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User: RelliK

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Comments · 1,140

  1. the NIMBY crowd on Canadians Protest Wind Turbines · · Score: 2, Insightful

    To the guy carrying the sign that says "my property value is now $0" I want to say: sell it to me for $1. Surely, if he truly believes the property is worthless, any money he can get from it is pure profit.

    I really want to hear what are the supposed "health problems" attributed to wind turbines. Amazingly, the same people who protest wind turbines have no problem with coal plants spewing ash and sulfur dioxide on their land.

  2. Re:This was predicted to happen two years ago on French Court Calls Free Google Maps Unfair Competition · · Score: 1

    > Well, you try to create a search service that is not free (= funded by ads) and I think you will quite soon realize what Google has done to the prices of online search. But that really was not my point.

    and?
    (btw, were you aware that web search was free (= funded by ads) for a decade before google?)

    > Google search is a monopoly in the sense that most people use it and the google.com front page.

    you clearly don't understand what a monopoly is. Please at least *try* to comprehend the definition. NeutronCowboy posted a good link. "most people use it" has absolutely nothing to do with it.

  3. Re:Corporatist on Meet the Strange Bedfellows Who Could Stop SOPA · · Score: 1

    > Mostly agree with your post, but the part I quote there is just plain wrong. 10% of a $10000 income is $1000. Even if the rich pay half that percentage, 5% of a million dollar income is $50,000. The rich pay more than the poor in taxes, period, end of story.

    uhhm... that's an idiotic statement. Do you expect everyone to pay the same absolute amount regardless of income? In your example above, would you consider it "fair" for a person with 10k income to pay 50k in taxes or for a person with 1M income to pay 1k in taxes?

    The statement "the taxes are lowest on the upper class" means precisely that, as a percentage of income the taxes on the top 1% are the lowest they have been since 1929.

    > Don't say the rich pay less taxes than the poor -- it just makes you look math-impaired. They don't.

    uhhm.. yes, they absolutely fucking do! That's largely because the rich derive the majority of their income from dividends and capital gains, which, for some idiotic reason are taxed at only 15%. That leads the rich people who are not assholes -- like Warren Buffet, for example -- to lament that they pay a lower tax rate than their secretary.

  4. Re:negative feedback loop? on Northeast Passage Becomes Viable Trade Route · · Score: 1

    In addition to what ColdWetDog said, I want point out a *positive* feedback loop: decreased albedo. Ice is white and reflective. It reflects most of the sunshine back into space. Water is dark and absorbent. It absorbs most of the sunlight, which leads to greater heating, more ice melting, etc. Positive feedback loop.

  5. Re:oops on IRS Auditing Google · · Score: 1

    > Then you've never looked at the income of the Federal government before and after tax breaks. It almost invariably goes up.

    uhhmm... bullshit. Please provide a reference to back up that statement.

  6. easy on Smart Power Grid Could Wreak Havoc On Itself · · Score: 1

    Existing grid can *already* support converting 70% of all the cars to electric, provided that they all charge at night. You really do not appreciate the difference in power usage difference between day and night. Build more power plants & transmission lines and you can get that number even higher. The article is a troll, btw.

  7. Re:RIM Reminds Me Of Slashdot on RIM Struggles Continue · · Score: 2

    reddit.com. It's what slashdot should have been.

  8. Reason for the request on Google Redirects Traffic To Avoid Kazakh Demands · · Score: 1

    Glorious nation of Kazakhstan has the best internets.

    All other countries have inferior internets.

  9. They wanted name to speak for itself on Drizzle Hits General Availability · · Score: 1

    ... but jizzle was already taken.

  10. wrong on several points on Leaked Cables Reveal US Thinks Saudi Oil Reserves May Be Overstated · · Score: 5, Informative

    > But the Saudi's have a lot of heavy oil that at 60 or 70 bucks a barrel wouldn't be economically viable, but at 100 bucks a barrel, with bangladeshi slave.. I'm sorry, foreign worker, labour becomes reasonably profitable.

    Not necessarily. Not if extracting that oil results in a net energy loss.

    See, we extract oil to get energy out of it (well, among other things, but let's simplify here). But the extraction process itself takes energy. If you spend more energy than you get out of it, then the process will never be profitable. You talk about certain oil reserves being profitable at 100/barrel. But you are assuming today's energy prices. As the energy prices increase, the break-even point for those reserves will also increase. Some reserves will become profitable but some will be forever too expensive to bother.

    Let me give you a practical example. Canada has 1/3 of the world's oil reserves. Unfortunately, the vast majority of those reserves are in the form of tar sands. You can't just pump the oil out of tar sands. You need to use steam extraction.

    Here is how it works. First they strip the top layer of vegetation to get to the tar sands. Then they use natural gas to boil water and then use the steam to extract oil out of tar sands. The contaminated oily water is then dumped into massive reservoirs called tailings ponds, where it continuously kills wildlife.

    To extract 3 barrels of oil out of tar sands you need to spend the equivalent of 2 barrels worth of energy. Oh and you also have to contaminate 15 barrels of fresh water. So the process is energy-positive, but the environmental damage is enormous.

    > If they're lying by 40%, then they're lying about a problem that will manifest in the late 2070's or 2080's. That's a long time to hold onto a lie for relatively little gain, since shit will hit the fan either way.

