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User: BitHive

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  1. Re:Biofuels are not "fat" on Fat Replaces Oil In F-16s · · Score: 1

    It's anti-social to object to meaningless phrasing?

    Unless the F-16s are going to be running on something that the average person would identify as "fat" rather than "jet fuel" then the headline as written is pretty stupid.

    Even if a fuel is made from animal fats, it stops being fat when its refined into fuel. If my faucet breaks and I melt some ice cubes, it would be similarly stupid to say "Ice has replaced water in my glass."

  2. Biofuels are not "fat" on Fat Replaces Oil In F-16s · · Score: 1, Informative

    The oil is being replaced by oil. This story is insulting to the intelligence.

  3. Re:the main problem with things like television on Doctors Recommend Against TV For Kids Under 2 · · Score: 1

    It is true that some individuals have and continue to achieve the things you mention. However, the parent is making a critique of our behavior as a group.

    While I neither agree nor disagree, your hasty reply intended to dismiss as pessimistic an opinion that hits close to home only seems to make his point wouldn't you say user 465911?

  4. Re:TV has been great for our kids on Doctors Recommend Against TV For Kids Under 2 · · Score: 1

    Let me counter your anecdote with two of my own. In the house of one of my childhood friends, multiple TVs were on almost 24 hours a day. You could not speak to any member of that family while in the same room as one of those TVs without their gaze migrating away from you and back to the TV.

    Needless to say, this was not a healthy family and it did not stay together long.

    My parents severely restricted my access to TV and incidentally I went to better schools and I earn more money than my childhood friends who had TVs in their rooms.

    What do these anecdotes have to do with the effects of TV on 2-year-olds? Not a lot.

  5. Re:Law should be like code. Not up for interpretat on NYTimes Sues US Gov't To Know How It Interprets the PATRIOT Act · · Score: 2

    Hear, hear! The truth of what you say should be obvious to everyone because as we all know, coded systems never have unintended consequences and can always account for every situation that comes up "in the field".

    Additionally, your comparison is quite apt because as everyone knows code is not ever subject to interpretation when it is executed. That is why we use one code to express everything.

    I am reminded of the invention of the first formal symbolic logics. Philosophers were rightly excited to have settled all human argument because finally each side could simply write down their arguments as symbolic logic and then whoever was correct would become self-evident.

    Bravo, sir. I hope your insights shake the foundations of our legal system and I wish to subscribe to your webinar and such.

  6. Re:Who is "one one"? on iPhone 4S Pre-Orders Sell Out · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    I made one one in my tu-tu! --timothy

  7. Re:why... on Patents Google Bought From IBM Are "Weak" · · Score: 2

    Please take some time to fill out the Slashdot survey! We require your feedback to improve the site since we operate it with our eyes closed. Thanks!

  8. Ineffective on Judge Rules Boss's "Firing Contest" Created a Hostile Work Environment · · Score: 1

    A much more innovative and effective strategy would have been to fire everyone and then hold auction-style interviews. Whoever agrees to work for the lowest wage gets a job.

  9. Re:wrong calculation on EPA Bans CFC-Based Asthma Inhalers · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This contradicts my instincts about the chemistry of our atmosphere. Just who performed these "laboratory studies"? If they were funded by government money in any way then they are probably part of the vast left-wing conspiracy to debunk my gut feelings.

  10. Make up your damn minds! on EPA Bans CFC-Based Asthma Inhalers · · Score: 1, Troll

    From TFA:

    The action is part of an agreement signed by the U.S. and other nations to stop using substances that deplete the ozone layer, a region in the atmosphere that helps block harmful ultraviolet rays from the Sun.

    So now that global warming has been exposed as a fraud we're supposed to be scared of the Sun as well? Leave it to tree huggers to care more about ozone, which is poisonous, than human life.

    I don't know about you but I'm perfectly capable of purchasing sunscreen. For the amount of money I'd save with the tried-and-true inhalers I could probably buy enough sunscreen to protect myself from this so-called "ultraviolet" light for a decade or more.

    I am continually amazed that people want the government to pass laws in the name of environmental protection -- if someone is polluting your air or water you don't need to call the EPA, you should be exercising your individual property rights the way our founding fathers intended.

