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User: crossword.bob

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Comments · 65

  1. Re:Mod parent up, Mod GP down. on Apple Releases Basic iPod Touch, Possibly Foreshadowing iPhone Strategy · · Score: 1

    Facts matter; posts about "fanboys" don't.

  2. Re:Wait, what?? on Raspberry Pi Team Launches Pi Store · · Score: 1

    Wow, yeah—first-of-its-kind tech project running behind schedule. Hold the front pages.

  3. Re:Wait, what?? on Raspberry Pi Team Launches Pi Store · · Score: 1

    OSS was never a primary goal of the Raspberry Pi. Education is. They're quite happy for people to be doing what they like with the device (including commercial applications), so long as the Foundation can keep turning their sales into more devices for schools.

  4. Re:Wait, what?? on Raspberry Pi Team Launches Pi Store · · Score: 1

    "As if it's something to be proud of"? As if it's something to be ashamed of?

  5. Meh on Intel Embraces Oil Immersion Cooling For Servers · · Score: 1

    Been immersing chips in oil for years. Part of the reason I'm the shape I am.

  6. Re:Is the judge a member of Anon? on UK Judge: Galaxy Tab "Not Cool" Enough To Infringe iPad · · Score: 1

    I buy products based on price and usability, not 'cool'.

    So do I. Which is why I bought an iPad. What makes you think they're incompatible with "cool"?

  7. Re:Video on Mozilla Shows Off Junior, a Simple Browser Built for iPad · · Score: 1

    Works fine on mine...

  8. Re:But she still can... on Apple Yanks Toddler's Speech-Enabling App · · Score: 1

    Apple is better than Android in terms of backwards compatibility.

    Really? In the update from Android Honeycomb to ICS, I had a grand total of one app that had a problem. Every minor version update for iOS has killed at least two or three things for me, some of which are never actually fixed by their vendors.

    ...and your sample size of one user proves what, exactly?

  9. Re:Worrying state of affairs on Raspberry Pi Has Gone To Manufacturing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And then the taxing part is plain and simply dumb. You can't control corporations, but that the government actively deters local production? That's like shooting yourself in the foot and wondering why it hurts.

    It's likely a throwback to a (failed) attempt to bolster UK component manufacture that's now backfiring on us.

  10. Re:Already called out by co-author as hiding resul on Climate Change Skeptic Results Released Today · · Score: 1

    Or to put it another way: "Whenever someone says anything I instinctively agree with, the only possible reason for anyone else to disagree with them is because they're corrupt."

  11. Re:Already called out by co-author as hiding resul on Climate Change Skeptic Results Released Today · · Score: 1

    So long as it's reported in the Daily Fail, I'd be inclined to ignore it too.

  12. Re:Well what about this ? on Apple Granted Patent For Slide To Unlock · · Score: 2

    I'm not seeing "one or more unlock images with respect to which the predefined gesture is to be performed in order to unlock the device."

  13. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects on Samsung Vs. Apple Tit-For-Tat Down Under · · Score: 1

    What a lot of people are missing (wilfully in many cases, I suspect) is that Apple aren't claiming any single element of their design, but the amalgamation of most or all aspects of it. They do not claim to own a shape, and there are any number of practical tablet designs incorporating rounded rectangles that Apple would make no claim to.

  14. Re:Yes. on Should Science Be King In Politics? · · Score: 1

    For the love of all that is sensible, you are maddeningly stupid.

    No, you're just massively missing the point. That's your problem, not mine. As is your insistence on acting like a twat while you do it. The point is that science routinely produces non-intuitive results. Historically, innumerable dead-ends have been hit by those tripping over incorrect assumptions based on intuition. And no, science does not advance common sense. It advances learning. Common sense—i.e. that which is common to all—is independent of learning. It is what is all too often cited by those who are ignorant of the salient facts when trying to advance their agendas and beliefs, and what I am saying is that we'd be better off ignoring common sense in favour of actual facts.

    That said, some comments on the rest of your response:

    An apple will, in fact, fall faster than a leaf from the height of a tree (which is a pretty fucking short distance). See previous.

    Sigh. But not because (and solely because) it's heavier. A grain of sand will likely fall faster than a leaf. A cannonball will likely fall at more-or-less the same rate as a pebble. Yet these facts were overlooked for centuries because common sense told us heavier == faster.

    And on and on... there is a difference between common sense and religious asshattery. Stop ascribing the results of the latter to the former.

    Sorry, but you've got it bass-ackwards. Where did the asshattery come from? Common sense explained the world as it saw it, in terms of gods and monsters, and it took a series of extraordinary people to reveal the less intuitive but more correct truth, with common sense advocates fighting them at every turn.

  15. Re:Yes. on Should Science Be King In Politics? · · Score: 1

    Wow - you really had to stretch to prove me wrong. And yet you failed nonetheless.

    Common sense is what told people the world is flat

    Uhm no, what told people the world was flat was a limited perceptive distance beyond which "nobody had ever gone." The Greeks had posited the idea of a round earth as early as the 6th century BC, worked out through observations of polar star movement and altitude differences.

