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Comments · 186

  1. Re:Stanislaw Lem on Ask Slashdot: Most Underappreciated Sci-Fi Writer? · · Score: 1

    I just read City by Simac. It seemed to have a common (for me, very negative) trait for old school SF. Hardly any ACTION. It was all a thought experiment, TALKING about the development of the world. Of course, I'm a fan of the way cyberpunk explains hardly NOTHING, and just throws you into the action.

    City wasn't really a novel, though. It was a collection of short stories, with a narrator.

  2. Re:A Canticle for Leibowitz on Ask Slashdot: What's the Most Depressing Sci-fi You've Ever Read? · · Score: 1

    I found it uplifting, at the same time. Even though people continually destroy themselves, they fight to survive-they adapt. They also idealize knowledge(which I kind of also do). Of course they do it so much they forget the point-like just copying things with no idea of the meaning. A favorite example was the blueprints-for years, they'd colored white paper(black? blue?) because the originals were that color.

    It also gave me less of a negative opinion of religion-Christianity was pretty much the bastion of knowledge in the Middle Ages in Europe.

  3. Re:We're gonna lose a lot. on Preparing For Life After the PC · · Score: 1

    Other posts refer to what I'm saying, but are dismissive and not-descriptive, only saying "serious gaming".

    When my wife first got her smartphone last year, I optimistically looked for games. The RPGs(that's mostly what I play) I found are about the level of old SNES games. My taste in games has changed in the past 20 years. While occasionally, I like a game like "Cthulu Saves the World"(done in that style), games like Fallout are more to my taste. That level of graphics isn't coming to smartphones soon. I don't know whether they could handle the AIs in Fallout, but I REALLY doubt they will be able to handle the AIs of a game like Civilization 5.

    If RPGs suddenly all were at the level of SNES games, I'd read books a LOT more. And, I've not been impressed by e-book readers. Used books are cheaper than new books-all e-books are "new". AND you have to pay for a reader. I wouldn't worry about dropping a paper book. While, I don't like getting a book wet, that would be more the case for an ebook reader. So, ebook readers aren't moving ME toward "post-PC" either.

  4. Re:Really? on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    There is more than one definition of "myth". The commonly used one is like a lie.

    The one used by religious(or other stories) academics. Is something like "story" or "legend". It is perfectly possible to be a Christian and talk about Christian mythology. Of course, many Christians don't know this, will get angry, and say "our stories are TRUE!"

  5. personally... on Who's Pirating Game of Thrones, and Why? · · Score: 1

    For a while, I paid for cable, while gradually watching more shows from torrents. It was easier to control what I watch. This included very old shows and current ones. Some copied from VHS, some from digital sources.

    I never cared about watching shows NOW, but did consider it a minor benefit that I got to watch the new Battlestar Galactica before my friends in the US-if I recall correctly, it was broadcast in Australia first. But, for me, it just came up on my list of shows to watch.

    At one point, I moved to another apartment. I didn't really see the point in paying for cable anymore.

  6. Re:Vaxes on Living Fossils: Old Tech That Just Won't Die · · Score: 2

    There is disagreement among language theorists about this. Some consider language to be prescriptive, some descriptive. I think it's both. There IS clearly a concept of "bad English", which is not the same as incomprehensible, though.

    I teach English to non-native English speakers, and I'm not going to teach my students to say "Where he at?".

    However, some of the mishmash of rules in English come from attempts to insert the rules of Latin into English.

  7. Re:Anti-Gay? on EA Defends Itself Against Thousands of Anti-Gay Letters · · Score: 1

    Few Christians argue that non-human animals have moral rules or penalties applied to them. So, Christians don't really care whether non-human animals "choose to be gay".

    (I am not a Christian.)

  8. Re:Anti-Gay? on EA Defends Itself Against Thousands of Anti-Gay Letters · · Score: 1

    Natural is a badly defined word. Living in houses is not "natural".

    While the current gay community promotes the idea of a biological cause for homosexuality, the Nazis did, too. The Nazis reaction to this view was not the one desired by the gay community.

    Natural is irrelevant to morality in current society, too. Sociopathy has biological causes, but we don't consider serial killing morally acceptable.

