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User: Kant_resistor

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  1. Well, at least one thing you wrote was true: we Americans do not live in a democracy. We never have, of course. But if you think that electing a single human being to direct the entire armed might of 350 million people, and to carry out the spending of 20-25% of their collective economic effort, in a single election, as a choice among two individuals selected by what are self-described private groups and in no way representative of the people, could somehow be turned into "democracy" by changing the electoral college as an institution, or even eliminating it, then you have been failed by your education as a citizen. That does not surprise me, because the number of people who actually understand anything about political institutions is, maybe, a few tens of thousands, at most. Democracy does not have to do with voting in an election every four years. It is a system of government where the people--all of the qualified citizens, usually qualified by property and education and armed service--meet in an assembly to make decisions, pass laws, and conduct trials as massed jurors. That is democracy. Nothing that is done in modern governments has anything--anything--to do with democracy.

  2. Where is your good governance to be found? The governance of Bitcoin is conducted by organized crime, which, globally, is a more peaceable, united, and effective government than any of the ones with armies and flags (outside of Europe, at any rate). They are doing a bang-up job of making their mint, which is a blockchain, and its currency, which is Bitcoin, do everything they want. Somehow the Federal Reserve has done better? "Read a history book." That's rich. Let's start with one on the Federal Reserve--let's start with it when you can buy a stamp for $.01. How's that "good governance" working out for you, if you are not a banker?

  3. Headline wrong again on Facebook Says It's Not Secretly Recording You (fb.com) · · Score: 2

    Facebook says it's not using your microphone to inform ads or to change your News feed. It says nothing whatsoever about recording you. This is the classic non-denial denial.

  4. Unhealthy lifestyle on 'Eat, Sleep, Code, Repeat' Approach Is Such Bullshit (signalvnoise.com) · · Score: 1

    Trigger warning: this comment contains a quotation drawn from an armed forces recruitment slogan of another era, and therefore may offend just about everybody.

    How much time can be spent coding is determined entirely by how much true creativity is involved. Three hours is pretty much the limit for truly creative work (PhD experience). But if it's just work, well, I put in pretty productive 30-hour shifts as a medical resident (medical experience). See a terrific book called Daily Rituals by Mason Currey: almost all of those extraordinary creators were good for three-hour shifts, at most twice a day with a long break in between.

    But let's face it, the message is not making a statement about coding in general. It's about the culture Google wants to create among their organization. Like the Marines, Google is "looking for a few good men." At least there's no doubt about what you would be signing up for.

  5. Re:eh, not saying it's really a bad idea on France's After Work Email Ban Is 1 Step Closer To Reality (huffingtonpost.ca) · · Score: 1

    The tragedy of the commons should be mandatory curriculum in school, along with the effects of compound interest on debt.

    For those not up on the idea (which surely excepts everyone on /.), it almost completely invalidates traditional Kantian "What if everybody did that" moral imperatives, by imposing a pragmatic anti-Kantian imperative along these lines: "Somebody will do that anyway, and you will certainly lose by not having done it first; and then, when you have all done that, you will get to see what actually would happen if everybody did that."

    I liked Jared Diamond's work for the way he addresses these situations in detail. I know many people find his work uncomfortable or insufficiently sensitive to, ahem, "diversity"--kind of an amusing criticism, considering Diamond's background in anthropology. It is uncommon to find work on calamity that is actually not sensationalized as much as it could be, and his work belongs in that category.

    I, for one, would welcome hearing about other works you all have read that give insights into any practical way around or out of the Tragedy. It is the conundrum that, if not solved within a generation or two, will kill human life on the planet, and in the meantime, make it not worth living.

  6. Re:I actually liked this feature on Microsoft Removes Wi-Fi Sense Feature From Windows 10 Which Shared Your Wi-Fi Password · · Score: 0

    I know, great information, right? Good thing not all of us are idiots.

