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User: neltana

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  1. Re:The readability seems to be questionable. on Stanford's Authoritative Alternative To Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    The fact that there may be other elements besides the sign that influence whether or not parking is truly allowed is not the point. The point is that the sign "No parking between 7pm and 7am" is implicitly telling you that parking IS allowed between 7am and 7pm.

    Is the sign giving you details about what type of parking is allowed? No, it is not. Could other signs offer more or even contradictory information about parking? Yes, certainly. Could the sign be completely and totally wrong in both the explicit and implicit information it conveys? Absolutely!

    The phrase "the exception proves the rule" is not referring to mathematical proof that a rule exists and is valid. It is referring to the fact that we can deduce that the writer of the sign had an underlying rule in mind because of how they wrote the sign. We may, of course, be wrong...our understanding of the sign may be faulty, the sign writer may not have intended it as an exception. However, IF the writer did intend it as an exception, then our deduction must be correct--the writer MUST have had an underlying rule in mind.

    Human communication contains gaps and unspoken assumptions--especially when it comes to norms. We don't tend to explicitly state what "everybody knows." However, this unstated information makes it very hard to have a rigorous discussion of human knowledge and behavior.

    Thus, we are often left in the position where we need to explicitly state what "everybody knows." This can be quite difficult, since, sometimes, we are looking across time and outside of our cultural context--we aren't privvy to what a given speaker assumed his or her listeners shared as common knowledge. How can we find and delineate this information? Well, one useful way to identify unspoken norms is to look at stated exceptions to these norms.

    Is this a useful thing to do? Well, that is like asking "Is division useful?" It depends on what question you are trying to answer and the type of analysis you are undertaking. It isn't hard to imagine someone misusing division to come up with an answer that is wrong or at least not useful. However, we know that division can also yield a useful answer. Similarly, there are problem domains where an analysis of unspoken norms, conducted carefully and properly, can yield useful results. It can also yield garbage if misapplied.

  2. Re:The readability seems to be questionable. on Stanford's Authoritative Alternative To Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    Either your lecturer is using "the exception proves the rule" improperly, or you should pay more attention during those "blah blah blahs." A sign that said "Emergency vehicles may use breakdown lane" implies that non-emergency vehicles cannot...the fact that the sign writer felt the need to state the exception implies there was an underlying rule or norm that was being excepted (the sign writer would still be being needlessly obscure, of course).

    For example:

    cop: you can't park there!

    me: Yes I can, the sign says "No Parking on Sundays"

    cop: But today isn't Sunday!

    me: Right, but the sign is the exception that proves the rule. "No parking on Sunday" implies parking is allowed on other days.

    cop: Oh...okay, you have a tail light out. Here's a ticket.

  3. Spoiler Alert on Wikipedia Reveals Secret of 'The Mousetrap' · · Score: 1

    The play's twist is, of course, that Agatha Christie has been dead the whole time!

  4. State-of-the-Art Swimming Pool? on Los Angeles Unveils $578 Million Public School · · Score: 5, Funny

    I just have to ask...what is the state-of-the-art when it comes to swimming pools? I kind of thought we had that nailed down years ago. What, do they fill them with ferrofluids or some space age gel now?

  5. This may merely be an allocation scheme on Internal Costs Per Gigabyte — What Do You Pay? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What you may be seeing, especially if you are working for a very large company, could just be a cost allocation scheme, not a real money cost as you are thinking of it. If your department brings in revenue, the organization needs to match expenses to it for purposes of Management Accounting.

    For instance, imagine you know it costs $X to run one of your cost centers. That dollar amount includes everything from the manpower, the equipment, the facility...everything. Now, they need to assign these costs to the departments that actually make money in a way that makes sense. They could do this by carefully costing out each service they provide and assigning an overhead rate, blah blah. That tends to be a pain. You do it if you have to...but you try not to have to. Another, easier, way of doing it is determining a usage metric (CPU hours, GB of storage, number of tickets) and using that to determine each profit center's percentage allocation of the overall cost.

    So, the $60 per GB may not even be close to a market rate for storage. However, if all the departments used twice as much storage next year, the per GB cost might fall to $31 per GB (slightly more than half to account for the fact that there would obviously be more real costs). Conversely, if you convinced your management to contract externally for storage, everyone else might find their per GB cost rise, since the fixed costs would be static.

