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User: WoodenRobot

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Comments · 186

  1. Re:here's a crazy idea... on Sci-fi Writers Join War on Terror · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the idea behind air marshals?

  2. Re:Genius yoyoq!!! on Sci-fi Writers Join War on Terror · · Score: 1

    It's my understanding that the pilots in aricraft always have different meals to each other to prevent both getting ill.

  3. Re:Nice, clever, but still not right on FBI Target Puts His Life Online · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Indeed - and that's why 'if you've done nothing wrong you've nothing to fear and no need to hide' is a load of bull.

  4. Re:Addendum: on Apple Admits to Occasional Excessive Work Hours · · Score: 1

    'Theocracy' as in 'govenment ruled by a religious institution', I assume.

  5. Re:TSA just anounced the new restrictions on on BBC Reports UK-U.S. Terror Plot Foiled · · Score: 1

    Snakes on a plane.

    And there ain't a God-damned thing you can do about it.

  6. Re:Just in time for U.S. Mid-Term Elections on BBC Reports UK-U.S. Terror Plot Foiled · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This happened in Britain, not the US.

    Granted, the flights that were probably going to be targeted were US bound, but surely it's within the abilities of the Conspiracy to organise all of this is the USA in order to fulfil their Evil Schemes more effectively?

  7. Re:sweet on Creative Sues Apple · · Score: 1

    I have to agree with you and sh00z. I had a Creative Zen, and found it tedious to use, suach as the over-sensitive slider, and the awful software. In addition, the software only recorded some of the track information, so albums with similar names, or similarly named tracks would interfere with one another. I eventually decided to get a 5th generation iPod, and it's not given me any problems whatsoever. I was a little hesitant about using iTunes initially, but it's absolutely great.

    Whether or not it's 'cool', it's a damn good product.

  8. Re:let's face facts on Apple vs Apple -- Judgment Day · · Score: 1

    Very much so in some genres, none more so than in the fields of electonic and dance music. Labels can have a very distinctive sound - sometimes you can guess the label just from hearing some music. Records on the Warp label stand out a mile, for instance, as do Ninja Tunes.

  9. Re:Children Shouldn't Be Indoctrinated on Kansas Board of Ed. Adopts Intelligent Design · · Score: 1

    Zenmar, the guy who runs "Dark Zen" is a cultish nutbag. I certainly wouldn't take anything he says as remotely authoratative on Buddhism - which has, with a few small screw ups here and there - been a very peaceful religion. Japanese Buddhism is mixed with Shintoism, which advocated the divinity of the Emperor. This, and the threat of violence, is how Buddhism was used to "advocate" the use of violence during WW2 (and other wars the Japanese have been involved with.

    If you want a completely benign religion, look at Jainism.

  10. Re:Don't let the state nany, take some responsibil on Senator Carper Calls for Tax on Online Porn · · Score: 1
    "True, Catholicism does have a tradition of good works, but it does not teach that they are a prerequisite for salvation."

    It does. I can't remember exactly where, but it is explicitly stated in the Catechism that faith without good works is insuficient.

  11. Re:"smapped"? on Study Finds Value in Email Spam · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of that sodding "Crazy Frog".

  12. Re:Er... they're all above 30 now... on Study Finds Value in Email Spam · · Score: 1
    The reason they're still around is because they typifies the average men:
    1) tsuyoshi --- buddy
    2) shinogo --- clown
    3) kimutaku --- asshole
    4) who?

    At a guess:

    4) Profit!

  13. Re:alchemy as an allegory on Royal Society Finds Lost Newton Papers · · Score: 1
    This is also true for the Taoist practice of alchemy. Descriptions of meditatonal states and transpersonal experiences were hidden in descriptions of chemical reactions, and such texts would only be able to be decoded by a teacher.

    The goal was to produce an "elixir of immortality", which was not really refering to a real medicine, but rather to enlightenment.

  14. Re:Wow! What a question to ask on Slashdot... on Hackers, Spelling, and Grammar? · · Score: 1
    Churchill really said "because because"?

    ...because, because, because of the wonderful things he does!

  15. Re:CD's suck! on Broadband to Kill Off DVD? · · Score: 1

    With DVDs there's the possibility added bonus features such as behind-the-scenes documentaries or commentaries. A good example of this is with the Fight Club or Band Of Brothers DVDs. As far as I'm aware, a downloaded film will only have the film, not the extra audio tracks or the documentaries etc that come with a bought DVD. Sometimes (although rarely) a DVD is worth buying, since what you're getting is actually worth the money - they've actually taken their time and produced a good product.

