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User: wcrowe

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  1. Re:Fuuuuuck on South Korea Bans Selfie-Stick Sales · · Score: 1

    Regarding "cameraperson". Perhaps the word you're looking for is photographer. Cameraperson sounds more like someone in the television or film industry.

  2. Sounds like a good idea on Cops 101: NYC High School Teaches How To Behave During Stop-and-Frisk · · Score: 1

    The police ARE a fearful group to be avoided at all costs. We live in a police state. Or, at least, we live in a country where the police have been militarized to the point that they are dangerous to be around. These days, when they're sending in SWAT teams to collect overdue library books, even a middle-aged, law-abiding, white guy like me needs to be wary of the police.

  3. Re:Instrumentation on Ask Slashdot: What's the Most Hackable Car? · · Score: 1

    That's kind of what I was thinking. The most "hackable" car I ever owned was a 1980 Jeep CJ7. It was super easy to work on. Lots of room in the engine compartment to put extra stuff. If you wanted something aftermarket in the interior or on the dashboard, you just drilled a hole or two and bolted it on. You could go with a hardtop, softtop, doors on, doors off, bikini top, or no top at all. And you could drive your hacked vehicle virtually anywhere. I wish I still had one.

  4. Obstacles on Microsoft Rolls Out Robot Security Guards · · Score: 1

    Since it can't climb obstacles, I wonder if you could simply corral one with a few well-placed bricks or concrete blocks.

  5. Re:Bullshit Stats. on As Amazon Grows In Seattle, Pay Equity For Women Declines · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's right, and I wish I had mod points today. Unless the author can show that female techs in Seattle are making less than male techs in Seattle, this is not a story.

  6. The logo change wasn't enough? on Firefox Signs Five-Year Deal With Yahoo, Drops Google as Default Search Engine · · Score: 1

    But Yahoo just changed their logo recently. I thought that fixed all their problems.

  7. Re:Capitalism does not reward morality on Is a Moral Compass a Hindrance Or a Help For Startups? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you're equating capitalism with avarice. It is possible to run a business while maintaining a sense of morality. Lots of people do and make a living that way. However, if all you want to do is make money, and continue making more and more of it, for no reason other than to keep making more of it, then yes, morality must, at some point, be tossed out.

  8. 3.6 billion passenger trips. on How Baidu Tracked the Largest Seasonal Migration of People On Earth · · Score: 2

    This article says it's 3.6 billion passenger trips. Over a 40-day period, that's a little more believable, but I wonder what is counted as a "passenger trip". Let's say I live in NYC, and I want to travel to Lincoln, Nebraska for the holiday. So, subway ride to the airport, that's a passenger trip. Flight to hub in Chicago, another passenger trip. Flight from Chicago to Omaha, another passenger trip. Then whatever means I use to get from Omaha to Lincoln, another passenger trip. Coming home, I do the same thing all in reverse. That's eight passenger trips for one person for the holiday.

    So, you take the 3.6 billion passenger trips, and divide it by 4 or 6 or 8 or whatever you think is the average passenger trip per person. Then divide that over a 40 day period, and account for the difference in population, and maybe you get something like a multiple of the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S.

    I dunno, I'm just throwing it out there as a possibility.

  9. MySpace 2.0 on Zuckerberg: Most of Facebook Will Be Video Within Five Years · · Score: 1

    It will mostly be video. Yeah. Just like MySpace. And we all know how successful that was.

  10. Re:Type 1 vs Type 2 on Human Clinical Trials To Begin On Drug That Reverses Diabetes In Animal Models · · Score: 2

    One of the greatest disservices that has been done to people with diabetes is the notion that being overweight causes the disease. It can certainly contribute to it, but the bottom line is that it is a genetic disorder. I personally know three type 2 diabetics who have fine BMIs and get regular exercise. Myself, I was diagnosed as a type 2. I began exercising and lost 110 pounds. And yet I kept getting worse. It turns out that I was mis-diagnosed, and that I am a type 1. It just hit me later in life than it usually does.

    Unfortunately, there is now this popular misconception that everyone who is diabetic is a fat couch potato. There was an SNL skit a couple of years ago where a Chinese character in a skit says, "What does America manufacture? Hmmmm. Diabetes?" Big laughs. Oh, har, har, har! Now we read that the largest number of diabetics in the world are in China.

