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User: chthon

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Comments · 1,236

  1. Re:What's the evidence this will work? on Bill Gates On Educating the World · · Score: 1

    You do not have kids or you are lucky with them. If I would not push my 10 year old daughter around a little bit, she would gladly sit all day in front of the TV or the computer doing nothing. She does have the brains, if she studies, she gets good grades. But she has a tendency of rather doing nothing and not to want to think about anything.

  2. Re:It means you jumped on the latest bandwagon on What Does It Mean To Be a Data Scientist? · · Score: 1

    Should be modded +1 Funny

  3. Re:As long as he isn't the focus of the MCU on Spider-Man Finally Joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe · · Score: 1

    Spiderman vs. the then whole X-Man team was already done in the sixties (through a misunderstanding of course). The writers let him beat them almost single-handedly. There was no real winner then because the misunderstanding was cleared up in the fight.

  4. Good for Mississipi on Mississippi - the Nation's Leader In Vaccination Rates · · Score: 1

    But underlying all this, it seems that the US American belief that you should have the complete right as a parent to decide how to raise your children, even if it is against their well being, is not new. I clearly remember 'Huckleberry Finn', and the description of his father who falls in the same category as those people that are opposed to vaccination (for whichever reason). And that was written 130 years ago.

  5. Re:C++ is a travesty of design on Bjarne Stroustrup Awarded 2015 Dahl-Nygaard Prize · · Score: 1

    Like Common Lisp, e.g.

  6. Other mail agent on Glitch In OS X Search Can Expose Private Details of Apple Mail Users · · Score: 2

    That's why I use claws-mail

  7. Finished in the mean time on In Paris, Terrorists Kill 2 More, Take At Least 7 Hostages · · Score: 5, Informative

    Both brothers are dead and their hostage is freed

  8. Re:No matter how much power we gave them ... on MI5 Chief Seeks New Powers After Paris Magazine Attack · · Score: 3, Informative

    The police officer which was murdered by the terrorists was also a muslim.

  9. Re:Fuck the Nanny State on MI5 Chief Seeks New Powers After Paris Magazine Attack · · Score: 2

    It seems that the practical implementation of sharia IS a tyrannical nanny state.

  10. This is clearly a scientific submission... on The Search For Starivores, Intelligent Life That Could Eat the Sun · · Score: 1

    for the Ignoble Prize!

  11. Re:Pullin' a Gates? on How We'll Program 1000 Cores - and Get Linus Ranting, Again · · Score: 1

    The thing is that I remember reading it in Elektor around 1982 or 1983. I think in the context of an electronics show.

  12. In the hope that there are still people reading on The Open Office Is Destroying the Workplace · · Score: 1
  13. Re:Well, duh on The Dominant Life Form In the Cosmos Is Probably Superintelligent Robots · · Score: 1

    Revelation Space, Alastair Reynolds

  14. Manta! on Material Possiblities: A Flying Drone Built From Fungus · · Score: 1

    If it is a flying fungus, then it is not a drone, but a manta!

  15. Unchain Your Brain on Ask Slashdot: Dealing With Electronics-Induced Inattentiveness? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This week I found a book in the library, "Ontketen je Brein" (Unchain Your Brain), the result of scientific research by Dutch psychologist Theo Compernolle.

    In this book, he show how the brain really works and what adversely affects it.

    The main thing he he does not stop repeating is: take a break, go off-line.

    The main brain chains are:

    • Being always on-line
    • Multitasking and context switching
    • A continuing low level of stress
    • Lack of breaks and sleep
    • Open offices

    Very interesting stuff to read.

  16. BOTS! on Microsoft Rolls Out Robot Security Guards · · Score: 1

    That will probably soon be the name of the Microsoft canteen.

    (Got a 10 year old daughter who likes to watch Nickelodeon)

  17. Re:Really? on 2014 Nobel Peace Prize Awarded To Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay · · Score: 1

    Possibly not in the US, I would not know about the UK, but here in Europe, she regularly has been in the news and on the agenda for her work.

  18. Some realistic space battles in literature on The Physics of Space Battles · · Score: 4, Informative

    Poul Anderson, The Star Fox

    Larry Niven, Protector

    C.J. Cherryh, Downbelow Station

  19. Re:I'll just let my sig do the talking on US Strikes ISIL Targets In Syria · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That is the big problem from North Africa to the Middle East: quelling sectarian unrest between all kinds of religions apparently needs a dictator.

  20. Re:they will defeat themselves on ISIS Bans Math and Social Studies For Children · · Score: 1

    People will need to realize how the second world war was won.

    The Japanese did horrible things, the SS did horrible things. In that regards, ISIL is not that much different.

    Actually, ISIL make the same error as the Japanese. The Japanese thought that they could terrorise the opposing armies by acting brutally and barbaric. That did not work out for them (look what happened on Guadalcanal).

    The main problem is that current opposing political forces in the Middle East will have to work together to crush ISIL.

  21. Re:New branch of life? on Mushroom-Like Deep Sea Organism May Be New Branch of Life · · Score: 1

    It is on the front page of WIkipedia. There you can read up on why it took almost 30 years to recognize it as a new specied.

  22. Re:Let me guess. Shiitake mushrooms. on Dirty Diapers Used To Grow Mushrooms · · Score: 2, Funny

    Plump helmet explosion?

  23. Re:Lawn Dart Alert! on The Pentagon's $399 Billion Plane To Nowhere · · Score: 1

    The people involved learned certainly nothing from history.

    While Germany was dabbling with all kinds of expensive new tank designs, the Russians built only one kind (with incremental improvements) but in large quantities. Guess which one made the difference? Actually, the same goes for the English and the Americans. While inferior, the Sherman tanks could be made in much larger quantities.

  24. Re:Sad, but... on HUGO Winning Author Daniel Keyes Has Died · · Score: 1

    I discovered 'The Hobbit' on my Speccy in 1984. The first adventure game I ever played. I then tried to solve it with a cousin of mine who had the book.

    In order to stay on topic, I read the story when I was 11 yrs old in another book (for Dutch and Belgian Slashdotters: Het Bonte Boeketboek), a kind of single-topic book, but with the topic seen from different angles. This one was about the human body, and this story was part of the chapters about the brain and the nervous system. I must say that it did made an impression, but due it being written in the first person I did not completely understand it at the time. But I always felt sad after reading it.

  25. Re:The cloud on Code Spaces Hosting Shutting Down After Attacker Deletes All Data · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your insurance agent would like a word with you.