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User: bs7rphb

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  1. Re:Notebooks on Civilization V Announced For This Fall · · Score: 3, Informative

    even though they're being developed by different companies

    Actually, Firaxis developed Civ 4 and is developing Civ 5.

  2. Re:epic hex fail on Civilization V Announced For This Fall · · Score: 1

    You COULD move an infantry unit through a forested hex with aircraft overflight in most historical periods

    And you CAN do so in Civ 4. Air units don't behave like ground-based units - they are based in cities and fly missions (which take a turn) then return to their home cities, or are set to defend the city and environs from other aircraft. It makes much more sense and is much more fun. I hope this mechanic stays the same in Civ 5.

  3. Re:On the other hand... on Net Radio Exec Says "Don't Mention Linux" · · Score: 1, Funny

    imminently hackable

    I'd say you meant eminently, but on second thought, imminently is fine too.

  4. Re:Surely Touch is ideal for net-tablets? on Windows 7 Touch, Dead On Arrival · · Score: 1

    You may be interested in this:

    http://www.alwaysinnovating.com/home/index.htm

  5. That's not ironic! on Facebook Releases Open Source Web Server · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's just coincidental!

  6. Re:Mandelson on In the UK, a Plan To Criminalize Illegal Downloaders · · Score: 1

    No-one voted for Brown, and two-thirds of the country voted against the ruling party in the last election yet they were returned with a large majority.

    Whilst I understand your wider point, the fact is that Gordon Brown was elected by the people of Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath to be their MP. He is an elected politician. Mandelson was appointed as a Lord by Gordon Brown, and given the Minister position by him. Nobody at all voted for Mandelson, except perhaps Brown.

    To my mind, this is a gross violation of democracy; much more so than the lack of proportional representation in our country.

  7. Re:Mandelson on In the UK, a Plan To Criminalize Illegal Downloaders · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What constantly astounds me about Mandelson is the lack of furore about the fact that he's unelected. We didn't vote for this man. How the hell did he get to be running the country?

  8. Re:Dang! Things were just getting fun on Earth's Period of Habitability Is Nearly Over · · Score: 1

    The pesticides are not sprayed on, they are grown by the plant. But after you harvest your corn, the pesticides made in that corn plant are still there.

    Sorry, I was talking about herbicide-resistant crops. I don't know what you're talking about.

    And they were now in your body, too, as you can't simply wash them off. They are IN the plant.

    Okay... let's explore that. Why would a low level of insecticide necessarily harm you? Are you an insect?

    How do you suppose GM "foods" are chasing away insects? Magic?

    Who said the crops were chasing away insects? Not me - I said they were attracting them. Maybe you meant to reply to a different post?

  9. Re:Dang! Things were just getting fun on Earth's Period of Habitability Is Nearly Over · · Score: 1

    Biggest problem is the corporations that you have to license the GM stuff from.

    Agree with you there. But still, it seems a small price to pay for a much greener (literally) agriculture.

  10. Re:Dang! Things were just getting fun on Earth's Period of Habitability Is Nearly Over · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Just like being environmentally conscious and opposed to GM crops. Absolute madness. Herbicide-resistant GM crops are fantastic for the local environment - they need much less herbicide use than either conventionally- or organically-grown crops to produce a decent yield, which means more green weeds, more flowers; more bees, butterflies and birds.

    I used to work on the UK GM crop split-field trials, where half the field was conventionally-treated conventional crop, and half was herbicide-resistant crop treated with less herbicide (as designed). The GM side was always green, buzzing with insects, and had noticeably more bird-life; the conventional side was bare earth until the crop came through, then stayed much less verdant. The farmers loved the GM crop, as it needed less work (fewer sprayings) and less costly herbicide.

    The 'environmental' protesters would always ruin the conventional half of the field. They saw the brown, ugly side and thought 'well that must be the evil GM side'. Of course, once half the split-field trial was trashed, the whole trial was wasted. The experiment didn't provide any useful data, and we in the UK are still spraying our fields with herbicide.

    Greenpeace? Wankers.

  11. Re:And? on Bing Search Tainted By Pro-Microsoft Results · · Score: 1

    And the hit below that:

    Why Is Windows So Cheap?

  12. Re:BING: But... It's Not Google! on Yahoo Filing Reveals Details of Microsoft Deal · · Score: 1

    It's a recursive acronym:

    BING Is Not Google.

  13. Re:By the Way - this insane versioning bent on Debian Decides To Adopt Time-Based Release Freezes · · Score: 1

    user@marvin:~$ cat /etc/debian_version
    4.0

    Shouldn't be running sid if you don't know what sid is.

  14. Re:By the Way - this insane versioning bent on Debian Decides To Adopt Time-Based Release Freezes · · Score: 1

    Oh for pity's sake.

    Debian: cat /etc/debian_version
    Fedora: cat /etc/redhat-release

    It's not hard. It's easy. It's one command, for crying out loud. If you can't run one command you've no business using a computer.

  15. Re:Beats Web-apps on Google Releases Open Source NX Server · · Score: 1

    You're absolutely right, and this is just my little problem, but...

    sometimes I wish people would just s/leverage/use/g on everything they write.

  16. Re:How soon we forget on How Microsoft Has Changed Without Bill Gates · · Score: 1

    > Now, be honest. How many of us had our first computer experience with MS-DOS or Windows 3.1?

    BBC B, baby!

  17. Re:Virtual Overlays on Defining an Interactive Physical MMO For the iPhone · · Score: 1

    Pretty much exactly the same stuff is dealt with in Charles Stross' book, Halting State. Mini-review: Fun, worth reading. Like all Stross books it's a bit like being in an exploding ideas factory.

  18. Re:Police state UK on The Electronic Police State · · Score: 1

    Maybe, for one person. The UK government want to do this for everyone, for ever. That's a little less trivial.

  19. Re:Solar Cycle 24 on The Underappreciated Risks of Severe Space Weather · · Score: 1

    Recently? That link's from January 2008.

  20. Re:Predicted on Amazon Releases iPhone Kindle Software · · Score: 1

    +1 unbearably smug

  21. Re:Just what the world needs... on Amazon Releases iPhone Kindle Software · · Score: 3, Funny

    +1 scary

  22. Re:Technically true... on Plasma Plants Vaporize Trash While Creating Energy · · Score: 1

    In the UK, the biggest daily power surge is always when one of the soaps finishes and everyone puts the kettle on for a nice cuppa. 1200MW or so. We have to borrow electricity from France for it.

    True story.

  23. bad idea, perhaps? on UK Outlines Plan For Internet Black Boxes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do I get a sinking feeling whenever I hear the words 'government' and 'database' in the same sentence? It's made much, much worse when the words 'giant' and 'central' are between the two.

    These clowns wouldn't be able to keep the data secure anyway, so soon enough any half-witted criminal will be able to do whatever they want with our connection logs.

    It's enough to make you vote Tory. Ugh.

  24. Re:they sure aren't usable... on London Is Still World's Wi-Fi Access Point Capital · · Score: 1

    Well, Liverpool St. will get you to Norwich, and if you've ever been there you'll realise why that might be associated with alcoholism. You've got to cope somehow.

  25. Re:The end is nigh? on Level of IPv6 Usage Is Vanishingly Small · · Score: 1

    Well, OK. It rather depends on your definition of 'asleep', but machines with spun-down disks and cpus throttled to minimum so they can be passively cooled seem pretty close to 'asleep' to me, and they'd still be able to listen to their network interface. Also wake-on-lan can do some pretty useful things. I'm not sure what this has to do with NAT though.