I don't think people are losing common sense. I think that new technology enables people who never had common sense to try to accomplish things that they wouldn't have even tried before.
The "Wormhole drive" was introduced in series finale of SGA and allowed Atlantis to travel from Pegasus to the Milky Way in seconds - normal hyperspace travel took three weeks.
And yeah, NO SF show has ever addressed the "how do you find a starship in a galaxy" problem (Star Wars, Star Trek, SG, BSG, whatever).
traveling into the future is, from a narrative standpoint, fucking boring.
Actually, Futurama handled this really well. Just go forward until you loop through the next Big Bang cycle. Then stop moving forward when the new universe it up to the point in its history where the old universe was and where you want to change things. Oops! Missed Hitler; quick, fast forward to the next cycle!
In SGA, the "Pegasus Galaxy" is supposedly about 3 million light-years from the Milky Way Galaxy. In SGU, the Destiny is supposedly 7 *billion* light-years from Earth, or ~2300x as far.
So the Wormhole Drive would have to run for hours instead of seconds....and as we all know, the dipolarized unobtanium that powers it goes supercritical if used for more than 30 seconds and destroys the universe, so SGU *obviously* couldn't have used that...;-)
I have an iPhone 3G. I updated my iPhone to iOS 4. Now I have the same proximity sensor issue; I was on a conference call the other day and kept hearing a beep before I realized that my face was pressing the "3" on the keypad. I had to hold the phone like Steve does in order to make it stop;-).
You can still compile and run FORTRAN programs--in fact, if you run Linux, you might have a FORTRAN compiler installed and not know it (I'm in Windows, so I can't see if I do right now).
Hmm.....let's see:
[rgenter@at41 rgenter]$ f77 --version GNU Fortran (GCC 3.2 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)) 3.2 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7) Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GNU Fortran comes with NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. You may redistribute copies of GNU Fortran under the terms of the GNU General Public License. For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING or type the command `info -f g77 Copying'. [rgenter@at41 rgenter]$
I usually universally ignore Anonymous Cowards, but every once in a while one catches my eye who actually has something useful and insightful to say.
I read through the redacted form of the proposal and I agree with you that they are protecting private individual information. In addition, it seems like they might have redacted anything that mentioned the name of a specific vendor or product - perhaps to avoid any appearance of favoritism.
As far as redacting the system capacity, my guess is that was done at the request of some "security" department who feels that security by obscurity is a valid policy. Obviously it's not, but that would be consistent with the way pretty much the entire government operates.
Overall, though, my opinion is that there wasn't any malicious intent in the redactions, but rather an intent to adhere to various policies that were put into place in an attempt to make government appear open, fair and safe, and instead end up making it look nefarious.
You seem to forget that Alien predated Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and most of the other "classic horror" movies:
Alien (1979) Friday the 13th (1980) A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Only Halloween (1978) predates Alien, and by a short enough period that I think it's safe to say that Alien was well underway before Halloween hit the theater.
I have Comcast. My download supposedly peaks at 16 Mbps, though I usually average about 11. Supposedly Comcast is going to 50 Mbps soon. FiOS is already 50 - or maybe it's 60 now.
Comcast having a "cut off" is FUD - definitely not true. I exceed 250GB/month almost every month.
However, if you don't have the time or the bandwidth, for a nominal fee you can get mozy to send you DVDs of your data.
I use mozy to back up my systems. I have just under 600GB saved at mozy. They use blowfish encryption and you can use your own key so only you have access to your data (the encryption is performed locally before being transmitted over the wire). I back up both a Mac and a PC to mozy. I don't know if they have a Linux client.
For unlimited storage they charge ~50 USD/year/system being backed up. I find it well worth it for my peace of mind (it's a great off-site backup solution).
I don't think people are losing common sense. I think that new technology enables people who never had common sense to try to accomplish things that they wouldn't have even tried before.
His real name was Obi Wan Laden.
The "Wormhole drive" was introduced in series finale of SGA and allowed Atlantis to travel from Pegasus to the Milky Way in seconds - normal hyperspace travel took three weeks.
And yeah, NO SF show has ever addressed the "how do you find a starship in a galaxy" problem (Star Wars, Star Trek, SG, BSG, whatever).
