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  1. Re: Nice on Trump Withdraws US From Iran Nuclear Deal (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    Iâ(TM)m on record as saying that they wouldnâ(TM)t find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Does that make me smarter than all of the allied intelligence services?

  2. Well it depends - if you agree with Cameron that sci fi is saying something about what it means to be human, then yes, you might want to hear females voices as they will have a different experience in life to you. On the other hand, if all you get out of sci fi is âoeworks well and was cheapâ then I guess it doesnâ(TM)t matter who directs the films you watch.

  3. Re:Not Like There's a Law Against It! on It's Harder To Get an Uber or Lyft If You're Black, Study Says (time.com) · · Score: 1

    Hey, you should read some of that literature. At its simplest, it says that racism can happen between any races, but it needs context. Just google "reverse racism" and read a little.

  4. Re: It's how you define the 'utility function' on Is A Rational Nation Ruled By Science A Terrible Idea? (newscientist.com) · · Score: 1

    Tax burden? But surely the weight of evidence says those democratic societies with higher tax burdens are happier and safer?

  5. I'll be around for a couple of hours too if anyone wants to take the time to debate against what I've written above.

  6. I don't understand the objection people have to rating websites in principle. Afterall - a rating based on whatever benchmarks is just semantic metadata which should be included on all websites. As to the details - I'd make the website owner rate their own site - right away most porn sites would be correctly rated with just a a couple of lines of code. Then I'd make it possible for people to tell their isp to automatically block non-rated sites, and whatever rated sites they like. For websites that lie about their rating (a G-rated porn site for example), I'd threaten to block them entirely. I can't see why an opt-in process like this would be objectionable. And why all this bother? As a tech guy with kids, I really feel it is almost impossible to stop them accessing stuff I don't want them to access. I don't want them seeing beheadings, and I don't want them seeing most of the obnoxious porn out there. I do all I can at home, but then some kid at school shares a video of the sorts of violence that a child would historically only see in worn torn countries? I think that's a problem worth addressing.

  7. Re: Totaly agree on Study Says People Who Continually Point Out Typos Are 'Jerks' · · Score: 1

    There is no evidence at all that English is devolving. However, that people use language to signal social class is very well documented. More often than not, correcting grammar and spelling is just an ad hominem attack and nothing to do with clarity. A great example is your and you're. People can distinguish these in spoken language, but when written down all of a sudden it's vitally important that they be corrected...

  8. Re:First experimental study? on Lack of Sleep Puts You At Higher Risk For Colds, First Experimental Study Finds · · Score: 1

    You are right, it isn't said to be the first study. It *is* said to be the "first experimental study". Which it is not.

  9. First experimental study? on Lack of Sleep Puts You At Higher Risk For Colds, First Experimental Study Finds · · Score: 1

    This would be news to Cohen, S., Doyle, W. J., Alper, C. M., Janicki-Deverts, D., & Turner, R. B. (2009). Sleep habits and susceptibility to the common cold. Archives of Internal Medicine, 169(1), 62–67. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2008.505 "Background: Sleep quality is thought to be an impor- tant predictor of immunity and, in turn, susceptibility to the common cold. This article examines whether sleep duration and efficiency in the weeks preceding viral ex- posure are associated with cold susceptibility. Methods: A total of 153 healthy men and women (age range, 21-55 years) volunteered to participate in the study. For 14 consecutive days, they reported their sleep dura- tion and sleep efficiency (percentage of time in bed ac- tually asleep) for the previous night and whether they felt rested. Average scores for each sleep variable were calculated over the 14-day baseline. Subsequently, par- ticipants were quarantined, administered nasal drops con- taining a rhinovirus, and monitored for the develop- ment of a clinical cold (infection in the presence of objective signs of illness) on the day before and for 5 days after exposure. Results: There was a graded association with average sleep duration: participants with less than 7 hours of sleep were 2.94 times (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.18-7.30) more likely to develop a cold than those with 8 hours or more of sleep. The association with sleep efficiency was also graded: participants with less than 92% efficiency were 5.50 times (95% CI, 2.08-14.48) more likely to develop a cold than those with 98% or more efficiency. These relation- ships could not be explained by differences in prechal- lenge virus-specific antibody titers, demographics, sea- son of the year, body mass, socioeconomic status, psychological variables, or health practices. The percent- age of days feeling rested was not associated with colds. Conclusion: Poorer sleep efficiency and shorter sleep du- ration in the weeks preceding exposure to a rhinovirus were associated with lower resistance to illness."

