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User: kipsate

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Comments · 144

  1. Re:Not A Moment Too Soon on 50,000 Users Test New Anti-Censorship Tool TapDance (www.cbc.ca) · · Score: 1

    Slippery slope arguments are for dopes.

    It is undisputable that Germany is on a slippery slope.

    At first, only Nazi propaganda was outlawed. The new "Netzwerkdurchsetzungsgesetz" now also makes “evidently unlawful” content illegal and forces Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms to remove it or be fined. It is unclear what is meant by "evidently unlawful" but it is definitely no longer just confined to Nazi propaganda.

    Textbook slippery slope.

  2. Re:Energy security? on Massive Solar Plant In the Sahara Could Help Keep the EU Powered (digitaltrends.com) · · Score: 1

    Redundancy can help. Just put three cables, 1000 km apart.

  3. in Pakistan on BlackBerry Exits Pakistan Amid User Privacy Concerns (blackberry.com) · · Score: 1

    'BlackBerry will not comply with that sort of directive' ...in Pakistan.

  4. Re:Data data everywhere and not a drop to think on 737 'Tailstrike' Caused By Typo On a Tablet (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    air speed*

  5. Re:Data data everywhere and not a drop to think on 737 'Tailstrike' Caused By Typo On a Tablet (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 0

    Why measure weight? All that's needed to know whether the plane will lift off is the current amount of thrust, the current speed and its acceleration.

  6. It's bullshit because why use ultrasound? I'm sure the sound of a commercial playing can be recognized from the commercial itself, just like Shazam can recognize a song. And to make things easier just embed a very recognizable sound in the commercial that is not annoying but is sure to be picked up and recognized.

  7. Re:Job or hobby? on How To Make Money As an Independent Developer · · Score: 1

    get girlfriends

    You must be new here.

  8. Great news on New Sampling Device Promises To Make Blood Tests Needle-Free · · Score: 1

    Tasso Inc. believes that these unpleasant pricks can be removed from the equation completely

    Great. May I recommend the firing squad.

  9. Re:"everyone from PayPal merchants to Rand Paul" on MIT May Help Lead Bitcoin Standards Effort · · Score: 1

    Bitcoin in of itself has no real-world value

    Some economists such as Carl Menger make a compelling argument that there is no such thing as "intrinsic value":

    Principles of Economics by Menger, 1871
    "Value is thus nothing inherent in goods, no property of them, nor an independent thing existing only by itself. It is a judgement economizing men make about the importance of goods at their disposal for the maintenance of their lives and well-being. Hence value does not exist outside the consciousness of men."

    A crude way of interpreting this is coming to the realization that if all humans were dead, nothing would have any value left. Value thus exists because humans assign value to goods, but value is not an intrinsic property of any good itself.

    it has no worth of its own

    That is false - the market value of a bitcoin is USD 236 currently. This value is established through supply and demand. The demand is created because value is assigned to bitcoin for various reasons:

    - Speculative: people are buying and holding on to bitcoin because they believe its price will rise in the future;
    - International money transfers: bitcoin can be used to do cheaper cross border money transfers. This is currently mainly useful in remittance markets where Bitcoin based remittance startups offer lower prices than for instance Western Union and MoneyGram;
    - Trading: people who like to trade currencies and currency derivatives can do so very easily using bitcoin. This happens a lot in China;
    - Payment processing: companies such as Coinbase and BitPay let merchants accept bitcoin at significantly lower costs than accepting credit cards or PayPal. These benefits are sometimes handed back to the buyers in the form of discounts, which in turn increases the demand for bitcoin.

    it doesn't have any strong central backer with an authority to reinforce it like national currencies do

    This is the entire point of Bitcoin - it can not be manipulated by a central authority. This is exactly where bitcoin derives its speculative value from - the believe that a currency that cannot be manipulated (by means of unpredictable inflation or by manipulating interest rates) is a better form of currency than existing fiat currencies.

    Right now it has some vigorous supporters, but those are truly very, very few in number

    Citation needed. Hundreds of millions of venture capital and hundreds of bitcoin companies say otherwise.

