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User: Theranthrope

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  1. Re:Now replace "deaf culture" in your text on How Cochlear Implants Are Being Blamed For Killing Deaf Culture · · Score: 1

    Remember kids: always practice safe sects!

  2. Re:Sounds reasonable to me. on FiOS User Finds Limit of 'Unlimited' Data Plan: 77 TB/Month · · Score: 1

    Ferengi Rule of Acquisition #17: "A contract is a contract is a contract... but only between Ferengi."

  3. Re: Good to see intelligence rewarded for once. on Curiosity Rewarded: Florida Teen Heading to Space Camp, Not Jail · · Score: 2

    Wow. What a textbook example of a concern troll.
    You sound like every member of the legion of small-minded school administrators, petty bureaucrats, complacent autocrats, and religious dogmatists that have been ever retarding the expansion of knowledge and technological progress, since before there was there was even a way to record human history.

  4. Re:Accountability on IRS Admits Targeting Conservative Groups During 2012 Election · · Score: 1

    The IRS saw "Tea Party" and "Patriot" in the names and just assumed those groups were political in nature.

    "I'm shocked! Shocked! To find that gambling is going on in this casino!"

  5. Re:Stop breathing on CO2 Levels Reach 400ppm at Mauna Loa For First Time On Record · · Score: 1

    For a "skeptic" to "re-educated" I would assume they would have to be educated in the first place...

  6. Re:Lots of good reasons. on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Good Reasons For DRM? · · Score: 1

    Unless you're a genius soloist; who can sell CDs and be a draw for concerts on the basis of your name and reputation alone, no one becomes a concert musician to become rich.

  7. Re:Citation needed?! Really?! on Statistical Errors Keep 4700 K-3rd Students From NYC 'Gifted' Programs · · Score: 1

    That AC is more right than you know, because the United States (and many other countries) is still mired in the 19th century's broken and degrading Prussian "factory for minds" system. Practically all of your "advancements" in "educational theory" amounts to shuffling the deck chairs on the Titanic, as the central tenet of the Prussian system's Industrial Era-philosophy is that minds can be "standardized" like machine parts coming off an assembly line is ultimately rotten to the core.

  8. Re:Stranger danger hysteria and cul-de-sacs on Statistical Errors Keep 4700 K-3rd Students From NYC 'Gifted' Programs · · Score: 1

    That's because greatest compilation of human knowledge ever collected is about half pornography...

  9. Re: Stranger danger hysteria and cul-de-sacs on Statistical Errors Keep 4700 K-3rd Students From NYC 'Gifted' Programs · · Score: 1
    To paraphrase Mahatma Gandhi:

    "European civilization would be a good idea."

  10. Re:Question on Schmidt On Why Tax Avoidance is Good, Robot Workers, and Google Fiber · · Score: 1

    If "optimizations" provide an advantage that others cannot take, it is in just about every other context OTHER than taxes, is not called "abuse" as it's properly called: "CHEATING".

    From doping and steroids in sports competitions; to bots and hacks in video games, aimbots in FPSs, and teleport hacks in MMORPGs, for instance. If I can't take advantage of the same accounting and off-shore account shell-games "optimizations" that corporate "persons" take advantage of, WHY THE HELL CAN'T I CALL IT CHEATING!?

    Dear AC, you need your moral compass re-calibrated as it's badly mis-aligned.

  11. Re:it's a media game on Ticking Arctic Carbon Bomb May Be Bigger Than Expected · · Score: 1

    Nuclear power looks cheap on paper because the costs are hidden because the costs were are borne, not by the nuclear power "industry", but by the taxpayer. The United States' nuclear power "industry" is actually a beneficial byproduct of the U.S.'s nuclear arms race with the (then) Soviets.

    Also, unlike gas, oil, coal, or renewable plants, the total cost of a nuclear power plant cannot be determined until AFTER the plant has been closed, because on top of dealing the spent fuel, the plant itself must be carefully dismantled and interred, which is both costly and labor-intensive.
    It's like having a mortgage with a massive balloon payment that must be paid after the house is knocked down (then you still have to keep paying to store the debris, because it's hazardous).

    Nuclear is NOT a good energy solution, because of reasons that have nothing to do with the typical hippy "no nukes"-things, NOR is it a reason to stop support for renewable sources.

  12. Dirty deeds done dirt cheap on Strong Climate Change Opinions Are Self-Reinforcing · · Score: 1

    PROTIP: Letting the deniers "debate the controversy" is a sucker's game; it's a form of "rhetorical judo" which forces a skeptic (a GENUINE skeptic) to always make the first move in a debate, to which, the denier would have a list of cut-and-paste talking-points to give a canned response or rhetorical evasion.
    It's letting a kook make a extraordinary claim ("All the scientists in this scientific field are WRONG, but I'm right!"), without extraordinary proof. Every. Single. Time.

