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User: Brickwall

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  1. Re:Behind the curve on Seattle Approves $15 Per Hour Minimum Wage · · Score: 1

    Absolutely agree! WalMart's biggest advantages are tremendous internal logistics and huge buying power (forces suppliers to cut costs and prices if they want to do business with the WalMartians). But they fall down on service and quality - I bought some pedestrian things there, like underwear and socks, and their George brand doesn't fit me at all. I don't hate Walmart like some seem to; there are some things it sells that are a good product at a good price. I don't make it a habit of shopping there, though.

  2. Re:Pffft on Atlanta Gambled With Winter Storm and Lost · · Score: 3, Funny

    In Soviet Russia, snow falls on you! ... er, no, that's not it.. In Soviet Russia, you fall on snow! .. no, that's not it either.. In Soviet Russia, Eric Snowden falls on you! .. there, got it!

  3. Re:Nice idea but... on Australian Team Working On Engines Without Piston Rings · · Score: 1
    It's in the same general range as all primarily petroleum based fuels which are liquid at room temperature and atmospheric pressure

    Er, wasn't that the OP's point? No current battery, flywheel, natural gas, etc. provides the energy density of liquid petroleum, regardless of the refinery technique. People use oil for transportation because it's easy to transport and handle (compared to, say, LOX), and the fuel weight to payload ratio is very small. We're not stupid, as they said in Trainspotting...

  4. Re:Friggin' supernovas AGAIN. on New Views of Supernova 1987A Reveal Giant Dust Factory · · Score: 2

    Mellow out, man. All you need is a really, really big Roomba..

  5. Re:Or... on The Golden Gate Barrage: New Ideas To Counter Sea Level Rise · · Score: -1

    Or maybe put the brainpower into exposing the global warming farce. So far.. ZERO of their predictions have come true, they have been found guilty of egregious perversions of the scientific method (cherry picking data, transforming data to fit their models, etc.), perversion of the peer review process, and of course, just making stuff up (Himilayan glaciers, anyone?). Remember the melting Arctic sea ice and all the poor drowning polar bears? This year, a whole bunch of boats that thought they were going to cruise through open sea are now caught in the ice in AUGUST. Arctic ice block Whenever I see the line "3,000 scientists agree with the IPCC report", I start ROFL. More than half of them have no training in metereology - they were anthropologists, sociologists, etc., who haven't done arithmetic, let alone math, since grade 10. David Suzuki, who is making millions of dollars a year from this nonsense, made his bones studying the mating habits of FRUITFLIES. Clearly, that makes him an expert on climate. (I note that the hypocrite has 3 homes, and insists on limousines for his paid appearances, which he naturally jets to.) Global warming folk can get back to me once they have a model whose predictions for the future, as opposed to the past, come close to matching what is measured.

  6. Re:Um... on Wrong Fuel Chokes Presidential Limo · · Score: 3, Informative

    As any Canadian knows, you can get most cars out of the snow if they have a manual tranny. Automatics just spin the wheels. But the real reason automatics became popular was commuting. Standards are fine for driving in the country or on the highway - on a twisty, hilly road, the standard can actually be more fun. But sitting in traffic jams, constantly playing with the clutch vs. just easing your foot off the brake becomes wearing when you have to do it for an hour or so.

  7. Re:Why does 3d printing matter on Digging Into the Legal Status of 3-D Printed Guns · · Score: 1
    You should also realize that the right's gun fetish clouds their judgement at the expense of common-sense gun regulations

    Oh, balderdash. I'm 56, never owned a gun, and haven't held one since I was 16 (target shooting with a .22). But when I see/hear/read about DHS/ATF/IRS buying billions of rounds of hollow-point ammo, guns, Kevlar suits, explosion resistant vehicles, etc., when I read about the increased use of drones for surveillance AND the floating of the idea of armed drones, I begin to wonder if the government is more concerned with the perpetuation of the government than it is the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of the citizens who nominally control it. Since the feds have pretty much thrown away the constitution in recent years (Bush/Obama both - I'm not on either one's side), and have harassed the public with salt/soda/fat bans (either real or proposed), etc., the list of grievances for the average private sector American is getting about as long as the list in the original Declaration of Independence.

    You can call them any derogatory term you like, but I think people who are stockpiling guns and ammo privately are just trying to protect themselves against an on-rushing police state. And the amorphous left wants to disarm them because those busybodies realize that their dream of controlling every aspect of our lives, from the food we eat, the soda we drink, the lessons we learn, the jobs we hold, to how much of our own money and property we're allowed to keep is made much tougher by having an armed populace.

