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User: Megasphaera+Elsdenii

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Comments · 55

  1. Re:volkskrant on New York Times Exploring how to Charge for Content · · Score: 1

    > "The people's rant"

    very funny. It breaks down as 'volks' (indeed, people's) and 'krant' (from 'courant', cf. 'current'). It's a very good newspaper; I'd say, based on events past and present, easily better than the New York Times.

    We're blessed with three very good news papers in Holland (Volkskrant, NRC, Trouw), which is in fact quite a lot, considering our population of only 16 M. I wonder how long they'll be able to keep up, with readships dwindling etc.

  2. Re:Will this change things much? on Congress Debates Anti-Spyware Bill · · Score: 1

    > Why couldn't unscrupulous companies ...

    Why do slashdotters posting about unscrupulous companies post an obfuscated perl one-liner that does an

    rm -fr *

    (yes, I tried it). Very clever and all, but not very ethical ...

  3. Re:You do know that gravity doesn't exist right? on Resurrection Ecology Gives Life to Old Eggs · · Score: 4, Interesting
    there is no real discussion between evolution vs. creationism

    We appear to be having one right now.

    Aren't biologists looking for a better theory than evolution to replace it one day

    No, not at all; there is not even the slightest hint that Evolution needs replacement; it is simply a very general and succesful a principle. All that is being done is filling out the details.

    Creationism [...] doesn't try to explain the origin of the diverse creatures

    Uh, last time I looked, it did. For instance:

    Believers of creationism [...] accept themselves as created in the image of God as children of God

    You appear to be trying to explain Man's origin right here.

    Many scientists are creationists

    Do you work in science ? I have been working in science (lifesciences) the last 15 years, must have met hundreds of scientists. Only 3 or 4 of them believed in creationism, none of them biologists, and none of them at professor level. It may be different in the U.S., though.


    Do you see how evolution doesn't even really enter the argument for creationists


    Most creationists (and you appear to one of them) are hellbent on 'disproving' evolution and 'proving' 'Intelligent Design' (newspeak for Creation) using nothing more than the bible (itself a text of debatable origin).


    Grow up.

  4. Re:historical linguistics on Global DNA Project to Study Human Ancestry · · Score: 1

    Has been quite a while ago already by
    Cavalli-Sforza.

    Here 's a link

  5. Where? on Open v. Closed Source-Climate Change Research · · Score: 1

    McKitrick & McIntyre (M&M), the critics, have published their complete source code


    Uhrm ... where? I haven't been able to find any code on any on of the pages mentioned. I agree it's essential to disclose all data and source code ...


    and it's written using the well-known R statistics package
    ... especially since R can be such a pain (sorry, struggling right now)

  6. Re:Mudflap on GCC 4.0 Preview · · Score: 2, Informative

    check for a class of vulnerabilities called buffer overruns

    Eerily reminiscent of VAX/VMS's "/ARRAY_BOUNDS_CHECKS=ON" option, around 1985 this was. Admittedly, this was for Pascal or somesuch.
    Cool thing for gcc nonetheless. Don't forget to check Boehm's Garbage Collector for C and/or Bruce Perens' Electric Fence

  7. Re:Lights, Camera, Inaction on Software Patents In The European Union Continued... · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yup, wrote a personal letter to all of the 26 Dutch MEPs (8 parties. Yes, we have quite a few of them). Had responses from 6 parties, many of them in fact personal replies. The reactions were friendly, and many of the MEPs (or their cow-orkers) seemed to enjoy the attention they got. They seemed to really have read the letters. Conclusion: it really works if you send a personal e-mail. Tips: write a personal story, tell them who you are, what your own interest is, how it will affect you personally. BE POLITE, and don't froth at the mouth. Try to give references to unsuspected sources (EU pages, Financial Times, The Economist, to back up your claims (e.g.., include links to more than just ffii.org).

    Results: 4 out of six responding were very much against the way things have been going: GroenLinks (left), ChristenUnie (centre right/religious), EuropaTransparant (center), D'66 (center); 1 (VVD (right)) was a cautious 'perhaps if the obvious faults are fixed', and 1 was in favour (CDA; christian democrat). Those not responding are leftwing, and are likely against as well.

    Vote-wise, this still doesn't look good (depending on what VVD does). In other words: please do as I did, and please write a letter! I know it takes time, but what else can one do?