  6. Re:This is his standard disclaimer guys on Publishing Company Puts Warning Label on Constitution · · Score: 1

    A notice isn't required, no (so "need" was a poor choice of words on my part). But there are some very good reasons to include one...in fact, I think you will find most publishers include one. If you don't include it, it makes it easier for someone to claim innocent infringement. And if you are asserting copyright on a portion of a publication that includes major portions that are well-known to be public domain, it never hurts to notify folks that a copyright is being asserted.

    But I think the copyright notice in question should be revised to make clear which portions are covered and which are not. I don't think the distributor and publisher are trying to pull a fast one, though. Who would honestly believe that they owned the copyright on the Constitution? It could be clearer, but clearly it isn't fraud.

  7. Re:This is his standard disclaimer guys on Publishing Company Puts Warning Label on Constitution · · Score: 1

    Well, okay, that is a legitimate point, I think it does create a false impression that he holds a copyright on the entire piece. Now, while folks are probably smart enough to figure out that he doesn't actually control distribution rights for the Declaration of Independence, that might not be quite so clear for an old Tom Swift book.

    I guess I could say that he is copyrighting his disclaimer so that nobody else can use it.

    But seriously, I think he needs to include a standard copyright notice to protect elements he did create (covers, etc.). But now that he will undoubtedly be reworking his standard disclaimer, maybe he should consider adding a bit about it only applying to portions "not in the public domain."

  8. This is his standard disclaimer guys on Publishing Company Puts Warning Label on Constitution · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hate to break up of the controversy with facts, but this disclaimer is just boilerplate the distributor puts on all of his products. He publishes lots of public domain works and he got sick an tired of people complaining about the language or mores.

    You can get the full story on his blog: http://warrenlapine.livejournal.com/

    I've known Warren for years. If he had been trying to make a point, he would flat out say that was what he was doing.

  9. Re:W...T...F..... on Recession Cuts Operation That Uses Hair To Clean Up Oil · · Score: 1

    I believe they meant that "Matter of Trust" is a non-profit. The original post suggested that they ask BP to buy a textile mill and I think that Interkin3tic misunderstood that meant that this was a suggestion that BP take over "Matter of Trust." You then misunderstood Interkin3tic's message because you didn't share the same original misunderstanding.

    What we need is a third misunderstanding to bring us back around to all being on the same page. Much like 3 lefts make a right, 3 misunderstandings make agreement!

  10. Re:Morality or empathy? on Magnetism Can Sway Man's Moral Compass · · Score: 1

    Can it be any citation? Because finding an apropos one is proving to be difficult.

  11. Re:Multi-page article on Taking Apart the Energizer Trojan · · Score: 1

    Symbol...a symbol of everlasting battery life...not simple.

    Darn you "typing the wrong word"! You get me every time!

  12. Re:Multi-page article on Taking Apart the Energizer Trojan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Maybe you're thinking of the wrong brand?

    No, I'm mocking the Energizer Bunny campaign of ads a robotic bunny left the set of its own ad and started interrupting other ads for fictional products.

    Whether you recognize the Duracell Bunny or the Energizer Bunny as a simple of everlasting battery life depends on where you are from. In Europe and Australia, Duracell has trademarked the use, in the U.S., Energizer did (they were the jonny-come-lately).

    Did I just BLOW YOU MIND!

  13. Re:Charge them for speaking english on Documentation Compliance Means MS Can Resume Collecting Protocol Royalties · · Score: 1

    They'd switch to Loglan.

    ...Actually, they'd make trivial, incompatible changes to the language and call it Microsoft Loglan.

    Meanwhile, FSF would promote Lojban, the free alternative that forked back in 1987. Many flame wars would ensue.

  14. Re:quality on Chinese Automaker Unveils First Electric Car · · Score: 1

    How was the Pinto a death trap? Especially when compared to other subcompacts of the time, it had fewer deaths per million vehicles on the road. It even had a lower rate of fatality due to fire than other sub-compacts.

    It is only for fires caused from rear collisions that it had a higher fatality rate.

    It had a design defect, to be sure. But the overall safety of the car was pretty much average for its class.

    Now, the VW Beetle was a deathtrap! It had a 10-20% higher fatality rate than the Pinto.

    Damn Germans!

  15. Re:That's no moon. It's a space station. on Hubble Finds Unidentified Object In Space · · Score: 5, Funny

    Come on, everyone knows that a Kessel is a measure of volume. Geez.

