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User: Peter+Trepan

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Comments · 324

  1. Re:God's experiment in free will on Debate Over Evolution Will Soon Be History, Says Leakey · · Score: 1

    Try to think of these stories as if they are written by your wife. It is not about what she says, but what she wants you to figure out yourself.

    So you're saying we're doomed.

  2. Re:Either way on Statistical Analysis Raises Civil War Death Count By 20% · · Score: 1

    And there will always be those who do. My mother wrote a book on the civil war, and in the course of her research she found a diary of a Union soldier who quartered his soldiers on the farm of a guy who told them his theory about how the war existed to protect the interests of a wealthy few at the expense of ordinary people.

  3. Re:Again... on MIT Institute's Gloomy Prediction: 'Global Economic Collapse' By 2030 · · Score: 1

    Gold has no more intrinsic value than the dollar. It's not expensive because we need it to survive or because it's a raw material for lots of products, but because everyone has agreed to assign it value, just like the dollar. If it has an advantage over the dollar, it's that you can't print more of it. But if anything that makes it a worse yardstick of the value of other things, because even without the downturn its value will tend to increase as the ratio of people to gold increases, making the relative price of everything else appear to go down.

  4. Re:Again... on MIT Institute's Gloomy Prediction: 'Global Economic Collapse' By 2030 · · Score: 1

    My point is that the price of gold is not a constant. It changes, often dramatically, and if you graph what something costs when priced in gold, that's not enough information to tell you whether the price of that thing has gone down or the price of gold has gone up.

  5. Re:Again... on MIT Institute's Gloomy Prediction: 'Global Economic Collapse' By 2030 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A two child per couple policy is actually more sustainable than a one child per couple policy. Because of its one child policy, China is about to run into a crisis where the elderly generation expects to be supported by a younger generation half its size.

  6. Re:Again... on MIT Institute's Gloomy Prediction: 'Global Economic Collapse' By 2030 · · Score: 1

    Gold prices are inflated because people are using it to hedge against the downturn. A gold ingot will currently buy more of anything than it used to, not just oil.

  7. Re:The Bill on Tennessee Passes Bill That Allows "Teaching the Controversy" of Evolution · · Score: 1

    (d) Neither the state board of education, nor any public elementary or secondary school governing authority, director of schools, school system administrator, or any public elementary or secondary school principal or administrator shall prohibit any teacher in a public school system of this state from helping students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories covered in the course being taught. (e) This section only protects the teaching of scientific information, and shall not be construed to promote any religious or non-religious doctrine, promote discrimination for or against a particular set of religious beliefs or non-beliefs, or promote discrimination for or against religion or non-religion

    In a region where the majority does not believe in evolution, it seems like this bill would help, not harm, the teaching of evolution in the classroom.

  8. Re:PHP is great on Ask Slashdot: Which Web Platform Would You Use? · · Score: 1

    ...visual studio is the best ide ever developed.

    By a mile. Visual Studio is indistinguishable from magic. I can't understand how the same company can produce both it and Internet Explorer.

  9. Re:Discourage on Ask Slashdot: Learning Dart Development? · · Score: 1

    I have a bachelor's degree in art. I worked first as a graphic designer, then a web designer, then a web developer with increasingly complex responsibilities. It took me about ten years to get from print design to proper web development, but it's possible.

    I second a previous poster's recommendation that you (the OP) learn ASP.NET. In my area, there are whole recruitment companies that do nothing but place ASP.NET developers, and demand for them outpaces supply. Microsoft has created a very successful ecosystem for creating new developers, and you should definitely get on that train.

    More reluctantly, I suggest you consider working for a "sweatshop" software consultancy at some point. The harder it is for a shop to attract experienced talent, the more likely it is that they'll gamble on inexperienced talent. Also, since their business model is based on hours billed, they're more likely to throw you into something that's outside your experience, trusting that if you go far wrong it can always be cleaned up by the handful of senior developers they have on hand, and they'll still get paid.

  10. Re:Global Oligarchy? on The 147 Corporations Controlling Most of the Global Economy · · Score: 1

    Credit unions. Co-ops. Employee-owned corporations. Social institutions that ensure value is traded between people who actually produce goods and services personally. Maybe the best instances of this are yet to be invented.

    In any case, it seems like a good idea to try out some solutions besides trying to get a government to regulate on our behalf when that government is assumed to be compromised.

  11. Re:Good luck with that on NATO Report Threatens To 'Persecute' Anonymous · · Score: 1

    I am Spartacus!

    See, he is Spartacus. Could you get your boot off my head now?

  12. Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. on Coffee Wards Off Cancer · · Score: 1

    Three times is enemy action. Coffee has so many widely reported health benefits, it makes me wonder if some coffee growers association has discovered that it's killing people.

  13. Alabama for everyone else? on Big Brother Friends Facebook · · Score: 1

    Could someone explain the "it's-like-alabama-for-everyone-else dept." tagline?

