When you get right down to it, life is 100% fatal. Everybody who is alive is going to die. Everybody who was alive and is not any more, has died. Everybody born tomorrow and the next day and the next day and the day after that, is going to die.
All of them tragic and sad and with loved ones left behind, but nothing can stop death. Nothing.
If every car can be automatically worth investigating, then so can people. After all, cars don't do anything without people at the controls (at least for now anyway), so if a car is interesting, then the driver must be absolutely fascinating.
And it won't matter if the driver is walking down the street or driving, they might drive soon. Heck, if you buy alcohol in LA, they should go ahead and book you for DUI because, you know, you might drive. Or beat your wife or kids in a drunken rage, set the house on fire and go on a stabbing rampage in a hair salon. You might do these things. Might as well assume you will. Stand still while we book you for murder in that hair salon. Wouldn't want to accidentally have you fight with arresting officers.
So, Joco, I had no idea who the hell you were when I stumbled across the PopSci podcast from the moon, which was really awesome and still what I think of when I think of your work. Not all these songs everybody else thinks of. No, for me it's a wacky but informative podcast.
So what happened? Why did they stop? How come you don't talk about them?
Yeah I get that the logic is different. The court decided based on the exact wording of the law, which they are changing last I heard. One worries about laws rushed into battle; but one worries more about the laws they spend time trying to pass. Good results are rare.
Laws have a serious need to catch up to the 21st century. A local case where involved a man who emailed pictures of his parts to a recipient who didn't want them. The police got involved and prosecuted under laws related to sending unsolicited porn without an envelope over the pictures marking them as adult content or some such thing that you have to do when you send unsolicited porn. The judge threw out the case on the grounds that email has no envelope so it simply didn't apply. The law had no concept or provision for what happened, and one could wonder why the police chose that route. But it didn't work. Obsolete law.
My pondering on the expectation of privacy is just that I would have none if I wore a kilt, for example. While I certainly would not expect upkilting, the only thing keeping it from happening is expectation of proper behavior on the part of other people. History shows counting on people to behave is not necessarily a good idea.
That's one of the reasons there are so many laws, after all: to encourage compliance and penalize the offenders. However in the case of a kilt or dress or skirt, this particular problem can be prevented entirely by choosing to wear a garment not vulnerable to such invasions.
Oh now I know this sounds too much like "her clothes = she asked for it" but I think that's a totally different (and rightfully ridiculous) thing. I am not suggesting bottomless clothing = any invite to anything, however I chose to dress tactically for the environment I plan to be in. From shirt to shoes to whatever covers my legs. I was in an environment where upkilting was likely, I would probably wear something else, same as if I was going to be in thick brush or spiny plants or walking on broken glass or hot furnace slag.
Yes I would go out into the world assuming there would be jerks with shoe cameras everywhere. And I would make it difficult to catch me and more difficult for them to remain walking and capable of reproduction afterward. I have a fondness for knees. And every jerk with a shoe camera usually has two of them.:P
This decision makes a kind of sense to me, and it's not difficult to understand. A woman in a dress or skirt wears that clothing with the knowledge that a breeze, for example, could come along and remove whatever modesty might exist. The classic Marilyn Monroe/Subway vent thing.
Therefore, there could not be an expectation of privacy when that type of clothing is worn. Because exposure can be an issue and a risk that is just accepted, or else they'd wear something else.
As a guy, I don't understand a lot of why women do what they do, such as carrying handbags and wearing clothes with no bottom like a dress or skirt, and how this manages to happen across culture or continents that have nothing obvious to do with each other. But it seems to me having the wind potentially expose your privates -and with the risk that is for women, is kind of a drawback, along with the lack of protection to the legs.
FWIW I may be a neanderthal for wondering such things but I still think upskirting is horrible and not how people should behave in this society. It should be a crime because it serves no purpose except to exploit the victim or target.
They can 2.oh this all they want. I am holding on to my Keurig B70 until the thing dies. Which, given Keurig's awful reliability, has probably already happened in 7 out of 12 universes. But for now it still works!
And when it dies, it goes back to Costco for a new one. HA! Take that Keurig!
PS: Keurig coffee is not THAT good. It's merely convenient. The company often mistakes these for being the same thing. They are not. When they DRM it all to hell and make it less convenient, it will become another -nt word and that word is irrelevant.
Breach and also defamation or slander as these accusations about discrimination were never actually put to a trial. The parties merely agreed to settle. With the settlement gone, and no trial, it's back to his word against theirs and clearly they have suffered some damages to their reputation in all this breach.
The only thing keeping this from being a financial bloodbath for this family is how badly the school wants to eat them alive, or not.
IANAL, but not only do they not get the $80K, presumably they still have/had legal fees related to this case which will need to be paid somehow. Likely they were to be paid from this money or from another pile of money from the school, but also likely that any such payout if it existed was also terminated by the breach of agreement.
