Thank you. I noted immediately that the goalpost-shifting was taking place WITHIN THE ARTICLE SUMMARY already.
Title: "97% of Climate Science Papers Agree Global Warming Is Man-made" Implication: Global warming is CAUSED by humans. Text: "The papers were evaluated and categorized by how they implicitly or explicitly endorsed humans as a contributing cause of global warming."
X is a contributing cause != X is the cause.
I think pretty much everyone reasonable agrees that humans are contributing SOMETHING to global warming (or, I guess the term is "climate change").
It's a great bloody step to go from there to blaming humans as the main (or even a significant) driver, and assuming we should all pay additional carbon taxes for the air we exhale, or buy into Al Gore's carbon credits ponzi business.
Honestly, I have a real job; I don't have time to fucking analyze every bloody news release for weasel-words and hedged bets. But looking at the sloppy thinking (or deliberate goalpost-shifting) in just a few sentences suggests to me that again, the whole AGW thing is pretty dubious from the start.
Of course, that's the begged creed at the base of the AGW mantra: we want nothing to change so it stays at (what we think is) "perfect for us".
Aside from the everpresent possibility that some massive supernova x-ray wavefront is racing towards us undetected at light speed and will sterilize the planet in the next moment, the root question is: why SHOULD it stay this way, so nice for us? There's nothing particularly human-favoring about the universe, the entire span of humanity's existence might be nothing more on the scale of the galaxy than a single bright little ephemeral flicker of a cinder floating above the the flames of a bonfire, where a *blip* of conditions favorable to us happened to exist, by accident.
As opposed to the other mainstream media, who merely assume that the climate of a 5-billion-year-old planet will be catastrophically ruined by driving SUVs, and that the root of every bad thing that's happened in history can be pinned to blame some white guy, somewhere (after 1776, it would be an AMERICAN white guy).
My goodness, I have a hard time understanding how stroke mags can even stay in business, much less the paywall sites. I truly can't comprehend anyone willing to break a law over something available ubiquitously for free, in fact it's hard to AVOID porn on the net.
For those who don't know what I'm talking about, google redtube, youporn. There is not enough time in the world to exhaust their current library of free porn, much less even catch up with the volume added every day.
This statistic, as presented, proves pretty much nothing.
Look, I'll cheerfully agree that our congresspeople are largely nicely-dressed whores who apparently will vote whichever way they're funded, but the statistics presented here are so confused as to be nearly meaningless.
The total given by those in favor may have been 40x that given against. Then again, this could be (viewed objectively) simply a groundswell of opinion in favor.
I look at my senators (both D-MN): Amy Klobuchar took $532,457 from those in favor, $16,298 from those opposed. ~30x as much. Al Franken took $858,186:$11,400 almost 90x. Two SOLID yes votes, as they vote mindless lockstep with their party.
Yet Jeff Flake (R-AZ), he received $588,966 $2,800 - a staggering 200x in favor, and voted "NO".
Mark Kirk (R-IL) $1,076,621to $28,200 or some 35x in favor, another "NO" vote.
So it doesn't seem that the wierdly-presented statistic of how much more one guy got from one side vs the other controls which way they voted.
I'd argue from opensecrets.org that the link between money and legislation is so obvious that it's hard to imagine that anyone could present it in a way that's NOT conclusive...like maplight managed to....
As I'd posted Beck's link to a number of threads on AGW, I wanted to post my response to some other links as well:
I just want to say thanks to some/. posters, in particular for the realclimate links (Rabett is a little too snarky for me) - specifically http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/11/650000-years-of-greenhouse-gas-concentrations/ [realclimate.org] [realclimate.org] . The article is interesting, as is especially the commentary, in which people raise a number of well-informed questions and get well-informed answers.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
However...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert: 1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND 2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND 3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems at least partially true. #2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change". That it's true in the medium- or long-terms is absolutely not proved, particularly not in the case of the most adaptable species this planet has ever seen (AFAIK). #3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
Further...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert: 1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND 2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND 3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems at least partially true. #2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change". That it's true in the medium- or long-terms is absolutely not proved, particularly not in the case of the most adaptable species this planet has ever seen (AFAIK). #3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
As I'd posted Beck's link to a number of threads on AGW, I wanted to post my response to some other links as well:
I just want to say thanks to some/. posters, in particular for the realclimate links (Rabett is a little too snarky for me) - specifically http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/11/650000-years-of-greenhouse-gas-concentrations/ [realclimate.org] . The article is interesting, as is especially the commentary, in which people raise a number of well-informed questions and get well-informed answers.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
However...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert: 1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND 2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND 3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems true. #2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change". #3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
"The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
"...just about anyone with access to those cutting-edge printers can arm themselves. 'Terrorists can make these guns and do some horrible things to an individual and then walk away scott-free..."
