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User: junkgoof

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  1. There were daily mass shootings in the past? on Amazon Workers in Europe Stage 'We Are Not Robots' Protests on One of Its Busiest Shopping Days (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 2

    I guess it depends on how you define past... It was like that last year, it's always been that way.

  2. propaganda does not encourage freedom on US Declines in Internet Freedom Rankings (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 1

    Repeating the same statements with the support of purchased news organizations and paid shills and astroturfers does not make a country more free.

    Restricting speech is bad. Restricting a company's ability to purchase media like Fox, Sinclair, and Clear Channel is good. The consolidation of media in the US is making propaganda very effective and good government harder.

  3. Wrinkle in Time on Netflix Deletes All User Reviews (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    I read the book and saw the movie. I thought the movie was fine. Not as good as the book but better than many book to movie transitions. I suspect that as with most novel to screen transitions the balance between making it interesting to those who had read it while not totally losing those who had not read it was tilted toward the reader and that could put people off. I watched it with my daughter and we enjoyed it.

    I didn't find that the racial composition of the cast made a major difference to the story. Some stuff was cut, some was changed, some was added but that is necessary with adaptations.

    I'm not sure that the actress is the person with the best perspective. She played a role, she did not write or direct. The book certainly had a religious and political point of view and I think the author was OK with the adaptation.

  4. IIRC oil and coal formed because there were no bacteria to break down some plant and animal life. Now the bacteria exist so I don't think we will get new oil or coal deposits.

  5. How many household incomes in 1978 vs 2017? 55% or so of women worked in 1978, 80+% in 2017. So less big macs even with an additional quarter earner.

  6. The government auctions off spectrum because it belongs to all citizens and they try to have it used properly and to have someone pay the citizens for the use. A vicious circle of people who don't want to govern and people who don't want government has corrupted the process in the US somewhat, but that's how it works in most western democracies.

    A free market should be free from the powerful not free from regulation. Government is supposed to be by the people for the people. In the US both have abdicated.

  7. intelligence on Why People Dislike Really Smart Leaders (scientificamerican.com) · · Score: 1

    Intelligence is variable. Lots of people are understandably unhappy that university degrees are used to signal intelligence and that things like farming are not. Many tasks and ways of life require at least as much intelligence, dedication, and application as university degrees. Some of the people who live such lives resent being told that they should abandon what they do and send their kids to college. Intelligence is not limited to what people do in school.

    Overall it is much easier to be popular using primary school name calling, no matter who is in the audience, than to actually come up with a good plan, poplularize it, and implement it. Intelligence doesn't really come into it. It is also much easier to do whatever makes you money, stick to it, and claim to be honest than to actually be honest in politics. Shamelessness helps too, as admitting to mistakes is the only American political error ("I would not have done anything differently knowing what I know now" - George W. Bush).

    The basis of American politics is making sure that no one who is rich stops being rich. The secondary basis is increasing the gap between the stratifications of wealth. The third is shrinking the top tiers. That is limiting economic mobility and having smaller numbers of people being extremely wealthy, very wealthy, and wealthy, with more people being more and more interchangeably middle class, working poor, and poor. It's very much a class system and it's aiming for historical times with a historical distribution, i.e. a few aristocrats and lots of peasants.

    Note, I'm doing fine, not top 1%, but at least top 20%. When you criticize wealth and you're called a hypocrite and when you're poor you're told that you're jealous. You're just told that by the bought media who want to please the very rich instead of reporting anything real.

  8. The volume of crap is different. Where you used to have a few news sources that were widely distributed and heavily vetted (more people to vet less news) you now have piles of sources and many, notably Fox, only care about who is paying and who they can manipulate and not about the information. The volume of propaganda and distortion vastly outweighs the truth, and people can easily find other people who agree with them and avoid listening to other viewpoints.

    I had a friend tell me NASA didn't believe in global warming. I did a google search with him and there were dozens of entries, most looking sort of like official sources and containing nothing factual. The NASA entry was midway down the first page and, obviously, said that global warming is real and stop misquoting us. The truth is obvious if you are looking for it, but if you are looking to win an argument and prove that educated people and liberals are all idiots it's pretty easy to ignore the correct options and go with the many, many other ones. My friend is not an idiot, he's bright and capable, but he dropped out of school early and he's hostile to mainstream "book learning" so he gets manipulated by a lot of these sites that play to his biases.

