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User: f()rK()_Bomb

f()rK()_Bomb's activity in the archive.

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  1. Re:Ignorant Bigot on Peter Molyneux: Working For Microsoft Is Like Taking Antidepressants · · Score: 1

    I've taken antidepressants, to see what they are like. I'm not in any way depressed. What he said is exactly how I feel. For example, playing games becomes impossible cause you don't care if your char lives or dies or what decisions you make, it's all fine. You feel like you are wrapped in cotton wool and floaty, like the world doesn't matter.

  2. Re:Prune Juice, a warrior's drink on Klingon Beer · · Score: 0

    I just type whatever, i have utter disregard for spelling and punctuation.

  3. Re:Prune Juice, a warrior's drink on Klingon Beer · · Score: 1

    'IwlIj jachjaj!

  4. Prune Juice, a warrior's drink on Klingon Beer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Surely it should taste of prune's, like a true warrior's drink.

  5. Re:Internet should go where it should go on U.S. Aims To Give Up Control Over Internet Administration · · Score: 1

    The servers are already distributed all over the world. http://blog.icann.org/2007/11/...

  6. Re:"Robots" will never be as smart as a human. on Why Robots Will Not Be Smarter Than Humans By 2029 · · Score: 1

    Sorry for the second reply, but I just came across a very interesting and relevant article about Watson being used to create recipes. http://www.popsci.com/article/...

  7. Re:"Robots" will never be as smart as a human. on Why Robots Will Not Be Smarter Than Humans By 2029 · · Score: 1

    You have moved the goal posts. What Watson does is clearly intelligent. It is not creative, but that is nothing to do with intelligence. The process you describe for how watson works can just as easily describe a brain. A human parses the natural language, then triggers a system of neurons, which are cross linked and activate based on thresholds. You can literally feel that process occur in your brain at times where you don't actually cross the threshold and you are unsure of an answer. You will have several possible answers that never broke the threshold of correct answer.

  8. Re:This could be a big problem for Republicans on NASA Wants To Go To Europa · · Score: 1

    I'm talking about stuff like how our conservative party supports gay marriage now. The parties seem capable of having rational arguments and possible stance changes. Everywhere has polarization, but the American version is extreme. There seems to be zero hope of compromise as can be seen in various recent events. I wanted to know why this is so. Another poster pointed out that america has "winner-take-all" political system, which seems like a very good explanation for the lack of any middle ground. It would force you into an extreme position so as to differentiate you from your opponent.

  9. Re:This could be a big problem for Republicans on NASA Wants To Go To Europa · · Score: 1

    Eh, stop being silly, you know that's not what i'm talking about.

  10. Re:This could be a big problem for Republicans on NASA Wants To Go To Europa · · Score: 1

    People are still fighting over Ireland... We fought the British for literally hundreds of years. We were fighting them before America even existed. There is still serious tension in the north, there isn't bombings any more, but they sure aren't all getting along.

    I don't see how any of this has anything to do with the extreme polarization of american politics? I don't see why any of this makes it so there is an even split with no middle ground between the groups. It sounds like it should be much more diverse since you are saying it is inhomogeneous. And that is what I find so strange. America politics seems incredibly homogeneous, way more than you would expect for such a large and varied country. There is an almost perfect split down the middle and each group has very tightly defined goals which are generally the exact opposite of the other one. I find it very hard to understand how all these disparate groups over thousands of miles all ended up in one of these two groups, yet smaller countries are fragmented.

  11. Re:The gain for Ireland? on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    Yes, those are the loopholes. That is the problem, not the taxes. One of those loopholes has already been closed.

  12. Re:This could be a big problem for Republicans on NASA Wants To Go To Europa · · Score: 1

    Well I want to know why it is like that in america and not elsewhere. I'm from Ireland for example, and we have 3 major parties and a couple of smaller ones. And people switch between them and the parties change their policies. It doesn't seem to be anything like America. It seems to be much more fluid. People don't just take a side and stay there no matter what and assume everyone else is wrong. And from what I read of other countries its similar.

