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User: krysolid

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Comments · 56

  1. Great, but think asbestos ... on Nanotube Paint Blocks Cell Phones on Demand · · Score: 0


    There are some reports that fullerenes, the carbon
    nano-particles, have dangerous health risks.

    So, people who spend their life researching this for
    labs are very motivated to produce a product from it
    so their life's work brings them wealth, and are not
    exactly incentivized to consider possible health risks.

    They are already putting nanoparticles into clothing
    and paint and other uses.

    I hope we do not have millions of people getting cancer
    so that some people can get rich from buckeyballs.
    Why not just pay them off for doing research which is
    positive?

  2. Re:Yup... on RIAA: Ripping CDs to iPod not 'Fair Use' · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    like i care ... when i read slashdot all i hear is a bunch of spoiled brats whining about not being able to steal any music any time they want, and how they would do anything to protect that right.

    to get an idea of how little regard i have for these type people, realize
    that i probably think just about as badly of the RIAA as any of you, and
    they and their bullshit antics and foul pissy whining are way down
    below that.

    this is standard fare on slashdot, and just to bring the subject up
    gets called trolling.

    I happen to think that any group needs sometimes to hear an opposing
    opinion lest they fall into group think, which is what slashdot is,
    so I feel it is perfectly justified to become abusive and nasty when
    this is not recognized and groupthink is allowed to prevail over
    a group that underneath it all would be very capable of intelligence
    if they had some moderators with a fucking clue doing their job instead
    of being trolls themselves on a power trip.

  3. Re:Yup... on RIAA: Ripping CDs to iPod not 'Fair Use' · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    Hey Slashdot, fuck you brainless jerks calling my post troll,
    the idea of real deomcracy and responsibility is so foreign
    and off your scope that is all you can say. You morons are
    clueless.

  4. Re:Yup... on RIAA: Ripping CDs to iPod not 'Fair Use' · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    I have been reading through these posts, and though I really do not
    like the recording industry you consumers match them in greed, and
    display it blatantly in public with profanity and total disregard for
    civilized behavior.

    Then you turn around and talk about using the vote to enforce your
    anti-social behavior by threatening to oust your local politician
    based on this one issue.

    First, it will never work so your blowing smoke, second if this is
    what democracy has become no wonder our current government and
    corporations has lost all respect for it and tries to override it.

    You people make me puke, you are so busy chasing ways to steal the
    crappy music you are being sold that you do not even realize the
    effect you are having on your own self, and society. You are like
    addicted robots with an infinite spoiled brat loop running.

  5. Re:If I'd got a NES would I be working in Pizza Hu on What Was Your First Computer? · · Score: 1


    Hahaha, Vic-20, the wonder computer of the 1980's said William Shatner -
    was also my first foray into computing.

    It had a big whooping 3.5K worth of memory, and I expanded that for over
    $100 to 16K. Never got a tape recorder, but on a trip to Washington DC
    I picked up a 160K single-sided single density 5 3/4 inch floppy drive
    for over $500.

    I cannot believe how much money sank into that little system over time,
    but it was the perfect learning platform ... graphics, assembly language,
    forth, sound, basic, light pen.

    I loved it and I am sorry I ever threw it away when I got my first B&W
    8088 PC & 64K of RAM with the 1200 baud modem.

    Brings back a lot of memories for sure.

  6. Re:I've always wanted to know the answer to this: on Should We Land on the Moon's Poles or Equator? · · Score: 1


    There is something there that we can "see" or detect.

    One of the missions put a laser reflector up there in order
    to measure the distance to the moon and back very accuratly.

    So if you shoot a last up to the moon in a specific spot you
    will get a refection back in so many millseconds.

  7. Re:an unpopular opinion on Should We Land on the Moon's Poles or Equator? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    not everything technological came from the space program,
    and besides would you argue as vehemently for war as you
    would for space exploration when you find out how much
    war made our technology progress??

  8. Re:an unpopular opinion on Should We Land on the Moon's Poles or Equator? · · Score: 1


    I don't think it hurts to explore space in a reasonable way.
    We can learn something and extend out senses our into the
    universe.

    I agree with your sentiment however, that before we think about
    going into space ourselves we ought to get the Earth in some
    kind of sustainable situation.

    It just gets worse and worse and the stupidity of man unless we
    start thinking is going to kill the planet dead at some future
    date.

    The other thing is that humans were born and evolved to live on
    this planet, with this air, with this amount of radiation, eating
    plants and animals that evolved and grew here as well.

    The idea of living in space may be romantic for some people, but
    the reality I am sure would be so depressing and sad ... like an
    animal in a cage, killing the last vestige of wildness and Earthly
    organic contact in our beings before we become as ants in a nest or
    bees in a hive. It is sad how some people rush headlong into something
    they have not thought about.

  9. Re:Because it's not what humans do on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1

    > We will keep doing it because we have an innate desire to make things
    > better for ourselves. And guess what! That is "nature" taking it's course
    > because we are part of nature, not separate from it.

    I'd like to disagree with this statement.

