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User: kuldan

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  1. Re: Luckily, he's not in Germany ... on PayPal Told Customer Her Death Breached Its Rules (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    sad thing about this is - as bad as the nazis were, they had a plan and kept to it - sometimes too well. trump on the other hand seems to do one random thing after the other...

  2. Re:So "Hyperloop" is a 200mph maglev? on 201 MPH Pod Run Wins SpaceX's Second Hyperloop Competition (geekwire.com) · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I meant the comparison to be with a normal bullet train, not the maglev in question..but still, that can't get up to full speed in that short distance either.

  3. Re:So "Hyperloop" is a 200mph maglev? on 201 MPH Pod Run Wins SpaceX's Second Hyperloop Competition (geekwire.com) · · Score: 2

    You forget one thing: The test track is not even a mile long, and the pod has to accelerate AND decelerate in that short span. Your comparison Maglev can't eaven rech 50mph in the same distance (and forget about stopping :) ... this is just a small scale test, in a very sub-length tube to test power and propulsion systems - if the pod had a length of say 10 miles, I'm sure they could reach the proposed 700mph. But that is far out, and the test track for that still has to be built.

  4. Re:not gonna happen on Finland Prepares Their First Tests Of A Universal Basic Income (futurism.com) · · Score: 1

    Just to put some numbers up for a simple example (which would be typical for someone working in IT in this region)
    (Situation: 32 Years old, Unmarried, no children, living in Stuttgart, Germany, Monthly values):

    Pre-tax income: 4.666,67 €
    Taxes
    Solidaritätszuschlag 52,05 €
    (Tax for rebuilding of eastern Germany after reunification)
    Kirchensteuer: 75,71 €
    (church tax)
    Income Tax: 946,33 €
    Social Security expenses
    retirement fund: 436,33 €
    unemployment insurance: 70,00 €
    health insurance: 355,95 €
    extended care insurance: 60,38 €
    (formatting killed by Shlashdots "use fewer junk characters" rule)

    Net income: 2.669,91 €
    (this is the amount paid to your account, everything above will be deducted from your pay before paid out to you.
    Everything on this list excluding church tax is state mandated and can't be removed or negotiated off, except in special situations, due to german tax laws)

  5. Re:Great in the winter .. on Germans Can Get Free Heating From the Cloud · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, to put it into perspective, power in Germany costs about double than in the US - I pay around 0.30€/0.40$ for power per kw/h in Germany, and I'm with the cheapest provider for the whole region...

  6. Re:Thank you Elon on SpaceX Falcon 9R Vertical Take-Off and Landing Test Flight · · Score: 1

    You are aware that they already did the landing (albeit in water) on CRS-3 with a fully orbit-capable production Falcon9(R-dev)? They turned around, slowed down, and soft-landed in the water, exactly what was planned for that flight. The next one will be on water again, but aims closer to the cape, and so on. It is an iterative concept... and, what you said Falcon9R does not do (and is a scam for it) it will do later when they have the new test site in texas ready to go, which they are currently lacking permissions to use.

    TL;DR: They are doing what they said they were doing, and they incrementally increase the height/flight paths of the rockets.

  7. Re:Thank you Elon on SpaceX Falcon 9R Vertical Take-Off and Landing Test Flight · · Score: 1

    It will do so when they have the permission to fly out of McGregor, where the Falcon9 Dev-2 will be stationed. Where they are right now, they are not allowed to do acutal launches, so they have to wait.

    Also, they test on production flights right now, see CRS-3 last time or the upcoming AsiaSat flight in a few days.

  8. Re:Flyout and back plan on SpaceX Falcon 9R Vertical Take-Off and Landing Test Flight · · Score: 1

    This is wrong, they said specifically that they aim to land back at the launch site, for quick refuel/restart (less than 24h turnover in production). No plans to return to other pads and carry via road/waterway.

  9. Re:What about the windows only software? and offic on High School Students Develop Linux Imaging and Help Desk Software · · Score: 1

    Well, you generalize way too much - maybe they do where YOU live/study.. they sure as hell did not where I went to university / high school..

  10. Ah, I like where I live.. on An Iowa ISP's Metered Pricing: What Will the Market Bear? · · Score: 2

    Back where I live (southwestern Germany), we have a Cable ISP that is the pure internet goodness in 99% of all cases..

    this is their top-tier plan:

    Internet Access (150Mbit Down / 5Mbit Up)
    Landline + Flatrate
    HD-PVR
    some PayTV Packets

    all inclusive: 47€/Month ($63 US, including taxes)
    Oh, and obviously, they don't do any metering on traffic.

  11. Re:Well, I've heard a lot of american reactions on More Details Emerge On How the US Is Bugging Its European Allies · · Score: 1

    yeah, at this point it is more resignation about the last ~50 Years of german government officials than anything else.. especially Merkel ..our "Flag in the wind".. turns wherever the wind blows..

