When you have a winner-take-all system of voting, third parties tend to siphon support from those who are ideologically closest to them. That's not a good way of choosing representatives of the public.
Libertarians, greens, tea partiers and progressives should join hands and support Instant Runoff Voting, Approval Voting or any number of more rational election schemes. Until they do, it's appropriate to dismiss minor parties as spoilers. Absent such reforms, I support the decision of ABC. Otherwise, I would say that there should be one debate for those polling above 2% and another debate for those polling above 20%.
Generally speaking, that's a reasonable position. The twist is that the US system is designed for consultation and compromise. So the Republicans want one thing, the Dems the other and they're suppose to split the difference.
What the Republicans have discovered is that compromises tend to make the President look good. So they've stopped compromising. Mitch McConnell has been pretty explicit about this: he will only sign off on a Dem proposal if it's something, "...I and my members would do anyway..." http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2011/01/mitch_mcconnell_the_most_hones.html Most Democratic systems work this way: members of the majority coalition support each other and the minority lodges objections. Therein lies accountability: if you don't like the coalition, throw them out.
The problem in the US is that the minority party can sabotage and obstruct and reap electoral benefits when the other side fails to get anything done. Indeed, economic sabotage becomes a viable strategy, which explains Republican resistance to stimulus packages and textbook economics: what's in it for them?
At any rate, if you truly believe what you say, you should vote for Romney, a Democratic House and a Republican Senate. That is, throw the bums out in the legislature *and* the executive. Frankly, I find this nuts: I only support pro-Science parties which for the past 10+ years excludes the GOP. Too bad our winner-take-all voting system blocks the emergence of more choices: a European style conservative party would earn my consideration.
Vista was a downgrade. Win7 was an upgrade from XP, barely. Windows Explorer was actually an improvement: 1) You can set the default view as you wish. You can do the same in XP of course, except that submitting that request doesn't work. 2) Win7 WE lacks the autocrash feature of XP. To crash XP, choose File -> New -> Folder and run the mouse beyond the context sub-menu. 3) The folders view doesn't erratically turn itself off.
Nice analysis about the 11% drop though. But business environments require multiple levels of security and they can't rely on their least attentive employees. Heck they can't rely on their most attentive either: Conde Nast was phished for $8 million last year. The Controller for Experi-metal revealed passwords after receiving an emailed phish in 2009: $1.9 million was subsequently wired to Russia. Experi-metal sued the bank last year for not monitoring its account activity adequately. Then again, I'm off on a tangent: Win7 wouldn't help in this instance though intrusive and annoying anti-malware software might.
It is by no means clear that Yucca Mountain is the proper site for radioactive waste disposal. From the article:
"It is still not completely clear whether Yucca Mountain would be a good place to bury radioactive waste. Despite the Energy Secretary's 2002 seal of approval, there are legitimate scientific concerns about the suitability of the site. An independent US Nuclear Technical Waste Review Board said PDF it had "limited confidence" in the Energy Department's performance estimates for Yucca Mountain because of "gaps in data and basic understanding." As Gary Taubes observed in Technology Review in 2002, "By choosing Yucca Mountain as the only option for a nuclear-waste facility, Congress put the DOE in an untenable position. In effect, it sent the department out to prove that Yucca Mountain would work as a repository, rather than to do a dispassionate analysis of whether it could work or was the best possible site." "
Yucca Mountain, IRRC, is rather close to Vegas and the site actually has some history of water migration, even over the past 50 years. Admittedly I'm working off of a memory of a report I read a decade ago. Here's the link FWIW: http://www.environmentalreview.org/archives/vol07/ewing_abstract.html
If people face the full cost of burning oil, they will consume less of it. Demand curves slope downwards. And alternatives to oil (natural gas now, solar later) will gain customers. Really, it's better if people pay for the burden they put on the economy directly, be it the burden in the form of labor and capital, health expenditures or climate adaptation.
Tax breaks mostly. Giving such special privileges to the oil industry shifts resources away from sectors with proportionally less pull in Washington, DC: software design is a prime example. There are also R&D and federal loan guarantees.