1) anyone can arm themselves. What the 3d printers can make is nothing more than a zip gun - a single-shot pistol of dubious safety. One can make this easily in ones' garage with pipe, rubber band, and a nail - and no special tools. Perhaps he should offer to ban garages?
2) shooting someone is illegal, no? If someone is going to SHOOT SOMEONE (ie breaking the law) what makes you think he's going to care about some law against owning a 3d printer?
And the fact that they *happen* to be the party in opposition to the Chief Executive (you know, the IRS's boss)....sheer coincidence? In an election year?
As long as the article's a dupe, I'll dupe my reply:
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/08_Beck-2.pdf (from 2008) "The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/08_Beck-2.pdf (from 2008) "The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
Casual, recreational use of a variety of brain-altering drugs: fine. Anonymous bathhouses where one can - hetero or homo - have sex with a variety of strangers: lifestyle choice.
Cellphones: "We should make sure we warn people about the dangers!"
Ahahahaha, I love it when some shithole 3rd world insolvent country rolls out a new method to keep control of its teeming masses.
Maybe instead of trying to watch everyone all the time like a giant prison ward, they'd be more successful at preventing sedition by I dunno, maybe making their country a better place to live so people wouldn't be so angry all the time?
They could start by - instead of their parliament and grand poobah (or whatever they're both called) wasting their efforts on trivial political point-scoring against each other all the goddamn time - passing a fucking budget since they haven't passed one in the last 4 years?
1) is there ANYONE who wanted Adobe who didn't d/l the full suite of everything plus licenses when they were posted just a few months ago?
2) if adobe wants to limit piracy, a first step would be to stop giving it away, cf#1, above.
FWIW, I personally think that giving away old versions is brilliant. The WHOLE REASON (in my view) that MS Windows owns the desktop market today (well, until Win8 anyway) was that OS/2 was hard to pirate, and Win95 was easy-peasy. Talk about a loss-leader paying off for 20 years.
I figured Adobe was 'accidentally' giving away old (CS2) versions of everything in the same vein, to 'hook' users on their methods, and it's worked for me...I was using a dubiously-legal version of Vegas (someone's old license they sold me at a flea market) and I'm cheerfully willing to plug away at the Adobe learning curve to switch to something only because I feel it is probably more legit.
Sure, SABRE sounds great, in the exact same sense that fusion sounds better than fission-based nuclear power.
Of course, like that comparison, scramjets are a relatively simpler technology that's already been conceptually proven, while the hybrid engine you're talking about is - despite the proof of concept for the cooling function - largely vapour.
And, by the way, the hybrid engine programme WAS originally a military concept development, but was set aside for other more promising developments. To fear that "it's just going to be used to deliver bombs" is pretty short sighted; like just about every other aerospace tech, it's likely that the bulk of investment, research, and deployment in the early, inefficient stages will indeed be by governments, but once the tech proves itself to be safe and as stable as it *appears* to potentially be, it's certain that the commercial markets will follow.
Setting aside the probably-politically motivated scorn, it's a modest achievement.
I mean, as much as ATF would like you to believe otherwise, it's EXTREMELY simple to build what is, effectively, a zip-gun: meant to safely shoot a single bullet in short, nasty situation. (More accurately, it's meant to prove you have the CAPABILITY to shoot such a bullet, hopefully deterring your attacker. Having to actually shoot that bullet will quickly prove that a) bullets aren't really the magic-bad-guy-killing-device that the movies make them seem, and b) in a high-stress, high-adrenaline situation, putting a little 9mm-wide piece of lead into even a human-body-sized target isn't simple.)
