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User: Twinbee

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Comments · 2,246

  1. Re: Work with cloned mice on Chinese Doctor Performs Head Transplants On Mice · · Score: 1

    I believe in souls/spirits/whatever, but some kind of god? Neah... probably not. At least not one who interacts with anyone, but probably not anyway.

    So we have this weird universe where all these soul thingies are eternal. No god needed.

  2. Re:Wipe your mouth, Slashdot on How Does Musk's Government Funding Compare To Competitors? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You're right. People aren't appreciative *enough* of him.

    Let's see. Creates the best car ever, creates rockets for fun and as insurance to potentially save humanity by going to Mars, going to create rockets at least half the price as competitors, and potentially 100x cheaper, wants to save the Earth from CO2 and is beginning to do it, amazing engineer, helped create Paypal (when it was good), open-sourced patents, envisaged design for hyperloop, building the largest battery factory ever made by an order of magnitude or more, wanted to originally research supercaps (great area to study!), cares about quality rather than just money. Put every last penny he had at his own cost in order to save Tesla and SpaceX. Speaks frankly during interviews.

    No one like him.

  3. Re:Wipe your mouth, Slashdot on How Does Musk's Government Funding Compare To Competitors? · · Score: 1

    He's possibly the most creative, intelligent, thoughtful, forward-thinking person on the planet. For so many reasons. Your knowledge of him must be minimal.

  4. Re:A single unified OS on Microsoft To Release Low-Cost Windows 10 With Bing Branding · · Score: 1

    That XKCD would need to be modified slightly for the success story of UTF8, despite the countless text formats that preceded it.

  5. A single unified OS on Microsoft To Release Low-Cost Windows 10 With Bing Branding · · Score: 1

    The computer OS is too important to be left to market forces and fickle managers.

    There should be a worldwide effort to create a single free unified OS (with a metadata filesystem, and 100% scaleable GUI!) for everyone, which dumps the bloat and legacy code of old OSs (including Linux) and starts afresh. It won't happen now, or even soon, but sometime within the next 1000 years it is almost definite.

    Such an OS won't drastically change over the years, but keep with a consistent theme (no flatland design!), only changing if a consortium of thousands of the brightest software engineers, mathematicians, scientists, and designers agree it's for the best. Everyone writes software for it, and there are no worries of cross-porting or compatibility issues. All software will be completely self-contained (no external libraries, or preference files scattered over the OS), and 32 bit would be a thing of the past. Searching for files and programs takes the OS less than 0.05 seconds in all cases.

    I would dig that OS.

  6. What you say is a fair point, but I also despise the opposite direction where everything is locked down. I'm impressed Windows allows you a program to change the colour of the screen for instance, or tinker with basic window moving/resize functionality.

  7. Re:A lot of inertia on How Tesla Batteries Will Force Home Wiring To Go Low Voltage · · Score: 1

    Actually I dream, but the other way - making the power higher. Who knows what kind of devices we could have if 480v was common.

  8. Re:Current? Fat cables? on How Tesla Batteries Will Force Home Wiring To Go Low Voltage · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't the US just keep to a single 240V for all power outlets, rather than complicate things unnecessarily?

  9. Finally on YouTube Live Streams Now Support HTML5 Playback and 60fps Video · · Score: 1

    Amazing to think that we're finally catching on to the 60fps standard that we had decades ago.

    It's only a matter of time before 120fps+ (which can look a lot better than 60fps) itself becomes the norm. Having a black screen inserted between every 1/120th frame (to make a pseudo 240fps) would help blurriness etc. even more.

  10. Re:It's not that great on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    That's a problem with those keyboards then. If had my own way, I'd have a single press key for the curly braces, or perhaps move to square brackets instead.

  11. Re:Verbosity is easy? on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    A future programming language would simply assume UTF-8 from the start, and not worry about trying to support the other encodings. Such a language would have a lot less bloat attached to it.

