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User: Arrepiadd

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  1. Re:I am glad I don't have to do this... on Norwegian Town Using Sun-Tracking Mirrors To Light Up Dark Winter Days · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As someone who spent the first 20 years of his life in an area without significant seasonal changes and the next 20 years in areas with major seasonal changes I can definitely say that seasons are vastly overrated.

    Having near perfect weather every day is about the least horrible curse I can think of.

    Except that being next to equator does not guarantee "near perfect weather". Plenty of friends from places close to equator just say "back home we carried an umbrella every day even if it only rained once a week, because when it did it was pouring really hard.

    And to further counter your example, the more artistic oriented among those friends, even after years of being in a place with significant seasonal changes really appreciate contrast of green summer bursting with activity and people vs the white winter of cold and quiet. Different people for different things, I guess.

  2. Re:Finally! on Bill Gates Is Beginning To Dream the Thorium Dream · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Gates Foundation has always been primarily a wealth investing and patent acquiring entity. I seriously doubt they are here for the benefit of humanity

    Yes, the Gates Foundation should just use all its money this year and close shop by next year. That will do much better for humanity!

    Guess what, wealth investing has to be a big part of any decent foundation's work. The Nobel Foundation has been around for 113 years and the way they did that was by investing the money they got in the first place. Otherwise it would have ran out a long time ago.

  3. Re:Margin compression on Apple Profit Falls 22% But iPhone Sales Are Up · · Score: 1

    Replying to myself... always nice! At least it's for a clarification about the state of the world when it comes to iPhones.

    I knew, unlike what my previous comment indicates, the differences in the size of the screen. But, quite frankly, they seem minute enough that I can't distinguish them unless they are next to each other. Individually, I can't spot the screen differences (once again, I haven't had enough time with either to figure that out).

  4. Re:Margin compression on Apple Profit Falls 22% But iPhone Sales Are Up · · Score: 1

    What plane do you live on? The iPhone 5 was barely distinguishable from the 4? (...) Only a buffoon can't spot these differences a mile away.

    Not the AC that wrote the text, but I want to contribute anyway. I'm by no means an ignorant when it comes to phones and stuff, but I'm not following the checking all the pics and following all the news on new phones. I guess I would call myself average on this field.

    With that said until you described the differences (which I may now use to recognize it), the only way I knew to distinguish both was based on the connector. Small on the 5, big on everything else.

  5. Re:Diet and laziness on The Man Who Convinced Us We Needed Vitamin Supplements · · Score: 2

    There's a very good reason why multivitamins exist, and that's because it's non-trivial to get enough nutrients in even healthy foods.

    That's like saying there's a good reason McDonald's exists... we really needed crappy burgers and nature wasn't giving us any

    The only reason multivitamins exists is because some people saw a market there and started selling them. Whether helped by a crazy chemist or not. It doesn't mean we need them. Hell, we've been in this planet for long and we never had the need for added doses of vitamins. What's with the 20th century, apart from crap food, that suddenly makes us need more vitamins? And if the problem is the crap food then clearly we don't need extra-vitamins per se, we need to revisit our dietary choices.

  6. Re:92 Billiard Dollars on PayPal Credits Man With $92 Quadrillion · · Score: 1

    I know, the Long Scale is seen as very archaic these days

    As a native from a non-English speaking European country, I wonder what's the "problem" with the long scale. Certainly here no one sees it as archaic.

  7. Re:Flat structures never, ever happen on Former Valve Hardware Designer Recounts Management Difficulties · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I haven't had the time to read the text you post, I'll try to do it later on tonight. So, this may be a bit off, I'm posting this based on your tl;dr.

    W. L. Gore and Associates (the company responsible for Gore-Tex) can be used as a counter-example to what you/Jo say. There are no bosses (everyone is an associate) and people work in small teams. No one bites others in the ass. And the company, while not the biggest in the world or whatever, works fine and people in it seem to be happy.

    One key element seems to be the size of each of its campuses. They limit them to 150 people. More than that and what you mention starts happening. A de facto hierarchy arises and bickering ensues. But below these numbers (and this seems to be corroborated by other sources) people work as in a small community/village and peer pressure keeps everyone working nicely. Above 150 people clustering of people occurs and, while peer pressure still occurs within these groups, the problems still occur in between groups.

    So, perhaps flat structures do happen, but only in small groups because "friends" take care of their friends, but employees don't necessarily take care of other employees (especially when the employee he's supposed to take care of is his nasty boss).

  8. Quality edge? on Microsoft Pushing Bing For Search In Schools, With Ad-Removal Hook · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Is this enough to beat the Google search quality edge?"

    What does removing advertising and including privacy features have to do with "search quality"?

