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User: Gramie2

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  1. Re:Article ignores variability on Wind Power Is Cheaper Than Coal, Leaked Report Shows · · Score: 2

    I believe you are supposed to keep livestock in your house to help with body heat. That's the traditional way.

  2. Re:Srsly, don't cross the streams. It's bad. on Ask Slashdot: Any Place For Liberal Arts Degrees In Tech? · · Score: 1

    "Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light."

  3. Re:Switching to Libreoffice? on Munich Council Say Talk of LiMux Demise Is Greatly Exaggerated · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...but in Libreoffice it's a literal pain in the rear to do, especially if a Spreadsheet is involved.

    A literal pain in the rear? I think you're not doing it correctly.

  4. Re:Nerd Blackface on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    I have a friend whose adult daughter committed suicide a couple of years ago. My friend, after seeing her daughter struggle with mental illness for years, believes in assisted suicide as a compassionate solution for some people even if they do not have physical pain.

    It's hard for me to agree with this, but I also haven't lived through what she has.

  5. Re:Nerd Blackface on Big Bang Actors To Earn $1M Per Episode · · Score: 1

    The characters in Silicon Valley (the Mike Judge TV show) are much more believable and accurate, and the show is far funnier as well.

  6. Re:ERP system from *Oracle* on Ask Slashdot: When Is It Better To Modify the ERP vs. Interfacing It? · · Score: 1

    Can you imagine how much face would be lost by people up in the executive suites if they admitted a mistake of this magnitude? They would run the company into the ground first.

  7. Re:They have gone further before on Marvel's New Thor Will Be a Woman · · Score: 1

    Well, this new character isn't actually Thor either, no matter what they may say. I expect that they will do a short run with a woman and return to the original Thor, because it's all about business and they don't want to confuse potential customers who like the movies (or the actual Norse mythology). This is just one of the regular "everything has changed" publicity stunts that they pull every few years because they don't have any real character development. Remember the death of Superman? Of Captain America? It's about the same level as when Dallas (the original series) said, "the whole last season was just a dream".

  8. Re:Another comic book gimmick on Marvel's New Thor Will Be a Woman · · Score: 1

    I think it's due to a lack of visionary storytelling. Just like all the alternate universes. I blame it on management running the show instead of the creatives. Oh, for the days of Miller on Daredevil, Byrne on X-men/FF, Layton/Michelinie on Iron Man....

  9. They have gone further before on Marvel's New Thor Will Be a Woman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Does no one else remember Beta Ray Bill from Walt Simonson's run in the '80s (the golden age for Thor and large swathes of Marvel, in my opinion). Beta Ray Bill was able to wield Mjolnir and Thor's power even though he was a vaguely-humanoid alien.

  10. Re:Today, I would never have learned programming on Normal Humans Effectively Excluded From Developing Software · · Score: 1

    If you really are interested, you could check out Basic4Android. No, it's not free, but it is very reasonably priced (starting at $60, and you can usually find coupons online to lower the price even more). It makes Android apps possible for the average programmer. There is a superb community growing around it, too, and the main developer of B4A answers many of the questions himself.

  11. Re:Not github's fault on Qualcomm Takes Down 100+ GitHub Repositories With DMCA Notice · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So you make up a completely fictitious name and address. Perjury problem solved! As long as the content gets pulled down, who cares?

  12. Re:This ruling .... on Canadian Supreme Court Delivers Huge Win For Internet Privacy · · Score: 1

    Rather than mark your ballot, you have to go to the polling station personnel, and tell them that you decline your vote. That is treated differently than a spoiled ballot.

  13. Re:Thyroid problem on EU's Top Court May Define Obesity As a Disability · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is simple. It's just hard, and people don't want to do things that are hard.

    My ex was/is obese, and all the chocolate bar wrappers I found in her car, and empty ice cream containers I found in her house, may have had something to do with it. Now she's an a meal-replacement diet and has lost over 20 lbs. in about four months. No, it's not easy, but I respect and support her for taking control of her health.

  14. Re:Protecting the Weak from the Strong on Interviews: Bruce Perens Answers Your Questions · · Score: 1

    You are right that some military personnel would presumably join the revolution. What are the odds that they would bring with them all the infrastructure (fuel, personnel, maintenance equipment and parts) needed to keep those A-10 Warthogs, F-18s, secure communications networks, satellite sensing systems and other high-tech machinery running as you fight the people who own the skies, seas, and telcos?