  12. Re:WTFAYTA? on More Details Emerge On How the US Is Bugging Its European Allies · · Score: 1

    Just to clarify: That were personal, individual reactions in forums as gizmodo etc., commenting on news - not in the news themselves.

  13. Well, I've heard a lot of american reactions on More Details Emerge On How the US Is Bugging Its European Allies · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ..to this lately, and most of them were in the "We are big, bad, mean motherfuckers so of course we do this and if you don't like it go fuck yourself or we nuke you" (paraphrased, not literally uttered.. even though nuclear weapons HAVE been mentioned once or twice in the discussion.. I think it was on gizmodo or some site like that..)

    Guys, just turn around the situation and it would be China doing the same in the US.. wouldn't your outcry be as big as ours (German here), maybe even bigger?

    Just because you have the biggest guns doesn't mean laws are not for you anymore, just as a reminder..

    Also, having the biggest Aircraft Carrier in the block means nothing, if you actually would take on an opponent that can fight back.. (I've read up on a lot of NATO maneuvers where even our old diesel subs blatantly sunk US carriers and the commanders didn't even believe the sub commanders that they were there, until they surfaced like 500 feet away from the carrier in full broadside view of the torpedo tubes..)

    Really, if you ask me, as a German with a strong national pride myself, the only political answer to this would be simple (and something our corrupt and incompetent government would NEVER do..): close all US bases on German soil, including Ramstein etc., remove every single American non-civilian personell from the country immediately..

    and while we're at it consider if this constitutes an "armed" (as in cyber-warfare) attack against Germany (and our Allies) as based on NATO Article 5 (Casus foederis).

    Also, leaving NATO would be another option.

  14. Re:...but it was still a space shuttle flying... on The Space Shuttle Discovery's Last Mile (Video) · · Score: 1

    Well, sorry to correct you, but SpaceX does not "require" the robot arm to berth with the station (this Mode of Operation is called Berthing, not Docking), but rather NASA requires SpaceX to not DOCK but berth with the Station to minimize the chance of a vehicle on fully auto without a crew going haywire and damaging the Station - the Dragon would/will be fully capable of Docking, NASA just doesn't want them to.

  15. Re:I wish they wouldn't on Firefox Demos Prototype Metro Interface · · Score: 1

    Well, you can.. there is some web magic around already that lets you add a "run at logon" script that opens the Desktop "App" bypassing the metro launch screen and also the swipe to unlock screen.. and if you install start8 from stardock you don't have to bother using metro for the basic tasks.. but as soon as you change stuff (that includes joining a wlan, that is metro now too..the volume slider isn't though) and have to use the control panel, you're back to metro.

  16. Re:I wish they wouldn't on Firefox Demos Prototype Metro Interface · · Score: 1

    That was in the DP, not in the CP - they actually removed the Registry key, and multiple times have stated that there will be no official way to get rid of metro.

  17. Re:That's what America needs to be competitive! on Bring Back the 40-Hour Work Week · · Score: 1

    So you know, yes it was already roughly converted into dollars :) If you scroll down a bit, I added a bit more information down in the thread as well..

  18. Re:That's what America needs to be competitive! on Bring Back the 40-Hour Work Week · · Score: 2

    Well, if you want a rundown .. (Anonymous coward here, just didn't have my login creds at work..):
    I live in Germany, Stuttgart, in the City center, and I have roughly the following col: (all monthly quotes, converted from Euro to $)
    3 Room, 700sqft -> $950 (including heating, fees, etc)
    Power -> $90
    50Mbit Cable -> $40
    Car Insurance -> $100
    Gas (at $8/gal..) -> $250
    Insurance (non-medi) -> $60
    Food -> $250 (including eating at our cafeteria at work)
    Of course I have a lot of other positions to take care of, but this is just to give you an overview on my cost of living on the salary stated above..

    Oh, and for your added benefit, some information on how we are taxed in Germany, example me (not married , no kids):
    Income: 5516 USD
    Work Tax: 1223 USD
    Solidarity Tax (to rebuild Eastern Germany): 60 USD
    Church Tax: 89 USD
    Healthcare: 415 USD
    Retirement: 540 USD
    Unemployment Insurance: 83 USD
    Pay after taxes (all above are mandatory): 3106 USD