Oil gets $41 billion, coal gets $8 billion, nuclear gets $9 billion, ethanol (not a fossil fuel, more like a handout to farmers and a tax on food) gets $6 billion and wind and other renewables..... $6 billion.
By my thinking, extractive industries should pay royalties to the commonwealth: they should be taxed, not subsidized.
Oh c'mon. The fossil fuel industry is subsidized to the tune of $40 billion per year +. Meanwhile you can dump all the CO2 in the air you want with zero cost. Nada.
In my world, you would charge people for the damage they do to others or to the environment and let the market take care of the rest. But let's not pretend that conservatives are opponents of governmental subsidies: if they were, they would have no problem with meaningful campaign finance restrictions, to take one of many examples. (There are even 1st amendment friendly means of doing that. You could put a tax on electronic advertising and transfer the revenues to their political opponents. Sure, there some knotty issues involved, but the status quo is hardly an environment of calm and detached debate anyway.)
Here is what's missing from a bad piece of science journalism. There will be no discussion of whether the study had a control. There will be no indication that some methodologies are more powerful than others -- the reader is assumed not to know or care about gold standards such as "Double blind" and the like. There's no attempt to recapitulate the scientific argument; the reporter need only lamely report the conclusion. Obvious questions arise from the reporting, but are left unaddressed.
The New York Times and The Economist magazine tend to do better than that. AP tends to be awful.
The government wouldn't have to choose. They could simply distribute subsidies on the basis of circulation or hits. Sure, there's scope for hit-fraud, but advertisers have dealt with this problem IRL for decades.
The newspaper model depends far more on advertising than subscription revenue: anyone who doesn't think that this leads to slanted coverage is hopelessly naive. If anything distributing revenue in proportion to circulation would fight oligarchy, not enhance it.
The Brits worked off this model for years with the BBC. Everyone who owns a TV pays an annual fee. The result was that the BBC produced a range of shows where everyone would have at least a couple that they loved. In contrast, the advertiser-driven eyeball model encourages production of everyone's third choice. You don't have to like the show, you just have to keep the channel knob tuned to it.
All that said, this proposal is a nonstarter in the US: it's the stuff of academia and white papers.
I got a 40 out of 70, implying that I'm a callous asshole.
Maybe they are correct. But I can say that " When I'm upset at someone, I usually try to "put myself in his shoes" for a while." That describes me very well. I hope that I reflexively consider the POV of those I disagree with.
But then, I don't feel pity or tender feelings for those less fortunate than me. Feelings shmeelings, what people need is a hand up. So yes, I do donate to charity.
In short, I'm cerebrally empathetic, but not especially softhearted. Hence my lousy score.
The Sad Thing... is that nobody appreciates comedy anymore.
Er - I think the guy was joking. He also asked with regards to the gas station, "Can I buy Europe on pump 4?" Somehow I doubt whether this was a serious question.
I'm not sure what they want, but they are getting the tech, the brand, the manufacturing plant and let's not forget the distribution network.
The buyer, Sichuan Tengzhong, looks like an interesting company. They manufacture heavy equipment, special-use vehicles, highway & bridge structural components, construction machinery and energy facilities. That's a varied mix, but I don't see passenger autos in there. They've been in business since 2005. They are a private company; I'm not sure where they get their funding or their origins.
I agree that no-cost photography is a helpful development.
In the 1970s and 1980s budding photographers were advised to spend more money on film than on equipment. And the pros would routinely throw out the vast majority of the pics they made.
The difference now is that these practices can now be conducted on a far smaller budget.
1. "The projections in the OCS access case indicate that access to the Pacific, Atlantic, and eastern Gulf regions would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices before 2030."
2. Do oil options or futures go out further than 5 years anyway?
Finally, from the same link: 3. "Because oil prices are determined on the international market, however, any impact on average wellhead prices is expected to be insignificant."
If you don't care about the marine environment or the fishing industry, drilling for a couple of buckets or mblpd of oil may make sense. But don't fool yourself into thinking it will have any effect on gas prices.
