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User: nanoakron

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Comments · 544

  1. Re:Great plan on Hackers Dump Millions of Records From Banks, Politicians · · Score: 1

    I think by 'gone through it', the OP means:

    'it' - the documents that have been released, not financial ruin

    'gone through' - to have read, not to have personally experienced

    So +1 for your misreading, with +4 for leaping to conclusions.

  2. Re:Autism on Lack of Vaccination Sends Babies In Oregon To the Hospital · · Score: 1

    Replying to AC I know...but seriously, what ARE you talking about?

    Can't find what vaccines are made of? I strongly suggest....umm...Wikipedia. And a medical degree (which I have).

    -Nano.

  3. Re:ground effects lighting on UK Plan Would Use CCTV To Stop Uninsured Drivers From Refueling · · Score: 1

    I'm not intending to put any effort into getting around this system because it's a good idea. Uninsured and untaxed drivers are a major problem on the UK's already overcrowded roads. Such drivers skip out on paying the upkeep for the same roads they expect the rest of us to pay for, are pushing the UK's skyrocketing insurance costs ever higher, often drive poorly maintained or even stolen vehicles and present a far greater risk to the law-abding driving public than the protection of their 'privacy' or 'rights' are worth.

    This is not a 'once they came for the Jews, but I was not a Jew' argument. These people are breaking the law to the detriment of greater society and we have the means to instantly punish them en masse. We should use it.

  4. Re:At least someone has balls (and common sense) on DDoS Attack On Wikileaks Increasing · · Score: 1

    Hang him because he's anti-US?

    Perhaps the irony of your statement has gone 'whoosh' over your head if you can't see it's that arrogance and dismissal of others that /makes/ people anti-US in the first place.

    tl;dr You've got about 3,000,000,000 others to wade through first.

  5. Re:Golf Diesel on Mazda Claims 70 mpg For New Engine, No Hybrid Needed · · Score: 0, Troll

    Older cars were so economical because they were so light. Newer cars are far more robust in an accident.

    Safety or economy, choose one.

    Absolutely false.

    Older cars were heavier than new ones AND new ones are safer.

    This is because of a number of improvements - new alloys, plastic internals, seatbelts, airbags, roll-cages and crumple zones.

    How on earth did the parent get a +5, insightful?

  6. Re:Interested to see any changes in OSX on 'Back To the Mac' Media Event On October 20th · · Score: 1

    That's one thing I often ask of my Sony Vaio-using family: Does Win7 run FASTER on your 4 year old Vaio than XP, because Snow Leopard certainly beats Tiger on my 2006 MacBook Pro?

  7. Re:Great Simple Idea on FCC Will Tackle Cell Phone 'Bill Shock' · · Score: 1

    Responding to AC but hey...

    You have heard of 'databases' and 'computers' right?

  8. Well, I'm not so sure 'won' as 'competed well' on Watch the 1st American Newsreel of Sputnik Launch · · Score: 1

    I know that Americans feel it dents their national pride to admit it, but the Russians categorically won the space race.

    America achieved only a single victory - the first man on the moon - and then decided that was enough so just sat back from there.

    However, the Russians had already done all the rest - first animal, first orbit, first man, first woman, first moonwalk.

    So if you're happy as a nation to believe you 'won' because of a single victory, go ahead.

    However, the rest of us know the truth.

  9. Yeah, 25 potential years but... on 15-Year-Old Boy Fitted With Robotic Heart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy is a progressive, irreversible muscular disorder where the muscle cells literally pull themselves apart due to the lack of a key membrane-stabilising protein, Dystrophin.

    So now this boy's heart can't give out for 25 years, you're then only consigning him to die of suffocation as his diaphragm does.

    Oh no, ventilator. Well, let's wait for his oesophagus, colon and eye muscles to go...

    But he's still alive, just locked into an immobile, artificially ventilated body with a heart that will never stop.

    That seems worse than the natural alternative to me.

  10. Re:This is news for nerds? Stuff that matters? on Segway UK Boss Dies After Driving Off Cliff · · Score: 1

    Umm...zero?

    Seriously - I live in London (biggest number of cyclists in the UK) - it's far quicker to ride on the road than the pavement anyway.

  11. Holy Radioactive Zombie Darwin on Plants Near Chernobyl Adapt To Contaminated Soil · · Score: -1, Troll

    Texas school board, say hello to a little thing called 'Natural Selection'...

  12. Re:Guns and chains... on Hunters Shot Down Google Fiber · · Score: 4, Informative

    Agreed!

    High voltage discharges create intense UV radiation - and because your retina doesn't detect UV it doesn't trigger your blink reflex.

    So you'll end up with corneal burning and irritation if you're lucky, cataracts or permanent blindspots if not.

    So these idiots intentionally reproducing these things to see the pretty colours deserve all they get. Unfortunate pylon workers, welders and high voltage researchers do not.

    -Nano.

  13. New Dark Ages on Geocentrists Convene To Discuss How Galileo Was Wrong · · Score: 1

    Mark my words - we're entering a second 'Dark Ages'.

    With the rise (or perhaps backlash) of religious doctrine against the progress made by modern science over the past few hundred years, we will eventually have the more reasoned voices in society drowned out by the clamouring of idiots.