So basically, Dad not only doesn't get 80K, he still has a legal bill to pay. And he has no job. This is made of win.
And now that the stuff has been made public, the school could possibly sue for breach of contract as well, and maybe defamation since they technically settled and didn't admit anything and weren't convicted of anything. However, the plaintiff's accusation is now in the open where it should not have been, has damaged the school's reputation, etc.
What a mess. Can they un-have this child? That might be the best option.
As the FA points out, you need a GOOD fit for a mask worth anything to actually work. The real danger for a mask like this is that correctly fitted or not, once you start using it, you tend to have to mouth-breath to overcome the drag from the filter material. This means whatever you are breathing in bypasses the filtering your nose provides and instead goes deep into your lungs.
This can be a very bad thing, especially if the mask doesn't fit well anyway.
There is also a possibility to hyperventilate by forcibly mouth-breathing for hours at a time. I've done this on work projects where I had to wear a mask the entire time. It's also tiring due to the extra effort just to breathe.
There is a very similar problem with sunglasses. Put on dark glasses and your eyes tend to widen and open. If light is leaking in around the lenses, then just like your lungs and a mask, your eyes will receive more unfiltered light than if you had no glasses on. And worse if the glasses are scratched or damaged, the sunlight can get in that much easier.
The commonality between masks and sunglasses is simply that any system that is expected to protect you has to be used correctly and the human response to it also needs to be understood by the user. You need to know that a mask will make you want to breath deeply AND if you do that with a shitty mask or one that is badly fitted, you will get sicker and/or injured.
Most people think safety warnings are for "the other guy" so they don't care anyway. People think they are invincible. Oddly, not one of them has ever been right.
OK, riddle me this: how are porn, piles of cash, illegal drugs, exotic pets, or god forbid a hamburger in any way a threat to the airplane, and if they are not, why does the TSA give a damn if they're in baggage or not? Shouldn't the TSA be focused on safety rather than generic law enforcement? Oh not as sexy perhaps but exactly what is the TSA (keyword Transportation) protecting and from whom?
And for all the TSA screening and checkpoints and xrays, how does any of that stuff offer any protection what so ever to the people lined up at security waiting to be screened? Suppose, for example, a bomber decided to come to the airport with a huge backpack bomb and went all the way through the line until they were surrounded by hundreds of people in the queue, and then detonated it. The casualties would be extreme, perhaps as bad as taking down a whole plane. Except now it becomes dangerous just to stand in line anywhere. The TSA's ability to prevent such a thing? Zero.
Not exactly. The salt in the oceans was there because rain fell on rocks and soil or whatever and dissolved out minerals and metals like sodium, which later concentrated in lakes and seas and early oceans and eventually some of it formed those salt deposits we mine.
But fair amount is still in the modern oceans where we humans pretend it's different enough to spend extra to have on hand. Really it's just sodium and trace minerals that have all cycled through fish for a long time. They pee it, we eat it.Yum.
The fun part is that salt is STILL being dissolved out of rocks and dirt and carried off down streams where it eventually ends up in the ocean.
Also, some amount of sodium is returned to the oceans thanks to kidneys and modern sewage treatment. We pee it, fish eat it. Cycle loops.
The strangest thing about sodium is its connection to hypertension. This is a rather salty world. We humans should have evolved to cope with the sodium levels instead of having it as a weak point. But then nature does like to use such things to weed out the weak.
None of the cities in the Atlanta area could be considered technologically advanced. Most of them are actually just suburbs, and not well-off suburbs at that. Sandy Springs would be the only well-off exception.
As an example, the cities of College Park, Hapeville and East Point don't have a single Walmart between them, One is about to open soon and the residents are thrilled to finally have a shopping option. Compare that to a more typical suburb which might have several stores and protesters blocking more.
What those three cities DO have is plenty of dark fiber and railroad ROW to lay in more, and local governments who would probably welcome Google with open arms.
This is my first MMO and I found it because of the calendar art pages that were circulating last year. It wasn't even the titillating nature of the game -I had no idea about that. Just liked the art.
Found out there was a game attached to it and that I could play it within my own abilities and within what my PC could handle, and ended up playing my first MMO ever. That was 8 months ago. I am currently the head for two different guilds and manage to have fun with the game nearly every day. I've made friends in game who helped me through a nasty crisis last summer, just by giving me an outlet and a refuge from the real world chaos.
The sexy aspect that is the game's notorious point fades after a while. It's not actually as in your face as some of the videos make it look and the only players who get really fixated on that are the brand new ones. Most of them get over it after a while, or they quit. Those of us who have been there a long time don't really notice it any more. I play as a girl because I am fine being a guy in real life. It seems fine to me to game as a fantasy, same as if it was a troll or something equally impossible. What's the difference?