  9. Re: Time is... limited on Why Your Sysadmin Hates You · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With all due respect, I am a system administrator (doesn't matter what kind for the subject at hand) and you should see the kind of things people expect me to do. People have no idea what my job is, they just know I'm good with computers. And they know the have problems with their computer. Which that just makes us a perfect fit for each other...

  10. Time is... limited on Why Your Sysadmin Hates You · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the sysadmin's time is limited. He also only works XX hours a week. And his day also only has 24 hours. If everyone sees themselves in the right to write to the sysadmin because Firefox is slow, because the password isn't working anymore, because... then the real problems can't get fixed (e.g. a screwed up backup policy left by the previous sysadmin, or a failing front end machine who needs to be transferred to new hardware).

    Sure, the user doesn't know why Word isn't working, and he thinks he can just write that guy we met last Christmas party. Turns out, that guy is the Linux guy at the company and he doesn't know either, nor does he care. Now he has to forward that email to the helpdesk himself! If the Help Desk is properly implemented, then going through it is the easiest way for the regular user. Not only it gets him to the right person, but when it does, the right person may already have all the information he needs (because the first level guy asked for a snapshot of the error Word gives).

    Indeed, sysadmins are just a cog in the machine. But so is the secretary of the assistant director of whatever. And by screwing up everything, you can't let those cogs perform at their best. You also expect the secretary will tell her boss "You have a meeting at 2 pm with person X in building Y" and not just "you have a meeting today" and wait for his questions "when? where? with whom?" (or the same in reverse when he asks her to put something in the agenda)

  11. Hydrogen is too different from anything else on Shapeshifting: Proposal For a New Periodic Table of the Elements · · Score: 1

    Hydrogen behaves in odd ways and it's hard to place it in a specific place that fits all "needs". In some ways hydrogen behaves like halogens. Among other reasons because it can only establish one bond, like other halogens (since it's highest occupied orbital [which, coincidentally, is the only one] is missing one electron). Of course, since it's highest occupied orbital only has one electron, it fits nicely in the first column of the periodic table, where all elements have only one electron in their highest occupied s orbital. But all the elements on column 1 are metals and they readily react with water, which the hydrogen molecule doesn't. So, from that perspective H cannot be an element of group 1.

  12. Re:So... on Altering Text In eBooks To Track Pirates · · Score: 5, Informative

    There would be no need to reverse engineer a pristine copy of the work. Simply proofreading a single copy and correcting some of the existing errors, while at the same time, introducing a few new errors of the same type

    I didn't read the article because I had seen it earlier in another news source, so I don't if this is mentioned in the one mentioned here, but proofreading may not do it in this case. The source I read mentioned two specific types of change that do not introduce any typos (I'm choosing the exampled myself):
    - One of them was reordering of nouns when the order does not matter, e.g. "Peter and John went for lunch" vs "John and Peter went for lunch";
    - The other was playing with negatives: e.g. "something is unclear" vs "something is not clear"

    Since there are no actual typos, it's hard to spot the identifying bits. You'd have to change the text substantially, in order to have a good chance of being free from discovery. Adding your own typos may not serve any purpose, since the company selling can focus just on the changes they made, not looking for other changes introduced after.

    Of course, if there is a concerted effort to release documents, all pirates would need to do would be buying a few copies and diffing the documents. You may not get the original back, but if the changes are randomly put in a specific set of words, you certainly can end up with something close to the original than any of the sold copies and still free from pirate identification.

  13. Re:Which Columbia? on Nicaragua Gives Chinese Firm Contract To Build Alternative To Panama Canal · · Score: 1

    And which other country, willing to invest dozens of billions of dollars, do you see coming in to finance a third canal? China wants to invest a ton of money making a new canal and it chose Nicaragua to do it (let's not even assume it was the other way around). Where's the market for a third one?

  14. Which Columbia? on Nicaragua Gives Chinese Firm Contract To Build Alternative To Panama Canal · · Score: 0

    What's to stop Costa Rica or Columbia joining in?

    Money, for starters. You'll want to read back on the fact that this costs billions of dollars to make, which Costa Rica doesn't have.

    As for Columbia... you refer to the University in New York or the or the district where Washington is located? Either way none of those is close enough to the Pacific Ocean to be considered for an entry point to a canal.

  15. Re:The new commerce gatekeepers on Nicaragua Gives Chinese Firm Contract To Build Alternative To Panama Canal · · Score: 1

    Like iOS, they get to set the price to move the goods around.

    I'm pretty sure that you can just 'sideload' through the Strait of Magellan if you feel like it.