For that matter, in particular contexts, a Derringer - which isn't much more than this gun - can be quite useful. It's been a successful firearm product for 100+ years.
Then again, I don't think their point (yet) was to try to print a 3d Colt 1911 (yet). Baby steps.
Their point was to prove that the restrictions attempting to contain TECHNOLOGY and hardware is extremely short-sighted and stupid, and that perhaps law enforcement and government is better-tasked with actually pursuing CRIMINALS rather than simply ban their tools and assume the job is done.
Thank you.
I noted immediately that the goalpost-shifting was taking place WITHIN THE ARTICLE SUMMARY already.
Title: "97% of Climate Science Papers Agree Global Warming Is Man-made"
Implication: Global warming is CAUSED by humans.
Text: "The papers were evaluated and categorized by how they implicitly or explicitly endorsed humans as a contributing cause of global warming."
X is a contributing cause != X is the cause.
I think pretty much everyone reasonable agrees that humans are contributing SOMETHING to global warming (or, I guess the term is "climate change").
It's a great bloody step to go from there to blaming humans as the main (or even a significant) driver, and assuming we should all pay additional carbon taxes for the air we exhale, or buy into Al Gore's carbon credits ponzi business.
Honestly, I have a real job; I don't have time to fucking analyze every bloody news release for weasel-words and hedged bets. But looking at the sloppy thinking (or deliberate goalpost-shifting) in just a few sentences suggests to me that again, the whole AGW thing is pretty dubious from the start.
Of course, that's the begged creed at the base of the AGW mantra: we want nothing to change so it stays at (what we think is) "perfect for us".
Aside from the everpresent possibility that some massive supernova x-ray wavefront is racing towards us undetected at light speed and will sterilize the planet in the next moment, the root question is: why SHOULD it stay this way, so nice for us? There's nothing particularly human-favoring about the universe, the entire span of humanity's existence might be nothing more on the scale of the galaxy than a single bright little ephemeral flicker of a cinder floating above the the flames of a bonfire, where a *blip* of conditions favorable to us happened to exist, by accident.
As long as we've perfected this, why not just grow them a little more, for meat?
At this point, it's probably easier to list the things global warming isn't affecting.
As opposed to the other mainstream media, who merely assume that the climate of a 5-billion-year-old planet will be catastrophically ruined by driving SUVs, and that the root of every bad thing that's happened in history can be pinned to blame some white guy, somewhere (after 1776, it would be an AMERICAN white guy).
Hey, we all have our preconceptions, right?
...why in HELL would anyone "pirate" porn?
My goodness, I have a hard time understanding how stroke mags can even stay in business, much less the paywall sites. I truly can't comprehend anyone willing to break a law over something available ubiquitously for free, in fact it's hard to AVOID porn on the net.
For those who don't know what I'm talking about, google redtube, youporn. There is not enough time in the world to exhaust their current library of free porn, much less even catch up with the volume added every day.
"....lesbian...."
"...not ashamed to rub one out to porn with the shades up..."
Where do you live, again?
We may have solved some of the porn-piracy problem right there.
This statistic, as presented, proves pretty much nothing.
Look, I'll cheerfully agree that our congresspeople are largely nicely-dressed whores who apparently will vote whichever way they're funded, but the statistics presented here are so confused as to be nearly meaningless.
The total given by those in favor may have been 40x that given against.
Then again, this could be (viewed objectively) simply a groundswell of opinion in favor.
I look at my senators (both D-MN):
Amy Klobuchar took $532,457 from those in favor, $16,298 from those opposed. ~30x as much.
Al Franken took $858,186:$11,400 almost 90x.
Two SOLID yes votes, as they vote mindless lockstep with their party.
Yet Jeff Flake (R-AZ), he received $588,966 $2,800 - a staggering 200x in favor, and voted "NO".
Mark Kirk (R-IL) $1,076,621to $28,200 or some 35x in favor, another "NO" vote.
So it doesn't seem that the wierdly-presented statistic of how much more one guy got from one side vs the other controls which way they voted.