  7. Re:This is why Trump is popular. on Newspaper Chain CEO 'Pleased' To Announce IT Plan, Then Fires Tech Staff (computerworld.com) · · Score: 2

    I wish someone would get a clue and retire this fuzzy-thinking line of nonsense. Trump has succeeded in the system as it was written, playing by rules that he did not make. What he wants now is to change roles; to acquire the power to change the rules, so that people do not have to play that way any more. Don't believe it? Well let's go with the first and best example: factory owners in Industrial Revolution England helped bring about the earliest factory reforms in the history of the world, introducing a shred of humanity into what was hell for everyone involved. They did that because they actually wanted the regulation, so that they could afford to be more humane: they knew that individually, no one of them, no matter how well intentioned, could afford to play by a different, and more costly, set of labor standards. It not only wouldn't be profitable--it would not be possible: because their business would rapidly disappear, losing out against the competition that was using 15-hour child labor, and undercutting their prices. See how that works? No? Well, that's why you are not rich, like Donald Trump. But just to prove it, run a business like a charity for a while, then get back to me on how noble you were for those six weeks--before you burned through your capital and went back to work for someone else.

  8. Re:Could be good news (without further information on Medical Errors Are Number 3 Cause of US Deaths, Researchers Say (npr.org) · · Score: 1

    So much this. Doctors are just juggling knives; the more diseases and treatment, the more knives; the better the doctor, the more knives. Eventually the best docs create a system where it's a medical error as likely as anything that terminates this recursive "complex system" catastrophically.

  9. Re:Does it matter that we've reach Peak Toaster? on Slashdot Asks: Does It Matter That We've Reached Peak Smartphone? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, not saying Jobs was a saint by any means. As an ubuntu/mint guy for seven years--a latecomer--I completely agree with you about Mac. My wife has a Macbook. I literally cannot make it work--I'm like a chimp with an abacus. Finally I decided that itunes just does not want me to have a library on a server or a removable hard drive. It's not part of their business model. So fuck them. One Mac in this household is plenty. And, I can't block ads on any of my idevices. So, I don't browse on idevices. Fuck them. So I'm a dinosaur with linux mint and Firefox and Thunderbird to download my gmail, and I am very happy about it. But I still think that Jobs truly did bring incredible dedication to "the product," and you just don't find that any more in business. Except maybe in the music field: Ernie Ball, Gibson, Gretsch, etc make pretty good products for not much money, and it really is about the product.

  10. Re:Does it matter that we've reach Peak Toaster? on Slashdot Asks: Does It Matter That We've Reached Peak Smartphone? · · Score: 1

    Toasters could be way better.

    Shorter toasting times through more intense heat radiation (just a few extra grams of metal in the wires), burn prevention for the toast and the user, more ergonomic knobs; but what about the really good stuff: what about a color sensor so that you can set your toast to come out "looking like this"? Presets for different family members' toast-doneness preferences? Seriously--"bagel" is the best they can do?

    Too bad that Steve Jobs died. He was pretty much our only hope for cool stuff like this. If you can name another guy who cares as much as he did about the product, and actually runs the company, I would love to hear it--really. And no, Dell does not count. Please.

  11. Re:SubjectIsSubject on Surveillance Cameras Sold On Amazon Found Infected With Malware (zdnet.com) · · Score: 1

    Not that I want to go down this road, but I had the same experience, and finally settled on this one: Sharx Security, made in New Hampshire, my adoptive state. Nice people, at least so far. They actually answered my email within an hour. They sent me a custom firmware that does not even ping 8.8.8.8 to find out if it is "properly connected." And yes, it was deployed in its own VLAN--I just didn't want clutter in the pfSense logs.

  12. Anyone remember Neil Gaiman's American Gods? An infamous exchange is made at the geographical center of the country.

    If those centroids think they have problems now, wait until that episode comes out in the TV series.

  13. Hydrogen just works on Siemens and Airbus To Push Electric Aviation Engines (networkworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Hydrogen has proven advantages in air transportation. Let's start by citing the quiet, luxurious staterooms on the Hindenburg.

  14. You know Cruz is lying because his lips are moving. Cuba was left out in the cold because it produces sugar and tobacco, the latter of which Jesse Helms did not want competing with North Carolina's production. (Wikipedia:"As long-time chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he demanded a staunchly anti-communist foreign policy that would reward America's friends abroad, and punish its enemies.") Thereafter, Cuba presented a huge challenge to the Florida tourism industry, as it allowed gambling, had fabulous women and beaches, and kicks the stuffing out of the rest of the Caribbean Islands for quality of life. So it had to be destroyed. The Cuba policy had nothing to do with political ideology. Follow the money....