  11. Re:It's a shame... on Measles Resurgent Due To Fear of Vaccination · · Score: 2

    Actually he was correct in pointing out an important, if subtle, misapprehension a lot of people have about "survival of the fittest". Darwinian fitness is merely a measure of how many of your offspring survived to have offspring of their own. Everything else is a value judgement.

  12. Re:AGW on Michael Mann Vindicated (Again) Over Climategate · · Score: 1

    It's 0k, we all mistakes.

  13. Re:Someone should have attended Secure Codeing 101 on Apache Warns Web Server Admins of DoS Attack Tool · · Score: 1

    Someone should have attended Spotting Sarcasm 101.

  14. Re:AGW on Michael Mann Vindicated (Again) Over Climategate · · Score: 1

    O not 0. The "O" stands for "oxygen", doofus.

  15. Re:Someone should have attended Secure Codeing 101 on Apache Warns Web Server Admins of DoS Attack Tool · · Score: 1

    Sadly, idiots (of which the the folks that codeed Apache are an example) nothing new. Their mediocrity has long suffocated us bright folk, many of whom are too timid to call these people what they are: pathetic failures. Others, like yourself, are not.

    Achieving perfection is a bit harder than merely rewriting flawed code. I guess people have to experience humiliation over and over again...

  16. Re:Just what I need on Sports Bars Changing Channels For Video Gamers · · Score: 1

    Because there's no surer way to get laid than to hit a sports bar?

  17. Just what I need on Sports Bars Changing Channels For Video Gamers · · Score: 2

    Another reason not to go to sports bars.

  18. Since the story is bogus on Accused Teen Bomber Finds FBI Surveillance Team's Wireless Network · · Score: 1

    A story of my own. I set my SSID to "flancrest enterprises" and a few days later I noticed one of my neighbors had changed theirs to "CompuGlobalHyperMegaNet". True story.

  19. Re:Does it work the other way 'round? on Court Rules Sending Too Many Emails Is "Hacking" · · Score: 1

    Quiet, I'm making a point about how retarded Slashdot is.

  20. Re:Does it work the other way 'round? on Court Rules Sending Too Many Emails Is "Hacking" · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A company's actions, as long as they serve its profit motive, are beyond reproach. This article is about a union, which is a whole other story!

  21. I think I already broke this guy's code on Breaking the Codes In Oslo Terrorist's Manifesto · · Score: 1

    Some excerpts from this nauseating, yet derivative, "manifesto":

    Time is of the essence. We have only a few decades to consolidate a sufficient level of resistance before our major cities are completely demographically overwhelmed by Muslims. Ensuring the successful distribution of this compendium to as many Europeans as humanly possible will significantly contribute to our success. It may be the only way to avoid our present and future dhimmitude (enslavement) under Islamic majority rule in our own countries.

    If a man of the 1950s were suddenly introduced into Western Europe in the 2000s, he would hardly recognise it as the same country. He would be in immediate danger of getting mugged, carjacked or worse, because he would not have learned to live in constant fear. When the children came home in the afternoon and told them they had to go through a metal detector to get in the building, had been given some funny white powder by another kid and learned that homosexuality is normal and good, the parents would be uncomprehending.

    Ladies should be wives and homemakers, not cops or soldiers, and men should still hold doors open for ladies. Children should not be born out of wedlock. Glorification of homosexuality should be shunned. Jurors should not accept Islam as an excuse for murder.

    Don't even need to read the rest, really.

  22. Sensationalism for nerds? on The Code War Arms Race · · Score: 1

    Stopped caring at "cyber weaponry".

  23. I have a better question on Can Long Term Research Survive the Coming Age of Austerity? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can Progress Survive Austerity as a Foregone Conclusion?

  24. It's not the dollar amount, it's the percentage! on Netflix Deflects Rage Over Price Increase · · Score: 2

    As a percentage of the old price, the new price is outrageous. This is like charging $0.75 instead of $0.15 for text messages and then defending it by saying that "to most people, it's like getting extra cheese on their burger".

  25. LoseThos on Ask Slashdot: Easiest Linux Distro For a Newbie · · Score: 1

    Why waste time with Linux when there's LoseThos?