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User: thelexx

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  1. Re:useless article on New Radioactive Water Leak At Fukushima: 300 Tons and Growing · · Score: 4, Informative

    Totally wrong on the puddle, not bothering with the rest.

    http://hps.org/publicinformation/ate/faqs/commercialflights.html

    Nutshell:

    "The corresponding annual effective dose, based on 700 hours of flight for subsonic aircraft and 300 hours for the Concorde, can be estimated at between 200 mrem for the least exposed routes and 500 mrem for the more exposed routes."

    500 mrem is equal to 5 millisievert. So 100 msv is equal to 20 years of commercial airline employee exposure. In one hour.

  2. Re:so just claim your org is pro-war on Ask Slashdot: With Grants Drying Up, How Is a Tech Non-Profit To Survive? · · Score: 2

    Don't forget the sapping and impurification of our bodily fluids!

    Deny them your essence!

  3. Re:My house, my rules on Israel Airport Security Allowed To Read Tourists' Email · · Score: 1

    Totally agree. And fuck Israel.

  4. Re:That's not a drone on Drone Comes Within 200 Feet of Airliner Over New York · · Score: 1

    It's also amusing that you don't, are wrong, and are so smug about it.

  5. Re:Wow! on Islamists In Bangladesh Demand Murder of More Bloggers · · Score: 1

    So you equate liberty with government handouts? Bizarre, if true.

  6. Re:Leftist as in Hitler? on Islamists In Bangladesh Demand Murder of More Bloggers · · Score: 1

    Priceless. That was simultaneously the most hilarious and sad post I've seen in a long while. Kudos.

  7. Re:amazing transformation on Alcoholism Vaccine Makes Alcohol Intolerable To Drinkers · · Score: 1

    "whole thing sounds a bit clockwork orange to me"

    Bingo.

  8. Re:sometimes on Ask Slashdot: Why Is It So Hard To Make An Accurate Progress Bar? · · Score: 1

    The Midnight Commander progress meter is for me the standard by which all others are judged, and is on my Things of Serious Fucking Beauty list. For years it has put to shame the fluctuating WAG meter in Windows. You know it if the network or something starts suddenly slowing down your move/copy - the throughput readout doesn't lie.

  9. Well done on Local Emergency Alert System Hacked, Warns Dead Rising From Graves · · Score: 1

    And tsk, tsk. What can I say, it's a battle between the young and the old internal geeks.

    I also note sadly to myself that my old geek would scold, while the current enforcement mindset would encourage terrorist charges. And also noting that the fact that I would even _think about that_ is fucking sad.

  10. One nerd's reply on Department of Homeland Security Wants Nerds For a New "Cyber Reserve'" · · Score: 1

    "Why don't y'all take that badge and shove it up your ass. All up in your ass." I'm American.

  11. Re:Everyone has pie in the sky sci-fi, who cares? on Kurzweil: The Cloud Will Expand Human Brain Capacity · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the forum Dr. Soong!

    Joking. That post was a thing of beauty. And fwiw anon, I have mods but was moved to reply. So...damn given and thanks for reviving the old /. vibe in me for a moment.

  12. Re:China on Counterfeit Air Bag Racket Blows Up · · Score: 1

    On the whole, I would say no.

    Building a reputation for quality is hard and restrictive. It restricts your ability to be lazy and make short term cash by ripping people off.

    China can make high quality things right now. They just choose not to.

    And though I feel it is crucial, I will leave the cultural differences between Germany/Japan and China unexplored so as not to incite a riot.

  13. Re:Well, that explains it on Counterfeit Air Bag Racket Blows Up · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Really? Sounds like a bit more than that to me:

    "While NHTSA says it has no reports of injuries or deaths linked to a counterfeit device, in its testing the counterfeit bags had "consistent malfunctioning," ranging from not deploying on impact to throwing metal shards."

    Feel free to install them in your car however and re-sell the genuine ones for a bit of quick cash.

  14. Re:Serious points raised? on Student Publishes Extensive Statistics On the Population of Middle-Earth · · Score: 4, Informative

    "wielding 50+ pound swords"

    Swords do not weigh that much. The Wallace Sword is five feet six inches long and weighs six pounds. It's at the upper end of claymore size/weight and of swords generally.

