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User: ColdWetDog

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Comments · 14,132

  1. Re:The Navy sucks at negotiating on US Navy Sells 'Top Gun' Aircraft Carrier For One Penny · · Score: 1

    They used 'pristine' in an odd context. Possibly 'historically pristine', but certainly not mechanically pristine.

    The Ranger had been in pristine condition, but for a week in August volunteers from other naval museums were allowed to remove items to improve their ships.

    .

    Flying over it makes it obvious it's not in great shape. Hell, the engines don't work.

  2. Re: for what i'm paying in taxes and mortgage on US Navy Sells 'Top Gun' Aircraft Carrier For One Penny · · Score: 1

    I'da payed substantially more to be towed out to the gulfstream and spent a few years trying to keep it from sinking.
    The only thing stupider than the US government is the US citizen, notwithstanding stupid illegal aliens tha are too stupid to make it in their own fucked up countries and think it's actually better here.
    What group of slimeball politicians got paid under the tablefor this latest episode of fuckme-imamerican?

    Well nitwit, you could have bid on it. You generally need to be a telecommunications maganate before you go out buying aircraft carriers and parking them in the middle of the ocean.

  3. Re:here is how it works on Federal Judge: Facebook Must Face Suit For Scanning Messages · · Score: 1

    I have 0 likes. I think that ratio is DIVINE!

    Goof. You need at least approximately* 16** likes to be divine.

    (* Don't get all hung up on significant figures. **Assuming integer values of likes.)

  4. Pity the archeologists on Inside China's 'Christmas Factory' Town, Yiwu · · Score: 3, Funny

    From thousands of years in the future (assuming we get that far). Walking through post apocalyptic sand dunes and finding some ancient city on the (new) coast line. Excitedly digging into years and years of old civilization.

    To discover this?

    They'd be scarred for life.

  5. Re:Motive on Did North Korea Really Attack Sony? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Worse than we got? A company that everyone loves to hate got embarrassed. Sony will likely lose a bunch of money. The FBI will get Beltway Cred for it's great Cyber sleuthing work. Hundreds of security consultants will get some nice Christmas bonuses. A few people will have their lives messed up.

    What are we supposed to do to NK? Give them a stocking full of coal?

  6. Re:Patriotic to NOT watch it instead? on Sony To Release the Interview Online Today; Apple Won't Play Ball · · Score: 3, Insightful

    North Korea is a country who:

    - brutalizes the majority of it's citizens for the economic and political benefit of a few.
    - threatens other countries with nuclear weapons.
    - threatens other countries with Internet hacking.
    - uses propaganda and bizarre statements for political gain.
    - deifies it leaders and makes a joke of the political process.

    Oh. Wait.

  7. Re:Nonstop action? Whattabore. on "Star Trek 3" To Be Helmed By "Fast & Furious" Franchise Director Justin Lin · · Score: 1

    TL;DR

  8. Re:Action movies are boring. on "Star Trek 3" To Be Helmed By "Fast & Furious" Franchise Director Justin Lin · · Score: 1

    The neat thing about the freighter crews as they were depicted in the shows, was that the crews were often families that would live and reproduce on the ship, spending their entire lives in space on a fairly small and poorly-armed vessel. They would occasionally take on new blood from outside their family unit (this helps combat the immediate idea of gene pool degeneration), but the majority of the crew would be biological relatives.

    These crews were much less idealistic than Starfleet personnel, and were very much loyal to their families above and beyond any set of ideals. No doubt they'd encounter all kinds of sticky situations in space with pirates, Klingons, and even Starfleet, and have to defend their family, defend their ship, make ends meet, and survive.

    They were Moties !

  9. Re:Action movies are boring. on "Star Trek 3" To Be Helmed By "Fast & Furious" Franchise Director Justin Lin · · Score: 1

    Um, OK, but in the ORIGINAL Star Trek, the Captain, First Officer, Medical Officer and perhaps some hot looking Ensign would beam down to unspeakable horrors on some random planet in T-shirts and yoga pants.

    How sensible was that?

  10. Re:and that's how we got the world of FIREFLY on Serious Economic Crisis Looms In Russia, China May Help · · Score: 2

    Or not. The Chinese leadership isn't as all powerful as some make it out to be. They are skating a very fine line between their own interests and the goals and aspirations of an enormous population. Right now, they are keeping the population relatively comfortable and happy by reasonable economic growth. That llows them to continue their current attempts at World Domination. If that falters, then so does most of the goodwill and support the Chinese population gives to the government.

    In that sense, it may be more representative that the situation in the US.

  11. Re:voicemail to email on The Slow Death of Voice Mail · · Score: 2

    My Cell transcribes all voicemail to text

    let's set so double the killer delete select all

  12. Re:Hahahahahahahahaha LOL on How Venture Capitalist Peter Thiel Plans To Live 120 Years · · Score: 1

    But exactly why do all these systems start breaking down? I agree we're not getting particularly close to 120 year lifespans with our current approach, which is tinkering with treatments for the ailments of old age. But I suspect there actually is a simple magic bullet somewhere - something to stop us getting old.

    I doubt it. Nature doesn't work that way. Getting to 120 is going to take a LOT of engineering. You are going to have to manipulate the immune system in a fundementally more complex way than we're doing know. You will need to have better organ transplantation and you're going to have understand the brain. You're going to have to understand human biology at a much deeper level that we currently do. And you will be swamped with details.