    Creationism/Intelligent Design vs. Evolutionary Theory was the first battleground, now Heliocentrism. What next? Alchemy? Flat-earthism? The stork theory of human reproduction.

    This is a disgrace to modern society.

  14. Re:2000 pages... on Child Abuse Verdict Held Back By MS Word Glitch · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, no - it's even nicer than that.

    Hang - As you say, hanged by the neck until loss of consciousness but still alive.
    Draw - Then they'd wake you back up by cutting into your abdomen and pulling out your intestines. Occasionally, for added fun, they'd burn them in front of you on an open brazier.
    Quarter - As you say, pulled apart by 4 strong cart horses.

    Lovely people.

    Look up 'broken on the wheel' for truly awful torture.

  15. Re:How is this news? on Whisky Made From Diabetics' Urine · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of the old saying about European beer vs. US beer -

    "What we call lager, they call beer.

    What they call beer, we call piss."

  16. Re:Their equipment, their choice. on Germany To Grant Privacy At the Workplace · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with just checking on their output.

    As in 'Is this person doing the job I pay him/her for'?

    Do you really feel you're entitled to see whether your top programmer is also a chronic alcoholic with a porn and crack habit?

    If he's getting the work done and bringing in the clients, why do you, as an employer, give a shit about the rest?

    Again this is a clear example of Europe's insistence on individual workers' rights vs. the US' corporatist approach.

  17. Re:illegal information... on North Korea Looking For Friends On Facebook · · Score: 4, Insightful

    like holocaust denial in Germany?

  18. Re:Good grief! on Australia Considering iPhone App Censorship · · Score: 1

    I've got to say - elections throw up the funniest things.

    Take a look at us here in the UK, where there was a massive swing away from Labour (13 years in big-brother promoting and education ruining government) towards the middle ground (LibDems).

    Then the best possible outcome happened - no party won an overall majority so the LibDems and Conservatives had to become strange bedfellows for the first time in a century (I believe)...and things have gone from strength to strength since - demolishing the database state, introducing locally-responsible education policies and promises to be greener amongst other things.

    Basically, a coalition has worked so far despite our first-past-the-post parliamentary system being rigged against such a thing - its tempered the more extreme voices on both sides of government and left us with an intelligent middle-ground.

    Hope you guys are left with the same!

  19. Re:Don't target cars on Is a US High-Speed Railway Economically Feasible? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You mean like in West Bengal http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10178967, Madrid http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Madrid_train_bombings or Russia http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8383960.stm?

    Yet people are still building new train projects worldwide.

    Do you honestly think 'b..b..but terrorists' is any sort of intellectually valid answer to questions of national transport projects?

  20. $8 billion? Is that all? on Is a US High-Speed Railway Economically Feasible? · · Score: 1

    Let's look at some more realistic likely project costs shall we:

    High Speed 1 in the UK (our first 'high speed' but really only reaching 180mph, which people do on their motorbikes nowadays)

    - 67 miles, £5.2 billion ($8 billion)

    Cross-Rail (our newest train project in London, crossing the capital)

    - 73 miles, £16 billion ($25 billion)

    The 'big dig' in Boston

    - 3.5 miles, $22 billion

    So, we've got $8 billion to spend - you'll be lucky if you see 100 miles of track, let alone purchase any trains with the leftovers!

  21. Sentence much? on Criminal Photoshops Himself Into Charity Photos In Bid For Leniency · · Score: 2, Insightful

    23 years for scamming.

    That's 23 years just for taking money that isn't his.

    I knew you Americans liked your long and excessive sentences, but this takes the biscuit. I've heard of murderers and rapists getting less time.

    Just shows you what your court system is really there to protect - the good old green.

  22. Grown men crying like babies? on The Hell Known As Internet Screening Services · · Score: 2, Interesting

    4chan'll do that to you...

  23. Re:smart move on iPhone 4 Reception Recall Ruckus Roundup · · Score: 1

    You're so right! The vast majority of iPhone users hack their phones and run jailbroken software, and the small minority who don't wish they could.

    Oh, what's that? - It's only true in sarcastic fantasyland and >99.9% of iPhone users don't give one shit about the hackability of their phone?

    Who'da thunk it?

  24. Where are the devices with BT 3? on Bluetooth 4.0 Spec Adopted · · Score: 1

    Umm...who really cares? Bueller? Bueller?

    Just bought myself a brand spanking new mobile phone - they're all still stuck on 2.1

    Anyone seen a single device that uses bluetooth 3?

    And now we're talking 4?

    Sorry - I don't care.

  25. Re:Just Return It on Apple, AT&T Sued Over iPhone 4 Antennas · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You're absolutely right.

    And the best thing is...this phone's only been out a week. 1 whole week.

    And there's already hysterical screaming from the rooftops and people running to lawyers because they see Apple as a potential cash cow, rather than returning a defective product and being done with it. No, they want to have their cake and eat it too.

    Not to mention the largest of these suits only names 11 plaintiffs. 11.

    I've got an iPhone 4 myself, as do two of my friends and none of us are able to reproduce this reception issue.

    I know the plural of anecdote isn't data but we're already nearly a quarter the way to the number of plaintiffs in this suit.