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User: AJH16

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  1. Re:Someone should do this coal power on Windfarm Sickness Spreads By Word of Mouth · · Score: 1

    Flywheel tech will help with some of this as well as the friction loss becomes lower and lower.

  2. Re:I deeply dislike the end-run aroudn the courts on Valve Removes Right For Class Action Claims From EULA · · Score: 1

    The problem is that encouraging a system that involves the lawyers getting huge pay days while the victims get nothing means that lawyers will look for ways to go after companies for things that really aren't unfair. This creates overhead and risk for companies which make them not pursue helpful things for the consumer on the grounds some asshole might sue them over it to get a fat paycheck.

    The root of the problem is that the class action system is BADLY broken, (you give up your rights even if you are never notified about the class action if you fit the definition of the class, for example), I agree there could be some point to it if the system worked right, but at this point it isn't. The "cure" is a greater evil than the problem and causes more harm to the consumer.

    Also, as an aside, the details in the earlier post about Netflix are incorrect, the proposed settlement is 25% for the lawyers (2.3 million) and 9 million to charity, with 30,000 split among 6 named plaintiffs. They're still scum bags and I fully intend to remove myself from the class or file my objection with the court, just haven't decided which yet.

  3. Re:don't buy the fucking thing then on iFixit's Kyle Wiens On the War On DIY Electronics · · Score: 1

    Those are completely different things. One is a criminal investigation, the other is intelligence. Yes, sometimes the investigations are wrong or politically motivated, but those are the result of corruption or human error. They have nothing to do with intelligence methods. So i repeat, show me relevant evidence for your paranoid drivel.

  4. Re:Comment follows on The Sounds of Tech Past · · Score: 1

    You are partially correct, they are not strictly prevented, but the restrictions in regard to disposal and the cathode ray tube chemicals made it cost prohibitive. I forget the exact details, but they would not have vanished entirely without the price going up for disposal. At the time they disappeared, it was still over 6 times the price to get a professional grade LCD and the professional and consumer lines of CRT manufacture were independent enough for one to exist without the other.

  5. Re:Comment follows on The Sounds of Tech Past · · Score: 3, Informative

    Fail troll fails. The A90F+ was a graphics workstation grade monitor. ViewSonic's consumer lines were crappy, but they made outstanding professional gear when accurate color reproduction and color gamut matter. My $600 HP was the best value around to match the quality. At the time both monitors had 5 star ratings (the A90F+ has since dropped if only because of people complaining about the bulk.) It is a S-IPS panel with 110% AdobeRGB coverage. Most LCD monitors that have similar quality and color reproduction levels run upwards of $1000, so $600 for the HP panel was a steal.

  6. Re:Now... on Judge Rules Pi-Based Music Is Non-Copyrightable · · Score: 1

    Of course it is, the captain is standing on shore watching it go.

  7. Re:Comment follows on The Sounds of Tech Past · · Score: 3, Informative

    CRTs can no longer be sold or manufactured commercially for environmental reasons. It was a sad sad day when my beautiful ViewSonic A90F+($150) died and I had to replace it with a $600 HP display in order to get anything resembling the same quality of display. :(

  8. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    Sane people give up what the believe, when they can prove things that contradict it.

    There are more forms of proof than scientific. They may not be scientifically rigorous, but it is incredibly arrogant to assume that just because you can't think of an answer that resolves conclusion A and conclusion B, that the two simply can not both be true. That isn't to say that a burden of proof that my beliefs are wrong couldn't be met, but I've had some very solid experiences to back my beliefs that I believe defy statistical likelihood. If you have an actual mathematical proof that God does not exist, then I am open to your criticism of my assumption that both are somehow true, however when we are talking about the only parts that I don't have a way to match up are things that a) happened far in the past, b) are not particularly disprovable by science and c) fairly lacking in useful detail for scientific verification in the Bible. The key is that I never stop looking for the answers of how they fit. It isn't scientific, I realize that, because I'm going in pursuing a particular answer, but it is not insane and is still a valid pursuit of knowledge using reason. It just isn't purely the scientific method.