  15. Re:That's TRULY insane on US House Science Committee Member: Evolution Is a Lie From Hell · · Score: 2

    My take is that he fully understands evolution and rejects it as a sophisticated ploy by Satan to trick us. I've met someone with this exact philosophy before and there was no reasoning with them on it. He too was an otherwise extremely intelligent person. Folks of that ilk have an impenetrable fall-back position from 'Satan did it' - it must be that God is testing us. I quickly realized that the only winning move was not to play.

    Seems relevant somehow to also mention the really smart and rather wealthy guy who once told me that environmentalism was a waste of time because Jesus was going to come before things fall apart. How I wish I was making that up.

  16. Re:So you admit tracking is bad for customers on Advertisers Blast Microsoft Over IE Default Privacy Settings · · Score: 1

    Actually, dropping that part of the sentence as false does nothing to the logic of the rest of it. The poster should have omitted it completely to begin with.

  17. Re:Neat on Message In Bottle Found After 98 Years Near Shetland · · Score: 1

    For sure, technological advancement SHOULD lead to a natural decrease in many prices over time. That isn't the case though because the money is losing value more quickly than the advancements are happening. The fact that even superior (let's say 5x) bread is now more than 30 cents per pound shows that pretty clearly.

    And you made me curious too! The loaf of bread on my shelf says 1lb on the label and it was a little over $2 IIRC.

  18. Re:Neat on Message In Bottle Found After 98 Years Near Shetland · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "But 1 L(1914) would buy you far more than 1 L(2005), so in that sense it is worth more."

    Think about that for a minute.

    1 in 1914 = 76 loaves of bread (just a number for example)
    1 in 2005 = 1 loaf of bread

    In absolutely no sense is it worth more now. It is very simple. If it were truly worth more now, in any way shape or form, you would be getting more than 76 loaves of bread for it.

  19. Re:Neat on Message In Bottle Found After 98 Years Near Shetland · · Score: 3, Informative

    "the Pound was worth roughly 76 times more in 2005 (the year it was written) than it was in 1914."

    Less. The pound was worth ~76 times less in 2005 than in 1914. See the graphs on pages 18 and 19.

  20. Re:I disagree; Bill is an idiot. on Bill "The Science Guy" Nye Says Creationism Is Not Appropriate For Children · · Score: 1

    "You sir are an a-hole."

    The truth is bitter.

    "A Christian with balls."

    Little teeny, tiny ones Mr Anonymous.

  21. Re:Gives a whole new meaning on Cheap Four-fingered Robot Hand Edges Closer To Human Dexterity · · Score: 1
  22. Re:Why not just 3 fingers, indeed? on Cheap Four-fingered Robot Hand Edges Closer To Human Dexterity · · Score: 1

    Reading on the subject (hand issue with a close family member) tells me that using toe joints to regain some finger functionality is not unknown in Western medicine currently. And I would speculate that a large part of the issue with five v. three is the cosmetic effect. This really can't be underestimated. It's the reason why many who currently can use a traditional clasping-hook prosthesis choose not to.

    BTW and kinda-on-topic - IMO the current state-of-the-art in hand prosthetics is from Touch Bionics. Great, great stuff. Here's hoping that over the next decade or so we see some real progress in this area, for children as well as adults. Hat's off to Nemours and their use of 3D-printing.

  23. Re:Red giants, the scourge of not our time. on Astronomers Watch Star Devouring Planet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I have it right, humans have been around in anatomical form for about ~200,000 years. And in about one billion years, the sun will begin expansion. Let's also say that in only 500,000,000 years it will already be unlivable on Earth for the reasons you mentioned.

    We would still have ~2500 'lifetimes-of-humanity-thusfar' to figure it out.

    Not. Worried.

  24. Re:Flip-flops on When Flying Was a Thrill · · Score: 1

    "Why aren't you doing everything you can to breeze through it?"

    Because it's not right that I should have to.

  25. Re:Real reason on Poll Finds Americans Think the TSA Is 'Doing a Good Job' · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unlike you, for whom the threat of a jackboot on your neck for trying to go about your business as a free citizen has become comfortable.