    Aging isn't just one thing. It's the pileup of a lifetime of little things going wrong until the bridge collapses.

    You may be able to DELAY aging with some sort of magic bullet but that is likely to have a whole raft of unintended consequences. Not to mention, you're going have to start on it when you're about 20 years old.

  13. Re:Bear repellent? on TSA Has Record-Breaking Haul In 2014: Guns, Cannons, and Swords · · Score: 1

    OK. I can see cannon or swords as weapons. That's the point of them. But why is bear repellent a weapon? Are bears secretly part of the anti-terrorist program?

    A bottle of bear spray is 10 oz of 2% capsaicin. If that accidentally or purposely was released it could incapacitate an entire plane. Given that there is no reasonable use for said spray while flying, it makes abundant sense to pack it away so the chances of release are minimized. All it takes is one half crazed passenger to put a whole lot of people in serious jeopardy. And we all know that a typical flight carries more than one half crazed person.

  14. Re:And how many were terrorists? Oh, right, zero. on TSA Has Record-Breaking Haul In 2014: Guns, Cannons, and Swords · · Score: 1

    Leaking gas for one thing. Same reason you shouldn't carry propane stoves, gas fueled lanterns or any number of potentially hazardous devices.

  15. Re:And how many were terrorists? Oh, right, zero. on TSA Has Record-Breaking Haul In 2014: Guns, Cannons, and Swords · · Score: 1

    In Soviet Russia all pilots were armed, and rightly so.

    Citation needed.

    Well, they were often loaded. Not sure about the armed part.

  16. Re:You forgot something... on Dish Pulls Fox News, Fox Business Network As Talks Break Down · · Score: 1

    For great justice.

  17. Re:Netcraft confirms it. on What Happens To Society When Robots Replace Workers? · · Score: 1

    I'd suggest getting your kids to learn:

    1) Organic Chemistry (think Mad Men) - drugs will never go out of style.
    2) Weed farming (ibid)
    3) Mushroom cultivation (ibid)
    4) Bulk chemical engineering (ibid)
    5) Psychology and counseling techniques.

    It's just a matter of being ahead of the curve.

  18. Re:We should have done this decades ago on Boeing and BlackBerry Making a Self-Destructing Phone · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, they've thought about that. Most modern high performance weapons need maintenance and spare parts. Get on our shit list, no maintenance and no spare parts. It's either us or the Israelis (who somehow manage to manufacture high performance US weapon systems in their entirety).

    Ask the Iranians. Their 'modern' Air Force has lots and lots of hanger queens. They've gone to making model RC planes since that is the best they can do on their own.

  19. Re:"But it can be circumvented!" on Boeing and BlackBerry Making a Self-Destructing Phone · · Score: 1

    Kaboom. It's the earth shattering kaboom.

    Bursting in flames is so 19th Century.

  20. Re:Sure... on Schneier Explains How To Protect Yourself From Sony-Style Attacks (You Can't) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Really. This. How hard is it NOT to flame people on a COMPANY EMAIL system? Even if some hacker doesn't get to you, your boss or some HR flunky might. Leave the immature conversations to places like Slashdot. It's what we do ....

  21. Re:Sure... on Schneier Explains How To Protect Yourself From Sony-Style Attacks (You Can't) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every. Fucking. Hospital. Everywhere.

    The only thing that keeps this from being a problem is that the gory details of most people's lives are really not interesting to anybody and they are hard to monetize. I would imagine that hospitals and clinics around Hollywood have been hit multiple times. If you are a 'high value target', ie, nobody here on Slashdot, I'd be worried.

    Very worried.

  22. Re:I already thought this was the case on Quantum Physics Just Got Less Complicated · · Score: 0

    Ah, the intuitive AC. One course in physics and he is light years beyond rabble of academic researchers who have spent their entire careers on these intellectual dead ends.

    A Nobel for you, sir! A hear there is one floating around, waiting for the highest bidder.

  23. Re:Genetic changes as a result of development on Scientists Discover That Exercise Changes Your DNA · · Score: 1

    Kinda depends on how you look at Lamarkian inheritance. While not the major driver in evolution, epigenetic changes (through, for example, DNA methylation) can do exactly what Lamark hypothesized.

  24. Re:Summary needs to bring up the interesting parts on Scientists Discover That Exercise Changes Your DNA · · Score: 3, Informative

    True, this isn't particularly earth shattering, but you are incorrect in stating that there is no change in DNA. Methylation covalently (stably) alters DNA. So it actually does create a different nucleotide, one that is recognized by the cell as different from the original. This COULD result in germ cell (ie, heritable) changes.

    There is absolutely no data to suggest that this particular set of methylation events has anything to do with reproduction or reproductive fitness, but mechanistically, it's possible. We are still pretty much working out the importance and scope of DNA methylation. In this particular instance, it is not at all clear that it does anything except alter gene expression - and we know that exercise causes gene expression changes. Those new biceps didn't just magically pop into being (unless you are photoshopped).

  25. Re:What does this mean...? on Scientists Discover That Exercise Changes Your DNA · · Score: 2

    Not quite. Sperm (in humans) are stored in the epididymus.

    This post brought to you by the National Association of Biological Pedants.