Well, no. T-Mobile's and AT&T's pay as you go plan works out to about $100 per year, plus the cost of a $40 phone. Virgin-Sprint costs $20 per quarter, or $80 per year.
It's not expensive, but it's not cheap either.
In an opinion piece on 19 Feb 2006, Kristoff of the New York Times all but called for a boycott on Yahoo. He thought that Google got a bum rap, Cisco and Microsoft were sleazy (but nothing like Yahoo), and that Yahoo was a national disgrace.
Kristoff: "...nobody should touch Yahoo until it provides financially for the families of the three men it helped lock up and establishes annual fellowships in their names to bring Web journalists to America on study programs."
Kristof of the New York Times has basically called for a Yahoo boycott (I think he said they should be "shunned" until they make reparations with the families of the imprisoned and set up a scholarship fund for Chinese journalists.) Kristof also opined that Google received a "bum rap".
How about a "Theft Protection" program from laptop makers. Offer a service that, for an extra $200 or so, comes with a different version of the BIOS which reads the physical location of the laptop from an embedded GPS chip and looks for a Wi-Fi/ethernet connection or connected phone line to phone home to the computer manufacturers.
I am not an atmospheric scientist, but I could still spot some problems in the freeper article.
The key strength of the original paper in Science, is that it used worldwide data.
Data from a single region is not only noisier; it would also reflect cycles such as El Nino in the Pacific, or its counterpart, The North Atlantic Oscillation:
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/NAO/
It is entirely possible of course, that the pattern shown in the Science article is an outcome of natural processes. Nonetheless, to tack on Atlantic data without mentioning the North Atlantic Oscillation strikes me as dishonest in presentation.
... those pushing the global warming stuff seem to pick time periods for their studies based on what will disinclude data which might point to a natural cycle.
No. The Science article used all satellite data that was currently available, which dated from 1970.
I should add that Pacific data is available for longer time spans. If anybody was cherry-picking, it was the freeper author.
-------- What about Amazon.com? What about your local library's card catalogue? Both link to and provide adult content (everything from Fanny Hill to "art" books of lesbians in latex whipping each other and sex manuals). Do they both have to move into the.XXX TLD?
No. They merely have to identify their adult content and link to it through tinyurl.xxx or some such service.
The adult content could even have a.com extension. But to access it easily you would have to go through a small.xxx gateway, which could be easily blocked by a kiddie filter.
What about seach engines? I understand that it is trivial to put code on the top of a webpage that requests/instructs the index robots to go away.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/space/03/14/planet.di scovery/
I don't know if that's the same 10th "planet", but it was given the name of Sedna but was said to be smaller than Pluto (as opposed to 1.5x).
It was actually called an "object", as the definition of planet is a matter of some controversy.
When you have a winner-take-all system of voting, third parties tend to siphon support from those who are ideologically closest to them. That's not a good way of choosing representatives of the public.
Libertarians, greens, tea partiers and progressives should join hands and support Instant Runoff Voting, Approval Voting or any number of more rational election schemes. Until they do, it's appropriate to dismiss minor parties as spoilers. Absent such reforms, I support the decision of ABC. Otherwise, I would say that there should be one debate for those polling above 2% and another debate for those polling above 20%.
Generally speaking, that's a reasonable position. The twist is that the US system is designed for consultation and compromise. So the Republicans want one thing, the Dems the other and they're suppose to split the difference.
What the Republicans have discovered is that compromises tend to make the President look good. So they've stopped compromising. Mitch McConnell has been pretty explicit about this: he will only sign off on a Dem proposal if it's something, "...I and my members would do anyway..." http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2011/01/mitch_mcconnell_the_most_hones.html Most Democratic systems work this way: members of the majority coalition support each other and the minority lodges objections. Therein lies accountability: if you don't like the coalition, throw them out.
The problem in the US is that the minority party can sabotage and obstruct and reap electoral benefits when the other side fails to get anything done. Indeed, economic sabotage becomes a viable strategy, which explains Republican resistance to stimulus packages and textbook economics: what's in it for them?
