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  1. We Should Step Back a Minute... on How Close Are We To Engineering the Climate? · · Score: 1

    What makes anyone so sure that we need cooling? What if they go over the edge and trigger irreversible Ice Age conditions? I should think we'd find that a more difficult problem to rectify! I don't think Earth can warm faster than our technology to stop it, at current rates.

    We could stand a warmer climate -- dare I say it, a much warmer climate if you ask North Dakotans -- so long as we address the issue of desertification.

    I promise it's much more complicated, but it should be sufficient to say that more ground cover planetwide will bring more atmospheric moisture, which leads to more ground cover, which, yadda yadda, prevents things from getting too warm. I'm told there is a period of history in which the global climate was much warmer -- and more importantly, wetter -- than it is now, and remained stably so for several hundred million years. I don't think the matter of stability is being addressed by these folks.

    It's not really warming that we should be going all Chicken Little for; it's desertification. Overall stability of the climate should be the priority over desperately trying to stabilize the current conditions, which may or may not be optimum for human use.

    It is my country bumpkin opinion that we should be concerning ourselves with how to make our climate wetter, not colder. I think city folks who live in more tropical locales lose sight of that fact, but those of us who live in the deserts are keenly aware of it.
     

  2. Re:When I hear "I work 60 hours a week"... on Your 60-Hour Work Week Is Not a Badge of Honor · · Score: 1

    I actually did work one construction job 55-60 hours a week for most of a year, so I could have actually waved a whole bunch of pay stubs in your face. This was a company that advertised to its clients that it provided crews on 60 hour work weeks. I was in my early 20s at the time, and even then the 6x10 plus commutes took their toll. I split for better conditions well before I became one of the 50-year-old losers doing it. (Come to think of it, that company is now gone forever... couldn't have happened to a better outfit. It was always a shit place to work.) The 15-20 hours of overtime pay a week looked good, until you did the math on how much more OT was taxed....

    Anyway, my work hour load or "work/life balance" is always about right, being self-employed now. And when I have employees, I'll pay hourly, with overtime work being optional. I always have thought that salary was bullshit if you didn't equate the salary to x number of hours per month. If $4000/mo is for 160 hours (bargained at hire time), then asking someone to work 200 or 250 hours for the same pay is reprehensible.

    I don't see this as a political issue, either -- it's not labor vs. capital. It's mutual human respect, and the contract law of a law-run society. Company needs labor, labor needs money, and the two need to agree somehow on a price. Company wants labor as cheap as possible; labor wants as much money for doing as little as possible. Compromise is key, but it rarely benefits both parties equally. It's something we all work on, I guess.

  3. Re:Pffft on Atlanta Gambled With Winter Storm and Lost · · Score: 1

    I live in snow country (Colorado)... and I've never bought snow tires or chains. 20 years and I've never had a need for them. No 4x4 either, I'm fine with front wheel drive. I don't think I even know anyone who owns a set of chains for their daily driver.

    In other words... it's not the failure of vehicles to be equipped that's Atlanta's problem. It's people who don't know what to do or how to drive on slippery roads. And true, it's not like people who've never left the deep South have any reason to have ever learned those skills, so it's not some kind of failure on their part. That's just how it is.

  4. Re: Fucking Retarded on Predicting the Risk of Suicide By Analyzing the Text of Clinical Notes · · Score: 1

    Ironic that Venezuela had their violent crime rate drop by a factor of a thousand by removing guns from the citizenry.

    Yes, and now all the Venezuelans dance and sing Kumbaya, there is love and joy and peace and freedom for all!

    Or is it a country run by a dictator who seizes private assets; beats, kills, or imprisons political opponents; and the paramilitary police run rampant over the populace that's starving because their currency has been ruined?

    Gosh, I can never remember which it is!

    Tell you what, AC, if you think post-Chavez Venezuela is a nice and safe (because no guns right?) place to live, feel free to move there, and I'll give you a swift kick in the ass to send you on your way.

  5. Re:education on US Forces Coursera To Ban Students From Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria · · Score: 2

    Besides, the guy supported by the 1% LOST.

    And at the same time, the other guy, who was supported by the 1%, won.

    You're seriously kidding yourself if you think there's any difference between the two major parties at the federal level. All you have to do is look: has the policy changed from Bush to Obama? Is the war over? Is Gitmo closed? Are the Patriot Act and the TSA gone? Your "liberal" president has upped the spying, fed the "defense" contractors, sent more troops overseas, and cut NASA. The previous "conservative" president raised taxes and vastly increased the size and scope of the federal government.