  16. Re:Marijuana isn't a performance enhancer, jackass on WCG Tournament Director Admits Drugs In E-Sports · · Score: 1

    One well-known side effect of marijuana intoxication is an inability to focus on more than one thing at a time. In my misspent youth, I had enough experiences to confirm that this helps in some cases.

    Your rant is a little bit off.

    That being said, people are better off not using pot. A good cup of tea helps with focus and has fewer long-term health effects.

  17. Re:I'll admit, I'm a bit confused on Newegg Defies New York Sales Tax Law · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The commerce clause certainly prevents a state from imposing tariffs on imports from other states. However, the use tax is not a tariff. It is a tax it imposes on its own citizens based on what they will do with the item, not those conducting the commerce.

    For instance, in my state, items brought into the state for personal use are generally taxed at the same rate as items bought in state if they are brought into the state within 6 months of purchase. Items brought in for resale are not taxed.

    So, clearly, this isn't a tax on commerce. It is a state imposing a tax on its citizens...which is well within the constitution.

  18. Re:Sorry, Swoosh belongs to Nike. on Gmail, SPF, and Broken Email Forwarding? · · Score: 1

    Joke leech!

    RFC 0465 makes it clear that any joke that contains at least 50% of the same punchline material as a joke previously posted in reply to the same post in an internet forum SHOULD be considered a joke leech if such posting takes place within 20 minutes.

  19. Re:Please adhere to RFC on Gmail, SPF, and Broken Email Forwarding? · · Score: 1

    You could still get cocksuckerdie.com for $9.99!

    Of course, now that I've looked it up, don't be surprised if some bot snaps it up before you can read this.

  20. Re:Sorry, Swoosh belongs to Nike. on Gmail, SPF, and Broken Email Forwarding? · · Score: 5, Funny

    Actually, RFC 0444 has been reserved by the IETF for use as an example RFC number. Your joke should have used that.

    Come on, people!

  21. Re:Because smarter people pick up the tab. on French Fine Amazon For Free Shipping · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure child protection laws fall into the same category as the others you mention. I believe you are saying that these are all "protect us from our own stupidity" laws.

    Child protection laws only fall into this category if you are the parent who is foolishly abusing his or her child, but not if you are the child whose foolish parent is abusing you. In this way, they are more like laws against murder or mugging...they protect individuals from the stupidity of others.

    Unless I am misunderstanding what you mean by "child protection laws," of course.

  22. Re:Why censorship? on Is Comcast Heading the Way of the Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    Assuming that you aren't really a troll, merely a guy who has a really, really sensitive hair trigger, let me respond to your criticism of my statement "I know that there are censorship issues associated with Comcast."

    First of all, nothing in the definition of the word censorship says that it requires government action. If I had said "there are First Amendment issues" your rant would have made sense, but I'm afraid it is a bit off the mark here. Every one of the major U.S. networks (and this probably applies globally) employ "censors" whose job it is to review content and "censor" it when necessary. I merely offer this example to illustrate that the definition of censorship is broader than you believe.

    As far as the throttling of BitTorrent, I'm not sure that I would use the term censorship to describe it. I view it as more of a violation of their implied contract and network neutrality. Why did you assume I was referring to BitTorrent? There have been a variety of allegations of censorship made against Comcast...these are the issues to which I referred.

    My point was that this article doesn't belong in the censorship category, since it is completely unrelated to the topic.

    Have a super day!

  23. Why censorship? on Is Comcast Heading the Way of the Dinosaur? · · Score: 1

    The article has nothing to do with censorship. I know that there are censorship issues associated with Comcast, but does that mean we have to categorized every Comcast article as such?

    I would like to illustrate the ridiculousness of this by making a car analogy, but I can't think of one. Feel free to fill in something suitable in your own minds.

    But my experiences with Comcast's customer service have been Kafkaesque at best. We had a glitch with our cable box a few weeks back and it took a loooong discussion to convince the representative that we even had a problem. There was no picture on any channel! How could we be misinterpreting that?

  24. Re:I have to agree with MS on this one... on Microsoft Admits XP Has Same Bug As Win2K · · Score: 1

    Nah, preview is for the weak! Real men don't even turn on the monitor when they post!

  25. Re:Bad article summary! on Cannabis Compound Said To "Halt Cancer" · · Score: 1

    Well, according to the 2005 National Household Survey, 2/3 of people who smoked marijuana in the past 30 days also smoked cigarettes. I think saying that people "generally smoked both" is warranted.

    Saying people always smoke both would be stupid!