  11. Re:Type 1 or Type 2 Diabetes? on Human Clinical Trials To Begin On Drug That Reverses Diabetes In Animal Models · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's type 1 (which I have). It it not necessarily impossible to fix a pancreas that is not producing insulin, because very often, even a type 1 diabetic will have at least a few beta cells. If something can be done to prevent beta cells from being destroyed, the body can produce more, and then a healthy level of insulin can be maintained.

  12. It doesn't work on New Website Offers Provably Fair Solutions To Everyday Problems · · Score: 5, Funny

    I keep telling my dogs that the way that Spliddit divvies up the expenses is PROVABLY FAIR, but all they do is look at me blankly, cocking their heads to one side. Damn dogs. I never see a dime out of either of them.

  13. Re:Nuclear powered drill on Japan's Annual Nuclear Drill Highlights Problems · · Score: 1

    I thought the same thing. It should say "Nuclear Disaster Drill", or something like that.

  14. Not everyone needs to be an athelete on US Army May Relax Physical Requirements To Recruit Cyber Warriors · · Score: 1

    I was in the Navy from the early 80's until the early 90's. When I joined, there seemed to be an understanding that most sailors were, basically, technicians, so once they passed a basic level of fitness, they merely were expected to do their jobs. Then, beginning about 1983 or so, there started to be this concept that everyone needed to get in better shape. Pretty understandable. But by the 90's, that had changed into, "everyone needs to be an athelete". Ridiculous. We need to recognize that the vast majority of the jobs in the military are support or tech roles that do not require excessive stamina or fitness. You cannot on the one hand say that everyone needs to be an athelete, and at the same time say, we're friendly to pregnant females.

  15. AI + Bad Data = Nightmare on Elon Musk Warns Against Unleashing Artificial Intelligence "Demon" · · Score: 1

    The problem with AI is an extension of the problem with information in general. Right now, we have a problem in that when a computer says something, the trend is to believe that is the truth -- even if it does not make any sense. In other words, there is no question about how the information got into the system or any question as to its validity. Everyone just assumes that what Mr. Computer says is correct. Identity theft and credit theft are two of the biggest examples. It gets worse when you add AI into the equation. Now the system is making decisions based on incorrect data. And no one questions any of it.

  16. Re:School is just fine. on Employers Worried About Critical Thinking Skills · · Score: 2

    I know. It's like they think no one had any critical thinking skills a century ago when the country started building railroads, suspension bridges, telephone systems, and hydroelectric dams all over the place.

  17. Yeah, right on Employers Worried About Critical Thinking Skills · · Score: 2

    Employers are concerned about critical thinking? Really? Because it seems to me that what they really want are employees who are willing to implement the latest stupid-assed plan a bunch of pointy-haired, mid-management, sociopathic dipshits have come up with, without question or comment.

  18. Doubleplusgood on Proposed Penalty For UK Hackers Who "Damage National Security": Life · · Score: 1

    I see goodthink is progressing doubleplusgood on Airstrip One. Anyone who commits thoughtcrime should become an unperson.

  19. Next, the brain on Cell Transplant Allows Paralyzed Man To Walk · · Score: 2

    This is great. Now if we could only get a cell transplant that would allow idiots to think.

  20. This is too easy. on 'Microsoft Lumia' Will Replace the Nokia Brand · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft Lemona". I already don't want one.

  21. Re:credibility of article is doubtful on Lockheed Claims Breakthrough On Fusion Energy Project · · Score: 1

    Yep. The accompanying video to the Lockheed press release says "the size of a large truck", and shows a semi driving down the highway. So, more like 7'x10'x45'.

  22. Sure, the sun can power data centers on Can the Sun Realistically Power Datacenters? · · Score: 1

    The sun is powering data centers all over the place right now... albeit from light it shined down on earth millions of years ago.

  23. Can't be good for humans either on Birth Control Pills Threaten Fish Stocks · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This might explain why grown men are more and more behaving like frightened old women these days.

  24. This is news? on A Critical Look At Walter "Scorpion" O'Brien · · Score: 1

    The way I see it, the only possible problem is that the network claims that the show is based on real life. Otherwise, pretty much everything on TV is a made up story, including everything on "reality" shows, some of the stuff on the news, and perhaps even the occasional sporting event.

  25. Re:Travel on Indonesian Cave Art May Be World's Oldest · · Score: 1

    Or there may have been a tradition of this type of art dating back to a time before human populations migrated to different parts of the globe. We just haven't found anything older yet.