    Nothing changes. The person who occupies the White House is merely a figurehead, and whether he's called a Democrat or a Republican, he works for the same people, and those people ain't me and you.

    And you know what? It's not going to change, either. Today's wealthy and powerful may fall from their towers from lack of breeding and management (note wastrel heirs and heiresses like Paris Hilton), but there will be more to take their place, because there will always be someone who wants more than his neighbors have -- and the talent and drive, or sheer cravenness, to go and get it. If we divided all the world's wealth equally to everyone right now, we'd be right back where we are now within a generation.

    Except, I'd be part of the 1% after. :-)

  6. Re:Pathetic on VC Likens Google Bus Backlash To Nazi Rampage · · Score: 1

    Your liberal ideology sounds very complex and enlightening. Tell me more!

  7. Re:Sugar... on Powering Phones, PCs Using Sugar · · Score: 1

    You are a first-class bastard.

  8. Re:Finally, a safe use for HFCS on Powering Phones, PCs Using Sugar · · Score: 1

    The rich will always exploit the poor to whatever extent they can get away with. In this case, it means that a small group profits from foreign demand while the laborers suffer. It's the same as "blood diamonds" - perfectly normal "free market" foreign demand may send capital to the region, but increases human suffering.

    But you're not accounting for the reduced human suffering on the other end. Perhaps the First World benefits from quinoa, so the suffering balances out.

    Blood diamonds help the situation of many married men who are suffering from a lack of fellatio. Does it seem right that people die for this? Alas, no, but it does show the true human cost of marital bliss.

    So who says the suffering of American suburbanites is less worthy of hand-wringing than the suffering of little brown people on the other end of the world? All things balance somehow.

  9. Re:Pathetic on VC Likens Google Bus Backlash To Nazi Rampage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What you're missing is that these private buses are using public stops. It's a very minor thing, yes. But it's also a perfect symbol of what's been happening in America:

    Or, it may simply be that existing places where public buses stop to load and disgorge passengers -- happen to be someone's crazy idea of good places for private buses to do the same.

    I've seen places where bus stops have a pullout area so as to be out of a traffic lane while stopped. Don't know if that applies here, but think about it... what sense would it make to deliberately stop somewhere other than a bus stop, for the express purpose of avoiding bus stops?

    If you think the private companies should put in their own bus stops, grand. But they can't just go out and tear up streets without permission from city and/or state governments, which may or may not ever accomplish anything anyway.

    We put up public infrastructure for people to use. I'm reasonably certain we can't discriminate against people with too much money.

  10. Re:Big deal. on 23-Year-Old Chess Grandmaster Whips Bill Gates In 71 Seconds · · Score: 1

    The truth is he can't write decent software and never could, is no visionary, and merely saw the potential of applying the Mafia business model to a software company.

    Point 1 there, true or not, is irrelevant, and I doubt Bill Gates lies awake nights worrying about all those software development skills he missed out on learning.

    But not visionary? I'm sorry -- I'm no Windows fanboy -- but you do not get to where he's gotten without a vision. Even if you have help, and step on everyone on the way up, it still takes a powerful vision and sheer force of will to carry it out. Hell, I bet even Stallman would give him that.

  11. Re:Wait so now on Protesters Show Up At the Doorstep of Google Self-driving Car Engineer · · Score: 1

    Well, okay, you may exist... perhaps I should instead question your taste in music... :-P

  12. Re:One and the same on Why Whistleblowers Can't Get a Fair Trial · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, nullification is frowned on by judges. That doesn't mean it's wrong; it means that many judges do not like anything that curtails their power as the black-robed potentate at the head of the room.

    Jury nullification is a sacred part of Anglo-Saxon law, and everyone needs to know about it. As far as I'm concerned, it should be a part of jury instructions every trial, or included in high school civics classes, because the number of Americans who know this simple concept is vanishingly and frighteningly small.

    Your last sentence there is NOT an example of jury nullification. In fact, it's pretty much the exact opposite.

    It is, fundamentally, the job of the jury to decide law as well as fact. It's why we have juries -- it doesn't take 6 or 12 people to decide fact, after all -- a computer could do that. The jury exists to check abuse by the state, as a final stop to the application of bad law. This is so important because the state holds all the power (police, judge, prosecutor, jury pool, etc) to the point that without jury nullification, even the most innocent of the "innocent until proven guilty" of accused doesn't stand a chance against the system -- a system we ALL know is corrupt and dangerous.