At any rate, if you truly believe what you say, you should vote for Romney, a Democratic House and a Republican Senate. That is, throw the bums out in the legislature *and* the executive. Frankly, I find this nuts: I only support pro-Science parties which for the past 10+ years excludes the GOP. Too bad our winner-take-all voting system blocks the emergence of more choices: a European style conservative party would earn my consideration.
Vista was a downgrade. Win7 was an upgrade from XP, barely. Windows Explorer was actually an improvement:
1) You can set the default view as you wish. You can do the same in XP of course, except that submitting that request doesn't work.
2) Win7 WE lacks the autocrash feature of XP. To crash XP, choose File -> New -> Folder and run the mouse beyond the context sub-menu.
3) The folders view doesn't erratically turn itself off.
Nice analysis about the 11% drop though. But business environments require multiple levels of security and they can't rely on their least attentive employees. Heck they can't rely on their most attentive either: Conde Nast was phished for $8 million last year. The Controller for Experi-metal revealed passwords after receiving an emailed phish in 2009: $1.9 million was subsequently wired to Russia. Experi-metal sued the bank last year for not monitoring its account activity adequately. Then again, I'm off on a tangent: Win7 wouldn't help in this instance though intrusive and annoying anti-malware software might.
http://www.piworld.com/article/2011-year-felony-418406/1
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/951f0efe-2d60-11e1-b985-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1iNBBiMVH
It is by no means clear that Yucca Mountain is the proper site for radioactive waste disposal. From the article:
"It is still not completely clear whether Yucca Mountain would be a good place to bury radioactive waste. Despite the Energy Secretary's 2002 seal of approval, there are legitimate scientific concerns about the suitability of the site. An independent US Nuclear Technical Waste Review Board said PDF it had "limited confidence" in the Energy Department's performance estimates for Yucca Mountain because of "gaps in data and basic understanding." As Gary Taubes observed in Technology Review in 2002, "By choosing Yucca Mountain as the only option for a nuclear-waste facility, Congress put the DOE in an untenable position. In effect, it sent the department out to prove that Yucca Mountain would work as a repository, rather than to do a dispassionate analysis of whether it could work or was the best possible site." "
Yucca Mountain, IRRC, is rather close to Vegas and the site actually has some history of water migration, even over the past 50 years. Admittedly I'm working off of a memory of a report I read a decade ago. Here's the link FWIW: http://www.environmentalreview.org/archives/vol07/ewing_abstract.html
If people face the full cost of burning oil, they will consume less of it. Demand curves slope downwards. And alternatives to oil (natural gas now, solar later) will gain customers. Really, it's better if people pay for the burden they put on the economy directly, be it the burden in the form of labor and capital, health expenditures or climate adaptation.
Tax breaks mostly. Giving such special privileges to the oil industry shifts resources away from sectors with proportionally less pull in Washington, DC: software design is a prime example. There are also R&D and federal loan guarantees.
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2011/0309/Budget-hawks-Does-US-need-to-give-gas-and-oil-companies-41-billion-a-year/(page)/2
Oil gets $41 billion, coal gets $8 billion, nuclear gets $9 billion, ethanol (not a fossil fuel, more like a handout to farmers and a tax on food) gets $6 billion and wind and other renewables..... $6 billion.
By my thinking, extractive industries should pay royalties to the commonwealth: they should be taxed, not subsidized.
Oh c'mon. The fossil fuel industry is subsidized to the tune of $40 billion per year +. Meanwhile you can dump all the CO2 in the air you want with zero cost. Nada.
In my world, you would charge people for the damage they do to others or to the environment and let the market take care of the rest. But let's not pretend that conservatives are opponents of governmental subsidies: if they were, they would have no problem with meaningful campaign finance restrictions, to take one of many examples. (There are even 1st amendment friendly means of doing that. You could put a tax on electronic advertising and transfer the revenues to their political opponents. Sure, there some knotty issues involved, but the status quo is hardly an environment of calm and detached debate anyway.)
Bah.