The game is not perfect. Early on, gold-trading was more or less tolerated so early players were able amass huge wealth for not much cash. Buying gold is now banned but the gold purchased before is still in play. This means the early players basically dominate everybody else because they can afford to buy the best gear which they resell primarily to their own levels. This leaves everybody else at something of a disadvantage.
The game has a mix of quests and PvP but the game all but says PvP is the purpose. The game wants you to spend money to compete on the battlefield. The questing is mostly just a way to gain basic skills and level up to a point. And then you are expected to be good enough to go kill other players. If you don't want to kill players, you can continue grinding out repeat quests but it's boring and slow. And eventually, you will have to go PvP. Surprisingly, this game seems to attract a lot of first-time MMO players who don't want to do PvP. It's fine to kill a monster but different to take on somebody with the power to kill you.
One problem with the game is that leveling up starts easy and happens fast. Literally, you can level from 1 to 10 in about half an hour. And new players get hooked on that easy leveling. 10 to 20 takes hours, probably over several days for most people. 20-25 is going to take days, easy. And slower and longer after that. My first level 30 character took a month of playing every day just to do level 30 alone.
This huge increase in difficulty and time starts becoming apparently around level 20 which is also when the supply of quests starts to run out before the level ends. Once players realize they have to grind, and that they will have to do a LOT of it, well, it tends to burn players like crazy. The attrition rate is probably around 90% at level 20. Net result is that only the good, or patient, or determined players hang on after that which is again what the game wants. Those top players represent another brick wall for new players who do manage to come up. You will be facing players who can eat you for dinner, and will do so.
From the game's perspective this is fine. The top players have an incentive to keep spending money to maintain their status. Perhaps a lot of money. It doesn't matter financially if hundreds of free-players drop out for every one player dropping hundreds of dollars a month.
I do pay to play. Spent money tonight on virtual warehouse space to store my game goods. Go me.
The Freshnews.org link to this article on/. links not to/. at all but instead directly to the Network World article. Which, as we all know, nobody needs to RTFA.
The Japanese anime Might Gaine (c. 1991?) explored this simulation possibility. At the end of the series, it was revealed that the villain of the series was in fact a 2-D animation character representation of a being from 3-D space, that is to say, a real human or at least some sort of real creature. The entire world of the anime was merely this being's casual game, and all the characters in it were its pawns which it intended to kill.
This ultimate evil concept was created in part because the show animators and the toy company sponsor had gotten into deep disagreement over various things. The animators represented the meddling toy company as a terribly menacing and evil being from beyond who was the shadow in control of the world of the anime.)
While basically just a plot device, it does bring the question of what happens if you find out you really are just a pawn for some other being? And how do you know if you want to do it, or if the the sim simply wants you to think you want to do it? And what it the sim master wants to pull the plug? What do you do? This is what the hero of the show has to face. A flaw in the game master's strategy ultimately leads to victory for the 2-D world and a defeat for the 3-D being.
Carrying on the concept. the final camera shot of the Might Gaine series was an external camera view of an animation cel sheet, representing a view from our 3-D world into the animes 2-D world.
For what was a kids show, the series peered very deeply into itself at times. It is highly recommended, if it's understood the slow beginning of the show is just a setup for various plots that come together in the end. It takes time to put all the pieces into play. Would perhaps be worth watching the start of the final episode to see just how much is at stake (a desperate end-of-the-world scenario) and then begin from episode 1. This would make the stakes much clearer.
A 2-D vision created by 3-D beings who themselves exist in a simulation would entirely makes sense.
You know, someone asks more or less this exact question every time this topic comes up -- "why not look for other forms of life unlike our own?".... There's really no point in trying to look for life built around other building blocks, because we don't know anything about what that hypothetical lifeform would look like or how to spot it.
I'm not saying it couldn't exist. I'm saying that until we know about it and how it works, there's no basis to look for it.
Look around, human. There are currently around 8.7 million different kinds of life on Earth. Only a handful of them look like YOU, and yet they are as alive as you are. Some of them are in your gut right now ensuring you can digest the dinner you will have tonight.
Out there in the vast universe, the odds are whatever life is there almost certainly looks even less like you than the 8.7 million kinds that are actually from the same planet. And yet there is this persistence to look only for life we know. We should be looking for what we do not know, which is oddly enough what most of science is supposed to be about. Except this one niche, where they only want to find what they know. Makes no sense to me.
It may be all we are capable of looking for, but then we should say that and understand our lack of ability to recognize life IS probably going to screw up any results we might get.
Phone OSs are quickly approaching the same plateau already reached by desktop OSs: the underlying OS doesn't actually matter. What users and customers want to DO is provided not by the OS but by apps they run. When they want to check email, tweet, update Facebook or play a game, they don't _care_ what OS supports it. They only care that they can, or cannot, do the things they want to do.
