playing the politics game, but he's very conservative (us versus them), and I think that sometimes he just enters this crazy "mention whatever comes to the top of my head" rant mode, where he talks about stuff like wanting to make Catholic religious school classes compulsory for all children.

    His rants have come back to bite him more than a few times, but he's been better at keeping them under control lately.

  17. Re:Oh, so "slave labor" is OK so long as you on In Xhengzhou, Thousands Vie For Foxconn Jobs · · Score: 1

    I agree with you mostly. Except this:

    >> You don't help the developing world by not buying from them.

    An organised and targeted boycott of Apple or another manufactures product can force Apple and Foxconn to improve worker conditions. This negative publicity has already forced some basic changes, and well publicised boycotts have worked in other instances.

    Chinese workers aren't allowed to unionise or strike to improve their conditions or they will go to jail, so a boycott is possibly the most effective way to improve worker conditions, and these kind of improvements could lead to better conditions at other facilities across China.

  18. Re:Isn't that anti-science? on Is Climate Change the New Evolution? · · Score: 1

    Education and science are different matters. If you as a scientist want to spend time trying to turn lead into gold, then go for it.

    I don't want my child learning that it may or may not be possible to make a perpetual motion machine.

    If every time a teacher covers a new topic or theory in a science class they have to cover all the niche alternate theories, then the student is not going to learn much in the limited learning time available.

    (That's not to say that there's not room for a separate "History and Philosophy of Science" module within a science class, but these topics might be more valuable when placed in historical perspective).

  19. Re:To say nothing of their own reputation on Greenpeace Breaks Into French Nuclear Plant · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I don't agree with everything that Greenpeace does, but in this case they've risk their lives to do a clear social good and exposed enormous security holes at nuclear sites. (They've risked their lives as other activists like Julian Assange do. They are not insane).

    Would you rather that these kinds of problems are covered up until some kind of incident occurs? The French government should have been testing the security at their nuclear sites (or even providing some decent onsite security), but don't want to for political and cost related reasons.

  20. Re:You know why Apple's winning? It's not about sp on NVIDIA's Tegra 3 Outruns Apple's A5 In First Benchmarks · · Score: 1

    Does the average user on either platform care that much about upgrading the OS?

    Anyone who's going to go to the effort of upgrading their phone is probably going to replace it before it is 2-3 years old anyway.

  21. Re:You know why Apple's winning? It's not about sp on NVIDIA's Tegra 3 Outruns Apple's A5 In First Benchmarks · · Score: 2

    Really neither of the rabid/cultish groups are worth listening to.

    Both Apple and Android have OSes that are pretty user friendly and both work equally well. Both pretty much do the same thing, and there is very little difference between them, since as soon as either side brings in an interesting new feature or app, the other adopts it.

    Just find the phone for the best price and the features that you want. It's only a damn phone, there will be a better one out in a month anyway.

  22. Re:When you're out of rational arguments... on New Batch of Leaked Climate Emails · · Score: 1

    They decided Love Canal was the most economic solution.

    I am not sure how this relates to an emission trading scheme. I agree that we don't want the cheapest solution (per tonne of CO2 removed), if it damages the environment in some other way (increases lead in the soil), but there are other environmental laws to prevent this kind of activity.

    A market solution is clearly not the answer to every problem in the world and an emission trading scheme clearly needs to be well regulated.

    The sulfur dioxide emission trading scheme in the US is widely considered to be a success.

  23. Re:When you're out of rational arguments... on New Batch of Leaked Climate Emails · · Score: 2

    Problem is we've been spending trillions and trillions of dollars in order to be "green" beyond simple common sense activities when we have absolutely no idea if that money is well spent.

    I agree. An emissions trading scheme is by far and away the most economically efficient means of limiting CO2.

    Let the markets decide how to economically provide solutions to the issue. It's much more efficient than having the Government fund people to put solar panels on their rooftops. The only solutions that the Government should be directly funding, is ideas in their very early (non-commercial) stages that can't get commercial funding.

    Problem is we have so little understanding of how the earth reacts to these changes over time. The earth has sustained itself through *much* more drastic changes than anything man has introduced.

    The Earth can handle a drastic climate change no problems. The problem is that we as humans have never lived through these drastic climate changes, and especially now with a population of 7 billion and and agricultural system feeding these people optimized for a stable climate. Even a minor change such as a change in global rainfall patterns would be hugely damaging.

  24. Re:Hand in your eyeballs on Apple's New Patent Weapon — Location Services · · Score: 1

    GPS devices that update their maps from the internet violate this patent.

    Why does it matter if you update your maps from the internet or a CD that is sent to you every six months?

    That is a very obvious feature to add to a GPS device, and I'd be surprised if there wasn't a GPS device that did this before 1998.

  25. Re:Models are always right! on World Emissions of Carbon Dioxide Outpace Worst-Case Scenario · · Score: 1

    It sounds to me like the arguments that a lot of anti-climate science people make boil down to "someone got something wrong several decades ago" (in this case 25 years ago, in the case of global cooling there was a paper published in the 1970s that was singled out).

    These are very similar to the arguments that the anti-evolution crowd makes: "Darwin himself admitted that he didn't understand how the eye evolved"