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User: dunkelfalke

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Comments · 6,171

  1. Re:English on Speaking a Second Language May Change How You See the World · · Score: 2

    Learning both Ukrainian and Russian is a waste of time because they are so close that they used to be just two dialects of the same languages a few centuries ago. It is better to learn two Slavic languages that are as far apart as it gets, this will help you understand all the other Slavic languages in between.

    Say, Ukrainian and Slovene, or Russian and Czech.
    The best combination is probably Russian, Slovak, Croatian. This way every other Slavic language except Bulgarian is inside the continuum and even Bulgarian will feel mostly understandable, although very strange (mostly because it is indeed strange, Bulgarian has changed a lot, probably due to the Ottoman influence. Old Bulgarian, on the other hand, feels almost like Russian).

  2. Re:Ergo! on Ask Slashdot: Good Keyboard? · · Score: 1

    It is the previously mentioned Natural 4000. I use the same one. It is pretty good, but bulky and the "leather" on the hand rest wears after a few years.

  3. Re: I used to be happy about... on Russia Abandons Super-Rocket Designed To Compete With SLS · · Score: 1

    Well, some people aren't goldfish.

  4. Re:The only pure English is the language of Beowol on Why There Is No Such Thing as 'Proper English' · · Score: 1

    how the hell do you pronounce "thrythswyth"?!

  5. Re:Do that for the laptops as well on Fujitsu Could Help Smartphone Chips Run Cooler · · Score: 1

    Not using a Pentium 4, I guess.
    My core i5-3350p has passive cooling.

  6. Re: I used to be happy about... on Russia Abandons Super-Rocket Designed To Compete With SLS · · Score: 1

    More like invading Mexico and then annexing Texas. Sounds familiar?

  7. USD is high against the EUR not because USD is strong, but because the European Central Bank is printing money like there is no tomorrow - for some very strange reason their current president is convinced that the Eurozone has a huge deflation problem.

  8. Re:Has anyone studied? on US Wind Power Is Expected To Double In the Next 5 Years · · Score: 1

    Not so in central Europe, over here there is more than enough water. I don't think farmers actually ever water their crops where I live.

  9. Re:forget the gameplay! on Rendering a Frame of Deus Ex: Human Revolution · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is Deus Ex we are talking about so the gameplay is good by definition. Even the shitty Invisible War was better than most of other similar games of the period.

  10. Re:a "COUNTRY that absolutely loves to censor stuf on Turkish Ministry Recommends Banning Minecraft -- Over Violence · · Score: 2

    What regression are you talking about? Compared to Yeltsin even Putin looks good.

  11. Re:Freon? You gotta be kidding: on Google Introduces Freon, a Replacement For X11 On Chrome OS · · Score: 1
  12. Re:Not at all surprising on China's Arthur C. Clarke · · Score: 1

    Captialism is necessary, though not sufficient, for a free society.

    And this is utter nonsense. A free society can coexist just fine with a simple barter system or even when everything belongs to the commons, which was one of the ways the tribal societies worked. Economic systems are completely orthogonal to the societies. It takes a completely brain washed person to insist otherwise.

  13. Re:For me a bike is a personal thing on Inside Bratislava's Low-Cost, Open Source Bike Share Solution · · Score: 1

    From the train station to home, not from my parents. It is about 10 km away. I think 30 km at once is about my limit when walking - I am unfortunately not as fit as I used to be.

  14. Re:For me a bike is a personal thing on Inside Bratislava's Low-Cost, Open Source Bike Share Solution · · Score: 1

    Same for me. But there was a situation when I was visiting my parents who live about 250 km away. I took the train. On my way back it was already so late that the last bus from the station to my home was gone. A rental bicycle would have been perfect for this situation. I had to walk instead, not a problem but it took me almost two hours. Would have been more like half an hour on a bike.

  15. Re:The Drain on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    Russia had famines every 10 years or so, the last one was in 1947, though.

  16. Re:The Left is in charge on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    Ukraine was not a country before 1991. Just saying ;-)
    The USSR started sinking because eastern European countries and most of the union republics were a bottomless drain on the economy, not other way around.

  17. Re:I have said it before on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    ORLY? Just in January two workers died at the Fukushima power plant.

  18. Re:Compare the alternatives on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    Except that you don't mine pure uranium, you have to mine uranium ore (pitchblende) from what is mostly useless rock and then refine it while coal is basically ready to use and comes in seams. Coal dust is not good for your lungs, but uranium ore dust also gets you radioactive poisoning, and so does radon exposure, with the additional benefit of lung cancer. It is no coincidence that uranium mining used to be a prison-camp job.

    This is how an uranium mine looks like. So much for orders of magnitude.

  19. Re:Compare the alternatives on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 2

    So you count coal mining deaths, but not uranium mining deaths?