    Yes, I know my state sucks in a lot of ways, but I have a bad feeling I didn't get the memo about how it's sucked lately.

  14. Wait, you've got them all wrong. on The Continued Censorship of Huckleberry Finn · · Score: 1

    There's no N-word connection here. Fox News is merely pointing out that Obama is, by birth, a member of a frightening and poorly understood culture* with a historical reason to bear a grudge against the typical Fox viewer*, and that as a member of that culture, he might use his office to empower his people* at the typical Fox viewer's expense.

    * [wink, wink]

  15. Concur. on Journal Article On Precognition Sparks Outrage · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's a compelling model that addresses a lot of tricky questions very neatly.

    For instance, if you combine this with many-worlds theory, you can eliminate the paradox of free will - that is, when I make a decision, what internal process prompted me to make that decision? And what prompted that? And so on.

    If you think of the universe as a static object that at every instant in time (or "the fourth dimension," if you prefer) branches off into multiple possible realities, then you can think of yourself as having made every possible decision, but being able to remember only one, because the state of your brain in this particular branch of the decision tree is only consistent with one past.

    It works the same way as the anthropic principle. Why is the universe perfect for supporting life? Because if it wasn't, you wouldn't have asked. Why did I make that particular decision? Because you're thinking about the decision from the perspective of a universe in which that particular decision was made. This also explains why consciousness appears to have a special place in quantum collapse. It's really an illusion, and there is no "collapse" - you have just chosen a particular viewpoint that is only consistent with one specific observation.

    Problem is, this hypothesis may be nondisprovable.

  16. Re:Oh brother on Survey Shows That Fox News Makes You Less Informed · · Score: 1

    They don't profess Obama was born elsewhere - they just leave it as a "question".

    They get even more subtle than that. When Pew Research revealed 18% of Americans believed Obama was Muslim, most networks quoted the article verbatim. The local Fox News anchor, however, opened with this: "Do you believe our president is Muslim? If so, there are a lot of people who agree with you."

  17. Re:Julian Assange on TIME Names Mark Zuckerberg Person of Year · · Score: 3, Funny

    It should have been Assange, but Time magazine caved to government pressure! Now we attack! Our forces will go to the newsstands and look at Time magazine thousands of times per second, until there are no photons left for anyone else!

  18. QBert on Man Sues Rockstar Saying GTA:SA Is Based On His Life · · Score: 4, Funny

    Since I spend a lot of time jumping on step pyramids and being chased by snakes, I was going to bring the same lawsuit against the makers of QBert.

  19. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised on Pentagon Papers Ellsberg Supports Wikileaks · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If our government wants to protect its diplomatic efforts, then DON'T ACCRUE the risk in the first place. Then you don't have to fear the leaks.

    I think putting this fear in the hearts of the powerful is the point of, and value of, Wikileaks. Regardless of whether they've broken a world-changing story so far, they've produced a chilling effect on corruption.

  20. Re:Another measure to lock down wikileaks? on Fix To Chinese Internet Traffic Hijack Due In Jan. · · Score: 1

    I was going to suggest the same possibility. Mod parent up.

  21. Re:Can we finally, finally, finally on NASA Finds New Life (This Afternoon) · · Score: 1

    If a deity exists, clearly they are just as likely to be made of arsenic.

    Indeed, my experience with organized religion has convinced me that God is most likely poisonous.

  22. Re:Charles Stross has a great article on this. on The Galaxy May Have Billions of Habitable Planets · · Score: 1

    Whoops - between stars.

  23. Charles Stross has a great article on this. on The Galaxy May Have Billions of Habitable Planets · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The High Frontier, Redux - Covers the true scale of the distance between planets, and the energy requirements of going between them. He estimates that sending an Apollo-sized capsule to the nearest star would take as much energy as is produced on Earth in a year.

  24. Re:Where's the gene that makes people believe on Researchers Find a 'Liberal Gene' · · Score: 1

    "People with stronger party affiliation, conservative political views, and greater interest in politics proved more likely to click on articles with opposing views, according to the Ohio State study. 'It appears that people with these characteristics are more confident in their views and so they’re more inclined to at least take a quick look at the counterarguments,' Knobloch-Westerwick noted.

    I'm willing to believe they're confident in their views, but I doubt they look at the counterarguments because they intend to consider them. Also, conservatives are much more monolithic in their opinions. Read one conservative blog's opinion on an issue, and you know what most conservatives are going to think, and why.

  25. Re:Who's on first? on Hawking Picks Physics Over God For Big Bang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think it's like Einstein's "God does not play dice," or everyone else's "Thank God it's Friday." It's just a turn of speech, and doesn't imply belief in God. Furthermore, when someone like E.O. Wilson professes belief in a god, everyone assumes he means Jehovah -- but "God" is a slippery word, even when you're using it in earnest.