> That's hardly the scenario I'd be hoping to find myself in.
It would be relatively easy to establish a fitness criterion wherein you'd be happy about being rogered by The Man, day after day, year after year, until you die of overwork. It would become part of your moral imperative. Spooky, innit?
Assuming you could make the power transfer practical, there's nothing to stop you from implementing an identification protocol over the inductive connection. Sure, it could be spoofed, but at the end of the day, *anything* can.
I've been using the 64-bit Ubuntu 12.04 KDE install, along with 64-bit Windows 7. I had a couple of teething troubles with Ubuntu, and no problems whatsoever with W7. I've been using Linux off and on since the version 1 Slackware floppy distribution. I've seen Linux grow and change, and I've seen the same with Windows. The early versions of Windows were terrible, but there has been slow improvement over time. The worst mistakes made by Microsoft were the 'user as Admin' security policy, and the tremendous own-goal represented by ActiveX.
Windows 7 is tremendously reliable, fast on my AMD-Turion equipped Acer laptop, and it looks nice. I honestly don't understand the vitriol.
> A person can easily have a hard time believing that "humans evolved from ooze", yet still be able to easily comprehend and work with genetic algorthms.
And yet, to comprehend genetic algorithms, you also have to comprehend the enormous difference in the probability of finding any given fitness solution that a genetic algorithm represents, as compared with random chance. Additionally, if you genuinely understand the topic, it gives you insights into the natural operation of evolution that you might otherwise have lacked.
Oh, and, it should really make you wonder why DNA is present in organisms from single celled creatures all the way up to us, if you were otherwise predisposed to find God in your gaps de jour...
The fact that it's currently illegal, criminalises behaviour which for the most part is completely harmless to the consumer and the people around her. So, *why* exactly does it need to be a criminal act in the first place?
> I see that time and time again, but don't recall anyone actually saying Macs
Funny, I had people telling me that all the time when I worked in a user-support role, to the degree that they regarded me as misinformed, deranged and/or stupid if I hinted that Macs were even theoretically vulnerable to malware.
To be fair, my personally experience *does* shadow yours, but with some changes:
'I don't recall anyone with an IQ higher than room temperature actually saying that Macs couldn't get a virus'
I think it depends on your hardware, as ever. Pangolin installed and ran flawlessly on my two (different) laptops. The older one was an upgrade from 11.10. I also run Windows 64 for games, and for the record, it's as solid as a rock. I have no particular axe to grind with regard to this position.
Assume that the Many Worlds interpretation is true. In this case, what's to stop our Sun from being a superflare star, flaring on average every seventy five years or so? This would mean that our world and everything we know of the benign nature of the local stellar environment is just an artifact of our survival along an extremely low-probability path of the tree of all possibilities describing the existence of the earth in some approximately life-friendly form.
In effect, we're living in an instance. Reality isn't quite so friendly, taken as a whole.
Apparently, he was also carrying the steg software with him. So now, all the world will know of the US security forces' fearsomely sophisticated ability to spot steganographically concealed stuff in the presence of a mountain of porn and a steganographic decoder.
> I seriously doubt that Aristotle could have comprehended calculus or designed a Mars rover.
Based on the fond imagining that evolution has made *that* much difference in 150 generations?
For God's sake lose the apostrophe from 'Hand's'.
> That's hardly the scenario I'd be hoping to find myself in.
It would be relatively easy to establish a fitness criterion wherein you'd be happy about being rogered by The Man, day after day, year after year, until you die of overwork. It would become part of your moral imperative. Spooky, innit?
I'm pretty sure that the Devil has all the best lawyers.
(Speaking as an otherwise atheistic individual).
Assuming you could make the power transfer practical, there's nothing to stop you from implementing an identification protocol over the inductive connection. Sure, it could be spoofed, but at the end of the day, *anything* can.
> good reason why things like evolution and the big bang theory should remain
hmmm...
I, rather naively, thought that the reason for these theories was grounded in the science rather than in political expediency.
I've been using the 64-bit Ubuntu 12.04 KDE install, along with 64-bit Windows 7. I had a couple of teething troubles with Ubuntu, and no problems whatsoever with W7. I've been using Linux off and on since the version 1 Slackware floppy distribution. I've seen Linux grow and change, and I've seen the same with Windows. The early versions of Windows were terrible, but there has been slow improvement over time. The worst mistakes made by Microsoft were the 'user as Admin' security policy, and the tremendous own-goal represented by ActiveX.
Windows 7 is tremendously reliable, fast on my AMD-Turion equipped Acer laptop, and it looks nice. I honestly don't understand the vitriol.
> A person can easily have a hard time believing that "humans evolved from ooze", yet still be able to easily comprehend and work with genetic algorthms.
And yet, to comprehend genetic algorithms, you also have to comprehend the enormous difference in the probability of finding any given fitness solution that a genetic algorithm represents, as compared with random chance. Additionally, if you genuinely understand the topic, it gives you insights into the natural operation of evolution that you might otherwise have lacked.
Oh, and, it should really make you wonder why DNA is present in organisms from single celled creatures all the way up to us, if you were otherwise predisposed to find God in your gaps de jour...
> The fact that evolution works does not necessarily lead to the exclusion of a creator.
It does, however, obviate the need for a creator as the immediate progenitor of Man.
This meme is retarded, tired and sexist.
Thatcher wasn't such a great example.
There are complex systems wherein small changes to X trigger large changes to Y. Why is that so hard to understand?
The fact that it's currently illegal, criminalises behaviour which for the most part is completely harmless to the consumer and the people around her. So, *why* exactly does it need to be a criminal act in the first place?
I think the word we're looking for is *troll*.
You don't really need anyone else to have a fulfilling dialog in which the truths of your core beliefs are elucidated, do you?
Why do you bother even posting here?
> I see that time and time again, but don't recall anyone actually saying Macs
Funny, I had people telling me that all the time when I worked in a user-support role, to the degree that they regarded me as misinformed, deranged and/or stupid if I hinted that Macs were even theoretically vulnerable to malware.
To be fair, my personally experience *does* shadow yours, but with some changes:
'I don't recall anyone with an IQ higher than room temperature actually saying that Macs couldn't get a virus'
Um, isn't 0.19... equivalent to 0.2?
Mod parent up to 11.
I think it depends on your hardware, as ever. Pangolin installed and ran flawlessly on my two (different) laptops. The older one was an upgrade from 11.10. I also run Windows 64 for games, and for the record, it's as solid as a rock. I have no particular axe to grind with regard to this position.
I grinned like a wolf when I stole my copy.
Would you, Quintus?
Assume that the Many Worlds interpretation is true. In this case, what's to stop our Sun from being a superflare star, flaring on average every seventy five years or so? This would mean that our world and everything we know of the benign nature of the local stellar environment is just an artifact of our survival along an extremely low-probability path of the tree of all possibilities describing the existence of the earth in some approximately life-friendly form.
In effect, we're living in an instance. Reality isn't quite so friendly, taken as a whole.
heh, I foiled you by not drinking my coffee at exactly the right moment.
Apparently, he was also carrying the steg software with him. So now, all the world will know of the US security forces' fearsomely sophisticated ability to spot steganographically concealed stuff in the presence of a mountain of porn and a steganographic decoder.
If they found the documents, then barring a tip-off from external intelligence sources, the techniques they used weren't very sophisticated.