    It's not like they're closing the Panama Canal once the Chinese build this. The new canal costs too much, people will just keep going through the old canal (tough luck for those who invested in ships too large to go through the old canal, but doing all those thousands of km through the end of South America isn't less expensive either).

  16. Re:Because Sony is nicer? on Microsoft Confirms Xbox One's Phone Home Requirement, Game Resale Rules · · Score: 1

    Sorry for the late reply...

    According to this there's no way to disconnect Kinect on Xbox one.

  17. Because Sony is nicer? on Microsoft Confirms Xbox One's Phone Home Requirement, Game Resale Rules · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So you basically forgot all the crap Sony has pulled out over the years... (e.g. rootkits). At least Microsoft is being honest about it.

    As someone else said, the solution is to forgo both PS and Xbox consoles.

  18. Re:BatteryMark 2007 on Sony Touts 25 Hour Battery Life For Haswell-Equipped Vaio Pro · · Score: 1

    A computer that can function for ten hours is quite useful, but a twenty-five hour battery life is only marginally more so.

    Maybe in this day and age where iPhones have to be charged every night that comment makes sense. But I come from a time when crappy phones had batteries that lasted several days. And you could go on for a weekend out without a charger, because by the time you came back home on Sunday evening the battery would still be more than half full.

    A computer with a 25 hour battery life doesn't need to be on all the time. In fact, if you are using it at home and for a few hours a day, you could stash the charger in a drawer because you'd be using it only once a week. And I, for one, would welcome that rather than having to plug half way through the movie.
    And if you are using it for work, you could do as with the laptop and leave for a couple of days without taking the extra weight for the charger (which, for many computer makers is still a huge/heavy piece of equipment).

  19. Re:WHAT popular perception? on Taking Action For Free JavaScript · · Score: 1

    Because what the guy meant was that if you know what JavaScript is you know it runs locally (he used the word web browser, just to say it differently). And if you don't know JavaScript you won't have any expectations about it (or knowledge, for that matter). So, the "contrary to popular belief" comment makes no sense because any person with the knowledge has no such belief.

  20. Re:Open set it is! on Major Advance Towards a Proof of the Twin Prime Conjecture · · Score: 1

    Oh god, I saw the "--" in your comment and assumed it was the signature... only then I realized it was the final section of your comment. Sorry about that.

  21. Re:Open set it is! on Major Advance Towards a Proof of the Twin Prime Conjecture · · Score: 1

    Actually, Euclid's proof for the infinitude of primes says that the number itself is either a prime (which your example shows isn't always the case) or that the number can be factored by a prime not in the list provided (thus proving other primes exist). In your case both 59 and 509 are primes, showing the original list of primes was incomplete. Rinse and repeat.

  22. Re:Camera's have more problems than Lidar on Tesla's Elon Musk Talks With Google About Self-Driving Cars · · Score: 2

    Clearly you've never seen what humans do on highways in foggy days...

    People will drive recklessly when they can't see crap. They'll drive too fast, out of a sense of security, out of stupidity, out of an illusion effect coming out of the foggy conditions. And you... well, you can't do much about it, since you only control one gas pedals over the entire highway.

    Computers, on the other hand, can "see" in different wave lengths than we do. Potentially wavelengths that are visible through fog. So, when you don't know there's a car there, because it's hidden from the fog, even though it's only 40 meters away (which will take what... 1 or 2 seconds to travel) the computer may. And if all cars are driver-less, worst case scenario, they'll be programmed to reduce the speed in foggy conditions to keep within a predefined safety margin. And that my friend, can be a lot better than having more f-stops in your eyes which you can't use anyway.

  23. Re:It's not superconducting on Does Antimatter Fall Up? · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the correction, I had not understood that. An experiment called ALPHA and another one called Alpha MS both coming from CERN... how could I mistake them!

  24. It's not superconducting on Does Antimatter Fall Up? · · Score: 1

    Just a minor correction...

    The instrument was eventually changed to a non-superconducting version. This was discussed here on Slashdot, but here's a section of the Wikipedia page on the experiment that states it briefly:
    "With Obama administration plans to extend International Space Station operations beyond 2015, the decision has been made by AMS management to exchange the original AMS-02 superconducting magnet for the non-superconducting magnet previously flown on AMS-01. Although the non-superconducting magnet has a weaker field strength, its on-orbit operational time at ISS is expected to be 10 to 18 years versus only three years for the superconducting version. This additional data gathering time has been deemed more important than higher experiment sensitivity"

  25. Re:Great! on Teachable Robot Helps Assemble IKEA Furniture · · Score: 2

    Another white people problem solved by other whites.

    How about accomplishing something meaningful for minorities for a change?

    I think IKEA sells furniture to those as well.