    3. Accept that science is how and the Bible is why.

    You are missing his point here entirely. The point of the Bible was never to be a book explaining how things happened. The details are vague, poetic, non-specific and visual language is frequently used. Metaphor is frequently used. The reason the events are recorded is not to answer people's scientific curiosity, but rather to show details of the character of God and answer the questions of why. It is not a scientific text book and to treat it as one is foolish. You are making the exact mistake that the OP was warning against.

    Ah, yes. Omphalism: God created Adam and Eve with navals, even though they weren't born. Because, because, because... Well, it would actually have been a stupid thing for God to do, wouldn't it.

    I think this is something that both the OP and I would agree with you on. It's a silly notion that we both find silly as well.

    But why would you accept that, even if there was nothing contrafactual in it? Why not choose some other culture's sacred precepts for your guide?

    Because, as the OP said, the science starts to align pretty damn well if you take a non-dogmatic approach to analysis. Also, due to personal experience with the religion or even simply objective philosophical consideration of the moral values (for example Pascal's wager). Reasons can vary from individual to individual. For me, a sufficient burden of proof has been met based on my personal experience with Christianity to believe it is correct unless strong empirical evidence can be presented that it is wrong. Thus far, nobody has been able to provide said empirical evidence against since I've been able to resolve (quite nicely in fact) the vast majority of scientific understanding to the Bible.

    So if you're going to interpret the Bible as referencing something other that what it actually says, why believe it at all?

    Maybe it uses the same technique to "reveal" spiritual principles. I.e., means anything you want it to mean, other than what it says?

    This is where I agree with you, but disagree with the OP. If things were not accurately recorded, then it throws a lot more in to question. There are still alternatives in a lot of cases with outliers where something may have been improperly canonized and added after original authorship, though the flood in particular is problematic as it is referenced in both the old and new testaments and makes it hard to use the corrupted cannon argument. Another viable fallback position is that it was a regional event that was recorded by those who experienced it and they recorded it as worldwide when it wasn't. I don't particularly like this fall

  9. Re:don't buy the fucking thing then on iFixit's Kyle Wiens On the War On DIY Electronics · · Score: 1

    Like it or hate it, as long as no action is taken, there isn't any reason that anything that results in a statistically meaningfully increase in chance of an issue shouldn't cause more attention to be paid, particularly in any automated systems. The thing I think most people don't realize is just how much information has to be parsed through in order to find the relevant bits and the penalty for missing a relevant bit is much much bigger than the penalty for analyzing something that didn't pan out. (Real harm to life and property vs some wasted time). As long as the additional scrutiny has no change in the way the person is treated and no action is taken due to suspicion unless more is found, then there is no problem.

    Intelligence gathering isn't the only thing that works this way. Insurance works very similarly. You evaluate the likelihood of a problem and if something shows any statistically meaningful indicators, you look for more. The more indicators you find, the harder you look. You start with quick easy checks that aren't work intensive to try and further refine the search. Many of the "low work" indicators are simple things like looking for electronics or holding what may be considered extremist religious beliefs. These are quick things that don't assign guilt or innocence, but can help note trends and filter down the information some. You can actively avoid some, but the idea is that you throw the net wide and get progressively more detailed. The fine line is when you start treating those who have been noted as being guilty instead of simply data points that merit further consideration. I'm not saying the system is perfect, but how else would you meaningfully get through the amount of information generated?

  10. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    I get the feeling we're not necessarily all that different, though I'd challenge that there is an option you haven't considered. It is kind of close to your answer 3 because the Bible was never intended to be a guide to how things work. (My previous arguments agree with your conclusion about #4, which is just silly both scientifically and theologically.)

    The point I would bring up is don't be too quick to dismiss the truth of the Bible as accurate. I think similarly in that if I absolutely can't find a resolution, then I must assume that the observations of science have an explanation and that I may be missing the appropriate understanding of scripture, but with very few exceptions, I have not found things that don't conceivably match up between Genesis and scientific observation. What they do challenge is the dogmatic interpretation of a particular understanding of scripture. Going more in to the theological side of things, you can see this with many complex theology topics that are purely philosophical. One example is free will vs divine foreknowledge. There are two major schools of theological thought about this, either that your actions are pre-determined and known or that you have free will. However, there is a very narrow line of reasoning between these that indicates that foreknowledge and even creation in a given state do not preclude free-will and thus while the outcome is known it is still our choice. This enters in to interesting scientific grounds when you consider the fact that without some external factor, the world is simply a complex set of reactions in which no free will would be possible unless some non-deterministic force was introduced. (Which I posit is the free will we posses.)