I'd argue from opensecrets.org that the link between money and legislation is so obvious that it's hard to imagine that anyone could present it in a way that's NOT conclusive...like maplight managed to....
As I'd posted Beck's link to a number of threads on AGW, I wanted to post my response to some other links as well:
I just want to say thanks to some /. posters, in particular for the realclimate links (Rabett is a little too snarky for me) - specifically http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/11/650000-years-of-greenhouse-gas-concentrations/ [realclimate.org] [realclimate.org] .
The article is interesting, as is especially the commentary, in which people raise a number of well-informed questions and get well-informed answers.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
However...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert:
1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND
2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND
3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems at least partially true.
#2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change". That it's true in the medium- or long-terms is absolutely not proved, particularly not in the case of the most adaptable species this planet has ever seen (AFAIK).
#3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
Further...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert:
1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND
2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND
3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems at least partially true.
#2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change". That it's true in the medium- or long-terms is absolutely not proved, particularly not in the case of the most adaptable species this planet has ever seen (AFAIK).
#3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
As I'd posted Beck's link to a number of threads on AGW, I wanted to post my response to some other links as well:
I just want to say thanks to some /. posters, in particular for the realclimate links (Rabett is a little too snarky for me) - specifically http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/11/650000-years-of-greenhouse-gas-concentrations/ [realclimate.org] .
The article is interesting, as is especially the commentary, in which people raise a number of well-informed questions and get well-informed answers.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
However...the point of the AGW creed is not merely to prove warming or CO2. It is, in fact, to assert:
1) that the sole (or at least dominant cause) for global warming (later amended to 'changing climate' - hah) is human activity, AND
2) that this is an unmitigated catastrophe, AND
3) the only solution is expanding government control of the activities of individuals "for their own good".
#1 seems true.
#2 may certainly be true in the short run for people in coastal cities, but let's be honest, these very-human things were never established in their current locations based on their durability/safety, and in long enough timescales the survivability of anything approaches zero. Nothing is permanent, not even stuff that we deem "really important or inconvenient to change".
#3 certainly doesn't logically follow either of the others, particularly considering some of the people volunteering (out of their own good nature) to be the ones making the decisions.
I just want to say thanks, in particular for the realclimate links (Rabett is a little too snarky for me) - specifically http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/11/650000-years-of-greenhouse-gas-concentrations/ .
The article is interesting, as is especially the commentary, in which people raise a number of well-informed questions and get well-informed answers.
I'm trying to honestly evaluate the claims of AGW as best I can as a layman. I'm not a climate scientist, and I'll admit, I have been made suspicious by the quasi-religious tone of the exercise (starting with Mr Gore) and the unquestioning adulatory tenor of its supporters (a Nobel and Academy Award for him, really?).
Anyway, I sincerely appreciate anything that increases my understanding of the science and details.
As a layman, it seems irrefutable that there is warming taking place. It seems that CO2 has recently spiked, and that makes anecdotal sense given the intense and constant consumption of hydrocarbons since industrialization.
It seems that the 'talking point' of the eco-marxists today "unprecedented" levels of CO2...was actually disproven in 2008:
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/08_Beck-2.pdf (from 2008)
"The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that
a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and
b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
"...just about anyone with access to those cutting-edge printers can arm themselves. 'Terrorists can make these guns and do some horrible things to an individual and then walk away scott-free..."
1) anyone can arm themselves. What the 3d printers can make is nothing more than a zip gun - a single-shot pistol of dubious safety. One can make this easily in ones' garage with pipe, rubber band, and a nail - and no special tools. Perhaps he should offer to ban garages?
2) shooting someone is illegal, no? If someone is going to SHOOT SOMEONE (ie breaking the law) what makes you think he's going to care about some law against owning a 3d printer?
And the fact that they *happen* to be the party in opposition to the Chief Executive (you know, the IRS's boss)....sheer coincidence? In an election year?
Yeah.