    So let the judges squirm. We, the people, have ourselves to protect.

  13. Re:Here's a question... why? on 20,000 Customers Have Pre-Ordered Over $2,000,000 of Soylent · · Score: 1

    That is all so... sad.

    Everything runs on energy, us included, and we have to fuel up. It's not optional. It's going to take up a certain amount of our time.

    I cannot for the life of me understand why anyone would want to substitute real food for fast food, let alone this liquid-diet nonsense.

    Hell, we really have adjusted misery down, haven't we? Once, it took ALL of our time to stay fed. Now the occasional trip to the store and a bit of chopping and cooking are too much for some lazy twats. Get a grip.

    Why not just hook up an IV for nutrients, a catheter, a bedpan, and your virtual reality goggles... and just become a being of pure experiencing? Maybe you could upload your brain, a la "Lawnmower Man" so the real humans around you won't have to listen to how terrible life is for you any more. Won't it be great to not be inconvenienced by breathing and the occasional bladder-voiding?

  14. Re:Wait so now on Protesters Show Up At the Doorstep of Google Self-driving Car Engineer · · Score: 1

    Intelligent people enjoy Pink Floyd and the Backstreet Boys,

    WTF? No one enjoys those things.

  15. Re:I'm gonna say something funny now. on Python Scripting and Analyzing Your Way To Love · · Score: 1

    Find a way to work all that into a trashy romance novel, and I'll read it!

  16. Re:So... on Fighting the Flu May Hurt Those Around You · · Score: 2

    What this basically means is that you are infectious the day before you show symptoms.....therefore you will not be able to ever stop the flu,

    You could have just stopped right there.

    Flu vaccines have done exactly fuck-all to stop the flu, and that's all they will ever do. What works is supporting the immune system. Eat healthy, get some sun, etc. Flu sucks, it's miserable, but we live on.

    Some die, a few here and there. Everyone dies sometime; no one gets out of here alive. People seem stuck in the notion that everyone somehow has a right to live to 100 and die peacefully in their sleep. It just isn't going to happen.

    On the other hand, too much vaccination and too much hygiene seem to be responsible for more sickness by keeping immune systems weak. Not only is there solid research on this, but it's quite instructive to watch the farm kids out running barefoot in pig shit... and never get sick. And let's face it: there are worse ways to die, like cancer.

  17. Re:Okay, but... on Hacker Says He Could Access 70,000 Healthcare.Gov Records In 4 Minutes · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yeah, probably a vast right-wing conspiracy among all the Republican software developers.

    Gimme a fuckin' break.

    Obamacare was always a bad idea. That the implementation sucks is secondary to the fact that it was bad law to begin with. But you're on the right track -- find anything and anyone to blame but the Obamessiah. Fucking liberals are going to whine about this for years.

    It's like those people who tell us that communism was a great idea, but it just hasn't been implemented right.

  18. Re: Oh yes on Stop Trying To 'Innovate' Keyboards, You're Just Making Them Worse · · Score: 1

    Jesus, if they were designing cars you'd have a joystick instead of a wheel and the brake and gas pedals would be reversed (and have a hand-operated clutch).

    That reminded me of this --

    http://www.theonion.com/video/apple-introduces-revolutionary-new-laptop-with-no,14299/

    Enjoy. :)

  19. Re:Over a decade on Microsoft Quietly Fixes Windows XP Resource Hog Problem · · Score: 1

    So how many Linux distributions are supported 12 years after launch? For free?

    I'd guess "none" -- but who cares?

  20. Re:Wait- There's More! on Alleging 'Malpractice' With Climate Skeptic Papers, Publisher Kills Journal · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From your very article:

    “We estimate that around 90% of the literature on which the conclusions of the report are based is on non-industry funded, peer-reviewed research,” said Sofie Vanthournout, head of the Brussels office of EASAC.

    In other words... 90% of the research in this study was non-industry-funded, not 90% of all research on the subject. There's a big difference between the two.

    Also from the very next paragraph in your linked article:

    “In this specific case, extra care was taken in order to ensure that none of the experts had strong ties with industry, although a certain level of industry connections cannot be completely excluded,” she told EurActiv

    Unless they specifically define the phrase "strong ties with industry", which is entirely vague and subjective, I'm going to give a pass on believing it.

    But, guess what happens when we cherry-pick quotes from articles! Here, I present a single sentence from YOUR article:

    A study by researchers at the University of Caen found that rats fed on Monsanto's NK603 GM maize or exposed to the company's top-selling Roundup weed killer were at higher risk of suffering tumours, multiple organ damage and premature death.