  10. Re:Privacy implications on 'Smart Sewer' Project Will Reveal a City's Microbiome · · Score: 1

    Data about an individuals health must be private. Automatically analyzing sewer samples is fine as long as the data is aggregated and no individual can be singled out.

    Bit worried about this combined with DNA fingerprinting. It seems a trivial next step to analyse a sewer sample, and after establishing drug use, get a DNA fingerprint and run it against a database. Do we want to allow such intrusive surveillance? Or is there a line to be drawn, even in case of drug use?

  11. Re:fun or obsession? on A Data-Driven Exploration of the Evolution of Chess · · Score: 1

    I'll be damned... honestly did not know!

  12. Re:fun or obsession? on A Data-Driven Exploration of the Evolution of Chess · · Score: 1

    Yes, perhaps the chess game should be started with the first row in random order. So we can at least ditch the opening theories.

  13. Re:Uhh ... Re: checkmate on A Data-Driven Exploration of the Evolution of Chess · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Please someone post a link to the first "first post" message on Slashdot. For the sake of documenting history.

  14. On racism on HR Chief: Google Sexual, Racial Diversity "Not Where We Want to Be" · · Score: 1

    I believe all humans are equally valuable and respectable regardless of race and sex. I do not, however, believe that humans are all created equal in terms of predisposition of physical skills and intelligence.

    Differences in physical skills between race and gender is not much of a taboo. It is generally accepted that men are stronger than women, and in sports we don't let men compete with women because that would be unfair and pointless. The 100m sprint is dominated by blacks. Should we think of women as less than men because of this? Or whites to be inferior to blacks? Obviously not.

    Differences in "intelligence" between race and gender is a huge taboo. It is not accepted that men are generally predisposed to be more able to abstract and plan ahead than women, and that whites and asians are predisposed to have better abilities to abstract and plan ahead than blacks. Perhaps the difference may be caused by poverty, less opportunity, cultural differences or racism. Or perhaps its the other way around: less ability to plan and abstract causes poverty and cultural differences.

    This would be a racist and highly controversial, politically incorrect position to take. In my view, this is exactly where the problem starts. Apparently, intelligence is the one measure by which we must judge a human being. It seems that against all evidence we want to continue to pretend we are predisposed to be all equally smart, implying that people that would be predisposed to be less smart are somehow inferior. This is infuriating and obviously not the case. Intelligence is an arbitrary measure just as physical skills or beauty is. There are many traits to a human being, and it would be better if we'd accept that there are differences in terms of predisposition between gender and race. It would mean conceding that some races are predisposed to be physically superior and others to be predisposed in terms of ability to plan ahead and abstract. Then we can accept that, yes, no surprise, we see a lot of white men in doing things that demand math-like skills such as finance, programming and research. A great many of these jobs that require abstraction and planning are the higher paying ones.

  15. The human species is evoluting degeneratively, let's say devoluting. The brain and our health are the first victims of this.

    We're devoluting because the widespread use of contraception prevents successful males from spreading there genes in the amounts required to sustain the quality of the human race. Not too long ago, alpha males would spread their genes 50 to 100 times, or even 1000 times if very succesful. Today, perhaps average 3 or four kids for them. That's not sustainable, humans were not designed that way.

    And nature doesn't give a fuck about your political correct counter-opinion.

  16. Goal reached! on CEO Says One Laptop Per Child Project Has Achieved Its Goals · · Score: 1, Funny

    Boy did they reach their goal. There's now 2.5 million OLPCs for each child that actually wants one.

  17. Re:don't think this really works on phones yet on Dead Reckoning For Your Car Eliminates GPS Dead Zones · · Score: 1

    Not only that, but the car is on a road and the nav system knows where the roads are. If the nav system has an approximation of the location of the car, and the car makes a right turn, then it can know and sync the position of he car to be on that road.

  18. Re:The responsible consumer is a myth on US Light Bulb Phase-Out's Next Step Begins Next Month · · Score: 1

    Let's face it: people don't want to think about every bit they do.

    You're right. People are plain stupid! Why do we even give them the right to vote? Surely, if people are too dumb to switch of the lights or TV or heating when they don't need it, how can they be given the responsibility of choosing their own government?

    Hope you start to see a problem when dismissing people from their responsibility to judge for themselves because they are 'too stupid'.