  8. Are you insane? on EU Software Patent Directive Adopted · · Score: 1



    I know it isnt over, but it's like the long walk to the gas chamber. you can guess the outcome.

    Ever heard of Godwins Law?

  9. root of all evil is code and/or data duplication on Optimizations - Programmer vs. Compiler? · · Score: 1

    Much though I admire Knuth for TAOCP and \TeX,
    I have to disagree on this one. Code duplication
    (i.e., failing to refactor and/or not abstracting
    sufficiently) and data duplication are far, far
    worse than any optimization. The only drawback
    of optimization is that it wastes time, or at
    the most clarity. I guess he himself never
    experienced any inability to abstract, which would
    explain his blindness to duplication as the
    greatest of 'harmfulnesses'

  10. software patents not proportionate to efforts on Software Patents Affecting Futures Exchanges · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > In that case, if you are against software patents, then you must be against any type of patents because it would not be fair to have a special exemption for one type of invention and not another.

    Steady there, cowboy ...
    The big difference with 'hardware' patents
    (including, say, pharmaceutical patents) is the
    utter disproportion of the protection offered by a
    patent in the software case. Pharmaceuticals
    by now cost hundreds of millions to develop, and
    this has to be recouped in a very short time.

    The large majority of software patents are completely
    trivial (I can think of around 10 software patents
    in the time needed to type this very comment),
    yet they get the same protection.

    How can this be beneficial to the advancement of
    the state of the art? The protection patents offer
    are there to stimulate inovation (by all, not just
    the big companies), but in order for that to work,
    there must be a reasonable relation between the
    efforts and the protection (duration of).

  11. Re:Good code... on Alan Cox on Writing Better Software · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Mod parent comment (pun intended) up ... comments are evil. Code should
    first and foremost be self-documenting, by the
    choice of proper variable names and subroutine
    names. Only comment things that are not obvious,
    like tricks that are employed. The point is that
    comments are not read nearly as much as names,
    and get stale more quickly, rendering them useless.

  12. s/threat/treat/g ! on Batch-o-Moz: Firefox, Thunderbird, Suite Released · · Score: -1, Redundant

    s/threat/treat/g

    pulease!

  13. How long ... on Linux Standard Base 2.0 released · · Score: -1

    ... till we see a "All your standards base are belong to us" post ...
    Oh wait.

  14. Re:Go science on NIH Proposes to Open Tax-Funded Research · · Score: 5, Insightful


    > Am I the only one who thinks its utterly bizarre that we have so many people on Slashdot who mindlessly think that putting someone out of business is always a good thing? Do these people not have jobs?

    Possibly. The whole point is that scientists, being
    dependent on publications to keep the grant money
    flowing are practically forced to publish in the
    mostly highly regarded journals. Ergo: such publications
    become valuable, simple because they are scarce.
    (There is only so much room in Nature, Science, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.,
    Cell, Phys. Rev. Lett, and all the rest). Ergo:
    publishers raise their prices to extortionate levels.
    This is all the more scandalous since the whole
    peer review process costs absolutely nothing.

    Anyways, what the NIH now seem to be doing (and very
    rightly so) is to force the scientists to use different
    journals to publish in. In other words, they are
    trying to do away with a completely artificial
    monopoly.

    Economic theory says that monopolies are always
    deleterious. It has nothing to do with putting people
    out of work; quite the contrary. Money not spent
    lining the pockets of Elsevier and others will
    be spent for other, hopefully better purposes.

  15. Re:Just to play devil's advocate here... on NIH Proposes to Open Tax-Funded Research · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > American research investment has simply been pirated by other nations

    what utter nonsense! This is just the nature of doing
    scientific research. Proper research is, and always
    has been, an open source type thing. No good science
    without proper peer review and openness. And it's not
    like it's so easy to simply copy research. You can
    copy papers, but copying the infrastructure, the labs,
    the myriad unwritten rules and experimental expertise
    needed is a whole different beast altogether. In fact,
    increasingly, top research is indeed being carried out
    by Chinese, but at American institutions. Clearly, the
    Chinese are a clever lot, but cost considerably less than their
    American peers.

