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User: lawpoop

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  1. Re:DIY Fuel Air explosive on 'Download This Gun' — 3-D Printed Gun Reliable Up To 600 Rounds · · Score: 1

    Sure, the frontiers are dangerous for those heading to them, but my intent was to highlight the attitude that are places that were wild and free from government, that one could 'escape' to, where in fact there was no place that was not lived in and ruled by somebody. So the idea that you could go somewhere and be free of the shackles of government and having to play nice while living amongst others means that you thought the people living there didn't matter, and their land was yours to do whatever you wanted with.

  2. Re:DIY Fuel Air explosive on 'Download This Gun' — 3-D Printed Gun Reliable Up To 600 Rounds · · Score: 1

    Its the down side of living on a small planet with no frontiers left and a civilization with accelerating technology development.

    Oh yes, the frontiers, where any persecuted white man could escape from his oppressive government and start killing natives.

  3. Have an hour meeting every week on Ask Slashdot: How To Convince a Team To Write Good Code? · · Score: 2

    My team has an hour meeting every week where we review code, how it could be better, what we can do better next time, how our overall system could change and improve. Instead of ragging on people, we sympathize when they are under deadlines and stress. People were hesitant and embarrased at first, but over time, as we've nurtured a supportive envrionment, people feel free to air their problems and ask for help. Knowing that your teammates truly have your back makes you feel good about yourself want to succeed. Sometimes people will give presentations of design patterns, functional programming, certain libraries, or new technologies like REST. Nothing big and fancy, just enough for everyone to get a handle on it and small enough to digest mentally. I don't know if this can work on every team because IT people seem to have a pandemic negativity and perfectionist syndrome. In the long run this just makes you give up and write crappy code, when you believe everything is futile and worthless when it's not perfect.

  4. The New Agers were right!? on Cambridge University Scientists Find Quadruple Helix DNA In Human Cells · · Score: 2

    Wait wait wait wait--- you're telling me those New Age kooks who said we were going to add another strand in our DNA after 2012 were actually right!?!?!

  5. Re:Pentagon: the leak "did not disclose...sources. on Adrian Lamo Explains His Decision To Expose Bradley Manning · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But Lamo could not have known beforehand that there would be no fallout from the release. It seems a reasonable fear to be had.

  6. Re:Great Deal on A Subscription-Based Movie Theater · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Where are people going to see movies these days? Pleasure Island from Pinocchio? I've never seen or heard anyone texting, talking, or whatever on their phones. Granted, it's not a monastery, but it doesn't disturb me or ruin the movie for me. If you haven't been to the theater in 15 years, how do you know the behavior has gotten worse?

  7. Re:Great Deal on A Subscription-Based Movie Theater · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Maybe you are the new-fangled type that prefers to watch media on their home entertainment system?

    I've found that certain movies are enjoyable on the big screen, and less so on the small. Does that mean they lack something? Probably -- but for me, it's about the experience of the film. If it needs to be seen on the big screen for me to properly get the full effect, so be it. If it makes a less stellar movie feel like it was worth it, then it was worth it.

    I don't go to the movies twice a month-- probably more 6-8 times a year-- but if I could go whenever for $19.95 a month, I might see almost every movie. If have have to shell out $10 for a movie, I have to think really hard if it will be worth it. If I've already shelled out the cash, it's a no-brainer.

  8. No control group on Newly Released Einstein Brain Photos Hint At the Anatomy of Genius · · Score: 2

    This is interesting, but will this tell us if his brain is truly different from any other physicist, mathematician? Before we go making any pronouncements, I think we should do a little more research into people of his profession.

  9. Anglo-Saxon folk tales on Why Are Fantasy World Accents British? · · Score: 1

    Remember that the creatures that populate the English-language fantasy world are all from Britain (which in turn I guess derive from the Norse mixed in with some local supernatural creatures, with a few Greek ones thrown in). The creators of the modern fantasy genre, Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were British. It's really not surprising that fantasy-genre people speak with British accents. All the people who believed in elves and fairies and wizards a few hundred years ago were British.

    These are all essentially Anglo-Saxon folk tales; why shouldn't the people that inhabit these worlds have an Anglo-Saxon manner of speaking?

    What I find more strange are Roman emperors of Greek kings speaking with British accents.