    Actually, huge gain. OPEC quotas for each country are limited by the amount of proven oil reserves (i.e. the more oil reserves a country has, the more oil it can export, according to OPEC rules). Therefore, it is in each OPEC country's interest to overstate their reserves to artificially increase their quota. The fact that Saudis, as well as every other OPEC country, has been overstating their reserves has been an open secret for the past couple decades. In the case of Saudis, it matters more because their reserves are (still) the largest.

    Peak oil is already here. Two of the predictions came to pass:

    1. Peak discovery, i.e. fewer new oil reserves are discovered than existing ones put in production. Happened in the 70's.
    2. Peak production. Despite growing demand, production of existing fields cannot be increased. Happened in 2008.
    3. Long tail of falling production and rising prices. We were "saved" from this by the economic downturn. For now. Once world economies start to pick up, oil prices will go through the roof.

  11. Neil DeGrasse Tyson on Apophis on Asteroid Once Seen As Dangerous Offers Chance For Close Study · · Score: 1

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xaW4Ol3_M1o

  12. right here on Model Says Religiosity Gene Will Dominate Society · · Score: 1

    http://blip.tv/file/2204956

  13. no kidding on Spinal-Fluid Test Confirmed To Predict Alzheimer's · · Score: 2, Funny

    The spinal needle goes up to 11 (inches).

  14. Re:over 5 years? on Just One Out of 16 Hybrids Pays Back In Gas Savings · · Score: 1

    Hate to reply to myself, but here is what I mean:

    "Long-term depreciation and resale values remain unknown so are assumed to be neutral."

    (from the pdf).

  15. over 5 years? on Just One Out of 16 Hybrids Pays Back In Gas Savings · · Score: 1

    Here is the actual study (took a few clicks to find it):
    http://www.bcaa.com/downloads/BCAA_Hybrid_Cost_Analysis_2010.pdf

    A car lasts a lot longer than 5 years. If you want to calculate the cost over 5 years you'll need to subtract the resale value of the car, which will be higher for a hybrid. It doesn't appear they've done that.

    While I agree that cost savings of a hybrid vehicle are overblown, this study is misleading. Also, another benefit of buying a hybrid vehicle was that until recently you could drive one in a commuter lane (in California at least), even without a passanger.

  16. Re:Great Outcome Ridiculous Reasons on Industrial Marijuana Farming Approved In Oakland · · Score: 1

    this was the same reason that alcohol prohibition was repealed. US was in the middle of great depression at the time.

  17. Some more fuel on Intel Abandons Discrete Graphics · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There was a company called Rapid Mind, which built library & tools for writing code to target various GPUs, multi-core CPUs, etc. Something similar OpenCL, I suppose, but easier to program (theoretically -- I never actually tried it). Intel bought it and killed it.

    Another company, Havok, developed a successful physics & AI library. They were going to port it to to GPUs. Then Intel bought it and canceled the GPU port.

  18. let me start on Researchers Create Logic Circuits From DNA · · Score: 1

    This involves a lot of uhh... manual labour. Would his hand get tired?

  19. uhhh... sure on Pope Rails Against the Internet and Transparency · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All that transparency sure makes it hard to hide child rape scandals.

  20. I was just wondering the same thing on Software SSD Cache Implementation For Linux? · · Score: 1

    Windows 7 (and I think XP) has ReadyBoost. I haven't been able to find anything similar for Linux. It is also not clear how much difference ReadyBoost makes. The only benchmark I was able to find uses a crappy USB flash drive. I was wondering how much difference something like the 80GB x-25m would make. There is clearly potential for huge gains as MaxIQ benchmarks show.

    This would be an awesome speedup if it was supported: just add a 40-80GB SSD for swap & file cache, and gain a massive performance boost over a standard cheap 7200RPM drive. Given that the price per GB for SSD is likely to stay very high for the foreseeable future, this seems like the best way to go. If only there was OS support for it...

    The alternative (that I'm waiting for) is for SSD prices to drop.

  21. and? on White House Issues New Gas Mileage Standards · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > Won't this just make people buy new cars less often?

    and this is a bad thing... how?

  22. Re:Which DB is better? on Digg Says Yes To NoSQL Cassandra DB, Bye To MySQL · · Score: 5, Informative

    Go with PostgreSQL. Reliable, standards-compliant, fast.

  23. I've seen buzz on Google Releases Chrome OS Tablet Concept Demo · · Score: 1

    Right here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eF0y0IfpPU

  24. citation on Supreme Court Rolls Back Corporate Campaign Spending Limits · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here you go, idiot.

    "Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.

  25. Insane on Samsung Settles With Rambus In Patent Dispute · · Score: 5, Informative

    The patent system needs major reform to prevent things like this from happening. For those who don't know, Rambus is a patent troll. The short summary of this long saga is as follows:

    For years it sat on the board of JEDEC, just as the standards for SDRAM and DDR-SDRAM were being set. It made no suggestions but kept notes. JEDEC rules require that all members disclose their patents. Rambus did not disclose that they had related patents pending. Instead, it tweaked the patent applications to make sure that the upcoming standard would definitely infringe. Never mind the fact that it did not invent anything and the DDR RAM was merely an application of existing inventions to RAM production. But Rambus was granted the patents anyway and went off trolling RAM manufacturers.

    It is absolutely disgusting that the system allows people who produce nothing to extort those who actually make things. The best line of business is a patent troll. If you win, you win big. If you lose, the shell company has no assets anyway, so there is nothing to lose.