Well, vegetarian actually means "people who don't eat meat", so these "vegetarians" you know are just that - "vegetarians". That's why we who really don't eat any animals had to invent a new term - Vegan, because of all the hypocrisy surrounding so called "vegetarianism".
Tell me please how the fascists in the 2nd world war could kill the Jews more humanely? And that would make the whole world feel so much better about it. Hell, if they killed them very humanely maybe we should give them a medal instead of feeling disgust?
However, whom do you trust for making such important software? I certainly wouldn't trust Microsoft nor Apple to provide it. Open Source all the way. I don't want no backdoors in the software that controls such important bodily functions. Imagine you get a dodgy patch via MS update... Anyway, I think we're still far from really useful trans-human tech. This is just still more or less sensationalism. The man died after 76 days. Short circuit? You can't have short circuits happening, but transplant rejection is the most important to deal with. Have they managed to make transplants that no-body [pun] rejects after a certain time?
There's one downside to it. I'm using Debian Wheezy with Gnome 3 which should be stable, but I'm getting occasional lock-ups and I have to reset the computer. Interestingly, that doesn't happen with either Gnome classic nor Xfce. Go figure. I do like Gnome 3, too, but the stability of Xfce is really enticing, to say the least.
I can send you my nudies if you send me yours.... :P
I believe the article said *Antarctic*, not *Arctic*? Has nobody noticed that?
Well, vegetarian actually means "people who don't eat meat", so these "vegetarians" you know are just that - "vegetarians". That's why we who really don't eat any animals had to invent a new term - Vegan, because of all the hypocrisy surrounding so called "vegetarianism".
Tell me please how the fascists in the 2nd world war could kill the Jews more humanely? And that would make the whole world feel so much better about it. Hell, if they killed them very humanely maybe we should give them a medal instead of feeling disgust?
However, whom do you trust for making such important software? I certainly wouldn't trust Microsoft nor Apple to provide it. Open Source all the way. I don't want no backdoors in the software that controls such important bodily functions. Imagine you get a dodgy patch via MS update... Anyway, I think we're still far from really useful trans-human tech. This is just still more or less sensationalism. The man died after 76 days. Short circuit? You can't have short circuits happening, but transplant rejection is the most important to deal with. Have they managed to make transplants that no-body [pun] rejects after a certain time?
There's one downside to it. I'm using Debian Wheezy with Gnome 3 which should be stable, but I'm getting occasional lock-ups and I have to reset the computer. Interestingly, that doesn't happen with either Gnome classic nor Xfce. Go figure. I do like Gnome 3, too, but the stability of Xfce is really enticing, to say the least.
You must be kidding. :) Yes, it must be some kind of a sarcasm. You made me laugh. :)