  10. Re:The whole premise is an excuse for illiteracy on Why There Is No Such Thing as 'Proper English' · · Score: 1

    ...a horribly inefficient way to communicate...

    I'm sure that you communicate efficiently all the time - I bet you even use "yous" - because you know, it's clearer, more efficient and logical. You can not like someone's language, but don't pretend an objective measure like "efficiency" is what it's all about.

  11. Re:The whole premise is an excuse for illiteracy on Why There Is No Such Thing as 'Proper English' · · Score: 2

    Actually, when taken as a mass, the youth today are more literate than any generation previously, by a *massive* factor. Before social media, most people after high school wrote little more than shopping lists, and *perhaps* the odd card. Compare that today with the massive amount of writing teens do every day. In terms of basic literacy skills, there is no comparison between past and present.

  12. I doubt it on Peter Diamandis: Technology Is Dissolving National Borders · · Score: 1

    Already in the world we have people working next to each other, speaking the same language but who actively maintain separate nationalities. I can't see how the internet will succeed here when co-location and shared languages didn't.

  13. Re:To America? Yes. To the GOP? No. on Does Being First Still Matter In America? · · Score: 1

    Why the rage? You could do a little reading and find out for yourself.
    Here are some ideas from me - some stats, some anecdotes.
    1. Scientific output in the US is stagnant compared with China. For example, between 2010 and 2013 the US published approx, 560k articles each year. China rose from 335k to 426k. I often hear Americans say "Quality, not quantity." But again, no one had to say that 10 years ago... (see ref1)
    2. The US standard of living has fallen below that of many other countries (see ref2). Again, many Americans deny this, or simply don't believe it. This is part of the problem. For example, this post (ref3) was rated 5:Insightful: "Government has a very limited range of things that they do as well or better than the public at large (war/defense, money, basic law enforcement, etc) - governmental action beyond that range invariably becomes incompetent, expensive, dangerous, or worse." Given that the poster is comparing Sweden with the US, this is laughable.
    3. You can't put a person in space anymore.
    4. You have people living on the street who aren't drug affected or mentally unstable. You know, like young, sane healthy families living out of their car. If you can't or won't fix that, you shouldn't have much confidence for larger problems.
    5. Among the many Americans I've met (and they were all friendly decent people), there was a strong feeling that their country was the envy of the world. This is simply not the case. Here are two anecdotes that may have wider applicability. If you were to offer an academic the choice between a US or EU passport, what do you think they would choose? Among the people I know, about 3/4 would go with the EU passport. But then I mainly know academics. Which brings me to another point. Within academia, the US is still considered the default centre of the world - but only just. But that has definitely changed in the last 20 years. 20 years ago, the status location for an international conference was the states. That is no longer the case. Many universities now prefer to hold conferences in the EU, and I've spoken to many scientists who now skip some minor conferences when they are held in the US, simply because they are in the US. This would, you assume, be bad for their careers, but two of them are leaders in their field. I'd say this is bad for the states.

    (some refs) ref1: http://www.scimagojr.com/count...
    ref2: http://www.oecdbetterlifeindex...
    ref3: http://games.slashdot.org/comm...

  14. Re:To America? Yes. To the GOP? No. on Does Being First Still Matter In America? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Looking at the big picture - 50 years ago no American had to say "Looking at the big picture." I think we are seeing many little signs that the US is losing its importance - even though at the moment it is still the dominant superpower. As to why - who knows. But the completely uncritical way that most citizens of that country can't see any problems is part of the problem. I'm not saying the USA are bad guys, but come on - *look* at what you wrote: "It's way past time for the US to limit it's international involvement and really start serving their own needs with no apologies and let everyone else fend for themselves." If you really feel that the USA isn't serving their own needs on the international arena, you need to read history more.

