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User: eleuthero

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  1. Re:Culture notes on Kurzweil: Human-Level Machine Translation By 2029 · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected. Thank you.

  2. Re:Culture notes on Kurzweil: Human-Level Machine Translation By 2029 · · Score: 1

    Exactly--and there are even some things that probably couldn't be translated into another language at all at one point or another in a given language's evolution. Consider that "snow" as a concept to a Tahitian islander in the mid-1700s probably would have been complete nonsense as would "ice"... water is always wet... and what does "frozen" even mean?

    If not for the colder parts of our planet, our understanding of chemistry might have lagged for thousands of years.

  3. VUE - from http://vue.tufts.edu/ might be a helpful mix of directory tree and mindmap. It allows for content tagging and linking (local or on the Internet). Search by hierarchical (or not) ontologies is possible.

  4. Re:Arsenic and the lace of life on War Over Arsenic Based Life · · Score: 1

    This has bugged me for a while--creatures on earth with copper blood don't bleed green (you end up with a blue tint--think certain kinds of seafood). ...

  5. Re:Invasion on War Over Arsenic Based Life · · Score: 1

    I think that I would fair fairly well, as the microbe in question would have only a small amount of resources to colonize me. Arsenic based life requires a substantial amount of arsenic to exist--same with sulfur based life or anything else (though there is much more free sulfur available than arsenic in the earth's general environment). This reference may be helpful: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abundance_of_elements_on_Earth#Abundance_of_elements_in_the_Earth (there's also a section on the human body on this page).

    I am happy to live on a planet where carbon is one of the most abundant elements--it means I have to put up with carbon-based bugs, but then, I am used to most of those I am ever around.

  6. Re:Take that Terry Childs on Judge Orders Former San Francisco Admin Terry Childs To Pay $1.5M · · Score: 1

    :) - which apparently can't go by itself in a response because it isn't sufficient to past the "cat got your tongue?" filter.

  7. Re:Take that Terry Childs on Judge Orders Former San Francisco Admin Terry Childs To Pay $1.5M · · Score: 1

    To put it other way, if your employee did something wrong, and you have a reason, you better fire him "without reason", or will face a discrimination case otherwise.

    Good documentation is important. Firing with cause does happen and should, unfortunately, happen in some cases. Letting someone go for repeatedly making inappropriate remarks to clients or for repeatedly playing costly pranks on other staff (depending on the business and the work environment), among others, are reasons that, if you have documentation of individual events, firing with cause happens. General laziness could also be a cause, provided there were concrete examples of failing to fulfill a job description.

    Why would a company bother? Unemployment benefits come out of a "tax" paid by the individual company--when the unemployment benefit account for a company is depleted when someone is let go without cause, they have to pay into it again. If someone needs to be fired, firing him or her with cause is the best way to ensure the financial stability of the company IF you have documentation.

  8. Re:Take that Terry Childs on Judge Orders Former San Francisco Admin Terry Childs To Pay $1.5M · · Score: 1

    By your own description, Canada is the country for those who (in a good way--escaping slaves or a bad one--deserters [there was the route of conscientious objection, but many who fled to Canada did so because it wasn't a matter of 'no war' but a matter of 'this war'] or a neutral one--general political/other dissidents) left the U.S. This is, of course, over simplifying things.

  9. Re:Multicast? What's that? on Netflix Dominates North American Internet · · Score: 1

    Sure they would--dedicated netflix boxes or something that are marketed to the MPAA and co. as "tamper resistant" (just use different screws like apple and since the CEO's won't be able to get into their gift netflix boxes, they'll assume no one else ever will either). From there, you have a contract drawn up that gives the various companies a penny more per film and voila, p2p netflix.

  10. Re:If you don't believe him... on Jeff Bezos Calls Sales Tax Requirements On Amazon Unconstitutional · · Score: 1

    If you have lots of money and a significant constituency, of course the Constitution means something. Let's check Amazon on that:

    1. Lots of money? Yes. Market cap of some $88 billion (U.S.) at the end of Q1 2011.(http://www.wikinvest.com/stock/Amazon.com_(AMZN)/Data/Market_Capitalization) - yes, I realize that market cap is only part of the equation, but this still makes it a heavyweight.