The problem for Microsoft and Blackberry is that they have the OS but they do not have the stuff to run on it. The quick way to fix this problem is to take the stuff people want and allow/make it run on your OS, and generally hope the public buys it.
This has not helped Blackberry because Blackberry is not cool, because nobody carries it so there's no peer envy, because the company reeks of instability and that scares customers, and because the US carriers don't do much to support it. And BB itself does not seem to actually bother to promote this compatibility. What good is a superpower you never use or talk about?
Windows Phone has other issues, one of which is the name Windows, which I insist in my own way is a terrible brand name for a product that has nothing to do with the "windows and manila file folders" concept, and it ties it to the desktop OS, which is used but not exactly beloved. They should have called it something else. The other problems are similar to Blackberry. Lack of peer envy, lack of carrier support, lack of OEM support (buying Nokia did not help this), and lack of any sexy reason to choose Windows Phone over Android or iPhone. Windows Phone fans say it runs better, does this or that better. They miss that "better than" means nothing when most people will never see it, much less compare it to their iPhone or Galaxy.
Getting people to think about Windows Phone means giving them a reason to bother getting closer than 40 feet away. A big campaign "We run Android's million+ apps!" is better than nothing. It removes an objection. It may add an enticement. Maybe. It beats a empty app store and developer issues.
There is only ONE book you need. The Holy Bible. King James translation.
A translation, by definition, is not the same as the original, Words get changed, meanings change, stuff gets made up when the translator gets fed up and wants to go to lunch early.
King James' translators were no better than any of them. Your faith isn't so much in God as you may think it is. Your faith is actually in those translators, that they did a correct and accurate job. Because you have no idea what the original works actually said, do you? Somebody has told you what it says. Perhaps many somebodies.
When average people talk you about... weather, politics, the best dog food to buy, or whether Pizza Hut, Papa Johns, or Dominos has the best pizza, do you take what they say at face value and believe it? No, probably not. You know how people are full of crap, make stuff up, or are simply delusional. Being wacko is almost normal.
But you trust your faith, the most important thing there is for many people, in the words translated by people hundreds of years ago. Whom you cannot talk to about pizza or anything else. You have no idea whether they were the best scholars ever, or merely humans who thought the same wacko things you find everywhere. I bet the latter because people are people, and most of them are wacko.
Stuff like that scares the crap out of me. I know how much people make stuff up. Some more than others. There is no way I can base something like faith on a book like that. If you can, good for you.
Well, of course you can and you will believe it. Because the alternative, that even a small part of what you believe might be wrong, is impossible to accept. It could not possibly be wrong, so it will never be wrong. You are safe.
Disagree with wikipedia's snub of first hand info. Who better to know facts, sometimes, than the people who work at a given place?
I worked for a small volunteer group which eventually got a wikipedia page. A lot of it was bullshit because it was posted by people who were not actually involved and had no idea what the hell they were talking about. The org in question existed before most people had internet access, and even before you could just go get a.com domain name. Those early years have NO citable online links. They didn't exist. There was no WWW.whatever.org.
So I posted a lot of historical corrections, because I was fucking there. I know the early history. I know the later history. I know stuff the head people have forgotten.
After posting some useful corrections, Wikipedia crapped all over it, you know, because there are no citations for stuff that happened before the WWW was open for general public use. And a lot of it happened offline in meatspace. Even if there were online elements, all the early stuff was on servers that no longer exist. There is no longer a there there. But I still have all the old ugly HTML cause I wrote most of it. Before I got jaded and burned out and began hating. I was nice once. And naive.
Their editorial reversion and shootdown of actual facts ended whatever effort I'll ever make to contribute to wikipedia. If they think they know better, they can just cope with citable but factually incorrect garbage and that's fine. I won't donate a used fingernail to their fund raisers and won't feel sad if they collapse into a heap of dung for lack of cash.
Nothing they've got matters if facts don't matter. And without facts, they're just another blog. Funny, but can't be trusted.
No, they know EXACTLY who the existing audience is. The thing is, they don't WANT us. They want a generic everyday people audience, the sort of people you attract with the Yahoo homepage and the godawful new NBC News website.
We old slashdotters don't matter for shit.
Heck, as they relaunch that new site design they will probably launch a whole new name too. And then where will we be? That's how much we are valued.
When you get right down to it, life is 100% fatal. Everybody who is alive is going to die. Everybody who was alive and is not any more, has died. Everybody born tomorrow and the next day and the next day and the day after that, is going to die.
All of them tragic and sad and with loved ones left behind, but nothing can stop death. Nothing.
If every car can be automatically worth investigating, then so can people. After all, cars don't do anything without people at the controls (at least for now anyway), so if a car is interesting, then the driver must be absolutely fascinating.