  12. Re:Yes & the sheer amount of existing code/fra on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    Having not yet touched Haskell, I love the terseness of the Haskell example. To me it feels like a high level function, like as if it could be rewritten:

    items = [1, 15, 27, 3, 54]
    result = items.filter(<, 10)

    Perhaps all Haskell functionality can be converted like this?

  13. Re:Yes & the sheer amount of existing code/fra on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    I've often thought about a programming language where you only need to write the smallest possible amount of code to achieve what you're trying to do. And have it clear too (so not Perl style).

    No bloat, no header files, no semicolons at the end of lines, swap functionality of && with & and || with | (colour coding them too), power-of symbol (^), terse Haskell-style functionality, and even no forced declarations (the IDE can colour code variables according to whether they're int, double, string etc. automatically, and the scope is automatically defined as the outermost appearance of the variable). The compiler would do ALL the hard work to optimize the program.

  14. Re:Yes & the sheer amount of existing code/fra on The Reason For Java's Staying Power: It's Easy To Read · · Score: 1

    The former is obviously much better. It's not just better to read but also to write without the mind veering off from solving the problem at hand.

    Those who harp on about verbosity being a good thing don't realize how good things can be.

  15. Re:3.3kW is not right on GM's Exec. Chief Engineer For Electric Vehicles Pam Fletcher Answers Your Question · · Score: 1

    3.3kW is absolutely pathetic. Consider that Tesla's supercharger is 120kW, almost 40x more powerful. Even their home chargers can be 3-4x more powerful than that.

  16. Re:The one question on GM's Exec. Chief Engineer For Electric Vehicles Pam Fletcher Answers Your Question · · Score: 1

    This keeps being repeated, but why then is the Tesla Model S so good looking (and its aerodynamic efficiency is one of the highest)?

  17. Re:Gee, I wonder on How We'll Someday Be Able To See Past the Cosmic Microwave Background · · Score: 2

    Well it's a very interesting topic. Did someone else also talk about this topic?

  18. Re:What if I want the ad fueled web to die? on Editor-in-Chief of the Next Web: Adblockers Are Immoral · · Score: 1

    Even though I don't block ads personally, I think I understand where he's coming from. Basically, he thinks he's not affected by advertising, so showing him ads is a waste of the publisher's/advertiser's money. Indeed, logically if that's true, then it is a waste of resources showing that advert to him, and obviously it's bad for him too, so lose-lose.

    Indeed it could be argued that only 'less techie' people respond to ads, and that 'intelligent' people aren't vulnerable to them. I don't 100% agree with that notion, though I can sympathize with those who think that way.

  19. Re:As An Engineer... on Wind Turbines With No Blades · · Score: 1

    Any idea why they can't scale these things up to produce nuclear-power plant levels of energy? Imagine a giant helix, 100x-1000x bigger than the ones in that link.

  20. Re:Weakness on Third Bangladeshi Blogger Murdered In As Many Months · · Score: 1

    "respect everyone's religion"

    There's your first mistake.

  21. Re:Yes. on Will Robot Cars Need Windows? · · Score: 1

    That looks too good for commerical airlines to adopt. Too futuristic, and not 'practical' enough, only good aesthetics which don't matter, yeah.

  22. Re:if I am dead on The Challenge of Web Hosting Once You're Dead · · Score: 1

    No I meant the stuff you had produced while you were alive. Keeping it online after you were gone may be beneficial.

  23. Re:if I am dead on The Challenge of Web Hosting Once You're Dead · · Score: 2

    Perhaps from an unselfish perspective, assuming you had something to offer humanity...

  24. Re:How one drives is a big part of the story on 25 Percent of Cars Cause 90 Percent of Air Pollution · · Score: 1

    Buy a Tesla, and you too will become part of the crowd which accelerates at every given opportunity ;)

  25. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 2

    It's definitely kW. Even on the following site, it mentioned the kW power limit. We're talking in terms of power remember, not energy.

    http://gizmodo.com/tesla-batte...