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User: hypergreatthing

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  1. Re:as a school administrator, i can explain. on Stormtrooper Arrested · · Score: 1

    eh, gi joe with laser rifles beats the accuracy of storm troopers

  2. Re:A holographic TV and a quantum teleporter on Ask Slashdot: If You Were Building a New Home, What Cool New Tech Would You Put In? · · Score: 1

    so uhhh... that thorium reactor is fission, not fusion. Not exactly interchangeable.

  3. what tech would i want in my house? on Ask Slashdot: If You Were Building a New Home, What Cool New Tech Would You Put In? · · Score: 1

    cat 7a in every room
    faraday cage in every room.
    biometric door locks in every room
    Solar panels with hydrogen energy storage (split water during the way, combine at night for energy).
    Underground storage for cars
    Intruder detection system
    Unlocked honeypot rear entrance for intruders
    Intruder elimination system (gun turrets, tasers and gas)
    building super structure to withstand bombs
    Underground base via elevator
    Secure wet lab
    Manufacturing setup via 3d printers
    Underground secret submarine bay
    Backup fusion reactor for power

  4. Re:They already have the technology on Amtrak Installing Cameras To Watch Train Engineers · · Score: 1

    I'm saying that the technology has been around for years and that other systems have it fully automated. Even if it's not fully automated in other areas, they have speed control in place which would have prevented the Amtrak problem and others having to do with questionable speeds.

  5. They already have the technology on Amtrak Installing Cameras To Watch Train Engineers · · Score: 1

    It's called positive train control.
    All that stuff you see with automation? Yeah, there are lots of systems out there that are tried and true.
    Why doesn't amtrak have it? I'm sure it has to do a lot about $$ and the unions pushing to not have it. It's the first step towards train automation.
    There are many more simplistic systems which have it and it's working fine. Many trams are all automated for years and the concepts are the same. They usually have the ability to keep the driver/operator/engineer (PR terms for train drivers is very odd) optional for the system to override it if necessary.
    Sounds like everything is still very manual and very little progress has been made in the past 30 years to bring them up to the 21st century.

  6. Re:Political Speech vs. Commercial Speech on Douglas Williams Pleads Guilty To Training Customers To Beat Polygraph · · Score: 2

    So what? If i create a new business that sells tin toil hats designed to thwart government mind control beams, how is that any different than teaching people how to pass some voodoo science polygraph test?

  7. Re:They wore him down. on Douglas Williams Pleads Guilty To Training Customers To Beat Polygraph · · Score: 1

    I can teach you how to defraud the government.

    Hire a tax attorney/CPA to do your taxes.

    That or lobby for bills giving your company huge tax breaks and or subsidized tax payer monies.

  8. Re:me dumb on Wormholes Untangle a Black Hole Paradox · · Score: 1

    So... basically.... the car has struts and shocks, which keeps it so that the main body doesn't come crashing into the ground and making sure your ride is comfortable.

  9. Re:"Full responsibilty?" on Drone Killed Hostages From U.S. and Italy, Drawing Obama Apology · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What fucking war?

  10. Re:Gas isn't free(as in beer), Many charge points on Cheap Gas Fuels Switch From Electric Cars To SUVs · · Score: 1

    So... when you have to relocate, how does it feel to have to ship your car across the country instead of driving it there?

  11. Re:Call The Real Police on Can Online Reporting System Help Prevent Sexual Assaults On Campus? · · Score: 1

    You can thank obama:
    from an article online " Title IX, the federal law that protects against discrimination in education. Schools are legally required by that law to address sexual harassment and violence on campus, and these activists filed complaints with the federal government about what they describe as lax enforcement by schools. The current administration has taken up the causeâ"the Chronicle of Higher Education describes it as âoea marquee issue for the Obama administrationââ"and praised these young women for spurring political action. âoeA new generation of student activists is effectively pressing for change,â read a statement this spring announcing new policies to address campus violence. The Department of Education has drafted new rules to address womenâ(TM)s safety, some of which have been enshrined into law by Congress, with more legislation likely on the way."

  12. Re:Bullshit ... on Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way) · · Score: 0

    I don't really agree. Or i should say i agree but disagree at some points.

    I'd like to think of myself as a libertarian. The problem here is local government allowing monopolies and duopolies to exist in the first place. This is the underlying problem, but instead of fixing the root cause, people want to put a bandage and apply Title 2 common carrier status to the issue. While this might fix the issue of ISPs getting greedy and trying to charge some for slow/fast lanes, it doesn't fix the issue of them sitting around doing and not investing in their own infrastructure and improving service/speeds and lowering the price.

    Common carrier doesn't fix any of those issues. In other businesses with competition that will go out of business if their product is inferior. In this case they end up staying around forever because there is no competition.