And it won't matter if the driver is walking down the street or driving, they might drive soon. Heck, if you buy alcohol in LA, they should go ahead and book you for DUI because, you know, you might drive. Or beat your wife or kids in a drunken rage, set the house on fire and go on a stabbing rampage in a hair salon. You might do these things. Might as well assume you will. Stand still while we book you for murder in that hair salon. Wouldn't want to accidentally have you fight with arresting officers.
So, Joco, I had no idea who the hell you were when I stumbled across the PopSci podcast from the moon, which was really awesome and still what I think of when I think of your work. Not all these songs everybody else thinks of. No, for me it's a wacky but informative podcast.
So what happened? Why did they stop? How come you don't talk about them?
What's the point of pointless what-ifs? It will not be a Tesla, or a Taurus or a Leaf or whatever. It'll probably be a Tahoe or another limo.
And by the way, there will be more than one of them. They always send at least two identical vehicles, and keep spares on stand by.
Yeah I get that the logic is different. The court decided based on the exact wording of the law, which they are changing last I heard. One worries about laws rushed into battle; but one worries more about the laws they spend time trying to pass. Good results are rare.
Laws have a serious need to catch up to the 21st century. A local case where involved a man who emailed pictures of his parts to a recipient who didn't want them. The police got involved and prosecuted under laws related to sending unsolicited porn without an envelope over the pictures marking them as adult content or some such thing that you have to do when you send unsolicited porn. The judge threw out the case on the grounds that email has no envelope so it simply didn't apply. The law had no concept or provision for what happened, and one could wonder why the police chose that route. But it didn't work. Obsolete law.
My pondering on the expectation of privacy is just that I would have none if I wore a kilt, for example. While I certainly would not expect upkilting, the only thing keeping it from happening is expectation of proper behavior on the part of other people. History shows counting on people to behave is not necessarily a good idea.
That's one of the reasons there are so many laws, after all: to encourage compliance and penalize the offenders. However in the case of a kilt or dress or skirt, this particular problem can be prevented entirely by choosing to wear a garment not vulnerable to such invasions.
Oh now I know this sounds too much like "her clothes = she asked for it" but I think that's a totally different (and rightfully ridiculous) thing. I am not suggesting bottomless clothing = any invite to anything, however I chose to dress tactically for the environment I plan to be in. From shirt to shoes to whatever covers my legs. I was in an environment where upkilting was likely, I would probably wear something else, same as if I was going to be in thick brush or spiny plants or walking on broken glass or hot furnace slag.
Yes I would go out into the world assuming there would be jerks with shoe cameras everywhere. And I would make it difficult to catch me and more difficult for them to remain walking and capable of reproduction afterward. I have a fondness for knees. And every jerk with a shoe camera usually has two of them. :P
This decision makes a kind of sense to me, and it's not difficult to understand. A woman in a dress or skirt wears that clothing with the knowledge that a breeze, for example, could come along and remove whatever modesty might exist. The classic Marilyn Monroe/Subway vent thing.
Therefore, there could not be an expectation of privacy when that type of clothing is worn. Because exposure can be an issue and a risk that is just accepted, or else they'd wear something else.
As a guy, I don't understand a lot of why women do what they do, such as carrying handbags and wearing clothes with no bottom like a dress or skirt, and how this manages to happen across culture or continents that have nothing obvious to do with each other. But it seems to me having the wind potentially expose your privates -and with the risk that is for women, is kind of a drawback, along with the lack of protection to the legs.
FWIW I may be a neanderthal for wondering such things but I still think upskirting is horrible and not how people should behave in this society. It should be a crime because it serves no purpose except to exploit the victim or target.
They can 2.oh this all they want. I am holding on to my Keurig B70 until the thing dies. Which, given Keurig's awful reliability, has probably already happened in 7 out of 12 universes. But for now it still works!
And when it dies, it goes back to Costco for a new one. HA! Take that Keurig!
PS: Keurig coffee is not THAT good. It's merely convenient. The company often mistakes these for being the same thing. They are not. When they DRM it all to hell and make it less convenient, it will become another -nt word and that word is irrelevant.
Breach and also defamation or slander as these accusations about discrimination were never actually put to a trial. The parties merely agreed to settle. With the settlement gone, and no trial, it's back to his word against theirs and clearly they have suffered some damages to their reputation in all this breach.
The only thing keeping this from being a financial bloodbath for this family is how badly the school wants to eat them alive, or not.
Yep. His lawyer's bills still exist even if the money no longer does.
His kid really stiffed him for 80 + 60, not just 80. I bet she pays her own way through college now.
IANAL, but not only do they not get the $80K, presumably they still have/had legal fees related to this case which will need to be paid somehow. Likely they were to be paid from this money or from another pile of money from the school, but also likely that any such payout if it existed was also terminated by the breach of agreement.