    By defining the two sides of the issue in simple terms, there is a very limited number of possibilities for which both sides are true. I think the same may be able to be said about science and the Bible. While the purpose of these two sources of knowledge are completely different, they both tend to demonstrate things that shed light to the other. In the case of scientific observations of our origins, it gives a lens through which we can refine our look at Genesis and the Biblical creation. It leads to some interesting thoughts such as what I mentioned about Adam and Eve not necessarily being the first man and woman, but rather potentially being the introduction of free will to the system. The Bible does seem to describe categorical differences between the offspring of Adam and Eve and the other humans. This could also potentially relate to the previously mentioned genetic Eve that someone else was pointing out. It gives possible hints as to what the Bible means when it says he created Adam in his image (my guess would be the presence of free will.)

    Ultimately I hold hard and fast to two assumptions. First, that God would not conceal himself or use some type of trickery to deceive people about his creation. Second, that the theological basis of scripture is true and that if properly canonized, the content of scripture in general is true as stated, though perhaps not properly interpreted. (There is certainly metaphor and visual, poetic descriptions within scripture, so study has to be approached carefully.) All my study is to try to find the points where the two co-exist happily and see what it can tell me about both. Where I can't figure it out, I simply accept that both are accurate and that I need to keep looking.

  11. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    There is not enough water because of the fact we currently have mountains and large underwater trenches. At one point in history, the geography was considerably more flat since most of the trenches and mountains are the result of plate collisions. This is why time-scale and not nature of an event is the problem. There is more than enough water to cover the planet if the land masses were properly shaped at some point in the past.

  12. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    Hmm, that is actually very interesting. I'm not sure how it factors in to my views, but it doesn't seem to disagree any. Is there a particular reason that you don't think there could have been some type of flood, perhaps associated with a plate collision as that seems to be consistent with the description given. I have not had the opportunity to look in to the topic as much as I'd like yet, so I'm truly interested in any evidence either supporting or contradicting.

  13. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    Perhaps my parens was confusing. I was pointing out that from a Biblical perspective, one could make an argument than mankind is only 6000 years old or so. You could also use it to point out that there is no problem with humanity being far far older. The context of my original comment was pointing out that there is effectively no way to use the actual way the Bible talks about creation of the world to indicate that the world itself is that young. I do not personally believe that people have only been around 6000 years, nor do I believe that even a literal interpretation of the Bible requires viewing humanity as having only existed for 6000 years.

  14. Re:Yessssss, Google... on Google Files Amicus Brief in Hotfile Case; MPAA Requests It Be Rejected · · Score: 1

    I can see some legitimacy to that concern, but I see that as more an issue of government corruption than an inherent issue with Google as a company. As a private company, they have to obey the law in regards to requests for information from law enforcement and such. Is it something we should monitor, yes, but I don't link it to a problem with Google as an organization.

  15. Re:Yessssss, Google... on Google Files Amicus Brief in Hotfile Case; MPAA Requests It Be Rejected · · Score: 1

    See, it's the imagine them cooperating with other companies that is where I run in to an issue. Google has no financial interest in sharing their data, they sell a product that depends on them being the only one that has the information and they take lots of safeguards to make sure they don't lose exclusive access to that information. They have a privacy policy that states basically the same thing that they will not disclose the info about you that they gain and will only act as a service provider to other companies seeking to use Google services that utilize the profile. They haven't given any reason to suspect that they would violate this. If it was a company like Facebook or Apple, I'd 100% agree with your concern as those companies have a track record of not giving a shit about the people providing them information, but I've never seen any indicators from Google that show anything other than trying to broker a mutually beneficial deal between customers and advertisers and make their money off the extra benefit they can offer both.