  20. Re:Whatabout Guarantees for Solar Cells And Windmi on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 1

    They are in the similar ballpark, but without the horrendous dismantling costs. And renewable costs actually go down with time, not up. Also Germany still doesn't have a place for long term storage of nuclear waste. So I'd say long live Maoist Energy Sources.

    I am also fine with natural gas, to be honest. Russia has been a reliable supplier even during the worst cold war days.

  21. Re:I have said it before on French Nuclear Industry In Turmoil As Manufacturer Buckles · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In case of the new British power plant there are not only upfront investments, there is also a guarantee for the power price that is twice the going rate and this guarantee is extended for the whole lifetime of the power plant and will be adjusted for inflation over that time.

  22. Re: Try and try again. on Microsoft Convinced That Windows 10 Will Be Its Smartphone Breakthrough · · Score: 1

    I used to type much faster with a stylus on a resistive touch screen than I ever can type with my fingers on a multitouch display and using a stylus I did not need a finger-friendly user interface so actually I can only second everything Frobnicator wrote about WM and iPhone. Well, except for WM5 being any good. It sucked both in comparison to WM2003 and to WM6. I liked my WM phones a lot, and damn, copy&paste is sooooo laborious on an Android phone in comparison. Same goes for the need for special gloves. I honestly miss resistive screens and the stylus.

  23. Re:Rise of Libertarianism (Re:Heinlein sucks) on 'The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress' Coming To the Big Screen · · Score: 1

    Could this be coloring your perspective, AC? Just a little?

    What was it again about "a speck that is in your brother's eye"? Libertarians are just as delusional as communists are, the difference is that libertarians also lack both empathy and the will for cooperation - both are traits that made humans out of apes. Human children are still like that - very competitive and lacking empathy, so I guess libertarians just never really matured. This, by the way, explains, why books that are normally read by teenagers can push people into this kind of social darwinism crap.

    What is especially funny is thinking that Heinlein was a libertarian. He was a military first and foremost, and there is no place for personal liberties in military.

    Heinlein not simply hated communists, he was pissing-his-pants scared of them which coloured his perception.

    which I, an escapee from the evil empire especially appreciate.

    I have read your posts and I can only see your ridiculous hate for anything slightly left of fascism. This has nothing to do with being "an escapee from the evil empire". There were millions born in GDR, the USSR, any other socialist country, but this kind of hate is not that common, even though you might feel different, being in an echo chamber and never accepting a converse opinion. Here in Germany mostly the "heil hitler" kind of baldies from the former GDR are like that - something what makes me ashamed for my fellow citizens. The others, like me, who don't shave their heads, are often much more relaxed about the past, even though they didn't like the mandatory Russian lessons (I, for one, am in love with Slavic languages, but this is a personal preference, I didn't like the mandatory French lessons later on).

    Personally, I also think that Heinlein is way, way overrated. There were much better SF authors back then, like Robert Sheckley or Stanislaw Lem. Their books stood the test of time much better than anything Heinlein has ever written. His stuff reads like eternal fifties, and I am not just talking about the technology. The only books even worse in that regard were the Lensman series.

    where he extolled virtues of the Individual while dissing the Collective

    The ones who speak loudest about the virtues of the individual are usually the ones who profit from a collective the most, but in their eyes they earned it all by them selves. You boasted once that you can speak Russian. Let this example of virtues of the individual speak for itself.

  24. Re:Subsidized? on The US's First Offshore Wind Farm Will Cut Local Power Prices By 40% · · Score: 1

    This is the theory. But the facts are that all currently built nuclear power plants suffer from massive (in the range of 3x the originally projected price) cost overruns and nuclear power is more expensive than even solar or wind.
    The reactors you mention that are "supposed to be" exist only on paper. The past experience shows that all nuclear power plant designs were overly optimistic about cost, security and performance.
    Klaus Traube, one of the most prominent German anti nuclear activist used to design nuclear power plants for a living and was later a CEO of Interatom and responsible for the development and building of a breeder reactor. He thinks that we don't need nuclear power because it is too complicated and too expensive - not worth it. This is appeal to authority, sure. But this particular authority knows much more about nuclear reactors than a standard issue slashdot atomic playboy.

  25. Re:Subsidized? on The US's First Offshore Wind Farm Will Cut Local Power Prices By 40% · · Score: 2

    Nuclear can't compete with anything.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    The UK wholesale electricity price in 2013 is about £48 per megawatt-hour (MWh). EDF has negotiated a guaranteed fixed price â" a "strike price" â" for electricity from Hinkley Point C of £92.50 per megawatt-hour (in 2012 prices),[2][3][31] which will be adjusted (linked to inflation) during the construction period and over the subsequent 35 years tariff period. The price could fall to £89.50/MWh if a new plant at Sizewell is also approved.[2][3] Research carried out by the Energy Policy Research Group at the University of Cambridge argues that no new nuclear power plants would be built in the UK without government intervention.[32] The construction cost are estimated to be £24.5 billion.