    Problem is a lot of the manipulation is harmful. Not just global warming, but all the crap about taxes. Check the new budget, poor people get "double the tax deductions" so twice zero. Rich people get real money. Once the deficit balloons who do you thing is going to pay it back? The guys who pay off the politicians and the news sources or the guys who got twice zero?

    The whole "small government" thing is sort of insidious as well. All those think tank slogans, but the middle class is pretty much a government creation via taxes. Everyone thinks that they are special and they got where they are because of how good they are, but the goal in the US is Putin's Russia, a kleptocratic dictatorship. In Russia there is not much of a middle class, mostly people working for other countries, not many taxes. Just rich friends of the leader, vairous connections, and lots and lots of people who don't have much.

    Funny about "the good old days." I suppose they were from 1952-1978 with some exclusions, and the relatively high taxes are a figment of our collective imaginations. Or maybe the real goal is to go back to the middle ages when leaders really had control?

  9. Money is traceable. The Russians did not use much, probably just incidentals like memberships and web site hosting. The Russians piggy backed on the propaganda networks in place to send their message. Trump did the same. Both hooked into the huge bought media circus that tells media consumers to do what the people paying for the news want them to do: buy guns, lower taxes on rich people, cut services, pay for your own medicare like rich people do and congressmen don't, subsidize big rich companies, money is speech... By comparison Trump and Russian hackers don't seem so bad...

  10. Funny, right to work states tend to be poor. Not sure making all states right to work would be good for anyone, really. Putting in a negotiation structure so that companies and unions can negotiate in good faith to get something everyone can be happy with instead of trying to crush the other side would be a good move. The constitutions the US imposed on Germany and Japan do a good job, and they are way more adapted to the 20th century than the 18th century one the US uses for itself.

  11. one salary, two salaries... on Ask Slashdot: Can US Citizens Trust Government Data? (msn.com) · · Score: 1

    Housing prices and bonuses for the 1%. How to produce more without improving your situation in life.

  12. some random comments on Microbiome Changes Drive the Dieting Yo-Yo Effect, Study Finds (smh.com.au) · · Score: 1

    Gut bacteria make a huge difference and they adapt to your diet. There are companies working on transplants, so far it's pretty much consuming excrement... It's the only treatment for some diseases, notably some antibiotic resistant ones. Gut bacteria will change what you consume depending on what they consume and they can change how full you feel based on what they give off (gases...).

    Antibiotics kill a lot of gut bacteria so they probably have an impact on weight gain and weight loss. They almost certainly reduce the variety of intestinal flora and that is probably a bad thing.

    Recent studies show eating fat does not make you fat. The fat gets broken down and used. Eating sugar makes you fat, it gets stored quickly. Drinking soft drinks (even zero cal zero sugar) makes you fat, don't know why, studies are consistent.

    Fruits, vegetables, and exercise are all good.

    Walking briskly is good exercise. Walking slowly isn't.

    If you want to lose weight: weigh yourself often, cut sugar, exercise. Not necessarily fun, but not bad if you can cook and find sports you enjoy, and/or learn to enjoy walking fairly fast and far.

  13. patch from MS? on Android Companies Keep Pretending That Android Doesn't Exist (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    For drivers? I never apply MS driver patches. Dell or manufacturer. Try using MS video card drivers, and good luck to you.

    Iphone updates, android updates through the carrier, that is to say not at all.

    Google really has to lean on or bypass the carriers.

  14. I think you are overestimating the cable bill and underestimating the rent of most people. 4 months of my cable bill would not pay my monthly mortgage and I have an oddly extensive and expensive cable package and a relatively small mortgage.

  15. Re:Microsoft's standard annoying programming on Microsoft Needs To Fix Skype (theverge.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Microsoft has never been consistent on the UI.

    Software quality is dropping like a stone with offshoring. You see it from IBM and Oracle too. Lots of bugs, incoherent error messages from someone who just learned that you can trap errors but not how to write English or how to provide different messages for different errors so that the real problem is hidden worse than if nothing had been trapped. Not that everyone onshore is a genius but there is some attempt at HR and technical interviews. Not even lip service once you go offshore, people are cheap and the cost of having crappy coders destroying the code base doesn't seem to figure for non-technical VPs. No end in sight because it's a management fad and outsourcers can bill offshore workers at crazy rates without customer complaints, it's a fad, execs can't knock it without admitting they have no idea what is going on in the companies they "run."

  16. Re:Journey to the Center of Dearth on An Advanced Math Education Revolution Is Underway In the U.S. (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 2

    8 * 8 =64

    x * x =x ^2

    (x-1)(x+1)=x^2 +x -x -1 = x^2 -1



    Should work for any numbers...