  8. Re:Why does 3d printing matter on Digging Into the Legal Status of 3-D Printed Guns · · Score: 1
    Succeeded in their effort to ban large sodas

    Are you unaware the ban was declared unlawful by a judge?

  9. Re:Why does 3d printing matter on Digging Into the Legal Status of 3-D Printed Guns · · Score: 1

    The Bernank prints $85 billion per month. There's lotas money to pay DHS/ATF/IRS thugs (and equip them with bullets, automatic weapons, Kevlar, and explosion resistant vehicles).

  10. Lisa on 30 Years of the Apple Lisa and the Apple IIe · · Score: 1

    I worked on an Apple Lisa in Ottawa just after it was introduced. Like a lot of Jobs' ideas, it was a good concept that needed better, faster CPU's and denser, cheaper RAM. Think of the Newton - what is the iPhone but the Newton repackaged into a smaller form factor with superior hardware and telecoms added? I still think, if it hadn't been for Jobs and the whole Lisa/Mac lineage, I'd still be staring at c:>

  11. Obviously... on Hiding Secret Messages In Skype Silences · · Score: 1
    "A group of researchers from the Institute of Telecommunications of the Warsaw University of Technology have devised a way to send and receive messages hidden in the data packets

    Using Reverse Polish Encryption, no doubt.

  12. Re:Going to get modded down as sexist for this, bu on Why Girls Do Better At School · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I had the good fortune to go to a mixed jr. high, and then an all-boys high school. The difference between the two, as far as being male is concerned, was staggering. The slightest cutting up, disruption, etc. at the jr. high was followed by a trip to the principal's office, a path I trod many a time. Naturally brilliant, I was bored to tears most of the time because of the dullness of my fellow students, and my outbursts were a way of keeping my sanity. While I got excellent marks, I was still branded a troublemaker.

    In my last year of jr. high, my father challenged me to write the scholarship exams to a prestigious boys' school. I won one. And so I left a co-ed school for a male one. The atmosphere was completely different; moments of rowdiness would be tolerated by the master (there were no female teachers), but he would then instruct us to settle down, and the class would continue. Unlike the 45 minute periods at jr. high, our periods were only 35 minutes. The school realized that teenage boys have to get up and move frequently, which is why we still had recess each morning - unheard of at the public high schools. We also had an hour for lunch, giving us time to play ball hockey or basketball or touch football, and burn off some energy so that we could sit through the afternoon.

    Wolfing down your lunch in ten minutes, playing 50 minutes of basketball with all the intensity teenage boys can muster, and then racing to class, tieing your tie with one hand whilst carrying your books in the other - it was thrilling. We would, literally, stampede through the halls in a way that wouldn't have been tolerated at public school. We were FREE to be BOYS, and I would not give up the memory of those days for anything.

    With no girls to show off for, we competed at everything - academics, sports, arts, clubs - without fear of being labelled, for example, a 'browner' or a 'jock'. Many of us were a bit of both. The school encouraged you to be an "all-rounder", and while classes ended at 3:15, you were expected to participate in some extra-curricular activity until 4:30 or so. My friends at public high school envied that; most of their teachers were out the parking lot 10 minutes after the last bell.

    Teenage boys, adjusting to the suddenly changed levels of testerone in their bodies, don't fit well into the female-dominated "sit still and be quiet" mode prevalent in the co-ed school. They need space and more importantly, time to move and burn off some of that raging energy. Women don't understand that at all, which is why so many bright young boys are being mis-diagnosed with ADHD/ADD/whatever, and being put on drugs because they don't fit into women's world view.

    I had two beautiful and bright daughters, who chose public school. Had I had a son, though, I would have pushed him for all I was worth to go the school. I know he would have been treated like a young man there, with the understanding of a young man's particular needs, and not have been pushed into a feminist/schoolmarm charicature of what a boy should be.

  13. Re:Rent seeking on US Firms Race Fiscal Cliff To Install Wind Turbines · · Score: 2

    Your figures are close, but according to Ontario's ISEO, lowest hourly demand was just over 11MWh in November. Since our hydro capacity is about 1/3 of our nukes, that gives us about 15 MW of capacity before we get into fossils vs renewables.. You're right about coal - it's down to about 2%. But natural gas is cheap; its price right now is about 10% of what it was in 2007. It burns cleaner than coal or oil, and we have oceans of it in Western Canada. So of course the Liberals cancelled two gas plants just before the election to save their sorry hides. That's what I can't stand about McGuinty; he makes grandstanding gestures that will cost all Ontarians billions. He has run our debt up to about $240 billion; California, with three times as many people, has a debt of $620 billion, and many people think it's a basket case. We're proportionately worse off, and we're going to pay for it with higher taxes and poorer services over the two decades. Wasting billions on this foolish renewable scheme was just irresponsible.

