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User: TapeCutter

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  1. Re:another variable in climate modelling on Space Traffic May Be Creating More Clouds · · Score: 1

    the source of the clouds could be a natural reaction to the increased CO2

    It could be but it isn't. Water vapour from the troposphere does not generally get into the stratosphere let alone the mesosphere unless put there by a tall volcanic plume or a machine. Once the water is up that high it doesn't fall back down easily, rather it is slowly broken down by radiation and the hydrogen tends to leak off into space.

    Yet in years past they were predicting increases cloud cover at all altitudes

    Umm, no the prediction was more water vapour and less cloud in the troposphere, there has been very little done in the way of research into clouds in the mesosphere so any prediction there was likely just speculation. The prediction for the change in tropospheric cloud cover was very uncertain, climate scientists will tell you that ALL clouds are poorly understood and of the various types ultra high level cloud is the most mysterious. The predicted increase in vapour itself was made with a very high level of confidence due to the well understood physics involved. Also note that CO2 has a cooling effect in the stratosphere and above, which was a prediction of models in the 80's and has since been observed via satellite. (google "stratospheric cooling")

    Why "less cloud" I'm not sure but water vapour has increased by ~4% since 1980 and cloud cover has very slightly decreased since 2000 (although it's debatable that there has been any change at all). The odd thing about water vapour is that it is almost exclusively found in the troposphere and the troposphere is always very close to chemically saturated* with it, the only way to change it is by changing either the pressure or temperature of the troposphere.

    chemically saturated* - google: "dew point" and realize the altitude at where it occurs is always below the troposphere/stratosphere boundary which makes for extremely dry upper layers of the atmosphere.

  2. Re:Wait, what? on Can Ride-Sharing Startup Lyft Survive the SoCal Heat? · · Score: 1

    enrich a few taxi drivers

    LOL, rich taxi drivers are about as common as rich burger flippers.

  3. Re:Past their time on BART Strike Provides Stark Contrast To Tech's Non-Union World · · Score: 1

    Hollywood come to Oz and NZ to make movies because it's cheaper than California, one of the stated reasons is it's cheaper is because the employer doesn't have to buy the local (unionized) crew workers overpriced health insurance. In my 15yrs of blue collar experience unions were a godsend, in my 20+yrs as a white collar worker they have been irrelevant. People who haven't had that "working poor" experience simply don't comprehend why they would need a union, the biggest workplace safety risk they have ever faced is a nasty paper cut.

    The difference in power between a white and blue collar is stark. The difference manifests itself straight away, for example the employer will pay several thousand dollars just to find a professional, where as he can get any number of low-skilled workers by placing a $50 classified.

    In my experience the biggest difference is between white and blue is manners. The first thing that struck me in my first office job was that people said please and thank-you because you did some task that you are paid to do. That single stark difference nails the problem in a word - "respect". People in general and employers in particular have zero respect for low-skilled labour unless the job requires them to risk their lives on a daily basis.

    This lack of respect is an unfortunate part of human nature, low-skilled labour is cheap and abundant but humans generally only respect that which is expensive and rare. The answer isn't to tilt at windmills and try and change human nature, the only practical answer is for low-skilled workers to unite and demand the respect they deserve for doing a job that you wouldn't do yourself unless you were really, really, desperate.

    Now if there was only some way we could equate the words "unionist" and "communist" in the mind of the public then lots of low-skilled workers will vehemently argue against their own self interest and human nature dictates the rest of us will agree with them.

  4. Re:It is a MakerBot after all on Breaking Up With MakerBot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comparing your professional abilities and patience to his amateur abilities and patience is unfair (to put it very kindly).

    Professionals have resources, amateurs have time. The reason he has to wait 5hrs has nothing to do with his ability and everything to do with his resources. The reason he can't bear to wait 5hrs has everything to do with his personality and nothing to do with his status as an amateur.

    Oblig anaology: The guy is like a gardener complaining he has to wait a year for fruit to appear on his tree and that when it does 1/3 of it will be inedible, while at the same time having that much fruit he is giving it away to friends and relatives..

  5. Re:It is a MakerBot after all on Breaking Up With MakerBot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What we're really seeing here is the impatience of the Now Generation. What? You have to wait -thirty minutes- for something to be produced?? OMG!

    Yes 3D printing seems to present about the same level of difficulty to hobbyists as computers did in the 80's. Loading my Apple from an old audio tape recorder failed maybe 30-50% of the time. The trick to getting reliability closer to 4 out of 5 was to mark the position of the volume knob with a pen. Of course that could have been fixed with money. Money could also have removed the annoying "family wants to watch TV" interrupt from the monitor.

    If 3D printing takes off anything like computing did in the 80's then it will be a gold mine in the 2020's and the hobbyists who managed to make it "just work" (for a reasonable price) will be billionaires. It won't replace mass production but it could seriously disrupt the spare parts industry.

  6. Re:#1 reason to use Android on Motorola Is Listening · · Score: 1

    All ROM is writable at least once.

