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User: the+plant+doctor

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Comments · 170

  1. Re:Limited production on Turning Soybeans Into Diesel Fuel Is Costing Us Billions (npr.org) · · Score: 1

    Nitrogen on soybean? They're legumes.

    I think you're thinking of corn, not soybean.

  2. Re:Use GNU/Linux ! on Nokia Crawls Towards Comeback With New Phones Announcement (theregister.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    I've since had a few Android Phones and iPhones, but my N9 still is my favourite one for the reasons you mentioned here. It just worked well together and was intuitive. Shame that there never was a successor. Maybe now there's hope.

  3. Re:More than that actually. The bananas are better on Disease Threatens 99% of the Banana Market (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    _Some_ rice cultivars might be that old, but most now are modern varieties developed by companies, international programs or national programs.

  4. Re:plenty of performance for almost everyone on LG G4 and Qualcomm's Snapdragon 808 Benchmarked · · Score: 1

    The camera in this phone definitely interests me. I'm starting to eye replacements for my XPeria Z. Yes, Z, not Z1, Z2 or Z3.

    Colby Brown has a review of this camera, err, phone that you might find interesting. http://www.colbybrownphotograp...

  5. Re:Why upgrade to the latest shinny new version? on Tumblr Co-Founder: Apple's Software Is In a Nosedive · · Score: 1

    Hear, hear!

    I switched after about 10 years of using desktop Linux, myself. Sure, I can make it all work with the hardware, or I can buy a laptop that has a *nix on it that works. Sure there are bugs, but I'll accept those, none have been showstoppers for me yet.

    I did just buy a new Retina MacBook Pro on Saturday, built in October, it only came with Mavericks.

  6. Re:Opportunity Cost on Lots Of People Really Want Slideout-Keyboard Phones: Where Are They? · · Score: 1

    Oh yes. I had an N97 Mini. It was my backup phone after I switched to a Galaxy S, then N9 and finally my Xperia Z, until the Mini was stolen. The build quality was wonderful. The keyboard was fantastic. The thickness of the phone wasn't so great.

  7. Re:Great... on Satellite Images Show Russians Shelling Ukraine · · Score: 1

    If you mean from the cold war, yes, you're right. However, as the English language evolves it's come to mean the developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America rather than it's original meaning.

  8. Re:Customer service? on Man Booted From Southwest Flight and Threatened With Arrest After Critical Tweet · · Score: 1

    From what I've seen, weight isn't as much an issue as the overall dimensions.

    At least most of the airlines I travel on have a 7kg weight limit, which I could easily pass with my 46L backpack that's still smaller than most roller bags.

  9. Re:Maybe the FAA should inform the stewardesses on FAA's Ruling On Smartphones During Takeoff Has Had Little Impact · · Score: 1

    Regarding the EM spectrum thing, I noticed it too. I flew from Houston to Manila with United last year. Taking off from Houston we allowed to use devices, landing in Hawaii we were allowed to use devices. Change planes in Hawaii. Taking off we were allowed to use devices. However, upon landing in Guam (still part of the US and on the same plane) we were not allowed to use devices?

  10. Re:I just want to know on Teaching College Is No Longer a Middle Class Job · · Score: 1

    THIS! I've since left academia, but while there I saw it start. The decrease in funding by the state to the "state" schools has hurt universities immensely.

  11. ~80% chance on Science Moneyball: The Secret to a Successful Academic Career · · Score: 1

    That I'll get the job I have now.

    I'm not at a major university, I'm at a large agricultural NGO with my own lab of 11 researchers and a PhD student who is hosted at the uni down the street. However, according to their model there's less than 80% chance that I'll become a PI.

    I'd be interested to know what's different. I realise that it's a model, thus it's wrong. Still, I guess ~80% is a pretty strong relationship for something like this. It was fun to try.

  12. Re:No thank you to all that on I Want a Kindle Killer · · Score: 1

    Have you used a Kindle or any other e-reader with a touch screen? Your fingerprint comment makes me think that you've not tried one. I had one of the old Sony touch screen e-Readers and now a Kindle Paperwhite. I get more fingerprints on the bezel than on the screen (never) because it's not glossy.

  13. Re:Tonopah Rob is a Real Farmer on Harvard Study Links Neonicotinoid Pesticide To Colony Collapse Disorder · · Score: 1
    +5 Informative? With a statement like this?

    Chemical pesticides are less than 100 years old. We got along just fine for beforehand for millennia without them.

    You'd best edit Wikipedia, quickly, then! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...