    I think you can say this in the great sense that everything that happens
    in the universe is part of nature, and it is true, but meaningless.

    Words and thought move forward by differentiation, and the differentiation
    I'd like to make is that natural processes are formed by the raw flow
    of time. Wind erosion, water erosion, evolution.

    If you look at living systems they have all evolved together in a web
    of weird and wonderful forms that humans can only appreciate and understand
    in a very limited way ... because we do not have the ability to see
    a force that operates over thousands of years, or millions of years,
    and understand it.

    Oh, we do pretty good for the hairless chimps we are, don't get me wrong,
    we're amazing ... but, to distinguish between natural and artificial
    is like talking about how genetic engineering gets into the mechanics
    of a cell and changes it in ways that time evolution never would, and
    it could be extrememly dangerous.

    I am just saying we do not know, and we ought to have some respect
    for natural things. That is where we came from and what we came up
    besides. I would think it would be a disaster if at some point the
    human race was left with a dead planet, and no environment except
    something like a space station or submarine's artitifical one.

  10. Re:Or... on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1

    Systems like nature of the climate are complex to the point that
    we do not understand them ... and even if someone did, it is not
    proveable that they did, and anyway people believe that they want
    to believe about this stuff.

    Personally I am not sure about global warming being human caused,
    but I do know that we are screwing with nature, and it is killing
    the planet. Every life system on the planet is in serious decline,
    and we are not even talking about reversing that trend, we are just
    screwing it up more.

    I think the goal should not be sidetracked by global warming. This
    would be a slow process, so we should study it, and ideas like this
    one are good technologies to try should be need them.

    The goal should be to get our population under control ,and the
    inputs we take from nature, and the outputs we put into nature.

    Not to mention it would be nice if we would live aside nature
    instead of stomping all over it and killing it.

  11. Re:Or... on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1


    Face it, the only reason we are seeing the global warming scenario
    even taken a little bit seriously is that somebody sees a great way
    to make money off it.

    Namely, the nuclear power industry. For so many years the energy
    industries all fought tooth and nail to humiliate anyone who even
    pursued any line of thought similar to - we should not screw up the
    planet.

    Now that there is money to be made by playing along, we see the
    nuclear industry talking about how clean nuclear is WRT CO2.

    Maybe I am just getting too cynical, but that's what I think.

  12. Re:I'm not a physicist, but... on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1

    > high noon, the sun delivers about a billion watts to a square
    > mile of the Earth's surface, give or take

    That's very interesting ... could you tell me where you found that out.
    I tried to derive that number one time ... forget what I got, but I
    got the suns output and then divided it by the area of a sphere
    93 millions miles in radius.

  13. Re:the barges? on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1

    I agree with your solution completely.

    I do not agree with peak oil, and all the rhetoric.
    It is just plain common sense that unless we want to
    hack up and consume the planet, ie. have no respect
    for the Earth and the life process, that we humans
    need to control our numbers and our inputs and outputs
    to the bioshphere.

    Why is that so hard for people to understand, and why
    do they have to understand it and express it is ways
    that insult and alienate other people so that the
    probability of it ever happening approaches 0?

  14. Re:Sounds like Brewster's Millions... on Using Barges to Fight Global Warming · · Score: 1

    This sounds like science fiction from the 40s and 50s, and makes
    me really nervous. Human beings just do not have a clue yet are
    willing to grab hold of the future of this planet and play with
    it twiddling primitive knobs that we only understand in basic
    controlled ways.

    The problem is that the Earth has been evolving for a long long time
    and there is no instruction book or understanding what the rules are.
    We could set off some runaway process that could lead the misery for
    everyone.

    Why can't we all just live together in peace, and then decide that
    we do not mess up the Earth with pollution or major changes.

    After all there is no need, except for the profit of some small group
    of people who are willing to live high on the hog uncaring about
    what happens to everyone else.

  15. Re:Why Only Police? on Tagging Devices To Aid In Car Chases · · Score: 1

    regrettable, but it's called collateral damage. ;-)

  16. Re:Why Only Police? on Tagging Devices To Aid In Car Chases · · Score: 1

    Yes, but to complete the cycle install a video surveillance system into every car that overwrites the last hour of data continuously. When you see someone doing something illegal that your cameras have picked it, it downloads the video into the device and sticks it to the offending car, as well as ids you so you can be a witness.

  17. Re:Psyops and CNN. on U.S. Plan To Fight The Internet Revealed · · Score: 2, Insightful


    The other day they admitted to an "error" when they translated
    the Iranian President's comments to something like - Iran has the
    right and will develop nuclear weapons - from what they said really
    was - Iran has the right to develop nuclear power.

    When you think about how big the world is and few channels of
    information there really are, and then couple that with your own
    experience with people that probably most of us have had where
    there is some personal incident in your personal circle of friends,
    and how hard it can be to determine what happened.

    We are living in total news fantasy, and our respective governments
    own us to the extent they can force us into situations that demand
    certain actions in order to get the carrot, avoid the stick, or
    get along with our neighbors who probably all think the same thing
    we do.