    Do I think we should watch Google closely? You bet your ass I do. I trust them, but that doesn't mean I don't watch their behavior closely. They've earned my trust over the years by behaving responsibly and trying to "not be evil" as they say. If their behavior was to start to look more shady, I would move to distance myself from them and make sure that my profile was poisoned and out of date. As long as they don't start looking like they are headed in the direction you describe, I see no issue, and they currently offer a lot of legal protection (in the form of their privacy policy) to guarantee they don't.

  16. Re:don't buy the fucking thing then on iFixit's Kyle Wiens On the War On DIY Electronics · · Score: 1

    Do you have evidence to support your theory? Last time I checked, it still requires evidence and a crime to be able to prosecute someone. Simple suspicion isn't enough to do anything. In theory, they could hold you if they had strong links thinking you were a terrorist without a trial, but do we have evidence of this happening in the case you suggest, or only when there actually is substantial evidence beyond the scale of being a person of interest? I don't deny there is potential for abuse (as there always is in any situation), but simply taking note of a behavior as a flag for further attention does not seem nefarious to me unless you have some evidence to indicate that it is.

  17. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    Could be, my goal is to resolve my belief that Genesis is likely accurate if properly read and that scientific observations should also match up without convoluted reasoning. I do my best to try to resolve the two and it sometimes comes up with interesting conclusions that I don't know a whole lot of other people who hold, but thus far I have not found anything in way of scientific evidence that can not be incorporated to match a particular understanding of the description given in Genesis. The main area I still have issue resolving is the flood. My most likely explanation would be that for the flood to occur, it would have had to occur immediately prior to plate collisions driving up our current mountain ranges (when land mass would have been relatively flat and therefore there would have been enough water to actually cover the land), however the time scale we observe for the formation of mountains doesn't seem to gel nicely. Prior to that, there are a number of easy time-gaps that can be introduced (for example, man's days are not numbered prior to Genesis 3, so an alternate possibility would be some very very old people as society was developing).

  18. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'll speak up as a very scientifically minded OEC who thinks the mechanisms of OEC were very likely the big bang and evolution. The order of events matches up closely and it's worth pointing out that the Bible doesn't say humanity was created separately, just Adam and Eve. In fact, it actually lends support to the theory that humanity existed either before or shortly after their creation and of independent lineage. (For those who aren't verst in Genesis, after Cain killed Able (Adam and Eve's sons), he was sent out of the region, but it directly mentions there being other people there and at that time, there were no other descendants mentioned of Adam and Eve.)

    You are probably correct that there are very few YECs on Slashdot though as it is a completely unsupportable position (both religiously and scientifically) that is only held to by people that don't know how to do any kind of research or critical reasoning. Just simply looking at the actual language of Genesis indicates that the term for each "day" of creation is the same as the term for age, and until a good part of the way through creation, there would be no actual 24 hour day to begin with. Also, the Bible is beyond clear that time in God's eyes is vastly longer than our eyes.

  19. Re:doh! on Satellites Expose 8,000 Years of Civilization · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Except that the Bible says that God is revealed through his creation as well. This would seem to indicate that God wouldn't make things appear to be a way they are not. (I say this as a Christian who does not believe that young Earth makes any sense. I could possibly see an argument being made that human's have only been around 6000 or so years (I don't personally believe this is necessary or accurate either, but I could at least see grounds for the argument (using the Bible, not science)).) Ultimately, those who claim the Bible says the Earth is only 6000 years old fail at both their own religion and science. The term translated as "day" more closely means age or period. Clearly, without a planet yet, you can't have a 24 hour day, so it doesn't even make sense to assume that the "days" referenced were literal.

  20. Re:Yessssss, Google... on Google Files Amicus Brief in Hotfile Case; MPAA Requests It Be Rejected · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Honestly, I don't even understand the privacy concerns. I realize that some people hold complete control over every action and breath they take to be sacred, but at the end of the day, we have always been advertised to and we have always had our behavior in public observed to a greater or lesser extent. Traditionally, we have gotten many pointless ads wasting our time and gotten very little if anything in return for observations of our behavior. I don't see how Google's attempt to alter that balance to give people a meaningful return of value in exchange for information about their activities, while also guarding that information and using it to provide better, more targeted advertising that is more likely to be useful to me, is evil.