So basically, Dad not only doesn't get 80K, he still has a legal bill to pay. And he has no job. This is made of win.
And now that the stuff has been made public, the school could possibly sue for breach of contract as well, and maybe defamation since they technically settled and didn't admit anything and weren't convicted of anything. However, the plaintiff's accusation is now in the open where it should not have been, has damaged the school's reputation, etc.
What a mess. Can they un-have this child? That might be the best option.
As the FA points out, you need a GOOD fit for a mask worth anything to actually work. The real danger for a mask like this is that correctly fitted or not, once you start using it, you tend to have to mouth-breath to overcome the drag from the filter material. This means whatever you are breathing in bypasses the filtering your nose provides and instead goes deep into your lungs.
This can be a very bad thing, especially if the mask doesn't fit well anyway.
There is also a possibility to hyperventilate by forcibly mouth-breathing for hours at a time. I've done this on work projects where I had to wear a mask the entire time. It's also tiring due to the extra effort just to breathe.
There is a very similar problem with sunglasses. Put on dark glasses and your eyes tend to widen and open. If light is leaking in around the lenses, then just like your lungs and a mask, your eyes will receive more unfiltered light than if you had no glasses on. And worse if the glasses are scratched or damaged, the sunlight can get in that much easier.
The commonality between masks and sunglasses is simply that any system that is expected to protect you has to be used correctly and the human response to it also needs to be understood by the user. You need to know that a mask will make you want to breath deeply AND if you do that with a shitty mask or one that is badly fitted, you will get sicker and/or injured.
Most people think safety warnings are for "the other guy" so they don't care anyway. People think they are invincible. Oddly, not one of them has ever been right.
OK, riddle me this: how are porn, piles of cash, illegal drugs, exotic pets, or god forbid a hamburger in any way a threat to the airplane, and if they are not, why does the TSA give a damn if they're in baggage or not? Shouldn't the TSA be focused on safety rather than generic law enforcement? Oh not as sexy perhaps but exactly what is the TSA (keyword Transportation) protecting and from whom?
And for all the TSA screening and checkpoints and xrays, how does any of that stuff offer any protection what so ever to the people lined up at security waiting to be screened? Suppose, for example, a bomber decided to come to the airport with a huge backpack bomb and went all the way through the line until they were surrounded by hundreds of people in the queue, and then detonated it. The casualties would be extreme, perhaps as bad as taking down a whole plane. Except now it becomes dangerous just to stand in line anywhere. The TSA's ability to prevent such a thing? Zero.
Oh yeah my point. All sea salt originated as land salt.
Ok except for that which formed in stars or as a chemical reaction.
Not exactly. The salt in the oceans was there because rain fell on rocks and soil or whatever and dissolved out minerals and metals like sodium, which later concentrated in lakes and seas and early oceans and eventually some of it formed those salt deposits we mine.
But fair amount is still in the modern oceans where we humans pretend it's different enough to spend extra to have on hand. Really it's just sodium and trace minerals that have all cycled through fish for a long time. They pee it, we eat it.Yum.
The fun part is that salt is STILL being dissolved out of rocks and dirt and carried off down streams where it eventually ends up in the ocean.
Also, some amount of sodium is returned to the oceans thanks to kidneys and modern sewage treatment. We pee it, fish eat it. Cycle loops.
The strangest thing about sodium is its connection to hypertension. This is a rather salty world. We humans should have evolved to cope with the sodium levels instead of having it as a weak point. But then nature does like to use such things to weed out the weak.
Have never worked for IBM but I have worked with IBMers on various projects mostly at Sterling Forest.
Best wishes to all of them.
None of the cities in the Atlanta area could be considered technologically advanced. Most of them are actually just suburbs, and not well-off suburbs at that. Sandy Springs would be the only well-off exception.
As an example, the cities of College Park, Hapeville and East Point don't have a single Walmart between them, One is about to open soon and the residents are thrilled to finally have a shopping option. Compare that to a more typical suburb which might have several stores and protesters blocking more.
What those three cities DO have is plenty of dark fiber and railroad ROW to lay in more, and local governments who would probably welcome Google with open arms.
This is my first MMO and I found it because of the calendar art pages that were circulating last year. It wasn't even the titillating nature of the game -I had no idea about that. Just liked the art.
Found out there was a game attached to it and that I could play it within my own abilities and within what my PC could handle, and ended up playing my first MMO ever. That was 8 months ago. I am currently the head for two different guilds and manage to have fun with the game nearly every day. I've made friends in game who helped me through a nasty crisis last summer, just by giving me an outlet and a refuge from the real world chaos.