  13. Re:The gain for Ireland? on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    But you talked about there only being a handful of jobs? :S I'm confused

  14. Re:The gain for Ireland? on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    Yes, absolutely, Ireland did not get 9 billion. Corporate tax revenue is more like 4 billion per year. This is creating more than a handful of jobs though. 4000 jobs from apple, 500 jobs from facebook, 2000 jobs from google, 1000 jobs from amazon, etc. Those are the ones I know off the top of my head and they are all growing.

  15. Re:The gain for Ireland? on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    They are looking into it. The loopholes are the problem, not the actual taxes themselves. And one them has already been closed. http://www.independent.ie/busi...

  16. Re:The gain for Ireland? on How Ireland Got Apple's $9 Billion Australian Profit · · Score: 1

    Apple employees over 4,000 employees in Ireland. The large companies with bases here are also here for our educational talent, as well as the taxes. The taxes bring them here and the employees keep them here. That was the whole idea behind introducing the low taxes (they are around 10%) in the 80s. Its the reason we are not a bunch of peasant farmers any more. We are very much a knowledge economy these days.

  17. Re:This could be a big problem for Republicans on NASA Wants To Go To Europa · · Score: 2

    I wonder if its possible for America to fix this horrible "if you aren't with us, you are against us" mentality. There seems to be no concept of a middle ground, no grey. Everything is either black or white. How did it end up like this?

  18. Re:victimless crime on Child Porn Arrest For Cameron Aide Who Helped Plan UK Net Filters · · Score: 1

    If it did it wasn't coke. Most likely it was cut with something else that made you feel bad,

  19. Re:Wouldnt want it on PETA Abandons $1 Million Prize For Artificial Chicken · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure you can't assume your opinion applies to everyone. I agree with the original statement, as an omnivore, who does pay more for free range stuff than than factory farmed. You can be sure there are many more like me given the huge amount of organic and free range stuff in the supermarkets. I'm very interested to know why you would pay more to not eat lab grown meat, that is immensely mind-boggling.

  20. Re:How is presenting all theories a problem? on South Carolina Education Committee Removes Evolution From Standards · · Score: 2

    Here you go. Testable, duplicatable example of evolution. http://www.newscientist.com/ar...

  21. Re:Dumb name. on CERN Wants a New Particle Collider Three Times Larger Than the LHC · · Score: 1

    They're calling it IRA. (Individual Retirement Account). What a stupid choice. I mean its bound to cause some confusion that could have very easily been avoided. I realise the IRA (Irish Republican Army) isn't a global organization but you'd think the American Government would have the brains and foresight to avoid reuse of already long established and very well-known acronyms.

  22. Re:Planned? on CERN Wants a New Particle Collider Three Times Larger Than the LHC · · Score: 1

    Thats the upgrade. This is the successor.

  23. Re:Not quite that on How Voter Shortsightedness Skews Elections · · Score: 1

    Viewed from outside America he is incredibly conservative. America seems to get more conservative every year. He is at best, center-right.

  24. Re:It has FLAVOR! on 20,000 Customers Have Pre-Ordered Over $2,000,000 of Soylent · · Score: 1

    The Machine Stops, 1909, E. M. Forster: http://archive.ncsa.illinois.e...

    That has food that is just called food and comes in tubes. It also effectively describes the modern world. Its amazingly prescient. Definitely worth reading.

  25. Re:More garbage on Programmer Privilege · · Score: 1

    Plenty of long haired hippie looking dudes where I work. My bosses boss is a long haired hippie. The company is a highly successful internet company. I find your comments very strange. Why does appearance matter so much? It's seen as effectively meaningless to us. Dreadlocks, crazy hair, crazy beards, ancient clothes. None of it matters. What matters is the people.