    Look at all the places that are getting google fiber. If the ISPs that are there want to survive, they're upping their game and service and lowering their price points. That's how a market is supposed to work.

    I disagree with the part where you say the companies need to change. Companies are in the business of making money and that's it. The way to increase profits is to eliminate competitors and shovel the same shit for the same or higher price. What needs to change is the cronyism that happens and allows this to happen.

    Honestly i'm not sure of a quick fix, but allowing cities to build out fiber and host them as a public utility for rent by ISPs might make it an even playing field with multiple competitors trying to get subscribers.

  13. Re:Space flight failure rate is around 5% on Some Virgin Galactic Customers Demand Money Back · · Score: 1

    I would risk a 25% chance as long as i get to experience going out into space.
    It's only fun if it's not safe.

  14. Re:advocating nuclear (fission/fusion) is an IQ te on Fusion and Fission/LFTR: Let's Do Both, Smartly · · Score: 1, Insightful

    screw you. Fusion has the potential to fuel all energy needs and future ones with minimal waste. How do you plan on creating solar panels with no energy? it costs a mountain of coal/gas/oil to produce. Solar has some big issues involving night time, scaling and expanding to meet future needs.

    How will you launch rockets using solar? You won't. You'll never reach that level of energy production. You can with a fusion reactor.

  15. Re:Mars has no magnetosphere on Elon Musk: We Must Put a Million People On Mars To Safeguard Humanity · · Score: 2

    It isn't about making it nice here. It's about putting all your eggs in one basket. One major natural accident or man made nuclear war or asteroid crashing into the earth can kill humanity. Time and time again if you look at the history of the earth there are terminal periods in which most of all the life vanished in a relatively short time and then after millions of years replaced with something else. We don't want to be that species which dies out. We need to expand to ensure the race's survival. This should be the biggest push for our own survival. Instead no one is considering the long term goals like this and just want to make it nicer for themselves when they're alive now. Short term thinking will lead to disaster.

  16. Re:Oh good on Miss a Payment? Your Car Stops Running · · Score: 1

    We do have debtor's prisons.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...

  17. Re:Poor rats on Device Allows Paralyzed Rats To Walk, Human Trials Scheduled Next Summer · · Score: 1

    Plants are alive too. Countless get murdered in (quite literally) hot steaming blood.
    Show me the humans that can photosynthesize.

  18. then the next big thing for European libraries is to allow vpning into the library network and remote viewing the kiosks through a webpage. Sounds fair to me.

  19. Re:What I think would be most useful on Ask Slashdot: What Smartwatch Apps Could You See Yourself Using? · · Score: 1

    So basically you want to replace your smartphone with a smartwatch that has all the things you'd come to expect on a phone.

    So you just want a really small smartphone, right?

    I think they still do sell older model iphones.

  20. Re:Tell time on Ask Slashdot: What Smartwatch Apps Could You See Yourself Using? · · Score: 1

    The app would have to send the alert back in time before the watch was even manufactured.

  21. Re:A solution for passengers? on Text While Driving In Long Island and Have Your Phone Disabled · · Score: 1

    ... why the fuck would you ever want to plug a device into your odb-II port that has wireless communications? That's likely to get you killed.

  22. Re:What happened to the core-wars? on Intel Launches Xeon E5 V3 Series Server CPUs With Up To 18 Cores · · Score: 1

    Yeah but these server chips aren't for gaming. Typically to put in that many cores and keep that amount of TDP, you're going to make sacrifices. Specifically in top speed. You may have 18 cores, but they're definitely not running at 4ghz like the i7-4790K. Try more like 2.7ghz. For gaming, single threaded performance is still king.
    Also for gaming, it's fairly rare today to be cpu locked (cpu being the bottleneck) and instead being the graphics card, memory bus, etc.
    These cpus are first and foremost used for virtualization/servers, then multi-core/threaded apps like 3d rendering, video editing, etc. The focus on server components is on stability, not tweaking performance.

  23. Re:What happened to the core-wars? on Intel Launches Xeon E5 V3 Series Server CPUs With Up To 18 Cores · · Score: 1

    i think you can get up to 8 cores in a standard desktop.
    These are server cpus. You can put a server cpu in a desktop pc, but these xeon cpus can be found in single, dual or quad variants. The price for one of these 18 core cpus? I figure it should be around 2800$. The motherboards for these will be around 500$. It's not something you'll normally see on someone's desk.

  24. These shiny new processor having working TSX instruction sets? The ones that are supposed to help with virtualization?

  25. just wait on Intel's Haswell-E Desktop CPU Debuts With Eight Cores, DDR4 Memory · · Score: 5, Interesting

    until next year. 14nm shrink should be a huge boost in both efficiency and performance.
    The x99 is an "enthusiast" platform and has pricing along those lines.
    DDR4 is also extremely new. Expect it to get faster/better timing specs as time progresses.