The sexy aspect that is the game's notorious point fades after a while. It's not actually as in your face as some of the videos make it look and the only players who get really fixated on that are the brand new ones. Most of them get over it after a while, or they quit. Those of us who have been there a long time don't really notice it any more. I play as a girl because I am fine being a guy in real life. It seems fine to me to game as a fantasy, same as if it was a troll or something equally impossible. What's the difference?
The game is not perfect. Early on, gold-trading was more or less tolerated so early players were able amass huge wealth for not much cash. Buying gold is now banned but the gold purchased before is still in play. This means the early players basically dominate everybody else because they can afford to buy the best gear which they resell primarily to their own levels. This leaves everybody else at something of a disadvantage.
The game has a mix of quests and PvP but the game all but says PvP is the purpose. The game wants you to spend money to compete on the battlefield. The questing is mostly just a way to gain basic skills and level up to a point. And then you are expected to be good enough to go kill other players. If you don't want to kill players, you can continue grinding out repeat quests but it's boring and slow. And eventually, you will have to go PvP. Surprisingly, this game seems to attract a lot of first-time MMO players who don't want to do PvP. It's fine to kill a monster but different to take on somebody with the power to kill you.
One problem with the game is that leveling up starts easy and happens fast. Literally, you can level from 1 to 10 in about half an hour. And new players get hooked on that easy leveling. 10 to 20 takes hours, probably over several days for most people. 20-25 is going to take days, easy. And slower and longer after that. My first level 30 character took a month of playing every day just to do level 30 alone.
This huge increase in difficulty and time starts becoming apparently around level 20 which is also when the supply of quests starts to run out before the level ends. Once players realize they have to grind, and that they will have to do a LOT of it, well, it tends to burn players like crazy. The attrition rate is probably around 90% at level 20. Net result is that only the good, or patient, or determined players hang on after that which is again what the game wants. Those top players represent another brick wall for new players who do manage to come up. You will be facing players who can eat you for dinner, and will do so.
From the game's perspective this is fine. The top players have an incentive to keep spending money to maintain their status. Perhaps a lot of money. It doesn't matter financially if hundreds of free-players drop out for every one player dropping hundreds of dollars a month.
I do pay to play. Spent money tonight on virtual warehouse space to store my game goods. Go me.
The Freshnews.org link to this article on /. links not to /. at all but instead directly to the Network World article. Which, as we all know, nobody needs to RTFA.
The Japanese anime Might Gaine (c. 1991?) explored this simulation possibility. At the end of the series, it was revealed that the villain of the series was in fact a 2-D animation character representation of a being from 3-D space, that is to say, a real human or at least some sort of real creature. The entire world of the anime was merely this being's casual game, and all the characters in it were its pawns which it intended to kill.
This ultimate evil concept was created in part because the show animators and the toy company sponsor had gotten into deep disagreement over various things. The animators represented the meddling toy company as a terribly menacing and evil being from beyond who was the shadow in control of the world of the anime.)
While basically just a plot device, it does bring the question of what happens if you find out you really are just a pawn for some other being? And how do you know if you want to do it, or if the the sim simply wants you to think you want to do it? And what it the sim master wants to pull the plug? What do you do? This is what the hero of the show has to face. A flaw in the game master's strategy ultimately leads to victory for the 2-D world and a defeat for the 3-D being.
Carrying on the concept. the final camera shot of the Might Gaine series was an external camera view of an animation cel sheet, representing a view from our 3-D world into the animes 2-D world.
For what was a kids show, the series peered very deeply into itself at times. It is highly recommended, if it's understood the slow beginning of the show is just a setup for various plots that come together in the end. It takes time to put all the pieces into play. Would perhaps be worth watching the start of the final episode to see just how much is at stake (a desperate end-of-the-world scenario) and then begin from episode 1. This would make the stakes much clearer.
A 2-D vision created by 3-D beings who themselves exist in a simulation would entirely makes sense.
You know, someone asks more or less this exact question every time this topic comes up -- "why not look for other forms of life unlike our own?".... There's really no point in trying to look for life built around other building blocks, because we don't know anything about what that hypothetical lifeform would look like or how to spot it.
I'm not saying it couldn't exist. I'm saying that until we know about it and how it works, there's no basis to look for it.
Look around, human. There are currently around 8.7 million different kinds of life on Earth. Only a handful of them look like YOU, and yet they are as alive as you are. Some of them are in your gut right now ensuring you can digest the dinner you will have tonight.
Out there in the vast universe, the odds are whatever life is there almost certainly looks even less like you than the 8.7 million kinds that are actually from the same planet. And yet there is this persistence to look only for life we know. We should be looking for what we do not know, which is oddly enough what most of science is supposed to be about. Except this one niche, where they only want to find what they know. Makes no sense to me.
It may be all we are capable of looking for, but then we should say that and understand our lack of ability to recognize life IS probably going to screw up any results we might get.
