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User: cinnamon+colbert

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  1. is cosmology more important then cancer ? on The Crisis of Government-Funded Science · · Score: 2

    cause that is the true question; science is $$, and, even more importantly, there are a limited number of talented people who can do science (I mean, how many guys can hit a major league fastball ?) I would say that spending a lot on cosmology is less important then cancer, but thats my bias

  2. Media response on Former TSA Administrator Speaks · · Score: 1

    Before proposed change: The TSA is a broken agency, as every day thousands of Americans endure our broken security system...why isn't anyone in Washington working for the American people instead of the TSA bearuacracy ? After proposed change, first time someone gets a hangnail because of lax security Today, the TSA found itself under serious criticism from all sides, as it became clear that the lack of oversight by the agency has led to a hangnail on a passenger. Politicians in Washington are promsing hearings to look into this. Says Pundit Gasbag "it is clear that the TSA dropped the ball on this, and as a result, thousands of American lives are at risk every day"

  3. Does it matter that much, in real life on Tennessee "Teaching the Controversy" Bill Becomes Law · · Score: 1

    A lot of people are posting things like, nothing in biology makes sense without evolution. I'll stipulate that, but does it matter ? Take cutting edge drug discovery, where you sequence a person's DNA, xray crystal structure the protein, etc You can do all that and be a King James is inerrant fundamentalist To put it another way, how often in real life does knowing evolution matter ? Or, how many people understand registers, or nor gates, yet manage to use a computer. I also wonder how many silly things the many people on slashdot , who seem to be overwhelmingly critical of TN, believe. We are all human; lighten up; let he who is without sin (no silly beliefs) cast the first blog-stone

  4. dog bites man on MIT Institute's Gloomy Prediction: 'Global Economic Collapse' By 2030 · · Score: 1
  5. Sad to be a newton resident on Mastering Engineer Explains Types of Compression, Effects On Today's Music · · Score: 1

    as a resident of Newton, MA, I'm sad to share my home town with Pear (typical of fly by night companies, there is no easy to find physical address - not even a mailing address on the website

  6. Re:obligatory... on Mastering Engineer Explains Types of Compression, Effects On Today's Music · · Score: 5, Informative

    you do know that the propellor at the front of the airplane is just a fan to keep the pilot cool ? I mean, when the fan stops turning, the pilot invariably breaks out in sweat.. there are 3 good things for a pilot: a good landing, a good orgasm, and a good bowel movement A night landing on a carrier is one of those rare moments in life where you get all 3 at thesame time

  7. inaccurate summary on Antibiotics Are Useless In Treating Most Sinus Infections · · Score: 4, Insightful

    abstract is here http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/307/7/685.abstract
    story itself, paid for probably with tax dollars is paywalled
    The abstract says that yes, at 3 days, amoxicillin and placebo similar, but there was a diff at day 6
    Also, total number of patients studied is quite small - Typical Bull**** "MD" science - mds just don't know how to do science, and they constantly flood the literature with these worthless studies, so the net result is a negative, cause you have towaste brain power to not pay attention

    However, what is of more interest is the hard to read format of the abstract, which is a deliberate format imposed by the medical journals; the use of statistics in parenthesis, eg quote, mean difference between groups of 0.03 [95% CI, 0.12 to 0.19]) and on day 10 (mean difference between groups of 0.01 [95% CI, 0.13 to 0.15]), but differed at day 7 favoring amoxicillin (mean difference between groups of 0.19 [95% CI, 0.024 to 0.35]).
    makes the abstract almost impossible to read; this practice has been criticized, but the idiot mds of course don't listen.
    Not only that, with the number of people in the study, if you know naything of the history of medical studies, to give CIs is just BS, crazy statistics for no reason other then to tget a publication or satisfy the wierdness of hte editors; everything that is wrong with academic medicine is in this abstract
    sorry for rant

  8. is it worth criticizing on Three Unexpected Data Points Describe Elementary School Quality · · Score: 1

    At first, I thought I'd say something smart about how "good" predictors change over time as people learn to game the system then I read the original piece; is there any serious there there ? Is slashdot really posting random musings based on sample sizes of ~ 1 as something worth thinking about ? maybe thats why I find myself spending less time on /. then I used to

  9. Re:Does Target intentionally block cell reception? on Retail Chains To Strike Back Against Online Vendors · · Score: 1

    I wonder if you have hit on a good business - design consultant when someone builds a new store...

