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User: Agent0013

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  1. Re:subsurface terrain & tides on Mysterious Feature Appears and Disappears In a Sea On Titan · · Score: 1

    If the shore line is made up of vertical cliffs then it wouldn't change at all even if the level of the sea changed by a lot.

  2. Re:Ipadguy is retarded, he didn't make a mistake. on Man Walks Past Security Screening Staring At iPad, Causing Airport Evacuation · · Score: 1

    I find it ironic that you say ipadguy is a retard and wasn't looking where he was going, and that somehow equates to deliberate action to cause hundreds of other people problems. If he wasn't looking, then it wasn't deliberate, was it? The security dimwits on the other hand should have known the result of their actions and so they deliberately caused problems for hundreds of people.

    It seems to me that you do not have a clear understanding of the word deliberate. It is truly a shame that this kind of idiocy isn't a crime... or painful. I would propose you be shot for your retarded and deliberate act of stupidity!

  3. Re:I would use this almost never on Nixie Wearable Drone Camera Flies Off Your Wrist · · Score: 1

    Except when you want to deploy it and get some pictures, it will already be broken. Imagine a tiny flying drone with little propellers strapped to your wrist while hiking through the woods and seriously tell me it won't get damaged by brush and branches that slap at you as you walk past. The working camera is always going to be more useful than the one that is broken when you need it.

  4. bring in the foreigners on Microsoft On US Immigration: It's Our Way Or the Canadian Highway · · Score: 1

    So their argument is that they want to bring in foreign workers and if we don't let them they will send the foreigners to Canada? Either way it is no more jobs for Americans. Have they gone soft in the head, or do they figure the money they gave to the politicians allow them to come up with any old stupid excuse and still get what they want?

  5. Re:Black holes can exist without a singularity on Physicist Claims Black Holes Mathematically Don't Exist · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it just need enough mass inside the event horizon radius? (all numbers made up out of thin air) If the 10^9 solar masses was compressed by gravity to be the size of Earth's orbit, but the event horizon was at the size of Mar's orbit, wouldn't you still have a black hole as seen from outside the event horizon?

  6. Re:Emma Watson is full of it on Emma Watson Leaked Photo Threat Was a Plot To Attack 4chan · · Score: 1

    One study I heard about found that women ask for raises less often than men do. So even a woman that chooses to not have children may be found to make less money. It may not always be that men are holding women back. There was another study of women scientists (I think) that found that women rate each other much more harshly than men will rate them. So even other women are a detriment to women in the workplace. That's not even getting into any cat-fight like behavior that some women might enjoy.

  7. Re:GP is an attempt to censor and bias on How Our Botched Understanding of "Science" Ruins Everything · · Score: 1

    to believe that there is a "Philosophical question regarding the origin of the Universe." Is, in itself, a religion.

    Except that science is derived from philosophy. So you are then saying that science is a religion. Nice!

    "The question regarding the origin of the Universe is just one question where bias takes charge and science is put in the background." False. there is a lot of sciecne regarding the origin of the universe.

    I think we have evidence going back to the big bang, but I have never heard of any data that comes from before the big bang. So how could we have scientific evidence of what caused the big bang. It sounds like you are falling for the very thing the article says people mistake.The holy scientist says so, so it must be!

    "Vaccines" The science is well know. The vast majority of public debate isn't about anything debatable. It's one side making things up and the other using science. i.e. expermint, data, ect.

    The anti-vaccine issue is extra complicated because of the crazy anti-vaxxers that make everyone who has issues with government mandates get lumped in with them. I have issue with the number of vaccines they want to give. Many of them are for stupid things that cause no harm. Why should you give risk to young children for something that is as bad as getting a cold? Why should a 1 day old be getting vaccines for sexually transmitted diseases? Why should vaccines that cause cervical cancer be mandated to young children? Well, because we said so is not a good enough answer. If a child got whooping cough then they have a much better immunity to pertussis than any vaccine can give. Does that matter to the law? Can you even get the other two vaccines without them being in the trio form? No and no. And their example of flu vaccines is especially apparent as a stupid example. Flu vaccines have to made by guessing what will be around next season. There is no testing. In fact, it is illegal to test using scientific principles, if the flu vaccine is effective because it is assumed to work effectively. You cannot deny someone the effective treatment, so being that they assume it works you cannot actually test it to see if it does. But when the season comes around where the flu vaccine is wrong and turns out to not be effective the rates of flu in the country don't change appreciably. So there is some evidence that we are being lied to about vaccines also. But it isn't the scientist, it's the politician and their desire to control everyone that makes the unintelligent laws. There are also the cases where the company has been lying about the effectiveness of their vaccine for the last 50 years. So we are all getting shots that don't do much other than have potential side effects. But the pro-vaxxers will say that we should all undergo every shot that they or any governmental agent says we should get. Very scientific there.

