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User: harvey+the+nerd

harvey+the+nerd's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 1,146

  1. Re:Sledgehammer approach. on New Destructive Malware Intentionally Bricks IoT Devices (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1

    I'd rather have a brick than a spy.

  2. One can only wonder if there are large reveneus in selling separate, compiled accesses to China, USA, Russia and Israel, among others.

  3. ...or, at least, an Enemy of the State.

  4. Re:Disjunction between headline and text on This is Why Australia Hasn't Had a Recession in Over 25 Years (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 0

    What about the socialists and their green energy fubar in South Australia,

    Sounds like they f*cked you more, made you the goose.

  5. Canadians, Alaskans and M4GW on This is Why Australia Hasn't Had a Recession in Over 25 Years (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    .Plenty of water and improved CO2 levels mean less CO2 starvation for plants and better growing results.

    I don't subscribe that the historical CO2 levels have been reported, correlated and projected accurately (e.g. Antarctic levels, cores are lower than arctic levels but not noted) nor do I buy the proposed CO2 accumulation levels, due to actual kinetic measurements of CO2 lifetime. This independent of the CO2 itself causes catastrophic warming discussion.

  6. Re:Wait... bad summary? on Publish Georgia's State Laws, You'll Get Sued For Copyright and Lose (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 2

    Often times building, safety and various engineering codes are incorporated into various laws.

    The codes or guidelines are typically published by various private and professional groups at exorbitant prices. Then they are incorporated into the laws by reference.

  7. Re:quick, post it here on Publish Georgia's State Laws, You'll Get Sued For Copyright and Lose (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Sounds like inbreeding and tertiary syphilis are still problems in the Georgja legislature and courts. Even spread to the federal courts around there.

  8. Dining in Tyler is pretty limited to outright bad, especially after Jake's closed. Jake's, a fantastic place, catered to lawyers, oil money, big money, and medical feeding off the old.

    Tyler is a great place if Hitler ever returns.

  9. Re:DRM on W3C Erects DRM As Web Standard (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    All DRM should be automatically disengaged for pre-determined events: 1. expiration of key patents or copyright 2. loss of validation server 3. judicial events removing DRM Anymore continues the DRM abuse.

  10. assays, rubber chicken on DNA Test Shows Subway's 'Chicken' Only Contains 50 Percent Chicken (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    A better study would report total protein and attempt to assay proteins and marker entities to distinguish from chicken vs other animal vs soy.
    Of course, the analytical costs on the second part would be higher.
    If the report is true, it might give new meaning and range to the phrase, "rubber chicken"

  11. Re:This is why I support AMD on Intel Reacts To AMD Ryzen Apparently Cutting Prices On Core i7 And i5 Processors (hothardware.com) · · Score: 2

    without AMD, the value market would still be a 486

  12. 130W

    Would you like bacon with your game ?

  13. If your numbers are accurate, it means that a black person is twice as likely to be killed by a white person as a white person is to be killed by a black person.

    It means you are innumerate.

  14. Re:Not entirely sure on GE, Intel, and AT&T Are Putting Cameras and Sensors All Over San Diego (fortune.com) · · Score: 1

    suicide will become one of the last refuges.... if they don't suicide you first...

  15. Re: Insightful, eh? on Kim Dotcom Can Be Extradited, Rules A New Zealand Court (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    Thanks to our forefathers for the 1st and 2nd amendments...

  16. whose fraud??? on Kim Dotcom Can Be Extradited, Rules A New Zealand Court (reuters.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although I doubt the $500m figure on a competitive bid or such pricing basis, at least they are not quoting billions and trillions....

    One of the most aggravating things in the US these days, is fraudulent pricing by companies with industrial strength DC political connections.

  17. Re:megavitamins on B Vitamins Reduce Schizophrenia Symptoms, Study Finds (newsmax.com) · · Score: 1

    There are several things that could be problematic if one is so uninformed, or determined to screw up. But, there are many times more treatments that are still surprising in both their dosage and benefits with a lack of adverse side effects.

    The right doses with the right molecules is the key concept that naysayers are determined to miss. Any moron can skip the instructions and do something silly/stupid.

  18. Re:megavitamins on B Vitamins Reduce Schizophrenia Symptoms, Study Finds (newsmax.com) · · Score: 1

    You look like an intelligent person with some common hearsay opinions contaminating your information base. Because of the structure of how these have been implanted over generations in the medical fields, most PhDs and MDs don't even begin to recognize their problem on accurate megavitamin information. Or where to start with the original scientific and medical papers. ...Very large doses of some vitamins can actually make you very sick or significantly increase your cancer risk Clearly not dealing with preferred forms and regimens of nutrients if that happens. There also is some skill, supervision or basic education missing if that happens. You might look at the old injectable vitamin C papers and the recent failures on vitamin D RDA setting (e.g. 200 iu D2 in 1992 vs 2000-5000 iu in 2017 for saavy arctic living) as a starting point. One clue: When someone speaks to me about "antioxidants" or an indiscriminate vitamin letter rather than the actual molecular entity, their credibility takes a big hit. The particular molecule(s), mixture or regimen can make a huge difference in megadose therapeutic situations.

  19. megavitamins on B Vitamins Reduce Schizophrenia Symptoms, Study Finds (newsmax.com) · · Score: 2

    Megavitamins and orthomolecular medicine have a scientific basis that is more targetable than this indicates. Merely they've been under "fake news" attacks since at least the 1960s, when the psychiatric establishment of that time attacked with rigged results. Then the severely iatrogenic oncologists of the 70s and 80s attacked.

    Both of these self anointed establishments' actions and statements then, when viewed by today's information, to me look like quacks with criminal intent

  20. Yen only if it is a virtual currency with some huge, unknown demand. Japan is in greater debt than us, with greater old age liabilities, and has failed to reproduce an adequate replacement generation. Big oops.

  21. lawyers as hired guns on DRM Company Denuvo Forgets To Secure Its Server, Leaks Two Years Of Emails (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they got the good stuff, they'll have a legal goldmine on felonies by management and lawsuits on the company.

  22. We rented an urban, asian, 4500 sq ft house for ca $1400/month in 2012. The lot it was on was worth about $3 million.

    You just have to know how to shop...

  23. Re:Gov't data on Ask Slashdot: Can US Citizens Trust Government Data? (msn.com) · · Score: -1, Troll

    Plenty of climate iies already. Trump should save the data where possible to mock the CAGW predictions in 2020 (likely coming cold years...).

  24. Re:s/half/all/g on Half the Work People Do Can Be Automated, Says McKinsey (techinasia.com) · · Score: 1

    Ok, got me. But I need the beauty rest for the heavy lift on the other half that no one else ever figured out.

  25. anything can happen after Jan 19...