Here is what's missing from a bad piece of science journalism. There will be no discussion of whether the study had a control. There will be no indication that some methodologies are more powerful than others -- the reader is assumed not to know or care about gold standards such as "Double blind" and the like. There's no attempt to recapitulate the scientific argument; the reporter need only lamely report the conclusion. Obvious questions arise from the reporting, but are left unaddressed.
The New York Times and The Economist magazine tend to do better than that. AP tends to be awful.
The government wouldn't have to choose. They could simply distribute subsidies on the basis of circulation or hits. Sure, there's scope for hit-fraud, but advertisers have dealt with this problem IRL for decades.
The newspaper model depends far more on advertising than subscription revenue: anyone who doesn't think that this leads to slanted coverage is hopelessly naive. If anything distributing revenue in proportion to circulation would fight oligarchy, not enhance it.
The Brits worked off this model for years with the BBC. Everyone who owns a TV pays an annual fee. The result was that the BBC produced a range of shows where everyone would have at least a couple that they loved. In contrast, the advertiser-driven eyeball model encourages production of everyone's third choice. You don't have to like the show, you just have to keep the channel knob tuned to it.
All that said, this proposal is a nonstarter in the US: it's the stuff of academia and white papers.
I got a 40 out of 70, implying that I'm a callous asshole.
Maybe they are correct. But I can say that " When I'm upset at someone, I usually try to "put myself in his shoes" for a while." That describes me very well. I hope that I reflexively consider the POV of those I disagree with.
But then, I don't feel pity or tender feelings for those less fortunate than me. Feelings shmeelings, what people need is a hand up. So yes, I do donate to charity.
In short, I'm cerebrally empathetic, but not especially softhearted. Hence my lousy score.
The Sad Thing... is that nobody appreciates comedy anymore.
Er - I think the guy was joking. He also asked with regards to the gas station, "Can I buy Europe on pump 4?" Somehow I doubt whether this was a serious question.
I'm not sure what they want, but they are getting the tech, the brand, the manufacturing plant and let's not forget the distribution network.
The buyer, Sichuan Tengzhong, looks like an interesting company. They manufacture heavy equipment, special-use vehicles, highway & bridge structural components, construction machinery and energy facilities. That's a varied mix, but I don't see passenger autos in there. They've been in business since 2005. They are a private company; I'm not sure where they get their funding or their origins.
http://www.mahalo.com/Sichuan_Tengzhong#guide_note-Official-1
I agree that no-cost photography is a helpful development.
In the 1970s and 1980s budding photographers were advised to spend more money on film than on equipment. And the pros would routinely throw out the vast majority of the pics they made.
The difference now is that these practices can now be conducted on a far smaller budget.
From the Energy Information Administration:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/otheranalysis/ongr.html
1. "The projections in the OCS access case indicate that access to the Pacific, Atlantic, and eastern Gulf regions would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices before 2030."
2. Do oil options or futures go out further than 5 years anyway?
Finally, from the same link:
3. "Because oil prices are determined on the international market, however, any impact on average wellhead prices is expected to be insignificant."
If you don't care about the marine environment or the fishing industry, drilling for a couple of buckets or mblpd of oil may make sense. But don't fool yourself into thinking it will have any effect on gas prices.
Well, no. T-Mobile's and AT&T's pay as you go plan works out to about $100 per year, plus the cost of a $40 phone. Virgin-Sprint costs $20 per quarter, or $80 per year. It's not expensive, but it's not cheap either.
In an opinion piece on 19 Feb 2006, Kristoff of the New York Times all but called for a boycott on Yahoo. He thought that Google got a bum rap, Cisco and Microsoft were sleazy (but nothing like Yahoo), and that Yahoo was a national disgrace.
6 0815F63B5A0C7A8DDDAB0894DE404482&n=Top%2FOpinion%2 FEditorials%20and%20Op-Ed%2FOp-Ed%2FColumnists%2FN icholas%20D%20Kristof
Kristoff: "...nobody should touch Yahoo until it provides financially for the families of the three men it helped lock up and establishes annual fellowships in their names to bring Web journalists to America on study programs."