  9. Re:Well I say on EA Defends Itself Against Thousands of Anti-Gay Letters · · Score: 1

    disclaimer: I'm not a Christian, and while I have plenty of negative to say about the religion, I won't say it here.

    Christ hung out with sinners, for the purpose of showing them the error of their ways. He did so with compassion.

    Some Christians would not allow people to attend their church because they are concerned with "encouraging the sin". These Christians might find it acceptable for a gay person to attend their church, as long as they at least feel bad about being gay. Like, if they TRY to not give in to their desire.

  10. Re:Holy fuck on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 1

    Just thought of this. I think the bigger problem with "colored" is that it makes people "white/everyone else". Yellow and red are colors, too racially. And, as is mentioned in my other email and often ignored, so is white.

  11. Re:Holy fuck on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 1

    I don't think it is a double standard. The white slurs are considered insults and rude. But, I've never heard a white person get upset about them. They were created for that purpose, but they don't have the history necessary for people to really care. The word "nigger" has a lot of history(whites beating/killing blacks) associated with it-this history gives the word weight/context. If white people start getting upset about the use of the racial slurs, they will become stronger insults, and closer in treatment to the word "nigger".

    To me, someone expecting me to get angry about being called "cracker" seems funny. It's like someone yelling "White person! Bad!". Yes, I'm white. Your point? Oh, I'm bad. OK

    White people don't care about the slurs, so they are not taboo.
    Black people do care about the slurs, so they are taboo.

  12. Re:Holy fuck on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 2

    It's stupid from the reverse side, too. I've met quite a few South Africans. All the ones I've met have been white. But, if they move to the US, they become African-Americans?

    The only people I hear calling someone "African-American" are people worried about offending someone.

    I don't know what the situation was with "negro". It stopped being popular before I was born. It's intent seemed not to be negative.

    "Colored" is problematic because it shows a common sociological bias. The idea that people are "white by default". You take take a white person and color them, and they are "colored". For examples of this, consider how many shows that are prominently white discuss race. Consider the same with prominently black shows. And, consider the prominently white show that has the "very special episode" with a black character(often new) discussing race.

    "Nigger" was(and to a lesser extent is) a word used by whites to control/abuse blacks. This is why it is taboo for whites to use it. Since blacks are not on the same part of that history, there is disagreements among blacks about how/whether to use it. Some blacks use it similar to the way whites tend to use it-something like stupid, lazy, violent person(who is black). Some blacks think it is a negative word, and should be erased from our current vocabulary. Some blacks think if blacks control it and use it in a different way, it can remove the power of the word-for these people it means something like friend.

    Black is the standard term.

  13. Re:Few to admit it, but a lot of parents teach thi on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 1

    Oh, the kid crying-I don't think it was due to the parents. They seemed to react about the same to me as the fascinated kids. Well, one of those parents were saying "don't bother him". The kids were just interested(negatively or positively) in the different person.

  14. Re:Few to admit it, but a lot of parents teach thi on Internet Responds To Racist Article, Gets Author Fired · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I (adult white male) live in Taiwan. Very few whites or blacks here. I've had children very interested in me because I'm white. Just wanting to touch me-it also helps that I'm hairy. I've also had a child cry when I smiled at her. This is segregation, but only of the kind that exists because people don't move across the planet often.

  15. Re:Ah ! The old US of A on Ask Slashdot: Re-Entering the Job Market As a Software Engineer? · · Score: 1

    Illegal? Is that relevant, given that you probably have your graduation date on your resume? If you graduated college before the guy hiring you was born, you AREN'T 25.

  16. Re:New Atheism on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Like To Read? · · Score: 1

    1. It's good to understand people. Religion has affected the world a lot, and still does.
    2. It may have useful ideas in it. It's possible to like an idea without agreeing with it.
    3. It's good to know your enemy. (that's half joke)

  17. Re:New Atheism on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Like To Read? · · Score: 1

    I tend to like comparative religion. Karen Armstrong, Joseph Campbell for religion. I also like a lot of Zen stuff, but the things I like are often labelled philosophy.

    I also like the psychology of religion. I liked Jung, but think I need to reread it before I say I got enough out of it. Jung was a student of Freud, but not so absolutist about religion.

