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User: Noah+Haders

Noah+Haders's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 3,293

  1. Re:All I'll say... on Thousands of Europeans Petition For Their 'Right To Be Forgotten' · · Score: 1

    Could I petition slashdot to delete a past comment? Can anybody petition anybody, or is this law just for google?

  2. Re:All I'll say... on Thousands of Europeans Petition For Their 'Right To Be Forgotten' · · Score: 2

    What if you file a request for google to remove a link from a search result and they do that, but the info is still out there and they re index it later? Are they supposed to be eternally vigilant for filtering your pedo info?

  3. Re:Now the real question is on Huawei Successfully Tests New 802.11ax WiFi Standard At 10.53Gbps · · Score: 2

    Gin-Su, bitches!

  4. Re:Thermodynamically Impossible on Solar Roadways Project Beats $1M Goal, Should Enter Production · · Score: 1
    where to start with this...

    This approach has several problems. Firstly, the solar cells / heater mechanism is less energy efficient than a black road surface.

    [citation needed]. you sound like a wikipeida editor.

    Secondly, if the snow falls when it is dark, the solar cell will stop working (unless it has some big batteries are present, and even they won't last long in a heavy snow fall.)

    [citation needed] or are you also a meteorological modeling scientist as well??

    Lastly, the best sun occurs in the summer, and the snow hits in the winter, when less solar energy is available.

    [citation needed]ahh, you're a nobel winning physics scientist as well. then you are an expert in all things and don't need to provide any citation!

    About the only way a solar cell can keep up with incoming snow is if the solar array is much larger than the area of snow being melted. However, even then, you still have the problem of the solar array getting covered in snow ...

    not if the solar panels were kept vertical... which would reduce the angle of incidence to snowfall.

  5. Re:So... on Solar Roadways Project Beats $1M Goal, Should Enter Production · · Score: 1

    could be practical/interesting as a building cover as well.

  6. Re:Deja vu on Solar Roadways Project Beats $1M Goal, Should Enter Production · · Score: 2

    sorry man, if you're looking for constructive conversation or openness to new ideas then you have come to the wrong place. we put up new ideas in order to tear them down. i am interested to see how this develops, and since it is at the kickstarter stage no need to give it a rigorous tear down yet. a new idea is like a baloon. let it fly, see where it goes.

  7. Re:Deja vu on Solar Roadways Project Beats $1M Goal, Should Enter Production · · Score: 1

    Current roads last a decade? Where? Seems round here the roads are resurfaced annually.

    you must live in a land where the road workers union / mafia gives kickbacks to govt officials to pay for repairs of good roads just to flow down more taxpayer money to the mafia. welcome to how the real world works.

  8. Re:Now the real question is on Huawei Successfully Tests New 802.11ax WiFi Standard At 10.53Gbps · · Score: 1

    You do that with materials like 2 mils (or 0.05mm if you prefer), or half the thickness of a typical sheet of paper.

    that's not that hard. I usually slice my paper in half anyway so I get two sheets for the price of one.

  9. Re:I'm so excited on Huawei Successfully Tests New 802.11ax WiFi Standard At 10.53Gbps · · Score: 1

    came here to say this. yo dawg, I heard you like getting owned so I built faster wifi so I could own you while you surf the internet at the same speed because the wifi speed >>> your crappy internet connection anyway.

  10. Re:Drunk drivers on A Bike Taillight that Goes Beyond Mere Taillighting (Video) · · Score: 1

    as I posted above, a kid in my town was hit and killed by a drunk driver a couple months ago. he was skateboarding with his friends in the margin. regardless of the number or type of lights you have on, if a driver is drunk it doesn't matter.

    I was in kansas city recently and my taxi driver from the airport was telling me about good strategies to avoid a DUI. I suggested he avoid one next time by not drinking and driving! It was my first taxi ride in a long time; Uber hadn't come to KC yet.

  11. Re:Great job David! on A Bike Taillight that Goes Beyond Mere Taillighting (Video) · · Score: 0

    A kid in my town was skateboarding and he was hit by a drunk driver. hit and run, driver gtfo'd. kid was 20. driver was 17. I don't think an LED would have helped him, no matter how bright.

  12. Re:Guilty on UPS Denies Helping the NSA 'Interdict' Packages · · Score: 1

    so the context is an accusation that UPS allows NSA to interdict servers being shipped overseas, so UPS issues, what a denial? except it's more of a confirmation, I guess.

  13. Re:polymer AR lower recievers... on UK Ballistics Scientists: 3D-Printed Guns Are 'of No Use To Anyone' · · Score: 1

    careful, it might blow in your face!

  14. Re:polymer AR lower recievers... on UK Ballistics Scientists: 3D-Printed Guns Are 'of No Use To Anyone' · · Score: 1

    what's the difference between a lower and an upper? which part has the barrel? or the trigger and "chamber"?

  15. Re:Not a very thorough evaluation on UK Ballistics Scientists: 3D-Printed Guns Are 'of No Use To Anyone' · · Score: 1

    umm, because the things you listed are hard, while anybody can download a file to make a gun and print one out? that's why it's called 3-D printing?

  16. Re:Guilty on UPS Denies Helping the NSA 'Interdict' Packages · · Score: 2

    the problem with this whole post-snowden NSA techno world we live in - it's impossible for any government agency or company to deny anything. because there exists a secret court that signs secret warrants for information and it's illegal for anybody to talk about the secret warrants, there's no way to deny that government intrusion has happened.

  17. Re:Guilty on UPS Denies Helping the NSA 'Interdict' Packages · · Score: 1

    who is "they" that would want to say "no"?

  18. Guilty on UPS Denies Helping the NSA 'Interdict' Packages · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not voluntarily unless required by law? Why do companies release statements like this? It just makes them seem more guilty. Better not to say anything.

  19. Re:Snowden didn't do right. on Why Snowden Did Right · · Score: 1

    You know, I didn't understand this particular revelation. Why Bahamas? Afghanistan makes sense, but what has Bahamas done to us? Is is a harbor ink ground for Rastafarian terrorists?

  20. Re:yet another one of these stories? on Misogyny, Entitlement, and Nerds · · Score: 1

    I don't know what that means, " made to penetrate."

  21. Re:yet another one of these stories? on Misogyny, Entitlement, and Nerds · · Score: 1

    more details needed. are you saying women raped you or seduced you? if you didn't want to cheat, but then did it anyway, how is this rape?

  22. Re:yet another one of these stories? on Misogyny, Entitlement, and Nerds · · Score: 1, Insightful

    >Men are not rapists. RAPISTS are rapists.

    Even more relevant in light of that recent study showing that women are almost as likely to be rapists as men, but men are considerably less likely to report being assaulted.

    [citation needed], or don't even bother trying because you made it up.

  23. Re:The Nook is/was excellent on I Want a Kindle Killer · · Score: 3, Funny

    you can type backwards on a keyboard that faces away from you? hardcore, man.

  24. Re:Welcome to your new walled garden on Google Starts Blocking Extensions Not In the Chrome Web Store · · Score: 1

    for now... that's phase 2.1.

  25. Re: A Pox on Google! on Google Starts Blocking Extensions Not In the Chrome Web Store · · Score: 2

    fool. the link you sent was for the 2013 report. here's the 2014 report, in which apple gets 6 out of 6 https://www.eff.org/who-has-yo...

    more importantly, EFF is only considering privacy from govt interference. Apple also gives you privacy from their own snooping. Google, all they do is peer into your activities to track and profile. that is loss of privacy. Apple does not do this.