Phone OSs are quickly approaching the same plateau already reached by desktop OSs: the underlying OS doesn't actually matter. What users and customers want to DO is provided not by the OS but by apps they run. When they want to check email, tweet, update Facebook or play a game, they don't _care_ what OS supports it. They only care that they can, or cannot, do the things they want to do.
The problem for Microsoft and Blackberry is that they have the OS but they do not have the stuff to run on it. The quick way to fix this problem is to take the stuff people want and allow/make it run on your OS, and generally hope the public buys it.
This has not helped Blackberry because Blackberry is not cool, because nobody carries it so there's no peer envy, because the company reeks of instability and that scares customers, and because the US carriers don't do much to support it. And BB itself does not seem to actually bother to promote this compatibility. What good is a superpower you never use or talk about?
Windows Phone has other issues, one of which is the name Windows, which I insist in my own way is a terrible brand name for a product that has nothing to do with the "windows and manila file folders" concept, and it ties it to the desktop OS, which is used but not exactly beloved. They should have called it something else. The other problems are similar to Blackberry. Lack of peer envy, lack of carrier support, lack of OEM support (buying Nokia did not help this), and lack of any sexy reason to choose Windows Phone over Android or iPhone. Windows Phone fans say it runs better, does this or that better. They miss that "better than" means nothing when most people will never see it, much less compare it to their iPhone or Galaxy.
Getting people to think about Windows Phone means giving them a reason to bother getting closer than 40 feet away. A big campaign "We run Android's million+ apps!" is better than nothing. It removes an objection. It may add an enticement. Maybe. It beats a empty app store and developer issues.
There is only ONE book you need. The Holy Bible. King James translation.
A translation, by definition, is not the same as the original, Words get changed, meanings change, stuff gets made up when the translator gets fed up and wants to go to lunch early.
King James' translators were no better than any of them. Your faith isn't so much in God as you may think it is. Your faith is actually in those translators, that they did a correct and accurate job. Because you have no idea what the original works actually said, do you? Somebody has told you what it says. Perhaps many somebodies.
When average people talk you about... weather, politics, the best dog food to buy, or whether Pizza Hut, Papa Johns, or Dominos has the best pizza, do you take what they say at face value and believe it? No, probably not. You know how people are full of crap, make stuff up, or are simply delusional. Being wacko is almost normal.
But you trust your faith, the most important thing there is for many people, in the words translated by people hundreds of years ago. Whom you cannot talk to about pizza or anything else. You have no idea whether they were the best scholars ever, or merely humans who thought the same wacko things you find everywhere. I bet the latter because people are people, and most of them are wacko.
Stuff like that scares the crap out of me. I know how much people make stuff up. Some more than others. There is no way I can base something like faith on a book like that. If you can, good for you.
Well, of course you can and you will believe it. Because the alternative, that even a small part of what you believe might be wrong, is impossible to accept. It could not possibly be wrong, so it will never be wrong. You are safe.
Disagree with wikipedia's snub of first hand info. Who better to know facts, sometimes, than the people who work at a given place?
I worked for a small volunteer group which eventually got a wikipedia page. A lot of it was bullshit because it was posted by people who were not actually involved and had no idea what the hell they were talking about. The org in question existed before most people had internet access, and even before you could just go get a .com domain name. Those early years have NO citable online links. They didn't exist. There was no WWW.whatever.org.
So I posted a lot of historical corrections, because I was fucking there. I know the early history. I know the later history. I know stuff the head people have forgotten.
After posting some useful corrections, Wikipedia crapped all over it, you know, because there are no citations for stuff that happened before the WWW was open for general public use. And a lot of it happened offline in meatspace. Even if there were online elements, all the early stuff was on servers that no longer exist. There is no longer a there there. But I still have all the old ugly HTML cause I wrote most of it. Before I got jaded and burned out and began hating. I was nice once. And naive.
Their editorial reversion and shootdown of actual facts ended whatever effort I'll ever make to contribute to wikipedia. If they think they know better, they can just cope with citable but factually incorrect garbage and that's fine. I won't donate a used fingernail to their fund raisers and won't feel sad if they collapse into a heap of dung for lack of cash.
Nothing they've got matters if facts don't matter. And without facts, they're just another blog. Funny, but can't be trusted.
This was mainly talking about private pilots, who are not getting poached by anyone except their own twin-tail doctor killers.
The ATP issue is a whole other problem.
No, they know EXACTLY who the existing audience is. The thing is, they don't WANT us. They want a generic everyday people audience, the sort of people you attract with the Yahoo homepage and the godawful new NBC News website.
We old slashdotters don't matter for shit.
Heck, as they relaunch that new site design they will probably launch a whole new name too. And then where will we be? That's how much we are valued.