  15. Re:Protecting the Weak from the Strong on Interviews: Bruce Perens Answers Your Questions · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here's the thing: the State has weapons that could reduce you, your house, your neighbourhood, or your city to a smoking ruin. They have people (stronger, faster, and more capable than you), who train daily to kill in the most effective ways, with weapons and equipment that are simply unavailable to you. If they were to take you seriously as a threat, they could locate you in seconds and put a drone through the nearest window.

    So owning your very own semi-automatic, or even fully-automatic small arms is completely pointless except, at the very best, to let your corpse serve as a witness to the rest of the world that your State kills its own. Armed resistance can not overcome the enormous imbalance of power that modern states possess.

    Resistance is not futile, but armed resistance is. The most effective counter to government encroachment is not to be found in the Cliven Bundys of this world.

  16. Re:Finally! on Teacher Tenure Laws Ruled Unconstitutional In California · · Score: 1

    And the one who taught you to spell "apostrophes"!

  17. Re:Lies. on NSA's Novel Claim: Our Systems Are Too Complex To Obey the Law · · Score: 2

    They fundamentally believe that your physical safety is more important than our individual rights.

    I'd be more inclined to say that they value their own power and influence over your individual rights (I'm not American, and so have no rights in their eyes). If they really worried about your physical safety, they would be getting evidence on polluters, unsafe working conditions, social collapse, the prison industry, and all the other things that contribute to the decay of your quality of life.

  18. Re:Russia on Canada Poised To Buy 65 Lockheed Martin F-35 JSFs · · Score: 2

    US military bases in Canadian territory? That would be news to me and, I suspect, to our government and military. There are certainly joint exercises here, and US military personnel working with Canadians, and occasional visits by US ships and planes, but no permanent facilities.

  19. Re: The reality is... on Teachers Union: Computers Can Negatively Impact Children's Ability To Learn · · Score: 1

    I'd agree with this. My son had the times tables drilled into his head mercilessly, when he was about 10. Now, in Grade 11, it makes the algebra, functions, and trig smoother and less mysterious. I challenge both my boys to do mental arithmetic all the time, because I believe it's so important to be able to estimate results that a computer/calculator spits out.

  20. The problem may not be protecting what you own on Ask Slashdot: Anti-Theft Products For the Over-Equipped Household? · · Score: 1

    I have to say that my first instinct is to ask where you see your quality of life. If you have so much expensive stuff that you spend significant time and energy protecting it, then maybe having that stuff is the problem.

    I haven't locked my house for at least a couple of month, and when I look around to see what might be stolen, the computer — and, more specifically, the hard drive in my desktop — is the only thing that I would really miss, that would be hard to replace. The laptops, TV, Playstation and other gadgets can easily be replaced. You know what? It's liberating not to have to be afraid of losing things.

  21. Re:Emu on Ask Slashdot: Anti-Theft Products For the Over-Equipped Household? · · Score: 1

    I remember going to a dairy farm in South Africa (about 25 years ago) that used ostriches to guard the dairy cattle. An ostrich can disembowel you with a single kick, and they are mean.

  22. Re:Caps Are Definitely Coming on Comcast Predicts Usage Cap Within 5 Years · · Score: 1

    Verizon received tax breaks from the New Jersey government of $2.1 billion in 1994, in exchange for a promise that every household in the state would have 45Mbps symmetrical fiber by 2015 (50% of them by 2004).

    Verizon then donated heavily to the political powers of NJ, and was released from their promise with no penalty.

    Who's the parasite again?

  23. Re:Awesome! on Comcast Predicts Usage Cap Within 5 Years · · Score: 1

    You're a Johnny-come-lately.

    I remember connecting to bulletin boards with my 300 baud modem (circa 1988), and I could read the discussions as they came in. That's right, my reading speed was about the same as the transfer speed.

    The modem used to overheat, and I would have to put it in the freezer for a while so I could use it again.

  24. Re:This may be crass but... on Percentage of Elderly In Japan Continues to Grow as Number of Children Drops · · Score: 3, Informative

    Japan is nowhere near able to feed itself. It produced under 40% of its caloric needs in 2011. It does produce all the rice it needs (thanks to ridiculously subsidized and protected farmers), but is the world's largest importer of corn.

    I would also be surprised if it had any significant textile/clothing industry; everything now comes from other countries in Asia.

  25. Re:The simple solution is make them document it on LA Police Officers Suspected of Tampering With Their Monitoring Systems · · Score: 2

    I suppose it's theoretically possible that vandals are risking arrest to remove -- and not break or damage -- a single antenna (out of the several on a cruiser), the one antenna that could embarrass or implicate officers in inappropriate/illegal behaviour, but it's ludicrous to suggest that it is likely or even probable.