That's because Groening and Cohen and math/science geeks...
traveling into the future is, from a narrative standpoint, fucking boring.
Actually, Futurama handled this really well. Just go forward until you loop through the next Big Bang cycle. Then stop moving forward when the new universe it up to the point in its history where the old universe was and where you want to change things. Oops! Missed Hitler; quick, fast forward to the next cycle!
Not to be a total geek, but:
In SGA, the "Pegasus Galaxy" is supposedly about 3 million light-years from the Milky Way Galaxy.
In SGU, the Destiny is supposedly 7 *billion* light-years from Earth, or ~2300x as far.
So the Wormhole Drive would have to run for hours instead of seconds....and as we all know, the dipolarized unobtanium that powers it goes supercritical if used for more than 30 seconds and destroys the universe, so SGU *obviously* couldn't have used that... ;-)
I have an iPhone 3G. I updated my iPhone to iOS 4. Now I have the same proximity sensor issue; I was on a conference call the other day and kept hearing a beep before I realized that my face was pressing the "3" on the keypad. I had to hold the phone like Steve does in order to make it stop ;-).
My favorite part of the NPR article was the sub-headline: "Discover It, Then Blow It Up".
Kinda sums it all, doesn't it?
It's just a glitch in the Matrix.
Hmm.....let's see:
[rgenter@at41 rgenter]$ f77 --version
GNU Fortran (GCC 3.2 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)) 3.2 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)
Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GNU Fortran comes with NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
:-)
You may redistribute copies of GNU Fortran
under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING
or type the command `info -f g77 Copying'.
[rgenter@at41 rgenter]$
Yup. FORTRAN, check.
It's Xfinitesimal! Oh, wait...
Those who moderated the parent "Insightful" should be meta-moderated as either "Clueless" or "Humorless".
This policy sounds like something from a Dilbert cartoon. The boss must be particularly pointy-haired in this case.
Bite my shiny metal ass.
No, really, you're alright, I like you.
Did you *read* the summary? It was $4,600 to $6,000 per month.
I usually universally ignore Anonymous Cowards, but every once in a while one catches my eye who actually has something useful and insightful to say.
I read through the redacted form of the proposal and I agree with you that they are protecting private individual information. In addition, it seems like they might have redacted anything that mentioned the name of a specific vendor or product - perhaps to avoid any appearance of favoritism.
As far as redacting the system capacity, my guess is that was done at the request of some "security" department who feels that security by obscurity is a valid policy. Obviously it's not, but that would be consistent with the way pretty much the entire government operates.
Overall, though, my opinion is that there wasn't any malicious intent in the redactions, but rather an intent to adhere to various policies that were put into place in an attempt to make government appear open, fair and safe, and instead end up making it look nefarious.
Too late: they've already got the MacBook Wheel.
Have you seen the recent Futurama DVDs? As in the opening scene of Bender's Big Score?
You seem to forget that Alien predated Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and most of the other "classic horror" movies:
Alien (1979)
Friday the 13th (1980)
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Only Halloween (1978) predates Alien, and by a short enough period that I think it's safe to say that Alien was well underway before Halloween hit the theater.
'nuff said, cocksuckers.
(Can you tell I've been re-watching Deadwood lately? ;-)
CNN had her picture - she's 19 now and in college. (You didn't think the strip search was last week, did you?)
I wish I had mod points right now...
I have Comcast. My download supposedly peaks at 16 Mbps, though I usually average about 11. Supposedly Comcast is going to 50 Mbps soon. FiOS is already 50 - or maybe it's 60 now.
Comcast having a "cut off" is FUD - definitely not true. I exceed 250GB/month almost every month.
However, if you don't have the time or the bandwidth, for a nominal fee you can get mozy to send you DVDs of your data.
http://mozy.com/
I use mozy to back up my systems. I have just under 600GB saved at mozy. They use blowfish encryption and you can use your own key so only you have access to your data (the encryption is performed locally before being transmitted over the wire). I back up both a Mac and a PC to mozy. I don't know if they have a Linux client.
For unlimited storage they charge ~50 USD/year/system being backed up. I find it well worth it for my peace of mind (it's a great off-site backup solution).
When you have a market of 1.5 billion potential consumers, a monopoly works just fine; you don't need competition to thrive.