  15. Re:It helps to actually use the thing. on How Sony, Intel, and Unix Made Apple's Mac a PC Competitor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just don't think you're right. I remember as developer about 10 years ago we were given $5000 every two years to buy whatever computer system we wanted. Nearly everyone bought Dell laptops - they had the best power/$ ratio, and when you have a company of 20 developers, 10 of whom are making that decision each year, it is pretty apparent what best laptop to buy was. I've left, but maintained touch with them. When I walk in to their offices now, it is 15" macbook pros that I see everywhere. I just find it unlikely that these guys, who now have 15+ years experience in the industry, have swallowed the Kool-Aid.

  16. Re: Equal rights on So What If Yahoo's New Dads Get Less Leave Than Moms? · · Score: 1

    Good advice - but probably not well-intentioned. But it's a balance - stay living in a shitty, anti-intellectual, country or take the massive upheaval of moving to Sweden, finding a place in a new society, learning the language, getting a visa etc. The barriers to entry are very high - but there is no doubt that as a place to live, work and raise a family Sweden shits on the states.

  17. Something less than theatre... on TSA Log Shows Passengers Say the Darndest Things · · Score: 1

    After learning that his luggage had made a flight that he missed, a Las Vegas (LAS) passenger told the gate agent: "Imagine there was a bomb in my bag. I'm not on plane, and it would explode."

    I could write why TSA's response to this comment as a threat is patently stupid - but to do so demeans us all. You guys are paying people to detain anyone who utters the word "bomb" - in any context.

  18. Re:He seems to confuse the purpose of copyright on Pirate Party Leader: Copyright Laws Ridiculous · · Score: 1

    Yeah fair enough, I wouldn't lose sleep over Disney either. Though this doesn't then legitimate the piracy of all artwork. Remember that for many artists, the people enjoying, but not paying for, their work will be better off than them.

  19. Re:He seems to confuse the purpose of copyright on Pirate Party Leader: Copyright Laws Ridiculous · · Score: 1

    And you wrongly are implying that therefore piracy of material is acceptable. If an artist, for whatever reason, decides to make money from selling copies of their work - then you, if you enjoy that work, have an obligation to help support them. That is the social contract you enter into when you gain the benefits of someone else's time.

  20. we're to blame because we elected these people on Ask Slashdot: Which Candidates For Geek Issues? · · Score: 1

    An opinion that appears in nearly every political thread is: 'we're to blame because we elected these people.'

    For the record, this is only true if your politicians don't lie to you...

  21. should read... on Physicist Uses Laser Light As Fast, True-Random Number Generator · · Score: 1

    Those measurements are HIS random numbers. ;) ps: IANAC

  22. Re:I learned the value of money by paying as I wen on Ron Paul Wants To End the Federal Student Loan Program · · Score: 1

    Man - I feel so bad for you guys, that is really hard. I think the free market supporters should look outside their country and see what other people are doing. Think of Australia as being half between you guys and some government run Scandinavian country. We pay higher taxes, but our education is much cheaper - many students work to help pay their way through uni, but they don't work as hard as you poor bastards. I look at the quality of life here, job oppotunities, tax payer funded Heath care, longer life expectancies - and I suspect it is government policies, such as higher taxes and stronger regulation. I really respect the Americian ethos of independence and hard work, but my guess is that your free market policies are making things harder than they need be.

  23. Re:Save your money. on Ask Slashdot: Radiation Detection For Tokyo Resident? · · Score: 1

    Actually - sorry about my previous post, it's not going to help the situation. I think I was surprised by the ferocity of the posts on this topic.

  24. Re:Save your money. on Ask Slashdot: Radiation Detection For Tokyo Resident? · · Score: 1

    Optimism - I think I can see foam at the corners of your mouth... Shame the mods couldn't keep you on a tighter leash.

  25. National Record The Police in Public Day on Cop Seeks Wiretapping Charges For Woman Who Videotaped Beating · · Score: 2

    I don't know the etiquette for reposting ideas, but we need a "National Record the Police in Public Day". If nothing else, this would force the issue to be dealt with. Anyone interested should contact this guy.