    It dosen't matter is the field is: cold-fusion, round-earth-ism, tectonic plates, smoking's link to cancer, evolution, or climate-change, the deniers all use the same play book (and in the case with smoking-causes-cancer and climate-change denialism, a lot of the PLAYERS are the same, q.v. the Heartland Institute)

  13. Re:In other words... on Strong Climate Change Opinions Are Self-Reinforcing · · Score: 1

    Actually, the actual number of bozos are apparent from reading your post: one. You'll never guess which one though.
    Occam's razor cuts both ways...

  14. Anyone (still) play Rifts? on Brain Pacemaker Helps Treat Alzheimer's Disease · · Score: 1

    This sounds like the M.O.M. (Mind Over Matter) implants for the "Crazies" OCC from the Palladium "Rifts" dice-and-paper RPG.

    Where electrical implants to stimulate the brain to treat mental-illness were found to have the unintentional beneficial side-effect of stimulating latent psychic powers in patients... which naturally (this being an 80's cyberpunk-with-magic hybrid RPG) led to weaponization.
    However, the implants used to artificially stimulate psychic super-powers in psycho-normative people, would over time, create mental instability in users, and as delicious irony, would eventually lead to insanity, hence: "crazies".

  15. Re:Erosion of developer freedom? on 4 Microsoft Engineers Predicted DRM Would Fail 10 Years Ago · · Score: 1

    Is your buggy and bloated crap even worth ripping off?
    The fact that you aren't getting paid what you think your product is worth is not so much about piracy...

    ...so much as your delusions of adequacy.

  16. Re:RAPEscan on House Subcommittee Holds Hearing On TSA's "Scanner Shuffle" · · Score: 1

    ...because doing it outside... will get you arrested in most jurisdictions.

  17. Re:RAPEscan on House Subcommittee Holds Hearing On TSA's "Scanner Shuffle" · · Score: 1

    These companies are never WOMANufacturers.

    That type of manufacturing is typically done... "in house".

  18. How abut as digital "now playing" arcade marquees? on What To Do With Those First Generation Photo Frames? · · Score: 1

    How abut as digital "now playing" arcade marquees?

    Like this: http://hackaday.com/2012/01/19/adding-digital-game-indicators-to-a-neo-geo-arcade-cabinet/

    They're programmed to cycle through all 20 NeoGeo arcade game cartridges I own (and a few I -want- to own...), or any other images I feel like putting up there.

  19. Re:When in Rome... on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    "The first duty of every Starfleet officer is to the truth, whether it's scientific truth or historical truth or personal truth! It is the guiding principle on which Starfleet is based. And if you can't find it within yourself to stand up and tell the truth about what happened, you don't deserve to wear that uniform!" ...but he isn't wearing a uniform.

  20. Re:The US Constitution is not a suicide pact on US Military Designates Julian Assange an "Enemy of State" · · Score: 1

    Counterpoint: Valerie Plame. Who lost their security clearance for leaking confidential info in THAT incident? Oh wait... NO ONE did.

  21. Re:Stay far away from him... on US Military Designates Julian Assange an "Enemy of State" · · Score: 1

    Lybia? The other time... against the Barbary pirates.

  22. Stalking on easy mode on Can Foursquare Data Predict Where You Live? · · Score: 1

    Between Twitter, Foursquare, and Facebook's timeline; if you can get friended by the object of your ~amour~ (and if they post/update frequently), you practically have a 24-hour electronic watch in-place. You kids have it so easy these days...

  23. Yes. Oh, it's not a very good name, is it? on What Would The World Be Like Without Microsoft? · · Score: 1

    Oh, but we are nice and we will attend to your every, every need!

  24. Re:BSOD on Spirit Rover Communications Error · · Score: 1

    unfortunatly, that tech-support mission is one-way only.

  25. Re:Insightful 50%, Funny 50% !?!!! on Linus Blasts SCO's Header Claims · · Score: 1

    Erm, when talking HTML or derivitives the key word is "format".

    HTML is a formating and markup language (if you can even call it a language, but that's another argument), like the old-skool, non-WYSIWYG word processors (cir. 1991 or earlier, thereabouts). Where you would have to put in <indent>, <bold></bold>, or <justifyleft></justifyleft> tags in wich were similar and in some cases were the same as HTML.

    You don't program, design, or build a wordprocessor document, you format it.

    (stupid lameness filter)