  18. SF/Fantasy/history/philosophy/religion/literature on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Like To Read? · · Score: 1

    I try to mix it up. I used to just read "what I felt like". But, I almost always wanted to read SF, sometimes fantasy. Now, I make sure to alternate between SF/fantasy and "other stuff". I also try to balance out "light" and "heavy".

    "Other stuff" includes history, philosophy, religion(mostly eastern), classics of literature, and generally things that have a strange point of view

    History: Just finished the second in a trilogy about the Third Reich by Richard Evans.

    Philosophy/(religion?): Currently reading a novel by Hermann Hesse. He usually writes a sort of Western view of Eastern philosophy/religion. This novel(Narcisuss and Goldmund) discusses a philosophy of duality, though maybe like Steppenwolf the main character may change his viewpoint.

    Classics of literature: most recent was Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov.

    "strange point of view stuff": while my taste in SF/fantasy tends toward this, the best example of it I can think of is Freakonomics. I like to get my mind blown.

    Science Fiction/Fantasy: I either like to laugh or get my mind blown. Books don't often do both. Currently reading Old Man's War by Scalzi. The main characters are all the same, otherwise ok. Last great one I read was Olympos by Simmons.

    My "light" tastes might be something like Pratchett. Some old school SF fits this, but a lot of old school SF writers can't do characterization. Some are too linear in plot development, too. My "light" is almost always SF/fantasy.

    My "heavy" might be something like Dostoyevsky/Frank Herbert.

  19. Re:New Atheism on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Like To Read? · · Score: 1

    I say this as an atheist. I've not read any of his books, but what I have read/watched of Dawkins's stuff on religion is pretty weak.

  20. Re:Neal Stephenson on Ask Slashdot: What Do You Like To Read? · · Score: 1

    I can't agree about Cryptonomicon. Stephenson seems to have a problem "ending" a book.It's a LOT longer than Snow Crash/Diamond Age, so it's a much bigger problem. So, I skipped Baroque Cycle.

    It might have been the style of novel, but I didn't really see that problem with Anathem.

  21. Re:Sounds like people need to fix thier names on Falsehoods Programmers Believe About Names · · Score: 5, Informative

    Chinese, written in pinyin, has numbers. Pinyin is how Chinese is typed. The numbers represent tones and every word in Chinese has a tone.

  22. Re:What about Official English? on Official Kanji Count Increasing Due To Electronics · · Score: 2

    I can't say about Japanese. I think they use a combination of kanji and an alphabet.

    But, with Chinese, there have been several systems(pinyins) created to use alphabets. Originally, it was meant to eventually replace kanji. Now, it's basically just used to show people how to pronounce the word. The reason it is not an effective replacement for kanji is because context is a LOT more important in Chinese than in English. Like, the word "shi4" has about 50 meanings. At least that's one reason.

    To avoid confusion, I'll mention that the "4" denotes tone. Tone is mostly used for emotions and to mark questions in English. In Chinese, EVERY word has a tone. "shi1" and "shi4" are completely unrelated words.

  23. Re:spin-offs are always awful on Why Are Video Game Movies So Awful? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but how many of those good movies are as good as the books? Usually, the original source material is better. It's a translation to an entirely different art form. Movies, books, and comic books, are at least similar in being mostly passive and linear media . So, the translation from mostly active and (AT LEAST less) linear is often difficult. Actually, look at a direct comparison, translations of books. If you get a bad translation of a book, it'll suck.

    With action movies/games, I'd think it'd be easier. Plot and characters are less important. If you focus mostly on the special effects and fight sequences, I'd think you'd be good.

  24. Re:Just a few points... on Stanford Robot Car Capable of Slide Parking · · Score: 1

    It makes some people feel free. Personally, I prefer the freedom to read while in a car/on a bus/whatever.

  25. Re:Not necessarily a wack-job... on Woman Tells State Judiciary Committee, "DoD Implanted A Microchip Inside Me" · · Score: 1

    I recall reading something about deposits of materials collecting commonly in your body over time. I thought the materials were usually metal, though.

    But, if you implant something into someone, why just glass? That doesn't transmit anything.