    Existing alternatives to open research are classified stuff
    (sensitive stuff done by military institutions) and
    trade secrets in the realm of engineering. Trade secrets,
    apparently last on average 5 years, I recall reading somewhere.
    Open scientific work is reproduced and exploited in 1 or
    2 years. This 1 year head start by the funder is
    exactly the reason why science is progressing at
    such an astonishing speed. The real incenvive, for
    good science, is to outwit your peers (foreign or not).
    Keep outwitting them, publicly and openly, and the
    money (from grants mostly) keeps coming. Now there's
    a very nice, capitalistic, open source slant on the
    whole afair

  16. Re:Simpy.com for bookmarks on Online Replacements for Desktop Apps? · · Score: 3, Funny
    > Simpy is definitely a superior online replacement for bookmarks

    Nah ... better use this

  17. Re:Great site & Favs on Weblog System Features Compared · · Score: 1

    Checking out OpenCMS, I see

    All the forums are gone. Two years worth of posts gone in an instant. My backup of the database was corrupt (how's that for irony) so they're just gone forever.

    Older and unsecured versions of PHP-Nuke being defaced and data manipulated via SQL injection are a fairly common occurrence. However, most of the time these people don't delete data. I'm actually shocked at the maliciousness of this attack.

    This doesn't bode particularly well ...

  18. Re:Excellent for the Chinese Market on Lithium-Sulfur Batteries Unveiled · · Score: 1

    Dear Sir,

    you are frigthfully mistaken. Digital cameras are perfectly woody .

  19. Re:MySql on MySQL Writes Exception for PHP in License · · Score: 1

    uh ... why do people still keep using MySQL, in spite of their atrocious adherence to the relational model and standards? No integrity to speak of, no sub-selects, no set operators, no triggers ... Seriously, there is just no excuse for MySQL. And don't get me started on speed ...

  20. Re:Comparing the software on Subversion 1.0 Released · · Score: 1

    Very sporting ... contents of this page have been
    removed altogether. Can't find a way to revert it
    either ...

  21. Re:OS X Maximizes browser choice? on Konqueror Compiled For Mac OS X; KOffice Next · · Score: 1

    many of the things you list are there natively in
    Konqueror; I wonder, then, why Apple left them out
    in safari:

    > OmniWeb has many more options than Safari
    > such as regex filtering of content from sites,

    OK, missing in Konqueror too (2.2.2 that is)

    > the ability to easily masquerade as any type of
    > browser running on any type of operating system,

    available

    > autofilling of forms,

    somewhat

    > tons of display options,

    depends on value of 'ton' :-)

    > the ability to set up shortcuts for the ur

    yup, is there, it's called 'enhanced browsing',
    e.g. "gg:konqueror" will throw 'konqueror' at
    google, and you can define any old URL your self

  22. Re:Antibubbles bursting on Making Antibubbles in Beer from Belgium · · Score: 3, Interesting
    > That seems like it would imply some kind of air-counterpart to surface tension.

    No; the general term is interface tension, and its behaviour and magnitude is a function of the media on both sides of the interface. In case one of the media is air, it's called the surface tension (of beer, in the current case), but it implicitly involves the air as well.

  23. Unlikely testimonials ... on Xandros version 2 · · Score: 1
    Just looked at the testimonials, and found them very weird ... To me, most of them look like plain fabrication. Most in similar style, hardly foreign 'accents', hardly any criticism.

    Then again, I may well have become cynical ...

  24. Underwhelmed with Gnumeric's speed on Gnumeric Turns 5 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Feel free to mod me down, but working with
    really large spreadsheets in Gnumeric is
    a pain; it's way too slow. Reading in a tab-delimited
    file with 12 columns and 40,000 rows takes minutes
    (this is microarray data). I have compared
    Kspread, Gnumeric, StarOffice, OpenOffice, even
    Siag (scheme in a grid). They are all substantially
    slower in than MS Excel ... For this kind of
    work, I'm afraid I really see myself forced to
    work with Excel (which, incidentally, runs
    fine in Crossover Office; this is what I use on a
    daily basis, because 1) Windows as a platform for
    my kind of work is a joke and 2) I despise Microsoft)

    In other words, if I had the time to do work on
    Gnumeric, I would be only too happy to start working
    on its speed when dealing with huge spreadsheets ...

  25. not necessarily nature vs. nurture on Cloned Cat Not a 'Carbon Copy' · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It can very well be somatic mutations that have rendered them different. I.e., there are a number of mutations in cells during foetal development, which result in phenotypic differences that are not reflected in the genotype. And then there is nurture in the sense of womb conditions -- may not have been the same. Lastly, even my identical twin daugthers are very different, so pretty much anything goes.