  7. Re:Lets take it to its logical conclusion on Beware the Internet · · Score: 1

    presumption is guilty until proven innocent

    Because it's unfair to try an innocent man! - Q

    However I agree the OP is an idiot who has never seen the inside of a corporate server room and is way too enthusiastic about giving the state the power to kill it's own citizens.

  8. Re:The "good old days".. on Beware the Internet · · Score: 1

    Encyclopaedia Britannica, something that hardly anybody would be able to afford to own at home.

    Not really, I grew up in the 60's, most middle class households with school aged kids had a set of encyclopedia, the expense would compare well with a good PC and internet connection. Second hand sets were dirt cheap but somewhat outdated.

  9. Re:Not really on Beware the Internet · · Score: 2

    WP news and opinion departments live in different galaxies and often contradict each other.

  10. Re:Depends on the energy source duh! on Electric Vehicles Might Not Benefit the Environment After All · · Score: 1

    Yep, most of what comes from a modern coal plant is steam and CO2, it's the CO2 that is currently a problem. Note also that scrubbers were installed after Regan introduced cap and trade for sulfur emissions a couple of decades ago (to avert problems with acid rain). Soot was more or less controlled by the various clean air acts in the 70's. Of course it is possible to scrub the CO2 but the current costs of doing so would make coal uncompetitive.

  11. Re:Meh.... on The Father of Civilization: Profile of Sid Meier · · Score: 1

    That's usually because people in their 50s and 60s have been listening almost exclusively to the same music for 30-40 years.

    Speaking as a 50-something grandfather. There's about 10-15 years where you are forced to listen to your kids music, it's only after they leave home that you can go back to exclusively listening to the good stuff.

  12. Re:Leaves us guessing on Voyager 1 Finds Unexpected Wrinkles At the Edge Of the Solar System · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You are not separate from the universe, you're part of it. One of many entities that allows the universe to observe and talk to itself. - Sagan (paraphrased).

  13. Re:An easy answer... on Number of Federal Wiretaps Rose 71 Percent In 2012 · · Score: 1

    If anything your post shows your own bias. Nothing has changed since I was a kid in HS when government spooks were following John Lennon and Jane Fonda around all day. Your list does not show that Obama is behind those "scandals" what it shows is that governments of both colors continue to support an environment in which individuals are likely to engage in such behavior. Worst still the judiciary and the military are also in lockstep agreement. It's not a conspiracy it's a state of mind, a patronizing world view that seems to be shared by virtually all those who wield serious political power.

  14. Re:An easy answer... on Number of Federal Wiretaps Rose 71 Percent In 2012 · · Score: 1

    Yes but also remember that a lot of the "conquered" could be more accurately described as "converted". To be a Roman citizen in Rome's heyday meant the emperor would literally provide you with bread (in the form of ~1kg of free grain per day), and there were technological benefits such as plumbing, roads, and circuses that made the roman way of life appealing to many Europeans and N. Africans. People flocked to Rome and Rome responded by expanding and sucking in more resources from new territory. When the Roman culture expanded to it's geographical and political limits the benefits could no longer be supported and people drifted back to the old way of doing things for a few centuries.

    Having said that there is no doubt Romans were expert propagandists, just ask the Vandals.

  15. Re:Seems a bit low... on Number of Federal Wiretaps Rose 71 Percent In 2012 · · Score: 1

    Caller: "Hello? USA?
    BOOOM!!!!
    USA: Yes?

    # - Cap filter be dammed!

  16. 1970's is ancient? on Google Maps Updated With Skyfall Island Japan Terrain · · Score: 1

    I was born in the 50's you insensitive clod!

  17. Re:Obviously they need brighter people on Australian Air Force's Recruiting Puzzle Shown To Be Unsolvable · · Score: 1

    Age? - Wisdom emerges from experience, experience is whatever fails to kill you.

  18. Re:Obviously they need brighter people on Australian Air Force's Recruiting Puzzle Shown To Be Unsolvable · · Score: 1

    It's a personality test not a technical test, the technically correct answer tells the interviewer nothing about the person's character. The SQL question is just an example of a point where a bullshitter would likely start trying to fake their level of knowledge. It's not hard to do if the interviewer knows the subject, simply keep thinking up questions based on trivial information you have had to look up in the recent past. I've used the same technique in the past when hiring C programmers. Most times it takes less than five minutes to find some esoteric trivia that the prospect does not know off the top off their head, how they handle not knowing will clearly separate the confident (and knowledgeable) professional from the cowboys.

    Also get it done early in the interview, no good wasting everyone's time if they fail the "arrogance test".

  19. Re:Obviously they need brighter people on Australian Air Force's Recruiting Puzzle Shown To Be Unsolvable · · Score: 2

    I've used the same technique myself, it's a very effective way to screen out bullshitters.

  20. Running gag on Yahoo Puts AltaVista To Death · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Running gag" is a shame, they really were pioneers in the search engine business. For me the switch to Google was simply because it had (and still has) an uncluttered interface.