As long as the article's a dupe, I'll dupe my reply:
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/08_Beck-2.pdf (from 2008)
"The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that
a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and
b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/08_Beck-2.pdf (from 2008)
"The record clearly demonstrates that [CO2 levels were] significantly higher than usually reported for the Last [Glacial] Termination, with levels of up to ~425 ppm about 12,750 years ago, which exceeds the present CO2 concentration of 395 ppm."
This explains thoroughly that
a) it's fundamentally a fallacy to compare Vostok data with Mauna Loa CO2 results (from 3000+ m altitude), and
b) that CO2 values frequently exceeded 400 in both this and the last centuries (as high as 480 depending on how you look at it).
Casual, recreational use of a variety of brain-altering drugs: fine.
Anonymous bathhouses where one can - hetero or homo - have sex with a variety of strangers: lifestyle choice.
Cellphones: "We should make sure we warn people about the dangers!"
I'm not sure how this is a big deal?
After all, pretty soon the only other person still playing is going to know what's going on.
Ahahahaha, I love it when some shithole 3rd world insolvent country rolls out a new method to keep control of its teeming masses.
Maybe instead of trying to watch everyone all the time like a giant prison ward, they'd be more successful at preventing sedition by I dunno, maybe making their country a better place to live so people wouldn't be so angry all the time?
They could start by - instead of their parliament and grand poobah (or whatever they're both called) wasting their efforts on trivial political point-scoring against each other all the goddamn time - passing a fucking budget since they haven't passed one in the last 4 years?
Wait, are we still talking about India?
1) is there ANYONE who wanted Adobe who didn't d/l the full suite of everything plus licenses when they were posted just a few months ago?
2) if adobe wants to limit piracy, a first step would be to stop giving it away, cf#1, above.
FWIW, I personally think that giving away old versions is brilliant.
The WHOLE REASON (in my view) that MS Windows owns the desktop market today (well, until Win8 anyway) was that OS/2 was hard to pirate, and Win95 was easy-peasy. Talk about a loss-leader paying off for 20 years.
I figured Adobe was 'accidentally' giving away old (CS2) versions of everything in the same vein, to 'hook' users on their methods, and it's worked for me...I was using a dubiously-legal version of Vegas (someone's old license they sold me at a flea market) and I'm cheerfully willing to plug away at the Adobe learning curve to switch to something only because I feel it is probably more legit.
"You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before."
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/r/rahmemanue409199.html
-Rahm Emmanuel
Sure, SABRE sounds great, in the exact same sense that fusion sounds better than fission-based nuclear power.
Of course, like that comparison, scramjets are a relatively simpler technology that's already been conceptually proven, while the hybrid engine you're talking about is - despite the proof of concept for the cooling function - largely vapour.
And, by the way, the hybrid engine programme WAS originally a military concept development, but was set aside for other more promising developments. To fear that "it's just going to be used to deliver bombs" is pretty short sighted; like just about every other aerospace tech, it's likely that the bulk of investment, research, and deployment in the early, inefficient stages will indeed be by governments, but once the tech proves itself to be safe and as stable as it *appears* to potentially be, it's certain that the commercial markets will follow.
Setting aside the probably-politically motivated scorn, it's a modest achievement.
I mean, as much as ATF would like you to believe otherwise, it's EXTREMELY simple to build what is, effectively, a zip-gun: meant to safely shoot a single bullet in short, nasty situation. (More accurately, it's meant to prove you have the CAPABILITY to shoot such a bullet, hopefully deterring your attacker. Having to actually shoot that bullet will quickly prove that a) bullets aren't really the magic-bad-guy-killing-device that the movies make them seem, and b) in a high-stress, high-adrenaline situation, putting a little 9mm-wide piece of lead into even a human-body-sized target isn't simple.)
For that matter, in particular contexts, a Derringer - which isn't much more than this gun - can be quite useful. It's been a successful firearm product for 100+ years.
Then again, I don't think their point (yet) was to try to print a 3d Colt 1911 (yet). Baby steps.
Their point was to prove that the restrictions attempting to contain TECHNOLOGY and hardware is extremely short-sighted and stupid, and that perhaps law enforcement and government is better-tasked with actually pursuing CRIMINALS rather than simply ban their tools and assume the job is done.
And that, kids, is the difference between being little Holland, and big United States.