    Ah, there we go. See what I did there? I picked a different sentence to quote, so now they support MY position! ROFL! :-D

    Meanwhile, I'll continue to do my research, as always... maybe you can work on your reading comprehension. Mmmkay? Ciao!

  21. Re:Over a decade on Microsoft Quietly Fixes Windows XP Resource Hog Problem · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just the other day I tried adjusting the time of the Magic Lamp effect in its properties dialog under KDE.

    How many desktop effects does Windows have for you to play with and customize?

      If we start to talk about the Unity desktop (which represents a de facto Linux experience to many),

    Everyone knows Unity is crap. So is Windows 8. And mostly for the same reasons -- hubris, and a few clowns thinking they're going to change the fundamental paradigm behind the way millions of people use their computers.

    Well, except for the people who like Unity... some folks like choices. How many choices do you get with Windows?

    What you need to understand is that Linux is not a monolithic thing. Linux as a whole is not tainted because one release of one distro sucks -- because Linux is not a whole anything.

    The declining quality of the Linux desktop should be taken very seriously.

    That's a rather subjective and vague statement.

    As someone who has used Linux desktops almost exclusively for over 12 years now, I have to say I'm quite pleased with the improvements over that time. Well, except for Gnome 3.

    Anyway, if Windows floats your boat, great. I hope MS makes Windows for a long time, and that most folks continue to use it, so us Linux geeks can continue to feel smug about it. :)

  22. Re:Again, hard to take conservatives seriously on Alleging 'Malpractice' With Climate Skeptic Papers, Publisher Kills Journal · · Score: 2

    Yeah, probably. Like those damn hippies of a century ago who brought pasteurization to "kill the toxins". Bullshit, all of it, no doubt.

    Or that damn hippy Semmelweis who started that ridiculous hand-washing nonsense.

    Let's look at your words again:

    All the hippy nonsense about "toxins" is born of ignorance.

    Do you wash your hands before you eat? Do you wash vegetables after you get them home from the store? Do you eat food after you've dropped it on the floor? Do you leave raw poultry out in a warm kitchen, and then consume it raw? Do you feed fish every meal to pregnant women? Do you support safety standards for food?

    I think you are perfectly mindful of "toxins", you goddamn ignorant hippy! And a fuckin' hypocrite to boot.

    All the hippy nonsense about "toxins" is born of ignorance.

    Let me tell you something, pal. It is perfectly legitimate to question the safety of EVERYTHING in the food supply... ESPECIALLY things that have not had adequate safety testing -- a criteria that applies PRECISELY to GMO crops.

    It is also perfectly legitimate to demand labeling. I want to know what's in my food. Don't you? Or do you just randomly dumpster-dive for calories?

    I wonder what your daily diet looks like... because you are either full of shit, or you're a fool.

  23. Re:Wait- There's More! on Alleging 'Malpractice' With Climate Skeptic Papers, Publisher Kills Journal · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And how long before all of the weeds just think of Roundup as a nice cool sip of water? Time for the next pesticide!

    We're already seeing it. Several species of weeds in the midwest (including the already nearly indestructible pigweed and lamb's quarter) have developed not only resistance to Roundup, but a taste for it as a fertilizer. Glyphosate-loving superweeds are not science fiction or theory; they are already reality.

    Talk of stronger herbicides is already happening, including the resurrection of Agent Orange:

    http://www.counterpunch.org/2010/07/13/the-escalating-chemical-war-on-weeds/

  24. Re:Everytime I posted about this sort of problem on Microsoft Quietly Fixes Windows XP Resource Hog Problem · · Score: 1

    I hate to be the one to tell you this, because I am about the farthest thing from a Windows fan... but the problem is probably you and the amount of stuff you have starting up on your machine at boot time. Use "msconfig" to turn some shit off. I've gotten lots of Win 7 machines to a minute or less startup, down from 5+ minutes, and the problem is always the same: bloat.

    Then again, the obvious question that occurs to me is: if your user experience is so bad, why haven't you switched to something else?

  25. Re:Over a decade on Microsoft Quietly Fixes Windows XP Resource Hog Problem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I didn't pay $100 for Linux.

    Even then the bugs in Linux still get fixed faster.

    But yeah, when volunteers are giving their own time to build me a killer operating system, I'm not going to harass them about a schedule. I give them thanks and positive vibes and sometimes donations. I think we all expect more from paid developers... but we don't always get it.