  19. Re:Regulations a bit premature on US Light Bulb Phase-Out's Next Step Begins Next Month · · Score: 1

    the price of leds is made up by the extreme long life they have.

    That's what they said with the first generation power-saving lamps as well. Supposed to last 25 years, but that turned out to be about a year. Yes, I had to replace these lamps yearly. A lightbulb costed 90 eurocents, these power-saving lamps were at least 5 euro a piece. As for the environment - worse than lightbulbs because the power saving lamps have electronics in them which take much more water and energy to manufacture and generate more and much nastier waste than an ordinary light bulb.

    Now we're supposed to believe that leds are the answer. Sure, leds last long but what about the circuits that drive it? People have dimmers in their houses which may not play nice with the electronics on the lamp, breaking it in no-time.

    And as for efficiency - the heat a bulb generates is not wasted at all in houses with the heating turned on.

    And... I just can't believe banning the bulb is even possible without any protests in the USA, "land of the free". The only ones who benefits are the producers of lamps, Philips, Siemens, etc. You can bet that they did some lobbying here and there for these regulations to pass. The losers are you (less choice, higher cost), the environment (because I'm pretty sure these lamps will break plenty quick too) but worse, choice and even liberty in general.

    Because this won't stop here, obviously. In the name of the environment, what's next?

  20. Re:genesis of life on Mars Rover Curiosity Finds Ancient Lakebed · · Score: 1

    Mars had an atmosphere
    Yes, and it was totally gone within 500 million years after Mars was formed, and had likely become prohibitively thin for any life to form way before it was gone. Any life that existed must have evolved during the first couple of hundred million years. But on earth, it took 1 billion years. And earth is bigger, closer to the sun, has more water, a less toxic surface than Mars.

  21. Re:genesis of life on Mars Rover Curiosity Finds Ancient Lakebed · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, but this is just common sense. Life does not spontaneously appear if you stir in a bowl of water. The chances of a self-copying molecule (because that's all the first "life" can have been) to spontaneously appear is so small, that it took a billion years on earth to happen. Mars, being an environment orders of magnitude less favorable, there's just zero chance.

  22. genesis of life on Mars Rover Curiosity Finds Ancient Lakebed · · Score: 1, Insightful

    On earth, it took 1 billion years before life started to appear. Just let that amount of time sink in for a second. A billion years. During this astoundingly long period, the conditions for life to appear have been orders of magnitudes better than on Mars. Lower radiation due to an atmosphere, warmer but not too warm, less toxic chemicals on the surface, and covered mostly with oceans.

    Now although there might have existed water on Mars, and even oceans, the reality is that the chance that life had been able to start on Mars before it dried up and turned into a reddish rock is zero.

  23. Re:no rfid required on Students Tracked In UK College Via RFID For 1-3 Years · · Score: 2

    intercepting cell-network-information

    No need. Have wifi turned on? Your phone will dutifully offer its mac-address when you come near the router.

  24. no rfid required on Students Tracked In UK College Via RFID For 1-3 Years · · Score: 2

    No RFID required to track you all day. Cameras everywhere. Carrying a cellphone? Driving a car?

    We already know where you are, and where you're going.

  25. Re:Not really sure what I was expecting on Aeromobil Flying Car Prototype Gets Off the Ground For the First Time · · Score: 1

    What a great comment. Perhaps it is too ambitious to shoot for "flying cars" as in cars like today that can also fly. Perhaps it is better to aim for "roadable airplanes" like the design in TFA.

    That makes a lot of sense. A roadable airplane only needs short runways and can perhaps be designed to take off and land at a speed of less than 160 km/h (100 mph), making it much more flexible than a conventional airplane. Once in the air, it should behave like a proper plane, that is as easy and as safe to navigate as a car. In the age of self-driving cars, the technology is there to make that possible. I imagine virtual roads in the air that only exist as GPS coordinates in the board computers of roadable airplanes, to minimize any chances on collissions. Also, the planes should be in constant contact with each other in order to stay out of each others way and to be able to land and take off safely.

    To do: extra infrastructure in the form of extra short runways, and technology that makes navigating them as easy as driving a car and which allows for many of these planes to be in the air at once without any dangers.