    You can go on and on about privacy and it's supposed sacredness, but at the end of the day, everything Google knows about me is information I freely gave them using services they provided to me for no financial cost. And what do they do with this information? They collate it to both better serve me and also to better generate revenue through advertising that is more meaningful to me than the advertisements I would have otherwise gotten. I am not saying they are some savior of humanity, but this is how corporate business SHOULD be done. Leveraging the size and power to try to improve the lives of customers while making a profit without getting in the way of your customers. It isn't like Google is trying to steal your information from you or even isn't clear about what they intend to do.

  21. Re:don't buy the fucking thing then on iFixit's Kyle Wiens On the War On DIY Electronics · · Score: 0

    Honestly, I don't see the problem with this as long as they are only looking at it as persons of interest and not taking action without further indicators. Intelligence gathering is about looking for lots of little cues. If I look for information on timers, it might not be bad. If I look for information on RF controls, it might not be bad either. If I look for where to buy fertilizer, that might not be bad either. If I look for used conversion vans, that might not be bad either. If I start googling for population density and structural integrity of buildings, that might not be bad either. But if I do all of those things, I'd hope that someone would have noticed all the little things and maybe come pay me a visit to see what I'm up to. Unless you take note of one of them, and look for more, you'll never be able to correlate them.

    The key isn't the observation being made in the public space, it is when actions start being taken specifically because of innocent behavior, not simply noting that they might want to look more closely. Similarly, people with access to classified information are treated with more suspicion than the average joe. Why, because it could be good or could be bad what they would do with it, and if you don't actually look for intelligence, then you'll never see anything. How exactly do you expect things to be detected. I can tell you that scanning people at the airport isn't going to do it. The active intelligence work, such as looking through the public space for patterns, is the only actual effective means of security.

  22. Re:HotS on Can $60 Games Survive? · · Score: 1

    Right, but what businesses look at is are people using it or not. Not are they buying it or not. The company would change if nobody used the product. The gut reaction if you think you are wronged is to try and prevent the wrong from happening, not try to fix the reason for being wronged in the first place, cause that is an unknown factor. It could be that people are cheap, it could be that people are immoral, it could be that people want things to be cheaper, it could be they don't want DRM. If people simply didn't get the game at all, then they would have no choice but to change their model. As it is, they are given an easy (and natural) out from having to change how they do business.

  23. Re:Thespians on Pay the TSA $100 and Bypass Airport Security · · Score: 1

    Or he doesn't care enough about that topic to research it. Why should it matter that he be a science expert? Why should he be forced to research it? When asked he answers what his views are, but does he actively fight evolution or is he simply indifferent to it? Do I lack the ability to stop and research something because I'm not familiar with the finer points of crochet? Unless he is vocally speaking on a topic, his view doesn't matter. You can't personally research everything. I don't follow him that closely, so yeah, if he is a vocal opponent of evolution, then I could see some justification to your complaint, but that would seem to be against his general philosophy if he was campaigning against evolution.

  24. Re:Good idea! on Russia Has Sights Set On Manned Moon Landing By 2030 · · Score: 1

    While I get the fact that the cost of living is higher, consider the fact that the average income on the planet is $7000. Our poorest working people make over twice that if working a full time job. Those of us that are middle class professionals make more in two months than most people in the world make in a year. America is objectively wealthy, not just a few people, but everyone in the country is comparatively wealthy to many on the planet.

  25. Re:Thespians on Pay the TSA $100 and Bypass Airport Security · · Score: 1

    But what difference does it make if he believes in evolution? He believes in shaking up the government. I agree that he doesn't seem to be all that bright, and I agree that he holds an overly simplistic view of the roll of government, but it is still 100 times closer to where it should be than the direction we are currently headed. We need an about face and he's the only person with any kind of popularity that is also screaming for an about face instead of running headlong in the same direction we are currently moving. Ron Paul as President would possibly (maybe even probably) be a disaster, but it would (hopefully) force the rest of the political field to recenter and reverse course, and that is better than the direction we are going. We're headed towards being just as dead, just in a much longer, more painful, unfortunately probably more violent way.