I think Kristoff's suggestion sounds doable.
Pay only link: http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F
The website that coordinates the Yahoo boycott follows:
http://www.booyahoo.com/
Booyahoo has a link which details some of the alternatives to Yahoo services (hotmail, etc.) Some Slashdot users may want to help flesh it out.
Wikipedia lists some of the Yahoo owned sites and services (to avoid?):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahoo!
...or they're cooking dinner and saying whatever first comes to mind to the pollster on the phone.
... or they're expressing an opinion without fear of adverse consequences to themselves.
It's not the People that are stupid, it's the lazy interpreters of these telephone surveys.
Kristof of the New York Times has basically called for a Yahoo boycott (I think he said they should be "shunned" until they make reparations with the families of the imprisoned and set up a scholarship fund for Chinese journalists.) Kristof also opined that Google received a "bum rap".
6 0815F63B5A0C7A8DDDAB0894DE404482&n=Top%2FOpinion%2 FEditorials%20and%20Op-Ed%2FOp-Ed%2FColumnists%2FN icholas%20D%20Kristof )
(Feb 16 op ed, purchase req: http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F
Alternatives to Yahoo include www.myway.com, an internet porthole that eschews banner ads. ("No banners. No popups. No kidding.")
Boycott Yahoo blog: http://www.booyahoo.blogspot.com/
Lincoln Spector of PCWorld gives an overview of laptop security products in the April 2006 issue: http://www.pcworld.com/howto/article/0,aid,124780, 00.asp
The 3 methods are 1) lock, 2) encrypt and 3) have the laptop call a central server to report it's whereabouts.
Spector doesn't mention combination approaches: CyberAngel reportedly ( http://www.sentryinc.com/sohoapp.html ) encrypts and calls home automatically upon login failure.
Full Disclosure: I don't own a laptop yet, though I am in the market for one.
Much like http://www.phoenix.com/en/about+phoenix/investors/ news+releases/2003/may+27,+2003-a.htm Theftguard.
Admittedly, their BIOS system only operates through the internet, though it will defeat attempts to format the harddrive.
Here's a previously posted link to current theft deterrent techniques. http://tuxmobil.org/stolen_laptops.html . Recommended.
Much like LoJack for Laptops [TM] even.
http://www.lojackforlaptops.com/
The key strength of the original paper in Science, is that it used worldwide data.
Data from a single region is not only noisier; it would also reflect cycles such as El Nino in the Pacific, or its counterpart, The North Atlantic Oscillation: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/NAO/
It is entirely possible of course, that the pattern shown in the Science article is an outcome of natural processes. Nonetheless, to tack on Atlantic data without mentioning the North Atlantic Oscillation strikes me as dishonest in presentation.
No. The Science article used all satellite data that was currently available, which dated from 1970.
I should add that Pacific data is available for longer time spans. If anybody was cherry-picking, it was the freeper author.
The Brits have been plodding around Antarctica for a while: their earliest ozone measurements date to 1957.
H ole/
http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/Key_Topics/The_Ozone_
Their data revealed typical seasonal patterns for about 20 years, then some disturbing changes. In 1985, the Antarctic ozone hole was reported.
The link above shows an interesting chart, showing a steep drop in atmospheric ozone over the Haley station after about 1977.
-------- What about Amazon.com? What about your local library's card catalogue? Both link to and provide adult content (everything from Fanny Hill to "art" books of lesbians in latex whipping each other and sex manuals). Do they both have to move into the .XXX TLD?
.com extension. But to access it easily you would have to go through a small .xxx gateway, which could be easily blocked by a kiddie filter.
No. They merely have to identify their adult content and link to it through tinyurl.xxx or some such service.
The adult content could even have a
What about seach engines? I understand that it is trivial to put code on the top of a webpage that requests/instructs the index robots to go away.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/space/03/14/planet.di scovery/
I don't know if that's the same 10th "planet", but it was given the name of Sedna but was said to be smaller than Pluto (as opposed to 1.5x).
It was actually called an "object", as the definition of planet is a matter of some controversy.