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User: Anonymous+Struct

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  1. Re:Principles exist in individuals only. on Congress Mulls China's Networked Authoritarianism · · Score: 1

    But why do we need federal government to do that? The UN could do it, a big NGO could do it, why the federal government? And even when the federal government does it, it's not designed for it.

    Because the Federal Government is beholden to the people who own the resources, namely us. I don't get to elect the people at the UN, and NGOs don't answer to me. Even if I did get to elect people at the UN, my interests as an American are poorly represented by a large world government. The resources here belong to me as a citizen of this nation, so I want representation in how they're managed. The Federal Government isn't some random thing that was dropped on our heads. It exists because we're a sovereign nation with a need for some kind of central and united governance. It was concocted in order to address real problems that people living in large societies have, just like every other national government on the planet.

  2. Re:Principles exist in individuals only. on Congress Mulls China's Networked Authoritarianism · · Score: 1

    ...?

    Okay, so why the National Park Service? Is that where we hide the nuclear missiles?

    You're making the mistake of concluding that since governments wage war, that's all they do. Governments exist to manage shared resources. Ten people live on a lake, and one day, one of them decides to start draining it so he can sell the water. The other nine get together and stop him, and everybody decides to agree that nobody exclusively owns the lake. Voila. A new government is born.

    Just because the military is a shared resource doesn't mean it's the only one. It's just the only one you're thinking about right now.

  3. Re:Well of course on Why Engineers Don't Like Twitter · · Score: 1

    I guess the difference for me is that I use the internet to learn more about something I need to know about. If I want to know about current events, I go to a news site. If I want updates on the World Cup, they're really easy to find. Twitter is more like waiting for the world to tell me something I didn't know I needed to know. It's like how my wife shops - go to the store and look around until you find what it is you didn't know you wanted to buy, then buy it. To each his own, but Twitter kind of annoys the hell out of me personally.

  4. Re:getting this out of the way on Why Being Wrong Makes Humans So Smart · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    AND stupid!

  5. Re:Nice editorializing on Utah Attorney General Tweets Execution Order · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'd say it boils down to the idea that when a government institutionalizes the execution of a citizen, it has some human responsibility to behave in a sober and respectful manner. Basically, everything from the government's mouth should be beyond reproach. Individual people can say whatever they want or sell 'Bundy Fries' on the street corner, but when the big, faceless machine is strapping a guy into a chair and shooting him in the chest, we really ought to do our best to remind everybody that it isn't being taken lightly. Twitter is kind of the opposite of that.

  6. Re:Too late probably, but... on Cloth Successfully Separates Oil From Gulf Water · · Score: 2, Informative

    How big is the biggest oil spill we should be prepared to contain? Keep in mind that the bigger the thing gets, the more ships and people you need, and it's not the kind of problem that increases linearly in resources required. On top of that, keep in mind that it costs money to be prepared for that great big oil spill every single day, even when it's been thousands and thousands of days since the last oil spill. I'm not really surprised that a line was drawn at a relatively conservative size.

    It's just like when I get in my car every morning and buckle my seat belt. I'm hoping another car doesn't run into me, and if it does, I'm hoping my seat belt is enough of a precaution to keep me alive. I *could* install a roll cage, but I don't. And that's my life I'm gambling, too. Compared to that, this oil spill is small potatoes.

  7. Re:Mistake my ass. on Malfunction Costs Couple $11 Million Slot Machine Jackpot · · Score: 1

    Every slot machine should be required to have this ratio and a statement that the machine will cheat to enforce the ratio printed right on the front.

  8. Re:It astounds me on Traffic-Flow Algorithm Can Reduce Fuel Consumption · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd add a fourth possible reason, though: I think traffic control may be a little more complicated than we give it credit for. When there's one main road and everybody's on it, it makes sense to try to get long synchronized trains of traffic flowing through green lights. But as soon as you start to get more than one big road, you have to also think about how much traffic you're allowing into different parts of the city at once. If you look at traffic management as a big picture, then giving people green lights doesn't get them off your plate, it just moves them to another part of your grid. If you're stuck at a red light for 30 seconds too long and nobody seems to be going, consider that it may be because 3 miles up the road, that bubble is intended to absorb some traffic from another busy intersection.

    Or, as you say, it could just be cheap systems.

  9. Re:Switch to cable internet at work? on 10 Tips For Boosting Network Performance · · Score: 1

    Indeed. This is a terrible piece of advice. Take it from someone who's had both in a lot of different places. If you don't care about SLAs and you want to hear 'Have you tried rebooting your cable modem?' every time there's an outage, then by all means, investigate cable internet service for your place of work.

    I also have to chuckle a bit when he claims that cable will give your users the relative speed they get at home. Really? Maybe that'd be true if they frequently invited 49 other co-workers over to share their link at home.