  16. Re:Nope, you are wrong. on British Government Considers Tax on Computers · · Score: 1

    I think the Environment Agency has such powers. It's actually quite surprising what they can do according to the law.

  17. Re:Know your knife laws on Best Leatherman-Style Multitool? · · Score: 1

    Hmm, I was thinking of the larger, glass bottles which are usually found for sale in the airport's shopping area, but I suppose for the terrorist with a budget, those little bottles would have to do. Perfume might actually be a much better idea, having a greater percentage of alcohol in it.

  18. Re:Know your knife laws on Best Leatherman-Style Multitool? · · Score: 1
    The 70s were good compared to today when carrying a lighter onto an airplane is going to be a crime in a few weeks.

    It's interesting that knives and lighters are both banned on planes, but buying a big bottle of wine or spirits in the duty-free shops and then taking it onto the plane in your hand-luggage is completely fine.

    A broken bottle (and one full of alcohol too) makes an excellent weapon. Something like high strength vodka could be used to make a rudimentary Molotov cocktail - although maybe not if lighters are banned. Of course they'll never ban bottles on planes. Not for safety reasons, of course, but because the drinks industry would go ape.

  19. Re:The Tory Party Joke on ALA President Not Fond of Bloggers · · Score: 2, Funny

    They aren't our only right wing party - we also have New Labour. They're even more like the Republicans.

  20. Re:A False Dichotomy on ALA President Not Fond of Bloggers · · Score: 2, Insightful
    And yes, people who "don't read classic literature" are, perforce, less completely educated -- or at the very least, less cultured. I make no claims regarding intelligence, however.

    Not everyone has the time or inclination to read, for example, Joyce or Tolstoy - but there's an difference between not reading the classics and not reading at all. Those that aren't really into such books can still be voracious readers (me, for example).

    I think the worst kind of reading habit is to read nothing but celebrity magazines.

  21. Re:.de on German Search Engines Self-Regulating · · Score: 1

    The same thing happened to me - although I was being diverted to Google.uk. My homepage was deliberately set to be google.com, so I found this a bit annoying. Even typing www.google.com into the address bar sent me to the .uk site. I got it to stop doing this by deleting the cookie, and it stopped redirecting me.

  22. Re:legal side... on Music Site AllofMP3 Under Investigation · · Score: 1
  23. Re:legal side... on Music Site AllofMP3 Under Investigation · · Score: 3, Informative
    For once. JUST ONCE. I wish people would vote for who they think is a better leader, instead of voting with their party. If they can't decide - don't vote.

    In 2000, "issue awareness"--knowledge of the stands of the candidate-producing organizations on issues--reached an all-time low. Currently available evidence suggests it may have been even lower in 2004. About 10 percent of voters said their choice would be based on the candidate's "agendas/ideas/platforms/goals": 6 percent for Bush voters, 13 percent for Kerry voters (Gallup). The rest would vote for what the industry calls "qualities" or "values," which are the political counterpart to toothpaste ads.
    source This is quite depressing...
  24. Re:RTFA on Australian ISPs Required To Report Child Porn · · Score: 1
    That fact is ignored because it is highly politically incorrect.

    And it doesn't sell papers. Some, such as the Daily Mail and the Sun here in the UK seem to thrive off the 'stranger danger' myth that kids are getting abducted, raped and killed. It's all swallowed hook, line and sinker - I guess because people actually enjoy the thrill of being scared and having an almost archetypal hate figure out there. Of course the real fact is that (IIRC), on average only SEVEN abductions of kids a YEAR end up with the child in question being killed. Compare this to the estimated one in twenty children who are at some point sexually abused by a friend or relative. Not something you can sell a paper with, since it doesn't back up the paper's readers' desire to feel rightious indignation at someone - since the 'evil guy' isn't some bloke in a dirty mac, but five percent of the readers themselves.

  25. Re:Simple solution on Australian ISPs Required To Report Child Porn · · Score: 1

    Indeed. If the ISP is allowing access to information the government would consider 'inconvenient', the fact that the ISP can be fined huge amounts or shut down for being guilty of allowing access to kiddy porn (which all, by default, are guilty of) then this gives a very useful and tempting way for the government to stop the ability to access said information. The argument that this would be a corrupt and dirty thing to do, and that a government would not give into temptation is obviously a naive one...