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User: sonamchauhan

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Comments · 1,756

  1. Re: Whats wrong with US society on Privately Owned Armored Trucks Raise Eyebrows After Dallas Attack · · Score: 2

    By the same token, US citizens should be able to buy nukes!

    Now there *is* the small possibility of owners going postal now and again! Perhaps even rendering the place inhabitable. But thats a small price to pay for a free market, right? In the long run, the market always sorts it out (perhaps has a different species take over... maybe cockroaches.... viva la market!).

  2. Or another application on A Computer That Operates On Water Droplets · · Score: 2
  3. I wouldn't knock anecdotes. Science is basically a set of carefully written anecdotes confirming one another.

  4. Or Superoxide? on Fuel Free Spacecrafts Using Graphene · · Score: 1
  5. Re: dont' engage it with people there? on Volvo Self-Parking Car Hits People Because Owner Didn't Pay For Extra Feature · · Score: 1

    Do you, with non neglible cognitive ability, not realise people, kids, or emergency personnel can walk into an area where a car has apparently paused to let them through? And that technology that replaces human function better behave somewhat 'human' ?

  6. Re: It only increases accountability on Amtrak Installing Cameras To Watch Train Engineers · · Score: 1

    Ignore this pedant. Thanks for the interesting grandparent post.

  7. Re:Firefox becomes Netscape on Ads Based On Browsing History Are Coming To All Firefox Users · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > The world has changed a lot since then. I would gladly pay $40 for a good browser
    Not really - you've just become richer :-P

  8. Re: Markets, not people on The Economic Consequences of Self-Driving Trucks · · Score: 1

    "American made" did mean quality, right up until Japanese cars and electronics redefined the term.

  9. Floating-yet-submerged pipeline? on William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California · · Score: 1

    Hmm... How about a floating-yet-submerged pipeline?

    Water flowing through plastic tubes anchored offshore ... (still submerged mind you - but not laying the seabed).

    It could start small -- say two 12 inch pipes, then more, or larger, pipelines added once the concept was proved.

    Why does this work? For one thing, eminent-domain, right-of-way issues pretty much go away. And the problem of structural support turns into keeping pipeline sections from _rising_, rather than falling (caused by the natural bouyancy of the pipeline and its contents)

  10. Article is false. on Columbia University Doctors Ask For Dr. Mehmet Oz's Dismissal · · Score: 1

    First of all none of the signatories are from Columbia university (i.e. none of the signatories are his colleagues)

    Secondly, many of the 'distinguished' signatories are in cahoots with the GMO industry -- including one that was earlier a shill for the tobacco industry. See this post for details: http://science.slashdot.org/co...

    You may not like Dr. Oz, but beware - this enemy of your enemy is not your friend.

  11. Re:Did they mention the yummy GMOs on Columbia University Doctors Ask For Dr. Mehmet Oz's Dismissal · · Score: 1

    Ditto. Thanks for this nbauman!

    (This is going to rollback my many mods here, but its worth it)

  12. Re:They're called trees. on Breakthrough In Artificial Photosynthesis Captures CO2 In Acetate · · Score: 1

    Thank you - this is very interesting to me.

  13. Re:They're called trees. on Breakthrough In Artificial Photosynthesis Captures CO2 In Acetate · · Score: 1

    Haha - you can't see the wood for the trees! (this idiom has a double meaning here)

    See the tree? The wood is almost all 'fixed' carbon.

    And when it dies, a tree doesn't go 'poof' in a cloud of CO2. Instead, organic matter gets trapped in the ground and new topsoil is created (again, mostly carbon).

    Recall a well tended urban 'nature strip' in an older suburb (a century or more)? Typically, the strip tends to 'pops out' from its concrete lining. That's a small version of the same effect.

    Some interesting info I just came across: http://managingwholes.com/new-...

  14. Re:Contracts on How Mission Creep Killed a Gaming Studio · · Score: 1
  15. Re:And airplanes without passengers... on Planes Without Pilots · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Instead of having airlines staff the flight deck back up again to previous levels (i.e. reinstating the flight engineer, or adding a third pilot), cue the snake-oil salesmen with the same pitch - irresistible to airlines - which got us into this mess.

    "Shame about that last crash...
    "You know, you _CAN_ increase safety _AND_ lower costs
    "How? Well, for starters, one less pilot on the flight deck...

  16. And airplanes without passengers... on Planes Without Pilots · · Score: 1

    'Nuff said

  17. Re: Although unused, not useful on Amazon Tests Delivery Drones At Secret Canada Site After US Frustration · · Score: 1

    When a plane crashes and kills someone, the pilot usually dies.

    When a drone kills someone on the ground,the only imapct to operator is via his chart of accounts!

    Symmetry has its benefits.

  18. Re:"Free" with restrictions is not Free! on Pixar Releases Free Version of RenderMan · · Score: 1

    Yup, this is a 'free for training purposes' kind of 'free'.

    Good for training young raw talent in Pixar's pipeline. Not so good for most other people.

  19. Re:Slashdot reports on an obscure mice experiment. on New Alzheimer's Treatment Fully Restores Memory Function For Mice · · Score: 1

    Well, Biogen's drug may have its place but it isn't exactly a Speedy Gonzales, and its side-effects include brain swelling.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/ma...
    "Wall Street analysts predict could get the drug to market by 2020"

    Also, this research is more elegant - it uses your blood's own cleanup cells to fight the plaques, versus injecting you with a foreign antibody like Biogen's does.

  20. The mind boggles....

    Corded Wifi!
    App Cartridges!
    Or, for the ultimate in convenience -- Dial-an-App! Just dial "C","r","a","z","y"," ","B","i","r","d","s" using the convenient 26-character dial to enjoy the latest in fist-pumping, arcade-style gameplay in the expansive 2x60 character display

  21. Re:A serious question on Mozilla: Following In Sun's Faltering Footsteps? · · Score: 3, Informative

    It made Netscape's open-sourced browser actually work. At a time, when using IE was unpleasant, if not downright dangerous, this is very useful.

    It later introduced tabbed browsing via middle-mouse-click -- a major 'productivity booster' (ahem!) for Internet addicts everywhere.

  22. Re:And still on NASA Ames Reproduces the Building Blocks of Life In Laboratory · · Score: 2

    Err, its Wuuuush!?!

    Liek reellly.... sum peeple ...

  23. First role taken over on 5 White Collar Jobs Robots Already Have Taken · · Score: 2

    Google "define computer"

    Answer: "[...] a person who makes calculations, especially with a calculating machine."

    That role was the first to go - the others are just side-effects.

  24. Re:Loo Pay? on Samsung Takes On Apple Pay By Acquiring Mobile Wallet Startup LoopPay · · Score: 1

    ;-)

  25. Re:Loo Pay? on Samsung Takes On Apple Pay By Acquiring Mobile Wallet Startup LoopPay · · Score: 1

    Great name? Rant on Dave!