    Chemical pesticides date back 4,500 years, when the Sumerians used sulfur compounds as insecticides. The Rig Veda, which is about 4,000 years old, also mentions the use of poisonous plants for pest control.

  14. Re:you have OpenCS on Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What? · · Score: 2

    Hmm, Gimp is fairly decent for a Photoshop alternative. I know pros won't be switching, but I'm proficient enough with it that I still prefer it now.

    However, Gimp won't cover Illustrator. Inkscape does a damned good job with SVGs.

    I'm a scientist, not a designer, so these cover the needs of me and my lab for no cost. I can do nice looking posters and whatnot with these tools, quite efficiently.

  15. Re:power over phonelines on WSJ: Prepare To Hang Up the Phone — Forever · · Score: 1

    Mmm, yes, I while had cell phones that I mainly used when I still lived in the States; I also had a landline in my home. Two cordless phones in the house that used. However, I had a cheap corded phone that I just kept in a cabinet in case of an emergency. Like the 7 days we were without power due to an ice storm. Corded phone came out, I was able to keep in contact. Sure, I could charge my cell phone in the car, but I had to leave the car running to do that.

  16. Re:GMOs=evil business on Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island · · Score: 1

    Blaming GMOs for this is silly. We've had herbicide resistant weeds before. It's the cultural practices used in production. Scientists warn of this and companies give guidelines on proper use, e.g. refuges of non-Bt corn to help prevent resistance from building up in insect population, use different mode of action herbicides, etc. but farmers (yes my father was one) often ignore these guidelines and do what's easy. Thus the problems.

  17. Re:More accurate headline on Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island · · Score: 1

    These things worry me. I am an not a biologist, but I am an engineer. Please don't accuse me of being a "science denier" and coming up with "crap."

    Well, since you're not "anti-science" why have you not read the literature? Reductions in mycotoxins and pesticide application seem like a verygoodthing to me. Just two articles of general nature, but there's plenty of others out there...

    http://www.ask-force.org/web/Benefits/Phipps-Park-Benefits-2002.pdf http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.1081/TXR-200027872

  18. Re:More accurate headline on Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island · · Score: 1

    "a bunch more"? I'm not aware that the label rate of RoundUp changed once RR Soybean was introduced. In fact, there's plenty of scientific evidence that says that pesticide applications and use of fossil fuels and soil erosion were reduced when these soybeans were introduced.

    As for RoundUp Ready corn, everyone conveniently forgets Atrazine and the other *zines that were used and leached into groundwater etc. prior to it's introduction.

    Your "bunch more" really is a "bunch less".

  19. Re:The food industry has been wrong before on Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island · · Score: 1

    Don't look now but, GMOs have been around for at least 15 years now...

  20. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers on Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island · · Score: 1

    Errm, Monsanto has nothing to do with Golden Rice and Dr. Shiva is a physicist, hardly an expert on biological organisms. Oh and RTFA linked from /. There's a bit in there about the supposed "suicicide-GMO" link.

  21. Re:Yes it's hard cheese BUT.... on US Customs Destroys Virtuoso's Flutes Because They Were "Agricultural Items" · · Score: 1

    But it IS a big deal.

    Imagine the inverse of the situation, the person screening fails to recognize something that's on a select agent list and lets it in. This is their job to know what they're looking at and doing. Not to just act carelessly.

  22. Re:Bamboo and reeds contains pests on US Customs Destroys Virtuoso's Flutes Because They Were "Agricultural Items" · · Score: 2, Informative

    If this really is a website for nerds, I can't let this pass. Woodborer? Bamboo is a grass, not wood.

  23. Re:Evolution did not happen through monoculture on Interview With Professor Potrykus, Inventor of Golden Rice · · Score: 2

    Having done my PhD on late blight, P. infestans and your "Mexican" Phythophthora are the same species. Not sure just what you're trying to say here? BTW, you misspelled Phytophthora, twice.

  24. Re:GMO won't fix this on Interview With Professor Potrykus, Inventor of Golden Rice · · Score: 2

    "Fix poverty". Which immediately leads to the question, *how* do you fix poverty? Don't you fix poverty by giving the poor more opportunity to grow and make what they need?

    It's well established that human health and poverty are closely linked. Fixing human health is one of the steps to fixing poverty. Healthy people are more capable of working than those that are ill.

  25. Re:GMO won't fix this on Interview With Professor Potrykus, Inventor of Golden Rice · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So in your world, blindness and other consequences of nutritional deficiency is in no way a driver of poverty?

    Poverty and well-being are inextricably linked. It's a vicious cycle. If you can start breaking into it at any point it's helpful. Golden Rice is just one entry point into this cycle.