    (x-2)(x+2)=x^2 - 4



    And so forth. Algebra...

  17. language on Tension Escalates Between Netflix and Its TV Foes (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    My daughter worked this out for her unilingual friends. You have to change an overall language setting IIRC, it is not per film.

  18. I think that is their goal... on Apple's 16GB IPhone 6S Is a Serious Strategic Mistake · · Score: 1

    I agree this is the Apple thought process. Doesn't work for me, I use the subway, but if you are going all cloud all the time 16 GB might work.

  19. Walking speed? on MIT Researchers Discover "Metabolic Master Switch" To Control Obesity · · Score: 1

    Walking is great exercise if you do it fairly quickly. Walking slowly hardly burns calories at all. I suspect walking makes a significant difference. My weight has varied but my wife grouches at my relative skinniness when we eat fairly similarly similarly, but I walk more and faster, at least when we are not walking together. I suspect hurrying and fidgeting heavily impacts metabolic rate.

    On the other hand I totally quit desserts a while back and that made it way easier to lose weight. No soft drinks, no desserts. Food is definitely addictive, though. Reducing sugar was hard. And depressing.

  20. Re:New bands? on What Happens To Our Musical Taste As We Age? · · Score: 1

    You think the current generation embraces older music? Kids are humoring you, maybe? Or kids have better taste in your area?

    The pre-teens I know through my kid don't voluntarily listen to anything pre-2008 or so and prefer the new star wars stuff. She and most of her friends can't deal with music that isn't electronically altered to keep the singer on key.

    I like my kid and many/most of her friends but they pretty much universally prefer the top 100 stuff on the radio. Still pre-teens, though, so maybe they'll grow out of it.

  21. file system cache? on Intel 'Compute Stick' PC-Over-HDMI Dongle Launched, Tested · · Score: 1

    File system cache, maybe? Try free -t. Linux will use any free memory and release it when it is needed.

  22. Really? on Why You Should Choose Boring Technology · · Score: 1

    I don't think the article suggests mysql over mongodb in all cases (maybe for the simple case). I think the main point is not to use both.

  23. Indeed on Millennial Tech Workers Losing Ground In US · · Score: 2

    What employers want is:

    Sycophancy. It's much more fun to botch a project with unqualified offshore people who say "we'll work harder next time" instead of with qualified people who say "define the damn business requirements and stick to them if you want us to be done on time." It's hard to tell a qualified techie from a guy off the street with acronyms on his/her CV.

    Low salaries. Companies are willing to spend 60 days training and 3 months of work to fail a project offshore that can be done onshore in 3 weeks. It's so much easier to sell cheap people who aren't qualified than reasonable priced people who are. No one knows the difference, especially once the project ends up getting done in 3 weeks once it gets brought back onshore.

    A low geekiness factor. It's way more fun to fail a project with guys who are fun and happy than to succeed with a bunch of grouchy nerds.

    Promotions without raises. Even at higher levels I'm hearing more and more people who get a title and responsibilities while being paid peanuts relative to people promoted 5 or 10 years ago.

    Stock buybacks to inflate options instead of growing the company. Who needs to get better at what you do when you can pillage what someone else built?

  24. Austerity is not a bandaid it is an amputation on UK Chancellor Confirms Introduction of 'Google Tax' · · Score: 1

    It's not like austerity is based on anything more than spreadsheet errors (intentional or otherwise), and it's not like it does anything positive for a country.

    If you have a family on a fixed salary living within your means is almost always a good idea, at least unless your fixed salary is high enough that you can use Trumponomics.

    If you are running a country lowering spending also lowers the GDP (movement of money) and revenues (taxes). Austerity cuts off money you need resulting in more austerityt. You do NOT want to run a country as you run a country or a family budget. Note that this is the reverse of trickle down. Money will get to rich people one way or another but the more steps it takes the better your economy does.

    The people pushing austerity, the very rich and the bankers, are not doing this for the good of the countries implementing austerity they are doing it so that they can take money from those countries.

    Taxing profits properly, that is making sure that tax on American income is paid in America and tax on UK income is paid in the UK, benefits close to everyone. The only question is the company doing the paying and they potentially benefit from better infrastructure.

  25. complex or fragile? on Is Modern Linux Becoming Too Complex? · · Score: 1

    I had a "get off my lawn" moment. I thought Linux was getting more fragile, then I thought back to some of the problems I had in the late '90s and changed my mind. There is more fluff, but once the fluff is removed it's more reliable.