  18. Re:Something I learned today... on Bill Gates Defends Google's Censorship In China · · Score: 1

    > Come on now. There exists no fourm anywhere that is more pro Google
    > than /. If /. things there is a problem with Google then there IS a
    > problem

    Unless there is not, what makes /. infallible? Maybe they should run for Pope.

  19. Re:How many of these things... on U.N. Lends Backing to the $100 Laptop · · Score: 1

    putty n. pl. putties
      - A doughlike cement made by mixing whiting and linseed oil, used to
      - fill holes in woodwork and secure panes of glass.
      - A substance with a similar consistency or function.
      - A fine lime cement used as a finishing coat on plaster.
      - A yellowish or light brownish gray to grayish yellow or light grayish brown.

    beige ( P ) Pronunciation Key (bzh) n.
      - A light grayish brown or yellowish brown to grayish yellow.
      - A soft fabric of undyed, unbleached wool.

  20. Re:Space, The Final Landfill on Old Spacesuits are Potential Satellites · · Score: 1

    maybe i was misled by your use of the word throw.

    the object in orbit is continually falling, but moving
    away from the center of the system.

    the object is going on 1 direction ... it has horizontal
    velocity, when you remove that it will fall due to gravity.

    so, if you could both stop the object, meaning throw it
    backwards so that it stops rotating relative to the center
    of the system it will start falling.

    additionally, if you can impart momentum towards that center
    then it will "fall" even faster.

    since there is no way in hell a "throw" from a any person
    would conceivably have enough force to stop an object from
    orbiting regardless of which way you "throw" it, I just
    thought that would be funny to mention.

    If you are in orbit, and all you can do is throw something
    I think you are stuck there was my point, which perhaps did
    not address your question.

  21. Re:Space, The Final Landfill on Old Spacesuits are Potential Satellites · · Score: 1


    You cannot get there from here.

    Let's neglect atmosphere. Anyway you throw it you just
    give it an impulse that alters its energy state, ie.
    momentum.

    forward: you push it to a higher orbit by adding to
      its momentum.

    backward: lower orbit.

    up: well, you wouldn't do this, but essentially you
      would just change the shape of the orbit.

    down: same as up, except if you can shove it so hard
      that it impacts or interacts physically with the earth
      it slows down because more forces act on it.

    you have to slow down using some force ... ie. the
    atmosphere, without slowing down you cannot do it.

  22. Re:Space, The Final Landfill on Old Spacesuits are Potential Satellites · · Score: 1


    I think the problem with that is that if you do not decrease
    the straight ahead velocity vector it will pop right back up
    because it will skip off the atmosphere.

    you have to stop it, you cannot just shove it down, or out,
    or forward of backward ... it must lose energy, so unless
    you can shove it down so hard and fast that you push it into
    the atmoshere and it slows down, it will pop up again, or
    if you push it backwards it will just assume a lower orbit
    unless the atmostphere interferes.

    the answer is ... if you had to throw you ... you could not
    do it.

  23. Re:How many of these things... on U.N. Lends Backing to the $100 Laptop · · Score: 1


    can we call it putty please, its always nice to get putty.

  24. Re:How many of these things... on U.N. Lends Backing to the $100 Laptop · · Score: 1


    Hmmm, that's funny, I would like to buy one just for the
    hell of it ... like a donation, I would even pay more in
    order to subsidize others ... otherwise how would you know
    what kind of experience millions of economy users are having
    and how you might imprive it or build on it?

  25. Re:Acknowledge the other side on Both Parties Ignore the Facts · · Score: 1


    I agree with you there ... it is like these two groups do not
    see reality the same, to trying to ease in ONE fact that
    disagrees with their entire reality does not compute.

    There is a saying I heard a little while ago that goes like this:

        "Never try to reason someone out of a position they did not
        reason themselves into first."

    I admit I am biased towards the left, but I also have a lot of
    conservtive beliefs as well, what trumps is my vision of what
    the future looks like under what I see happening now. It is
    not that I do not agree with some of the conservative ideas,
    but their implementation is fatally flawed.

    I do not want perpetual war. I do not want an even more
    positive feedback loop for taxes, profit, benefits to go to
    the rich while the middle, working and poor have to pay for
    it all, and all the war to protect these riched they do not
    partake in.

    I believe in the theory that the crime rate has gone down
    so much because of the ability for women in marginal positions
    in life to decide what happens to their embryos. I do not like
    abortion, I was a product of a forced marriage and would not
    even exist if that was an opportunity for my mother at the
    time ... however I would never have known about it, and I did
    not many advantages of an upper middle class life.

    What I see arguments as pointing out are the ablity of both
    sides to nit-pick. I see the Republicans as following the
    letter of the law, making arguments, built on other arguments,
    that go in a direction they want, but not the spirit of the
    law, which is what most liberals seem to be pointing out.

    Both side think they are right, and even if they do not think
    they are right, they will rationalize, or find a way to do what
    is best for them ... the problem is when an elite gets to
    decide what is best for everyone.