    "GMO foods" ON one side we ahve science, and verification from every major scientific health group in the world, that it is safe. On the other side you got FUD.

    Or you have one side doing the experiments and hiding the results. Then they make it illegal, by copyright law, to allow anyone else to do their own experiments. Sounds like science to me, NOT! The fact that the chemicals are seen in utero, when the companies making them said that it would not survive the stomach is one lie right there. The higher rate of animal miscarriages when using GMO feed that farmers report is highly worrisome also. But we should not be able to test this ourselves to find out if it actually is caused by GMO or something else is ok. Plus, we should not even be given information as to which foods at the market are GMO and which ones are not. Seems fishy to me.

    " Global Warming" ON side has science, prediction, proof, the other side has people screaming nonsense.

    Similar to the GMO. One side has the companies that want to p

  8. Re:The article isn't any better. on How Our Botched Understanding of "Science" Ruins Everything · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and when you learn how the flu shot has to be guess at for the next season I really start to doubt that the author has any clue at all. Guessing and making something without testing it would not be what I call science.

  9. Re:This can only work a little bit... on Small Restaurant Out-Maneuvers Yelp In Reviews War · · Score: 1

    I guess I left out the part where only some of the receipts would get the code. I was taking the slashdot moderation idea and translating it into the restaurant review realm. If each restaurant only got 100 (change numbers to fit) codes a month (or week, whatever fits) then the reviewers would be randomly chosen. You would also need some sort of system that gives the codes randomly that the restaurant could not alter to give codes to the shills.

    I was really posting in jest as your previous comment mentioned how the somewhat randomness of slashdot's moderation works pretty good. To make it work in the real world would need some extra stuff that turns it impractical rather quickly. If it could be pulled off though, it would give people who get a code a chance to give a review and the shills would have a hard time getting in to spoil the overall scores. You could go with a percentage of the patrons get a code, but then more popular places get more reviews, so maybe having each place get the same number of codes works better. Of course some codes will be tossed and unused, but that doesn't hurt the way things work out in the end. It may lead more people to giving reviews if they can only do it when they get a code. It becomes more special, since you can't do it any old day, only when you go there and "win" a code. I guess the shills could keep buying food there until they get a code, but they makes it much more expensive for them than the current system is.

    Perhaps you could have the phone as the way to give the review, but I would not want the restaurant to be able to exert any influence on the persons review. It seems like you will get more accurate reviews if you let the person enter it after they leave the restaurant. Tying the review to the phone or ip address or something would help stop restaurants from stealing the codes that should go to patrons and giving them to the shills though, so it certainly would be a valuable addition to add in somehow.

  10. Re:This can only work a little bit... on Small Restaurant Out-Maneuvers Yelp In Reviews War · · Score: 1

    So you need to randomly give review access to patrons that are eating at the restaurant. The receipt would have a code on it that allows you to give a review. If you don't get the code, you can't give a review.

  11. Re:Why does this always happen? on TrueCrypt Gets a New Life, New Name · · Score: 1

    It's not a commercial product so who cares if some PHB who thinks the name of an application is important doesn't like it?

    This makes me think of all the horrible names that Microsoft has chosen for their products. :-)

  12. Re:Buridan's Principle on Developing the First Law of Robotics · · Score: 1

    If this is the kind of research that Microsoft puts out, then I have an even lower opinion of them than I did before.

    from the article

    Random vibrations make it impossible to balance the ball on the knife edge, but if the ball is positioned randomly, random vibrations are as likely to keep it from falling as to cause it to fall.

    I have a hard time believing that there is a 50 percent chance that a ball will balance on the edge of the knife. First she says it's impossible, then in the same sentence she states that it is just as likely. WTF!

  13. Re:The fancy ones are expensive.. on A 16-Year-Old Builds a Device To Convert Breath Into Speech · · Score: 1

    Ok, so you were imagining words rather than letters. I was thinking a screen of the letters, so the 4 or 5 breaths is for one letter, not a whole word. I guess that helps out some, but it seems like a lot of words would be needed to be able to say what you want. And now you need different breaths for up, down, left, right, and click. Spelling a word with Morse code might take a little bit of time, but searching through many screens of words to find the one you want will take a while also. Morse code might be a non-starter for people who can't read, but so is searching through screens of words!? I guess in the end it would have to be tested to see which one is more efficient or easier to use.

  14. Re:The fancy ones are expensive.. on A 16-Year-Old Builds a Device To Convert Breath Into Speech · · Score: 1

    I don't see how waiting for a cursor to scroll through the alphabet is going to be quicker than doing 4 or 5 quick breaths. One takes a second or so per letter (Morse), the other will take at least 10 seconds to get through the alphabet to the letters near the end. If the cursor moved to quickly you would miss your letter too often. Then you have to move the cursor through the whole alphabet back to the start again and try to stop at the letter you want so you can click-breathe. Yeah, I would go with the Morse code on this one for speed of entry.