  10. End run on Congressmen Send Letters, Hope For Net Neutrality Fades · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I say the FCC should license a nice fat chunk of wireless spectrum for high power ad hoc peer to peer networking. Then people can put up their own antennas and run their own community-wide public access points. Then maybe the government can help out by connecting the major cities with the longer haul infrastructure. I have to wonder how big of a mess it would be to start, but I also kind of wonder if it might self-organize into a new internet. It'd be delightful to see Comcast's reaction to something like that.

  11. Re:As a non-developer, this is what I see on IT Infrastructure As a House of Cards · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Absolutely nothing. A 24 port gigabit switch makes a great foundation for a small to medium-sized network with typical business use. It's a stretch to call it a 'core', but anybody who tells you that you need some kind of crossbar fabric chassis switch at the center of your average branch office is just trying to sell you hardware and service contracts.

  12. Re:Why not high school? on Too Many College Graduates? · · Score: 1

    +1 OhYeahIGuessYerright

  13. Re:Ah, Memories. on Exam Board Deletes C and PHP From CompSci A-Levels · · Score: 1

    That's because BRE, TradeWars 2002, and LoD already exist. What's left to write?

  14. Re:You get the todays talking out of your ass awar on Crunch Time For IRS Data Centers · · Score: 1

    Yeah, well if we put YOU in charge, spending on signage alone would triple.

  15. Sounds painful on The Woes of Munich's Linux Migration · · Score: 1

    But honestly, a lot of the problems he's talking about aren't Linux migration problems, they're problems with how things were being done. Converting this city from where it was at to Windows 7 and Server 2k8 doesn't sound like it would have been any easier. At least when they're done with this, they'll be on an open platform instead of another closed one.

  16. Re:The problem is high costs on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    High cost is really just a symptom of the actual fundamental problem.

    The actual fundamental problem with health care is that new breakthroughs make it possible to live longer/better, but that they involve very expensive technology. This leaves us with money on one side of the scale and our lives (or the quality of our lives) on the other, and as individuals, we choose our lives or quality of lives every time. When you're facing terminal cancer, how much does the treatment have to cost before you say 'Nah, that's just too much money.'? A million dollars? A billion? If the treatment is available, you don't care what it costs, and advances in technology are constantly making new treatment available.

    The problem is, to make health care economical, you have to convince people to draw the line somewhere and let themselves die. Pretty tough argument to make.

  17. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. on Health Care Reform · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Only the absurdly rich come to the US for care, and they come here for absurdly expensive care that most Americans don't have access to. You're only making an argument that the very best care in the US is better than the very best care in these other countries while ignoring the fact that 99% of Americans don't care, because they aren't able to buy the very best care anyway. The average citizens in these nations do better than the average citizens in our own, and from a public policy perspective, that means a whole lot more than 'but the Prime Minister of X flies his private jet to the US when he needs surgery!'.

  18. Re:Stupid question time on Court Says Parents Can Block PA "Sexting" Prosecutions · · Score: 2, Funny

    It ought to be illegal to even SEE nude pictures of underage children. Everybody involved should be in jail! If we don't keep the children safe, how will they ever grow up to enjoy the dystopic world we're building for them by keeping them safe?

  19. Re:Why on Designer Builds Coffin For Xbox's Suffering RROD · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Instead, why not plug it in and leave it on for a while so that it can self-cremate?

  20. Just tell us where it's buried on Funeral Being Held Today For IE6 · · Score: 1

    So we all know where to pee.

  21. Re:Simple reason on The Sad History and (Possibly) Bright Future of TiVo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The cost is the primary reason I don't have a Tivo anymore. When we bumped up to HD, the HD Tivo was something like $800, so we just went with TWC's DVR. I'm on the verge of going back to Tivo, though, because the box from TW is probably about the most useless pile of electronics you can possibly assemble and still legally refer to as a DVR. It sometimes just fails to record, and probably 4 out of 5 times, fast-forwarding or rewinding will desync the audio. Tivo was expensive, but it never had rookie problems like that.

  22. Re:Sure they can claim it on IOC Claims Olympian Lindsey Vonn's Name As Intellectual Property · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but what if you include a union with Microsoft-loving slashdot readers who actually ARE lawyers and who RTFA? NOW how big is the set?

  23. Re:Economics should decide energy's generator on US To Build Nuclear Power Plants · · Score: 1

    The problem is that given two options, A and B, where option A provides huge profits within your lifetime and magnificent catastrophe for future generations, and where option B provides marginal profits within your lifetime and ever-increasing profits for generations to come, any capitalist would choose option A. You have to focus on something other than your own profit (or risk of loss) to pursue option B.

  24. Re:Real solutions to foreign energy dependence on US To Build Nuclear Power Plants · · Score: 1

    Ditto. I think nuclear power makes tons of sense.

    And I think I'm an environmentalist anyway. I mean, I like the environment and all. I don't have a card or pay dues or anything.

  25. Re:That's good on US To Build Nuclear Power Plants · · Score: 1

    Shoot it to the moon. Moon's free now.