    So what; mankind's been around longer than 6th Century BC. And ideas worked out through observations of polar star movement and altitude differences can hardly be called "common sense".

    heavy objects fall faster than light objects

    Actually, in the resistance of air, "light" objects of sufficient area have a much lower terminal velocity than heavier objects. Thus they do, in fact, fall faster. The idea that gravity is acting on them differently is incorrect, but that's all.

    Yes, I know that, I am not a moron. Nonetheless, until the experiments had been done, the notion that over short distances heavier objects would fall faster than light ones was widespread.

    time is absolute and particles either go one way or another

    For purposes of daily use, treating them as such simplifies the math while remaining useful. In detailed physics, no, but don't underestimate the idea of the useful approximation.

    Again, so what? We now know (at least most of us do) that these are useful approximations. But when discovered, they ran counter to what was considered common sense. And to this day, do you really believe that the majority of humans on this planet are aware that they are merely useful approximations? I'll skip a few now...

    Common sense tells ME that if it is valid, it can be scientifically tested

    No, uncommon sense tells you that.

    Common sense tells me also that people like you - who ascribe to "common sense" things that are demonstrably not - are buffoons.

    Sorry, but you have not demonstrated that any of the above are not the product of "common sense". You've demonstrated that they are known to be wrong by people who have sufficient learning, but such people are applying that learning, not common sense.

  16. Re:Yes. on Should Science Be King In Politics? · · Score: 1

    The last thing we need is more common sense; common sense is usually wrong. Common sense is what told people the world is flat, heavy objects fall faster than light objects, time is absolute and particles either go one way or another.

    Common sense is what people use to demonstrate that fish can't turn into monkeys, or that you can't evolve an eye. It tells you that if loads of people get better when using homeopathic "remedies", there must be something in it. Common sense is appealed to by those who can't produce any controlled trial basis for their suggested "improvements" to healthcare/whatever but want them implemented anyway, regardless of cost.

    Common sense and science are not good friends. And if you still don't believe me, go Google for "agw common sense" and see where it gets you.

  17. Re:Doesn't make sense on Samsung Halts Galaxy Tablet Promotion In Germany · · Score: 1

    I'm no lawyer, and my understanding of the details of the case come from a Google-powered translation of the filing from German to Legalese, and a layman translation from Legalese to English, but much play was made of the fact that 6 particular design elements were shared by every generation of iPod touch, iPhone and iPad (together with an unusually thin design (compared with pre-existing tablets)), and that these devices have become successful enough to make this particular design well-established (unlike pictures of the crunchpad prototype and other flopped devices). I suspect (but can't claim to know for sure) that Apple's mind-share elevates their claim to a distinctive brand design, legally speaking.

    At the end of the day, I'm nowhere near qualified to say who should win here, but the claims that, were Apple to win, they'd hold a monopoly over every reasonable tablet design is pure FUD. There are plenty perfectly good tablet designs left for others to lay claim to.

    Regarding the picture frame, I've not seen one up close, but unless it displays a grid of coloured icons when powered up, it doesn't fit the 6 design elements claimed.

  18. Re:Doesn't make sense on Samsung Halts Galaxy Tablet Promotion In Germany · · Score: 2

    Imagine if they win: They'll have a legally enforced monopoly on tablets!

    Not so. They'll have a legally enforced monopoly on a very particular design of tablets.

    Like the judge said: “There are a lot of alternative ways to design a tablet device, as the market amply shows.” Doesn't sound like he has any interest in stopping others from making tablets.

  19. Re:"No ecosystem" on Android On HP TouchPad · · Score: 1

    [...] I just cannot see what a 'pad can do that a notebook cannot do better.

    Ever tried using your notebook in "portrait" mode?

  20. No contest on Samsung Tablet Ban Lifted For Most of EU · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Samsung could win this case easily. All they need to do is prove that the iPad's touchscreen works.

  21. Re:Pesky critics on Climate Unit Releases Virtually All Remaining Data · · Score: 1

    Plus, you like to label people with derogatory names.

    followed immediately by:

    These are compelling signs of a right-wing nut job.

    Epic

  22. Re:White on White iPhone 4 Coming Today · · Score: 1

    Oh good grief, are there still people who believe in that antenna myth? Go check ChangeWave's recent report: the one that says iPhone 4 call dropping is 0.2% above the average for all phones on AT&T's network. Similar story on Verizon.

    Or just use your brain and ask yourself how plausible is the idea that industry leading customer satisfaction figures would carry on regardless if the phone didn't work?

    Sheesh, if Occam hung around here he'd have a luxuriant beard by now.

  23. Good job... on A "Throne" Fit For a Tech King · · Score: 1

    ... it's not made by Apple, or it wouldn't support Flush.

  24. Re:USA #1 on AT&T Cracking Down On Unofficial iPhone Tethering · · Score: 1

    Aye, I was only talking about iPhone tariffs.

  25. Re:USA #1 on AT&T Cracking Down On Unofficial iPhone Tethering · · Score: 5, Informative

    Do Americans know that no one else in the world does this? Not in Europe, not in Asia. They sell you the service and you use it how you want.

    O2 in the UK charge £7.50/mo for a tethering + 500MB bolt-on for consumer tariffs (you can't buy the tethering without the additional data). I believe 3 offer it free, but not sure about others.