  10. how about stuff I want to buy ? on Retail Chains To Strike Back Against Online Vendors · · Score: 1

    About two years ago, our coffee pot, a nice simple goodlooking Braun that didn't take up a lot of counterspace, broke. here in Boston, one of hte shopping meccas is Route 9 in Framingham - I went out there, and looked at Wal mart, and Target and Sears, and a couple of other stores. The ALL had the same stuff, and although they all had 15 or so different coffee makers on teh shelf, there was no real variety Just 2 or 3 basic models, with lots and lots of minor differences. Vacumn cleaners are even worse; Dyson is like a giant setback to civilization: why on earth would you buy a vacumn with a plastic thing you have to empty, spreading dust everywhere, as opposed to a dispo bag ? You would have to be crazy to buy a vacumn cleaner that doesn't have a throw away bag for the dirt Not to mention all those stupid plastic tailfin equivalents. and in all those stores, nothing like the basic 100 upright with a dispo bag (true story: in the 80s, by upright broke; on going to the store, I was told that Vacumns generate vacumn with a plastic fan blade; in the american models, teh fan is before the filter, so it can shatter if a penny gets sucked up; in the Japanese models, the fan is behind the filter. In my particular model changing the 5$ plastic fan blade was very nearly impossible, due to the snap together construction method) (end of rant)

  11. there are 24 hours in a day on Why We Should Teach Our Kids To Code · · Score: 0

    so we have to be careful of what we choose for kids I would argue that psychology is more important then programming - happyness, family, sex, friends, these things are more important then programming

  12. Re:I Hate to Threadjack, But... on Are You Better At Math Than a 4th (or 10th) Grader? · · Score: 1

    maybe this school board guy isn't as successful as he thinks he is overconfidence is a major theme in psychology (I've just been reading D Kahneman's thinking fast and slow, not as good as the reviews say it is, but Kahneman talks at length about overconfidence, and how very successful people (financial advisors, pundits) don't know much

  13. experience from the cold war with USSR shows on Boeing Delivers Massive Ordnance Penetrator · · Score: 1

    that countermeasures may, or may not, be cheaper. 1) Star wars was originally based, (and may still be) on detection of the short "boost phase" of an ICBM, when the ICBMs rocket is firing off and is, to use a colloquial term, bright as the effin sun.
    turns out, you make the rocket a little faster, add some chaff, you can slow down the time the rocket motor is hot, and make detection harder; it is cheaper to do this then upgrade the starwars; advantage not to us
    2) during the 1st Iraq war, the US tank, the M1 abrams battle tank, long derided as an example of super $$ pentagon engineering that was to complex to work in the field, toasted the soviet made Iraqi tanks for a very simple reason: the M1 could shoot a shell further then the Iraqi tanks; all the US had to do was sit their tanks at the right distance; advantage US.
    3) Henry Kissinger, the mass murderer of the Vietnamese, Chileans and Kurds, remarked after leaving office that every technological advance made by the US was a waste of time, as the Soviets (this is cold war stuff) quickly matched it; MIRVing of ICBMs was a specific example
    4) We know from Postol and others that the pentagon has greatly *cough* exagerated the effectiveness of anti missle missles , esp those used by the israelis against scuds in the 1st iraq war; how do we know that the pentagons claims about the bunker buster are not just total exageration

  14. real debates on Slashdot Asks: Whom Do You Want To Ask About 2012's U.S. Elections? · · Score: 2

    The debates, an hour or two in total length, are the only time the citizenry get to question the candidates directly Yet the time alloted to people to ask questions is so short, no intelligent question can be asked. further, the audience is discouraged from reacting, and the questioner cannot interrupt when the candidates don't answer the question I would like to see one 3-4 hour debate per week, where it is almost open mike - people get three minutes to talk, and they can harangue the candidates, interrupt them, ask serious questions etc would need tape delay to remove the ***k words, and editing to take out the tedium, but we might get something worth watching

  15. not happy to ditch for windows 7 on 10 Years of Windows XP · · Score: 1, Interesting

    but that was all they had at the store; I was perfectly happy with XP; my hardware died and I didn't see anything I like with XP on it, so got one with windows 7 IMO, and in the opinion of everyone here at my office, XP was MS's best OS; most of us like it a lot more then windows 7 ymmv

  16. why antiPauls need to be extreme on Ron Paul Suggests Axing 5 U.S. Federal Departments (and Budgets) · · Score: 1

    We measure reasonable not by comparision to a std, but by comparision to the extremes
    So, if someone like R Paul or H Cain takes a super extreme posistion, suddenly previously "extreme" things become "reasonable'

    This tactic has worked well for the right in the last 40 years, and instead of arguing with Paul supporters - there is no point, they add 2+2 and get the color of the sound of thunder- I think people should advocate antiPaul posistions, to ensure that the center doesn't change
    So, my proposal is that all corporations are required to remit 10% of gross revenue to the gov't
    All corporations, and officers, are banned from any political activity
    All corporations are required to pay their senior staff no more then 15X the min wage, or no more then 15X the wage of the lowest paid employee or subcontractor or part timer, or, for companies that try to avoid this rule by outsourcing stuff, no more the 15X min wage at the contractor Corporations are not people; they may not publish any information, in any form, not directly related to their sales

  17. don't get open/libre on Looking Back On a Year of LibreOffice · · Score: 0

    over the years, I've downloaded open/libre 3 or 4 times, and each time I come to the same conclusion: it just isn't anywhere near as good as MS office; fewer features, not as well organized, etc. and I just checked, on ebay you can get a office 2003 suite for ~40$ +S&H, which considering you will use it every day for a year or two, ain't much. I admit, sometimes my docs have some formatting, like TOC, TOF, cross refs, paragraph styles, etc, and I do a lot of graphs in excel, so maybe libre just isn't right for me, but I just don't get it. IT just doesn't have the features. am I missing something ?