  21. Re:anti-sex ad policy? on Google's Blogger To Delete All 'Adult' Blogs That Have Ads · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ex taxi driver from Australia - happy hookers were the norm here 25yrs ago, AFAICT they still are. I must have had at least a couple of hundred strippers/hookers in my cab during the 3yrs I was driving and I concur "I don't think I ever even heard a hard luck story more than this or that girl had a BF that was an asshole.". Probably helps that brothels, strip clubs, and private escorts are all legal businesses over here, they pay their rates and taxes just like everyone else, they must be licensed and are subjected to regular health checks. From a purely logical POV the fact they may be asked to do something they find unpleasant is no different to asking a plumber to clean out a septic tank. While on the subject of pleasure most taxi drivers would rather transport a hooker, stripper, athlete, cat in a cage, in preference to a social snob in a suit. In my experience young drunken women in groups of 3 or more are amongst the worst behaved passengers and seeing-eye dogs are amongst the best.

    Making sexual entertainment a crime simply gives real criminals the chains to enslave sex workers. Accepting the fact that sexual entertainment is a universal human behavior and regulating it ensures the public health problem is controlled, that society benefits in the form of taxes, and (most importantly) it ensures workers can demand the legal protections afforded to other workers in their society without fear of being prosecuted themselves. Organized criminals and corrupt cops long ago lost the keys to a sex workers jail cell in Melbourne and that's a GoodThing(TM). You'd think the same reasoning would have enough force to pull their heads out of their arses and do the same for *recreational drugs, but alas they are too busy banning water pipes and playing legislative "wack-a-mole" with "legal highs".

    *Hard drugs: such as heroine and crack may "enslave" some sex workers but from what I've seen junkies are uncommon in Melbourne's regulated sex industry. Although there are some well known spots where they do try and (illegally) pimp themselves on the street without the requisite license, these are mainly frequented by a tiny minority of people who actually enjoy a $50 blow job in a public toilet, like beggars they are considered a public nuisance but in reality most are simply drug/alcohol fucked or handicapped by a mental illness/deficiency.

    A basic freedom is missing from western society, consenting adults should be the masters of their own bodies to the point where the effect on others goes beyond a purely emotional offense to the mind of the observer (eg: non-custodial punishment to enforce mass vaccinations, jail for using your body to murder/rape/etc).

  22. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Yes, this is a non-story in Australia.

    The current government's incompetence is going to allow something much worse to take over

    No, the incompetence of the Australian voter will be responsible for that. However numerous polls also show that the majority of voters would have preferred to be choosing from Rudd vs Turner. Turner leads the traditional side of conservative politics, the side that still has some principles and common respect for their ideological opponents.

    The fundamental problem in Oz is that the mining unions are pulling the strings in the Labor party and the mine owners are pulling the strings in the Liberal party, and Murdoch controls 70% of the press. On many subjects the union and the bosses are in lockstep agreement, eg: the unionists ousted Rudd because of his mining tax plans, their bosses ousted Turner because of his plans to regulate carbon emissions. Neither the union leaders or mine owners want anything to get in the way of digging holes in the ground, everybody seems to have forgotten about Tony's prediction of economic Armageddon, the carbon tax was instituted a year ago and we are still one of the healthiest economies on the planet.

    Disclaimer: I believe we should exploit our resources but not at the cost of our natural life support systems, for instance coal mines on cape york are potentially a threat to the great barrier reef. The reef is not only a valuable tourist attraction it is also a massive fish nursery, The shelf waters around Australia's coast are the breeding ground for much of the southern hemisphere's fisheries, the planetary food web is not something you can put a price on, it's essential natural infrastructure that (if given a chance) is so productive it allows some of us enough time to do things like dig massive holes and sell magic rocks to China.

  23. Re:The current government is doomed. on Australian Government Rejects Data Retention Law After Report · · Score: 2

    Yep, it's rare for people to actually have to pay the fine, however we consistently get 90+% of voters turning up to a state/federal election which is a GoodThing(TM).

  24. Re:So that's it then on California Sends a Cease and Desist Order To the Bitcoin Foundation · · Score: 1

    What have the Romans ever done for us eh?

    Are you wrefering to my fwwriend Biggus Dickus?

  25. Re:So Bitcoin is money? on California Sends a Cease and Desist Order To the Bitcoin Foundation · · Score: 1

    Banks pay "insurance" to the federal reserve, it's a chunk of money they must deposit at reserve interest rates. The amount of imaginary money they can loan to people is determined by the size of that chunk of money. Should the whole thing go tits up the fed uses that money (and more) to prop the system up (bailouts). Certainly not an ideal state of affairs but the alternative of "let them fail" doesn't explain how the economy is rebuilt after the banking system collapses and the rioting has subsided.

    However bitcoin claims to be a currency, not a bank. The problem there is that in the not so distant past certain business owners paid their workers in a currency that could only be spent at the "company store". Bitcoin also gives a much better return for money laundering than paying a bunch petty criminals to wash it by hand at the slot machines.

    Personally I think if they don't want to be part of the public banking system then they should stop promoting it as a currency and start pretending it's virtual bling, start by posting the exchange rate in grams of gold or number of IPV4 addresses it can rent, rather than $US.