    2. Significant constituency? Yes. It is the 5th ranked site in the U.S. with the largest impact on people who have money too (age 35+) -- (http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/amazon.com).

  11. Did they really lie to most people? on Dropbox Accused of Lying About Security · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I ask the above question because I didn't start using Dropbox because I thought it was secure--I have class notes for teaching and notes for my personal studies in my account and these are for the most part publicly available anyway. I signed up because I was tired of having to fish out my backup CDs when my hard drives died on me (I still do a local backup though) and this part of their service is visibly not a lie and has saved me on at least two occasions in addition to the ease of sharing said notes with students when the file size is too large for our school's hosting service.

    Did they lie to me about securing my data? Technically, yes, they did. Was this a factor in signing up with a cloud-based data storage service? Absolutely not. It never even occurred to me that they would actually secure my data to my level of satisfaction even with the claim that it was secure. It was in the cloud and accessible by whichever script kiddy wanted it. Since this was my operating assumption going in, I can't say I'm surprised that Dropbox has been caught in a lie, nor am I concerned (lying seems to be endemic in our society, unfortunately, but I've grown enured to it). On the other hand, now that they've been caught, I am interested in how they will respond--this could impact my use of their service.

  12. Re:Human after all! on Porn Reportedly Found At Bin Laden Compound · · Score: 1

    Nobody cares what you do with your own life.

    I hope someone does--after all, this is part of what relationships are about. If you've ever had the chance to parent / teach / etc., you'll know that molding the next generation is a significant draw... and a good one. It is not limited to the "religious" (as you note). People who care influence each of us, and they should--no one's perfect. Not only that, those who mold, if they truly care, are also molded themselves by those they teach (so it isn't just some insidious plot by the old to manipulate the young).

  13. Re:great idea on Canadian Music Industry Seeks Copy Tax On Memory Cards · · Score: 1

    I am not aware of a single P2P program that is commonly available that lets someone download without also uploading. If there are, I would like to know about them.

    For movies or music (yes, there is music there if you can demux)

    Youtube+Firefox+Downloadhelper (or similar variant)

    [insert random divx or flash or mp4 movie site found by google search here] + Firefox+Downloadhelper (or similar variant).

    It turns out it's a way to have quick flicks right now and still save them. If you do this on a computer isolated from the rest of your network or in some fashion sandboxed, you reduce the risk of one of Adobe's countless holes causing you problems by going to the "wrong" site. Of course, you would then probably also want to keep it sandboxed, but then, most have separate media computers anyway, right?

  14. Re:Identify her, everywhere. on Judge Issues Gag Order For Twitter · · Score: 1

    As a Christian and someone who self-identifies as "pro-life," we recently had to deal with whether or not to unplug a relative. Most who are jerks about the process have probably not had to go through it--there are tensions on both sides. Are we playing God by leaving the person plugged in? Are we committing murder by unplugging? Where is the line? Harvard (and I can't find the link) has a good list of questions to confront when determining whether or not unplugging is ethical or not--and this is not (anymore) a Christian institution (in case you are put off by my original statement).

    We determined that "present normal level of care" was appropriate in our discussion of the situation (though at the last minute, the decision was thankfully taken from us)--would I have turned off the feeding tube in the Schiavo case a few years ago? I don't think I would have, but I wasn't there. With this said, there should definitely be a medical ethics board composed of members from different walks of life to approve such before any disconnecting is allowed (emotions run high and there should be a double check to any decision).

  15. Re:From TFA: on Disorderly Conduct Charge for Offensive Classmate Ratings · · Score: 1

    There is a reason there are limits. We could cite recent suicides tied to bullying or go for the more literary (slightly) Lord of the Flies . You are right to note that "race" as such does not exist in the ways originally understood. The fabric of humanity is much more complex with shifting ethnic and social boundaries, genetic predispositions towards certain traits (sickle cell anemia is tied to a positive genetic issue primarily impacting people of African descent, etc.). It is a problem when kids go beyond name calling to organized, pre-planned attacks on people's character. It is for this reason he was charged--and likely he was charged in order to deal with a larger problem or potential problem at the school (he gets to be the example).

  16. Re:Bad. on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 1

    I am not advocating high tolls (I am troubled that the toll proposal has gone forward in the Dallas area, particularly in light of recent legislation at the state level against foreign toll management which tends towards higher tolls for some reason), but having major highways change over to tollways with only minimal tolls would help provide the state with missing revenue as more and more switch from gas to electric hybrid to electric, etc.