  18. Re:Flaw in reasoning (obvious?) on What's the Carbon Footprint of Bicycling? · · Score: 1

    in general I agrree, but there is a slight diff due to efficiency of manufacturing, eg if the steel tubes of a bike frame are welded together in some home shop, you might generate 100x more pollution/weld. But this is a slight effect

  19. why do we take this seriously on What's the Carbon Footprint of Bicycling? · · Score: 1

    I mean, how many angels can balance on the head of a pin ? To argue that bicycles are , in any sense whatsoever, as polluting as cars, is just silly. Smart doesn't equal wise

  20. doesn't anyone know what scientists do ? on 'The Code Has Already Been Written' · · Score: 1

    The job of a scientist is to come up with new ideas and test them.
    In that job, code is a tool, like a hammer or a mass spectrometer. If the tool works well enough for the job at hand, why on earth would you spend time making it work better ? It is just crazy.
    The other problem is that scientists are arrogant (so they think what works for them is ok for others) and non scientists are stupid, as they expect scientists to do their work for them - in this case, production code.
    sigh
    It is not a scientist job to make a product, which, roughly speaking, is something that works more then twice, and can be used by someone without extensive training.
    It is a scientist job to produce enough data to test their idea; you only have to do this once (ok, twice if you want to be a stickler about reproducibility). The code destructs on the 3rd run, you don't care, cause it aint your job, and your boss ain't gonna be happy, you doing something that ain't your job.

  21. not a test, and not even correct at diagnosis on New Blood Test Can Detect Alzheimers · · Score: 1

    1) academic work on some hideously complex test (I work in this field, nine proteins is almost unprecedented for a mass screen) is
    NOT
    a test. It is like some academic at IBM or intel announcing they have 10x faster memory in the lab; how many of those get to production ?
    maybe, maybe, in 2 years, this will be a test
    2) and, the data show that it doesn't work
    accordng to the article, theytested their test on people whoose status was already known.
    do I really have to remind slashdotters about grade school statistics and probability, and how working on something with a known value is not the same as working on something with an unknown value ?
    its kinda wierd, this biotech stuff on /. is always at the edge of gee whiz; I assume cause most /.ers, while versed inthe arcana of the tcip stack, or linux kernel, don't know anything about bio science, so they can't distinguish rediculous pr hype from serious stuff.

  22. wrong as bachmann.. on Calling BS On Unpaid Internships · · Score: 1

    1. 'You'll get training.'
    well, out intern is getting a lot of training, both in a highly specialized biotech skill useful in about 4 labs in the US, in general biotech lab stuff, and in seeing how a startup actuallyworks
    2. 'We might hire you after the internship.' we have already done this (score is 1 out of 1) our current intern would ccertainly be offered a job if she wasn't a sophomore
    3. 'You get to work with an awesome team.'(modesty forbids)
    4. 'It will look great on your CV.' modesty aside, I and my boss have pretty decent reps in the biotech area; a letter from us would help
    5. 'You'll make great contacts.' certainly true here
    as they say, ymmv

  23. Greater SE Asian Coprosperity sphere, anyone ? on China Begins To Extend High Speed Rail Across Asia · · Score: 1

    am i the only one who knows that the national hero of hte Vietnamese is the general who liberated the vietnamese from the chinese like a 1,000 years ago ? Am I the only one who knows that the chinese have been trying to subjugate the koreans, japanese, etc for most of their history ?

  24. how about a deluge of fake info on Anatomy of a Privacy Nightmare · · Score: 1

    Since I can get addons for firefox which query google randomly every second, why can't ms cordova get an app that sends out tons and tons and tons of spam with her name, permutations of her name, etc etc....quickly making it impossible to find the real info

  25. anyone here been to the Newark catalog recently ? on US Nuclear Power Enters the Digital Age · · Score: 1

    or the omega catalog, or Digikey, or any place that sells this stuff ?
    (i know, nuke stuff costs 5X more cause it is "certified" or whatever, but it is the same crap, re badged and repriced)
    like buying a laptop with a non std screen size, buying analog probably costs more - cause it is no longer std
    and, I would guess, the morons they now have running the plants might not be able to interpret an analog scale....