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User: hcpxvi

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  1. >> You've never been down to Georgia, I take it.
    >> I'd bet it against your soul, because I think I'm better than you.
    > What does that even mean?
    You might be trolling, phantomfive, but just in case you are not, I'm New Around Here is quoting a song called "The devil came down to Georgia" by the Charley Daniels Band.

  2. Re:Beer saved the World! on German Brewers Warn Fracking Could Hurt Beer · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was mostly what the British called "short beer". It was pretty watery and had just enough alcohol to kill much of the bacteria.
    Nearly. ISTR it was called "small beer" not "short beer". Even modern beer doesn't contain enough alcohol to kill bacteria; the important thing is that to make beer you had to boil it, which kills off any waterborne bacteria that were in your water supply. So up until the advent of treated water supplies you might well get cholera or dysentry from your water supply, but not from your beer.

  3. Re:Skype doesn't work on Android on Microsoft Says Google Trying To Undermine Windows Phone · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Support for (traditional, non-Android) Linux is also dodgy in Skype, with the Linux versions of the software being a long way behind the Windows version. I am not naive enough to think that Google are non-evil, but if MS can get away with using Skype as a lock-in lever for Windows, I don't have much sympathy with their whine that Google are doing the same thing with YouTube.

  4. Re:Ugly on New DRM-Free Label Announced · · Score: 1

    That logo is hideous. Who's going to be putting that on their packaging?
    At least it doesn't look like two people performing an act unsuitable for discussion on a family website ( See here for the canonical example). You can pay graphic designers a LOT more money than was spent on the DRM Free logo and still get something that is astonishingly bad.

  5. Re:Missing Plotting Tools on Julia Language Seeks To Be the C For Numerical Computing · · Score: 1

    But the biggest pluses of Matlab is being able to plot your results, and work interactively from the command line
    This. Precisely this. If Julia can reasonably rapidly acquire plotting capabilities that approach those of R (and hence are much better than those of MATLAB) then it may have some traction. If it remains the case that you have to dump your results out of Julia and use another tool to plot them, then you are better off using R/MATLAB/Octave/IDL/SciLab/Yorick for everything except the most number-crunchingly intense tasks. And you would probably do _those_ in a traditional compiled language anyway.

  6. Re:turning data into a compelling visualization on A Taxonomy of Visualization Techniques · · Score: 1

    Usually ones with "taxonomy" in the title are doubly tedious.
    ... beaten only by those with the word "ontology" in the title.

  7. it's the film that is at 11 on Leaked Heartland Institute Documents Reveal Opposition To Science · · Score: 1

    Apparently, in the distant past, TV announcers in the USA would use the phrase "Film at 11" to mean that the film that was normally on at 10pm, after the 9pm news, would be an hour later tonight, as momentous events required an extra hour of news coverage. Hence the non-sarcastic use of "Film at 11" to mean "That's big news" and the sarcastic use meaning "That is not really news at all."

  8. Re:C? on Filmmakers Reviving Sci-fi By Going Old School · · Score: 2

    C-film: a new spermicidal contraceptive.
    New? I remember it being new in the 1980s. I also remember it being demonstrated to be jolly unreliable, before (I hasten to add) I had any reason to be involved in the use of such a product. Keep wearing those condoms, kids!

  9. Re:Summer is Over in North America on Ask Slashdot: Science Sights To See? · · Score: 1

    Presumably "this summer" means the next summer to occur, i.e. summer 2012. But if they are taking a road trip across the States, then maybe they are not wussies. Such a trip is perfectly possible in the winter. The wife and I drove from Mississippi to California and back over Christmas 1987, in our '76 Dodge dart, taking in the Hoover dam, Carlsbad, the Grand Canyon, San Francisco etc. Meteor crater was officially closed when we visited it, so we drove down the snowy road and hiked up to the rim. Never mind the museum, it is worth just looking at the big hole in the ground.

  10. Observatories, caves ... on Ask Slashdot: Science Sights To See? · · Score: 1

    If you are in LA, drive up the mountain to the Mount Wilson Observatory in honour of Edwin Hubble. If you like observatories you can do the one in Griffith Park in the same day (if it isn't closed for refurbishment). It has appeared in at least one Star Trek episode. If in the southern deserts, visit the Hoover dam and Carlsbad Caverns. In San Francisco, I thought the exploratorium wasn't bad as science museums go.

  11. Re:hardware solutions & dumbing down the world on Jaguar Recalls 18,000 Cars Over Major Software Fault · · Score: 1

    I also don't think that driving without power steering is a hazard.
    Indeed. My Ford focus dumped its power steering fluid during a long drive. I was able to keep going; the only hard part was parking at the end of the trip. Once you are up to about 20mph you hardly even notice that the power steering is b0rked.