  19. Re:Amazing on SpaceX Tries Out Its New SuperDraco Rocket Engine · · Score: 2

    Well, if that Coal-Fired Burner is producing Power at 1/10th the price everyone else (producing it using Nuclear, or whatever they have), I would damn well be impressed. Of course we've been to the Moon already, shot stuff to Orbit a quadrillion times over.. but if we can do it again, affordable this time.. Take for example travel.. sure we could do London - New York in a single trip 50,100, 200 Years ago.. only difference is, 2hundred years ago, it took 2 weeks, cost a fortune, and was not very safe. 100 Years ago, it took four days, still cost a fortune, was safer, but still. Today it takes roughly eight hours, and I can actually pay for a return ticket with two weeks of my pay - if I wanted to, I could do that trip easily every two months and possibly survive every one of them. SpaceX is currently not doing something new - they are trying to build and improve upon what has been done in the past - namely getting stuff and people from A (Earth) to B (LEO, GEO, GSO), and at the same time build the foundation for much more ambitious missions. Like it says in the Article - if the SuperDraco system works as intended, you have a pinpoint-accurate lander that can touch down and - depending refuelling and the gravity of the body - launch again on it's own, without any expendable stages. also, Falcon 9 and Falcon 9 Heavy are only stepping stones on the way to something bigger - Falcon X, XX, XX Heavy are all on the drawing boards already. And with that much lifting power - and that at more or less affordable prices - building a structure in orbit for manufacturing larger crafts which in turn can be serviced, piloted, and left/rejoined with one and the same capsule: Dragon. As soon as you have a cheap means of getting stuff up there, you can really start looking at persistence - NASA is planning for developing "Space Tug" Systems, that can take stuff in LEO, and shuffle it to higher orbits, even GSO at little to no extra cost, since it is in all possibility a system based on VASIMR and solar power.. and if you actually have a means of getting fuel, repair crews and the crafts themselves up at a cost that actually makes making them reusable and not "one-shots" feasible, you suddenly have a complete infrastructure up there, actually gaining manufacturing capabilities after a few years of building.. Imagine if you have a Launcher like Falcon X/XX, a standardised Flottila of Crafts like Dragon..and the means to actually build ships in space instead of just one-shots that you partially drop piece by piece on your way and then throw away. Want to go to the Moon? Build a ship, fuel it, fly it, do your mission, return it, refuel it, refly it.. Of course this is all more or less science fiction right now, but it all is technically doable - the only things blocking us from actually doing them with what we have now is cost and effort, since most stuff for spaceflight is designed from the ground up for each specific mission - if you start having a reliable, high-volume and cost efficient base to bring stuff up, a lot of other stuff will follow.. and SpaceX is doing it's babysteps right now of course - hell, that Company is only a few years old and already on the edge of being the first gig that launches a 21st century man-rated Space Transportation System - hell it is a capsule, it looks retro, apollo did it, yadda yadda. But with thar Argument take your Ford Model T and your Ford Fusion 2012.. they both still look like cars no? Somewhere along the way we figured out that "four wheels and an enclosed capsule for the people inside" is a more or less optimal form for a car, so we stuck with it. I want my Spaceplanes as much as everyone else (REL, go on with Skylon, quickly!) - but for now SpaceX is doing a darn good job at what they do. I've seen their plans for powered ascent for 1st/2nd Level rocket stages - and I'm highly sceptical it will ever work. But oh boy, if they would make it work, that would be one of the sweetest feats I've ever seen launched from a Launchpad..

  20. Re:When was our last human rocket launch? on New Soyuz Launch Facility Near the Equator · · Score: 1

    Ah, yeah of course you are totally right. I kinda mixed up Apollo 17 and the end of the Apollo program in general.. thanks for correcting my mistake :)

  21. Re:When was our last human rocket launch? on New Soyuz Launch Facility Near the Equator · · Score: 1

    As much as I remember, the last "rocket" Flight with a human Payload onboard before the Shuttle was Apollo 17. There was a "Human Spaceflight Gap" for a few years then as well as much as we have right now, only not as bad..

  22. Re:not just planes on Brothers Build World's Largest Model Airport · · Score: 2

    Okay, I forgot to login, so here is the link again: My Picasa Gallery with Pictures from the MiWuLa

  23. Re:Can't Log Emails? on Germany To Grant Privacy At the Workplace · · Score: 1

    Yeah, what you are doing would be illegal in Germany, even by current laws - as long as the contract allows private use of communication equipment (so phones, email..). If private use is allowed (it is in my company for example) you are breaking the law if you read (as in - filter by hand or electronic means, read the messages) mail for example or keep mails from reaching a user - this also applies to spam filtering. I am allowed to do spam filtering, I am just not allowed to dispose of mails that the filter deemed "spam".. the only thing I'm allowed to do is to mark them as spam (as in set the X-SPAM flag) and let the user decide to configure a local filter rule to move so-marked Mails to their respective spam folders. The same applies to follower regulations - I need a written permit from the user that I am allowed to read his mail or forward his address to another person after his departure/if he is on holidays, etc. Just doing it would be an invasion into his privacy and I would be held responsible by law. (For clarification, I'm head of IT over here)

  24. Re:Did they close the loophole? on For New Zealanders, No More Phones As Sat-Nav Devices · · Score: 1

    No, not so far as I know.. but they are currently closing the loop hole that one can lose his license permanently in germany, and just travel to another EU-Country like poland and just get another license there..

  25. Re:Hands-free is allowed on For New Zealanders, No More Phones As Sat-Nav Devices · · Score: 1

    Yeah, you can trade in some US Licenses, but sometimes have to take a test too. And I strongly suggest getting your license here, since driving (safely) in europe is a whole different matter than in the US.. oh, and german licenses are divided by manual and automatic shifters.. so if you learn on automatic, you are only allowed to drive those at all.