  15. Re:IP Stolen on A 16-Year-Old Builds a Device To Convert Breath Into Speech · · Score: 1

    The Morse code breathing works today. Your idea will work in a few decades or centuries. I think your ideas looses in this comparison.

  16. Re:So.... on A 16-Year-Old Builds a Device To Convert Breath Into Speech · · Score: 1

    Yep, and I noticed that you can code breathe while taking breath in and also while breathing out. That makes it pretty efficient for what it is.

  17. Re:Lucky them on Court Rules the "Google" Trademark Isn't Generic · · Score: 1

    That sounds like something Microsoft would do on purpose to try to get Google's trademark taken away from them as being generic. Sleazy and low, just how Microsoft likes it!

  18. Re:Fahrenheit 451? on MIT's Cheetah Robot Runs Untethered · · Score: 1

    Why would a viscious man want to eat a robot dog?

  19. Re:Duh on MIT's Cheetah Robot Runs Untethered · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but you probably would have told them the wrong thing. You don't need the force to push you forward, you need to push down. I was watching a show the other day where they discussed how they train runners to get faster. You need to hit your feet down on the ground as hard as you can, and then you will go further on each stride and keep the momentum going. Only at the start do you need to push forward with the force.

  20. Re:First world problems. on Apple Outrages Users By Automatically Installing U2's Album On Their Devices · · Score: 1

    so choose not to add it to your playlists. Really simple. If it's not in a playing playlist, it won't play.

    Yeah, soo simple to do. Just wait until there are hundreds of albums added every day to your account because Apple gets paid by the distributors to get the songs out there. Then it will take you hours to search through your music collection just to find the music you actually want in your collection.

    I find it humorous to think what would happen if the media contained something where mere possession is illegal, like child pornography or terrorist handbook texts.

  21. Re: But is it reaslistic? on Islamic State "Laptop of Doom" Hints At Plots Including Bubonic Plague · · Score: 1

    I would not say it is consistent. Politicians and rich get around any inconveniences any time they want. And it's all just theatre any ways. The airline locked the door, nothing else needed after that.

  22. Re:What they don't tell you on Low-Carb Diet Trumps Low-Fat Diet In Major New Study · · Score: 1

    By contrast, it can be handy in women who are breastfeeding. One of the ways to help with production is apparently drinking hoppy beer. (obviously not just before feeding the kid)

    Or you do drink the alcohol before feeding the kid and then they sleep like a baby. Wasn't it advised to mothers to drink whiskey or something like that. And beer was supposedly good for pregnant women back in the day also. Probably not the same kind of beer we have today. I know back far enough beer used to be more like a liquid bread.

  23. Re:What they don't tell you on Low-Carb Diet Trumps Low-Fat Diet In Major New Study · · Score: 1

    Soybeans are only healthy if they are fermented. The soy we get here is not fermented, but in places where they make traditional tofu it is fermented and then becomes easily digestible.

  24. Re: What they don't tell you on Low-Carb Diet Trumps Low-Fat Diet In Major New Study · · Score: 1

    If you eat carbs combined with a fat, such as peanut butter or bread, it will help slow the absorption of the carbs and sugars. I think my wife read about that in something about how French people eat, and it does seem to help you feel fuller faster.

  25. Re:And? on Hidden Obstacles For Google's Self-Driving Cars · · Score: 1

    Can it swerve across the side walk when necessary? Can it make a blind turn past an obstacle just having faith that opposing traffic goes slow enough so they can stop in time? Can it turn on a single lane road in unison with lots of other cars when the road is blocked, judging the sides of the road accurately so it doesn't get stuck?

    I can go on and on and on, just like any normal person who often drives in urban environments. Even the motorway isn't safe from the sort of shit which would make anything we could program today barf. Something simple like temporary lanes indicated by obstacles and traffic wardens can occur in so many different ways that it becomes impossible to handle. Or lets say we get directed through narrow bits of the shoulder for road works or an accident and the car decides to stop because safety margin aren't met, lets just make hundreds of people wait. Best not have a small car, or some very helpful folks might park your car in the ditch for you once they understand the cause of the hold up.

    It's a pipe dream until we have human level AI.

    It's so funny you mention these things that the car is already doing. I just watched the youtube video someone posted of the car driving around. And it handles the orange cones and constructions signs just fine. You even get to see the computer drawing the new lane path as it crosses over into the other lanes. It's almost like the smart engineers already thought of these things that a car would have to do and started solving the problems involved. That's a lot more that what you are capable of with your identifying the problems and then saying it can't be solved.