  12. Re:My car has a fail-safe device... on Jaguar Recalls 18,000 Cars Over Major Software Fault · · Score: 2

    Not only that, but manual transmission cars sold in the US often have the bizzare feature that the headlights go off if you put the handbrake on. How are you supposed to do a hill start in the dark, for goodness' sake?

  13. Re:A little late on Epic Geomagnetic Storm Erupts · · Score: 1

    Not an Android app, nor for Canada. But UK readers might like to know that they can get email alerts from http://aurorawatch.lancs.ac.uk/ Not that they are a lot of use if it is cloudy, as it was last night.

  14. Re:Perspectives from a British CS graduate on British CS Majors Doing Badly In the Jobs Market · · Score: 1

    In Britain this is what is known as bollocks.
    I don't think so. My experience suggests that Sosigenes' post is rather perceptive and that the AC parent has (a) not had much contact with the higher education system since he graduated and (b) has a bit of a chip on his shoulder. AC may be right to whinge about clueless recent graduates who know nothing. But Sosigenes correctly identifies why there are so many bad graduates around. it is all down to the belief that the Blair-era govenments had that just because it was a good idea in the 1970s to increase University participation from 8% to 20% [1] it must necessarily follow that it is a good idea to increase it again from 40% to 50%. As a result, we are now wasting large amounts of money (taxpayers' and the students' own) sending people to bottom of the barrel universities to get meaningless qualifications. Just recently I have noticed people asking what a University degree is actually for, what sort of person can benefit from it and what other career paths exist. And about bloody time.
    Of course, AC is right that snobbery needs to be beaten out of people ASAP. No-one is impressed per se by the fact that you went to Oxbridgeperialstolchesterburgh rather than an ex-polytechnic. But the fact remains that if you went to one of those places and did well there then a lot was expected of you and you achieved it. If you went to City University of Scuzzborough (formerly Scuzzborough Poly) you may well have excelled and be a good job candidate. But you will be a very different person from the majority of your classmates.

    [1] All statistics and dates are made up. But they give a general impression of what actually happened

  15. Re:Just like laptops! on The Quest For an EV Fast-Charge Standard · · Score: 1

    They didn't all agree, just ask Monsieur Diesel.
    I think you will find that he was Herr Diesel (although he was born in Paris).

  16. Re:Ford Trimotor on Ex-Board Member Says HP Is Committing 'Corporate Suicide' · · Score: 1, Informative

    I could give a shit
    You mean you couldn't give a shit. Your homework is to watch:
    David Mitchell's soapbox (series 2 episode 2)

  17. Your canal next? on Google's Amazon River Street View Project · · Score: 1

    I look forward to the day when the floating googlemobiles have been all round the canal system of England and I can work my way up Foxton staircase (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxton_Locks) without leaving my desk.

  18. Golga-frincham-tastic on DARPA To Sponsor R&D For Interstellar Travel · · Score: 1

    At last we will be able to get rid of all of those useless hairdressers, telephone sanitisers and middle management types.

  19. Re:Circumventing? on Jupiter-Sized Alien Planet Is Darkest Ever (Barely) Seen · · Score: 2

    Surely they mean "orbiting"? "Circling" even? But "circumventing"?
    I was about to make the same point, but the OED gives several meaning for "circumvent", one of which is "To go round, make the circuit of." Still, it is not the way that most people use the word; I think we can conclude that TFA is not written by one of the web's better science journalists.

  20. Re:How about #000000 on Jupiter-Sized Alien Planet Is Darkest Ever (Barely) Seen · · Score: 2

    Is it darker than #000000?
    Nope, they say it reflects "less than 1% of the light falling onto it". So it could be as light as #020202 (but not #030303).

  21. Re:People still boot up? on The Death of Booting Up · · Score: 1

    I've been using linux for almost a decade so I really don't the state of other OS's
    I think you accidentally the entire OS market (or most of it, anyway).

  22. Re:MPs? on UK Taxpayers' Money Getting Wasted On IT Spending · · Score: 1

    Members of Parliament in this context.

  23. PAL? RTFA. on The Uzebox: an Open Source Hardware Games Console · · Score: 1

    If you read the article you will note that a supplier is soon to release a European version that outputs the RGB directly and which can be connected to the SCART input on your PAL TV.

  24. Re:sleezeball on Google Yanks Several Emulators From App Store · · Score: 1

    Wait a minute, I thought that the drug in the jug was the pill from the till. Or was that in the gateau from the chateau? Maybe I'm just being distracted by the thought of Vikki Michelle in WWII-era silk nightwear ...

  25. Re:The end is obviosly near on Oracle's Android Claims Cut By 98% · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nonono --- the end will be near when Slashdot's fortune generator gets un-stuck and shows something other than that annoying Matt Welsh quote. (And when I get some mod points.)