  17. Re:Bad. on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 1

    Yep--and I am glad that the article discusses an idea that was just a debated idea that didn't make it too far (or at least hasn't made it too far yet--ideas have a nasty way of coming back). Tolls look like they are the way of the future for money raising--having higher taxes for gas guzzlers is already present in many states through increased registration fees and initial purchase fees. The only problem, though, is that toll raising is typically left in the hands of private companies--often foreign companies with oversight by the government not always working effectively (this is part of why the NTTA in the Dallas area lost its bid on the new project to a company from Spain).

  18. Re:Macs will be a closed platform in the end on Apple To Distribute OS X Lion via the Mac App Store · · Score: 1

    ...or bad power--there are places I've been in Europe that plugging in to a wall, even with a powerstrip / ups, was dangerous--the electricity was just too unstable for electronics to survive long.

  19. Re:Bad. on Draft Proposal Would Create Agency To Tax Cars By the Mile · · Score: 1

    And yet, anyone who drives on a tollway already does this. In fact, it is what the government is going to have to do. Big energy won't take kindly to direct taxation more than they already are and as everyone switches from gas to electric (and that will likely happen barring a better handling of other alternative tech), the government will lose out on the gas tax (because no one but truckers, trains, boats, and airplanes will use the stuff--and there's far fewer of these than of passenger SUVs). They've already started this in Dallas with a new expansion project for one of the main freeways turning the HOV lanes into a $.75 / mile tollway (variable on traffic, no max after 6 mos.--and this is extreme considering the other tollways in the area currently charge ~$.14/mile).

    How can the government do anything else given the "rube goldberg tax" scenario otherwise?

  20. Re:Poor estimation on New Heat Pump Will Last 10,000 Years · · Score: 1

    I am all for someone starting in on buildings designed so well that they don't need maintenance very often. As a point towards the possibility of this goal, it was only in the last few years that they've had to start blocking vehicular access through the aqueduct in Segovia, Spain--pollution and vibration from vehicular traffic was damaging it. It carried water up into the modern age but had sections destroyed in the Napoleonic wars. I'm sure it had some maintenance, but we could do with more designs like that which allow for something to last with largely original material and no mortar for nearly 1800 years.

  21. Re:Another reason ... not to live in TX, AZ and NM on Yes, an Armadillo Can Give You Leprosy · · Score: 1

    Try all across the South / South East and much of central america (not in the link): http://www.ajtmh.org/content/vol78/issue6/images/large/962fig1.jpeg

  22. Re:Conspiracy on Yes, an Armadillo Can Give You Leprosy · · Score: 2

    The main risk is actually for those who have (1) eaten armadillo, (2) lived in Mexico proper, and (3) also eaten rabbit from Mexico. Why are these three connected? I have no idea, but http://www.ajtmh.org/cgi/content/full/78/6/962 offers more info.

  23. Vectors (and a link to an older article) on Yes, an Armadillo Can Give You Leprosy · · Score: 2

    Washing off the tire would be a good idea because the bacteria survives well, particularly in soil/sand/etc. If you run over the armadillo and then park in your garage, there's a good chance the little m. leprae are going to still be alive. Washing the tire off won't remove that possibility entirely, but it will get rid of most of them, reducing your risk significantly. And even if they do have a cure, I'd hate to have symptoms (irreversible) before they realized the need for treatment.

    More importantly, this is fairly old news: Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

  24. Re:Leprosy can be cured. on Yes, an Armadillo Can Give You Leprosy · · Score: 1

    Yes, but the extant damage it has caused is not easily cured. They are just now getting into nerve transplantation and even then, it doesn't always take. Artificial nerves, as we saw earlier this week, are developing nicely, but we are still a long way off from practical usage.

  25. Re:Leprosy can be cured. on Yes, an Armadillo Can Give You Leprosy · · Score: 1

    which is really just water with about .00000001% of something else in it.

    You give them far too much credit. The more likely percentage is 0%.

    No, it has to be flavored with something to make it taste awful--otherwise it wouldn't be effective at deluding people into thinking it was real. High levels of alcohol in the water might be part of the scam.