  15. Re:Suzie can vote. Suzie can get a pitchfork. on Fast-Food CEO Invests In Machines Because Regulation Makes Them Cheaper Than Employees (yahoo.com) · · Score: 1

    Here's how it went. Really.

    Starting with the Viking invasions, a village-full of struggling subsistence farmers agreed to equip one large ferocious man with a sword, armor, and horse, so that he could protect them from longboats. Other villages saw that, and did it to. So there arose a gang of men all with similar interests based on their relationship to the means of production. (This is what Karl Marx called a "class.") And that class found that its monopoly on armed force could serve not only against Vikings, but also to punish or kill any villager who got out of hand.

    Now you have the feudal system!

    That worked well for the ruling class until the invention of disciplined, well-armed infantry, at which point the struggling little people broke the knights' monopoly on effective armed force. As a result, the "people" eventually gained political power themselves, which, as always, went to those who shared the obligation and right to exert armed force. As more people fought, more people needed to be called up to fight, until there is total war, followed by total suffrage. Hello modernity: we have arrived back at the political economy of the Roman Republic.

    In the post-modern age, we again have mercenary armies and heavily armed gendarmes (police) who control the peasants, because the weapons that the little people can carry are no longer "effective armed force." Voila! Back to the feudal system! Only now, the knights are the ultra-rich, and, above all, the enormous corporations, who control the funds that hire the people who form "an effective monopoly on armed force" and keep the little people in line.

    It is the same story wherever you look. Start reading with Otto Hintze, or Hans Delbrueck, and see how the modern western state, which is the most powerful force ever, even more powerful than Javascript, came into being again, after the fall of the Roman empire. Or if you are Chinese, you can do exactly the same with Chinese history. Or Japanese. Or anywhere.

    Then it will become crystal clear why the second amendment was second--second only to freedom of speech--in its importance to the Founders: because they knew, from reading about the past, that only people who bear arms and fight for the political order have any real political influence over that order. Read Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment, to understand the influence of Florentine urban militias on the Founders' constitutional thinking.

    Anyway, even if you don't want to learn something, please stop just making stuff up about political economy from the Bronze Age.

  16. Much as I loathe Trump, and what his luxury development has already done to sully what was a beautiful "bucolic bay," wind farms can be a crime against, well, everything: beauty, heritage, peace, spirituality.... The peerless vista of the Slieve Bloom in Ireland somehow ended up as a site for a wind farm. The most beautiful land in the world, where the faeries live, if they live anywhere; and they went and put those huge iron towers there, destroying all kinds of magic.

  17. Re:Intel software needs to get their shit together on Intel Skylake-U For Laptops Posts Solid Gains In Testing, Especially Graphics (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    So true. Their X79 boards were plagued with UEFI and chipset driver problems, never fixed--they actually dropped their Mobo line completely after that boondoggle. Drivers for NUC have suffered years of neglect. Integrated products still have some kind of interference between USB 3 ports and ethernet, that you can't use a wireless keyboard more than two feet away from the NUC (same was true of the X79, never fixed). I couldn't believe it when I had to connect an extender to my NUC to use a wireless keyboard with it.

    And the forums...the patience of Intel customers facing the stone wall was impressive.

    I now try to avoid any Intel piece of hardware more complicated than a NIC. I'll buy chips from 2 years ago rather than deal with that nonsense at the chipset bleeding edge.

  18. Re:The farther left you go, the more you lose on Canada Reinstates Mandatory Census, To Delight of Social Scientists (sciencemag.org) · · Score: 1

    "Being Jewish in 1935 Berlin"?

    I was going to write a paragraph of answers to your idiotic question, but this thread needed to be Godwin'd anyway.

  19. Open it to the vacuum! Scrub it with Listerine! Call Sigourney Weaver! We wouldn't want our astronauts getting acne. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Or, the horror!, erythrasma--which is how most people might encounter a Corynebacterium species.