  10. Re:HotS on Can $60 Games Survive? · · Score: 1

    Beats paying $10/mo. for online play! Their service is free.

  11. HotS on Can $60 Games Survive? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't care, I'm still buying Heart of the Swarm when it comes out...!

  12. Re:It's not just the textbooks on Math Textbooks a Textbook Example of Bad Textbooks · · Score: 1
    You make it sound like they were only looking out for the interests of those who make their living teaching.

    I think the thing we should care most about is its impact on the student's learning.

  13. need Roads first on Why Did It Take So Long To Invent the Wheel? · · Score: 1

    Wheels are worthless unless you have decent roads. In order for the invention of a wheel to be worthwhile, you need a decent, flat path, without too many ruts, to drive your vehicles across. Meanwhile the Incas has excellent roads, but since they ran up and down mountains, wheels might help you for half the journey, be become a liability on the other half.

  14. Re:Microcenter? on The Gradual Death of the Brick and Mortar Tech Store · · Score: 1

    4) You can return it at no loss to yourself -- you didn't pay shipping in the first place, nor do you pay to ship it back.

  15. Re:How "An Inconvenient Truth" can it get on Huge Freshwater Bulge In Arctic Ocean · · Score: 4, Funny

    Will liberals stop at nothing to destroy the American Way of Life?

  16. Re:Dunno... on Filmmakers Reviving Sci-fi By Going Old School · · Score: 2

    How many sci-fi films how sounds in space during epic space battles?

  17. Re:It's Alberta... on The Problem With Carbon-Cutting Programs · · Score: 1

    When the price of oil starts getting that high, its energy competitors start becoming a lot more... competitive.

  18. Re:Do the math, indeed! on Space Is (Not) the Place, Says Professor · · Score: 2

    Without a lot of resources! Are you kidding me?
    In Arizona, they had free air, heat, water just flowing around, food that grew on trees and ran around, and cheap and easy access to other people and their huge trade networks. And that was all stuff they *didn't* have to pay for!
    The cost of all of those things are extraordinary when you're talking about being on the moon or in space.

  19. Re: Prattlings of a Pussy Professor on Space Is (Not) the Place, Says Professor · · Score: 1

    I am intrigued by your comments and wish to subscribe to your periodical.

  20. Re:What the HOX? on Scientists Discover Mechanism That Gives Shape to Life · · Score: 1

    The question is, why do we express opinion on subject matter we are ignorant in.

    Our ignorance is so profound we are oftentimes ignorant of it itself.

  21. Re:Huh? on We Finally Know Why Oil and Water Don't Mix · · Score: 1

    That makes it sound like humans define things into existence, and create their properties by declaring them.

  22. Re:upsetting science on Fossil 'Suggests Plesiosaurs Did Not Lay Eggs' · · Score: 1

    but the previous work isn't really getting trashed, is it?

    That's what it feels like, and that's why people initially have a strong emotional reaction to it. The various levels of the brain are all operating simultaneously -- the 'fight-or-flight' part and the higher-level cognitive part. We continue to have emotional, child-like reactions, but our higher-level cognitive functioning arrests and overrides such reactions.

  23. Do you *want* them to be trusting? on How WikiLeaks Gags Its Own Staff · · Score: 1

    sounds like they don't trust their employees

    Yeah -- you think there aren't attempts to infiltrate them left and right? How dumb and naive would they be if they *did* trust their employees? Would you want to turn over documents to them if the person to whom you did turned out to be a secret agent?

    Or maybe they're just going to happen upon trustworthy employee by an extensive screening process and three rounds of interviews.

  24. Re:Step 1 on Ask Slashdot: Becoming a Network Administrator? · · Score: 1

    *Whoosh!*

  25. Re:It's complete bullshit on Is Sugar Toxic? · · Score: 1

    That makes sense. I've always been one of those people who've been skinny and I eat basically whatever I want, so it's counter-intuitive to me that overweight people eat more -- I always ate what my friend were eating when we went out ( and I don't eat all that healthily), so I just though some metabolisms were different.. I grew up in the same household that my brothers did, and one is more normal weight while the other was obese in high school. Funny thing is they were both athletic while I was the skinny nerd. But I guess we really did eat differently.