Slashdot Mirror


User: ColdWetDog

ColdWetDog's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
14,132
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 14,132

  1. Re:That'll show 'em! on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 4, Funny

    The TSA's next step:

    "Thank you sir, now, would you please start Crysis for me?"

  2. Re:Actually makes good sense on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    Eureka! The real reason Apple discontinued the 17 inch MacBook Pro!

    And you guys all think that Apple isn't looking out for you.

  3. Re:No it makes no sense at all on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    you are pretty stupid to make this comment, in short you will be in a no fly list, and every time you go through the border will be anally inspected... twice.

    You need to discuss this statement with your therapist.

    You have some issues here.

  4. Re:This is scary on Consciousness On-Off Switch Discovered Deep In Brain · · Score: 1

    Na, just a few little wires.

    Whatcouldpossiblygowrong?

  5. Re:Sports HRMS on FDA: We Can't Scale To Regulate Mobile Health Apps · · Score: 1

    What I find astounding is that the FDA doesn't even try to regulate Electronic Health Records. Large, expensive, complex programs that do monitor and help diagnose medical conditions. I'm much more leery of EHRs than random iPhone apps.

    It would be a major challenge to do this, but you might actually make a difference.

  6. Re:Another child making unsupported claims on 15-Year-Old Developing a 3D Printer 10x Faster Than Anything On the Market · · Score: 3, Funny

    Another future CEO. Just great.

  7. Re:How dare they on Study: Whales Are Ecosystem "Engineers" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, there are quite a number of regulations concerning human activity in and around whales. Come to think of it, if engineers had those same regulations apply to them (mostly don't bother the whale, stay at least 100 yards away, no nearby explosions and such), then engineers might have a better chance of getting something useful accomplished.

  8. Re:Not surprising. on When Beliefs and Facts Collide · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Humans aren't a rational animal. They are a rationalizing animal.
    -- Heinlein.

  9. Re:It's Okay on When Beliefs and Facts Collide · · Score: 1, Funny

    No, in this case, we just laugh at you. You're too obnoxious to ignore.

    Nobody wins in this game.

  10. Yep. on Study: Whales Are Ecosystem "Engineers" · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Large apex predators change their environment. Change the numbers of the apex predators and the environment changes.

    - So far, so good. Ecology 101.

    "Engineers of the ocean" - now we're starting to anthropomorphize. Engineering, at least in the classic sense of human engineering, is a directed, (generally) intelligent effort to change the environment. Now, cetaceans are very likely intelligent (at least smarter than the average Internet user by all accounts), but the TFS doesn't give any indications that the whales are doing this purposely to change things, they're just being apex predators.

    Grrr. I hate stuff like this. Perhaps the paywalled article is better, but TFS does not impress.

  11. Re: This and more on Are Tethers the Answer To the Safety Issues of Follow-Me Drone Technology? · · Score: 2

    I see you've not been over to YouTube recently.

  12. Re:Wild West Yahoos on Are Tethers the Answer To the Safety Issues of Follow-Me Drone Technology? · · Score: 1

    Gun control is using two hands. If you hit the target with your 9mm, neither the bullet nor the target are going anywhere.

    Though we both agree that a .223 is pretty useless. Overkill for short range defense against humans, woefully underpowered for Zombie attacks. It's really the 12 gauge shotgun that is your friend - safe, accurate (well, you don't need to be really accurate), effective.

  13. Re:Saw the last launch of the Saturn V on NASA Approves Production of Most Powerful Rocket Ever · · Score: 1

    I'll bet you're fun at parties.

    Oh. Wait.

  14. Re:I dont see a problem here on NASA Approves Production of Most Powerful Rocket Ever · · Score: 2

    But from Saturn forward it's been pure as the driven snow....

    Perhaps as pure as snow falling from the skies in Bejing. Both the Atlas and Delta systems are based on old military hardware. The Shuttle was partly Air Force. And since the United Space Alliance (USA! USA!) is Boeing and Lockheed which, together, form a substantial part of the Military Industrial Complex, the difference between 'civilian' and military is basically the paint job.

  15. Re:Actually won't buff out, needs to be totalled on Train Derailment Dumps Two 737 Fuselages Into Clark Fork River · · Score: 1

    You might want to 'buff up' your humor detector. Appears to be a bit rusty.

  16. Re:They used to build them in Renton on Train Derailment Dumps Two 737 Fuselages Into Clark Fork River · · Score: 1

    Speaking of reading disabilities ... did you catch the part where the Wichita plants uses your darling Union workers?

  17. Re:Only in America on Train Derailment Dumps Two 737 Fuselages Into Clark Fork River · · Score: 2

    I think you meant to say 'lower water content'. Alcohol is an azeotrope and is hard to get past 95% purity. Once you do, and you open it to air, poof, the water gets absorbed into the alcohol and you're back where you started from. Pretty expensive stuff.

  18. Re: Why are the fuselage apple green colored ? on Train Derailment Dumps Two 737 Fuselages Into Clark Fork River · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That stuff is pretty amazing. I have a number of bits of aluminum plate and extrusions scrounged from the Reserve Property Center (Where Boeing sold surplus parts and equipment including entire landing gear assemblies - it was a fantastic place to stagger around and become delusional about what you could build. Unfortunately, the MBAs shut it down a number of years ago. Very, very sad. )

    Anyway. the coating withstands scratching, denting, bending and pretty much everything short of a TIG welder. I wish there were ways to get that coating applied in one off numbers for various home projects.

  19. Re:How fitting on Study: People Would Rather Be Shocked Than Be Alone With Their Thoughts · · Score: 5, Funny

    tl;dr

  20. Re:I can't imagine... on How Did Those STAP Stem Cell Papers Get Accepted In the First Place? · · Score: 2

    According to TFA, Nature did run it through a similar database. No obvious plagiarism was found. It turned out that the journal she originally published in was not in the database. There are one hell of a lot of journals out there.

  21. Re:We should expect some wingnuts to say... on How Did Those STAP Stem Cell Papers Get Accepted In the First Place? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Exactly. This.

    The road to scientist's Hell is paved with journal articles that eventually have been shown to be incorrect. Just because it's published doesn't mean it's gospel. It is Science after all, not religion - even if half of Slashdot seems to think they're one in the same.

  22. Re:The same way many global warming papers got pub on How Did Those STAP Stem Cell Papers Get Accepted In the First Place? · · Score: 2

    And the end result of this is that Nature, along with other high profile journals, will continue to improve the peer review system. Just like they taught us in Science School. Experiment, look at results, repeat....

    Furthermore, peer review isn't all that 'vaunted' - we've known for a long time that bad science gets through peer review. It's just one semi-convenient method of screening. The ultimate screening tool is repeating the experiment. That isn't practical in many cases. Although in this case, it should really have come to mind since Nature had recently asked another researcher to do just that for a less 'extraordinary' result.

  23. Like the American, Vacanti, who started the whole thing.

  24. Re:Parents are all guilty on Austrian Tor Exit Node Operator Found Guilty As an Accomplice · · Score: 4, Funny

    for giving birth to evil people. Arrest them all!

    To be fair, the birth of each child comes with an 18 year + sentence, often with a similar sentence for the accomplice.

  25. Re:Should probably be locked up on Judge Frees "Cannibal Cop" Who Shared His Fantasies Online · · Score: 1

    Didn't he use a police database to look for women? Didn't he browse the web looking for ways to cook human flesh?
    Fuck this guy.

    What ever floats your boat, dude.

    Seriously, Timothy - just why is this on Slashdot? Are you channeling something? Is this a hint? Are we trying to compete with the New York Daily News?
    Does this actually matter?