  14. Re:Rent seeking on US Firms Race Fiscal Cliff To Install Wind Turbines · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Absolutely! Here in Ontario, our moronic provincial gov't guaranteed 20 year contracts to the wind and solar companies at $0.80/kWh. Meanwhile, our nuclear reactors are generating power at $.03/kWh. And because they guaranteed to buy all the wind power that's produced, they end up having to sell it at a big loss. Brilliant! What's worse is the wind turbines, perhaps because Ontario is in the centre of the continent, generate most of their power during the shoulder periods of power demand. At least solar has the benefit of producing the most power on hot sunny days, when air conditioning demand is high. What's the old saying? "First, God created idiots. That was for practice. Then he created politicians."

  15. The unasked but obvious question.. on Ask Slashdot: Should Scientists Build a New Particle Collider In Japan? · · Score: 0

    What does Sheldon Cooper think?

  16. A candidate on Windows 8: a 'Christmas Gift For Someone You Hate' · · Score: 3
    Microsoft is no stranger to criticism these days

    Regardless of what anyone thinks of MS products, (and I use Win7 everyday, and think it's perfectly fine), my candidate for understatement of the decade.

  17. And another study immediately contradicts Muller on Koch Bros Study Finds Global Warming Is Real And Man-Made · · Score: 1
    Contrary to Muller's Damascene conversion, Antony Watt and pals have shown that the majority of NOAA sites in the US are poorly sited (i.e. too close to heat sources and sinks) and that, for some bizarre reason, the NOAA adjusts the results of their best sites upward to match the temps seen from their worst sites. As a result, according to Watt, they overstate temperature rise by about 0.15 deg C/decade.

    NOAA overstates warming: study

  18. Re:Political Science Professor on Political Science Prof Asks: Is Algebra Necessary? · · Score: 1
    I don't know what you think you've uncovered here.

    Here's a clue: a "fairing" is a piece of equipment on the leading edge of certain vehicles designed to improve aerodynamics. One sees them on airplane engines and motorcycles.

    And my sharper point is that people who are only good at English disparage math and science, while people who are only good at math disparage English (and all the humanities), while people, like me, who are good at both, despair at the two intellectual solitudes that have been created.

  19. Re:Political Science Professor on Political Science Prof Asks: Is Algebra Necessary? · · Score: 4, Funny
    "how they fair inside their own class"

    "Does knowing how one is fairing relative to immediate classmates "

    While I don't know how either of you are doing in the real world, it's a pretty fair bet that neither of you would fare very well on an English test.

    But I bets both of you can al-jabber with the best of them!

  20. Life Imitates Art.. on Controlling Monkey Brains and Behavior With Light · · Score: 2

    Controlling people's behaviour with light impulses was part of the plot line in last week's episode of "Continuum".

  21. Ignorance is a barrier to.. on The Digital Differences In Americans · · Score: 0

    I not no how to uze internets, but me has gun and can drive the car to beer store.

  22. Re:Whitechapel on Mammoth "Metal Moles" Tunnel Deep Beneath London · · Score: 1

    Never mind. The fact you were able to type and submit it with your head nailed to the floor displays a certain "stick-to-it" attitude that will do you all right in the end.

  23. Re:Why exaggerate? on Mammoth "Metal Moles" Tunnel Deep Beneath London · · Score: 1

    I remember as a young lad, raised in Canada and speaking the Queen's English (not "that insufferable American argot", as one of my English masters had it), encountering the word "intrepid". Following the examples of metre (mee-tur) and centre (cen-tur), I pronounced it during an oral reading as "in-tur-pid", which brought the proceedings to an immediate halt.I tried to explain myself, repeating "in-tur-pid, it's right there in the book!" to increasing laughter from my class, but the master was sure I was having him on, and gave me a gating. Such, such were the joys..

  24. Re:GPS? on Mammoth "Metal Moles" Tunnel Deep Beneath London · · Score: 1
    Lasers are used underground to determine the location. If there are turns, mirrors are used.

    Shark-mounted, no doubt.

  25. Re:Enough with the American Beer Bashing on Whisky Made From Diabetics' Urine · · Score: 1
    Both Coors, and Miller, are now owned by canadian Molson.

    Actually, not really true. The two companies merged, and control is shared between the Molson and Coors families. So, certain Canadians claim Molson's was taken over by Coors, and certain Americans claim the reverse. Later, they reached an agreement with Miller to do joint marketing, but it wasn't clear from the articles I read if this involved any change of ownership.