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  1. Re:No they don't on Renewable Energy Policies Actually Work (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 5, Informative

    Thanks to renewables, Australia ended up paying $500 a day per family for electricity [blogspot.com].

    Obviously not written by someone who lives in Australia:

    --- Our coal plants fail during peak demand, like our hottest-on-record January this year. Congrats coal, you fail at the definition of baseload.

    --- The conservative coalition promised a saving of $500 when our experiment at a carbon price was axed. Surprising nobody, we didn't! I believe these figures more than the nonsense from that Borepatch site, a site that's keen to list externalities like the cost of food when power goes up, but not when we burn the Earth's densest carbon sinks.

    --- There's a phrase in Australia: gold-plated power grid. Different states privatised their energy grids, and their new owners went on a spending spree which was passed on to us. The cost is significantly higher than the glorified rounding error in that Borepatch article.

    --- Victoria has some of the dirtiest coal in the world. Hazelwood, the power station listed in that article, was the least efficient and most greenhouse-pollution generating station in Australia, and needed to go.

    --- AGL, Australia's largest electricity retailer, has said they're not investing in new coal plants because its not economical. The private sector, which conservatarians always tell us works best because they have a profit motive, doesn't want more Australian coal.

    It's currently technologically impossible for renewables to provide baseload power at a competitive, or even reasonable, price, and will not do so anytime in the near future no matter how much religious environmentalists claim otherwise.

    I can see where you're coming from. The only way we're going to make the significant and immediate reductions to carbon we need to mitigate or limit climate issues (we're past the point of avoiding) is investment in nuclear.

  2. Re:Let me save you some trouble... on Chinese Hackers Targeted Insurer To Learn About US Healthcare (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    This is true to an extent, but there are some unforeseen things that nobody in the middle class could reasonably afford, even if they do the financially responsible thing with savings, read their insurance plans, etc.

    My mother's cancer treatment nearly bankrupted our family, and we still had medical insurance, savings and a six figure income. Most people aren't as lucky as you and I in that respect.

    Here in Australia, the government recently tried to introduce a $7 co-payment before seeing a GP covered by our Medicare system, but the public backlash stopped them. Affordability is as much a question of the system as the public buying iThings.

  3. Same was said in Australia on Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chaffee Proposes That US Go Metric · · Score: 1

    There seem to be two main arguments, all of which (I'm reliably informed by my parents) were argued to death in Australia before our successful metrification starting in the 1970s.

    1. Imperial is entrenched. It was in Australia as well; alas we bear the same burden you do with our British colonial heritage :). All our road signs, car dashboards, units for commerce etc were Imperial. We stuck things over signs, children were taught both systems, commerce migrated. With packaging in both units, the US is halfway there.

    2. Imperial units make more sense. I can't speak personally for this, because I grew up using Metric. For the arguments that Celcius is less granular than Fahrenheit though, may I introduce the decimal point (that Americans so famously applied to their Metric currency while the Brits were still arguing over shillings). Most of these arguments appeal to familiarity, which are valid for the time, but will fade.

    I'd say 2.1: All units are arbitrary. Indeed, all the more reason we all use the same ones, rather than having two systems.

    Those said, I emphasise with unfamiliarity. Aussies laugh at me, but I've actually been learning Imperial measurements in my own time so I can chat with my American friends about weather, etc. If that sounds condescending I don't mean it to, it's genuinely hard. "26 degrees" means something to me, "79 degrees" is a step away from being useful. I also appreciate it's easy for me to say "move to Metric" given it's the system I use.

    I'd argue though the potential benefits far outweigh the negatives though, as they did in Australia. Along with NZ, it's proof that the Metric system can be used in the unwieldy Anglosphere after all.

    The Wikipedia article explains Australia's metrification (metrication?) process pretty well actually, including the myths that switching causes more road accidents, etc.

  4. Search engines are doing the same on Is Facebook Keeping You In a Political Bubble? · · Score: 2

    DuckDuckGo and the like made a big deal about the big players doing search engine bubbling. Depending on who you are, you get different results.

    I don't use Facebook enough to comment on that, but I'd imagine the echo chamber would be deafening.

  5. Article summary misse the point on Are Third-Party Android Vendors Violating the GPL? · · Score: 1

    "Google's refusal to not release Honeycomb source code is kosher because the code in question is released under the Apache license. But the kernel at the heart of Android is GPL'd, which means that code must be released. Google has actually been a good citizen in this regard

    Wait, hold on a minute. It's precisely the fact the Apache licence doesn't compel them to release the source that would make them "good citizens" if they did, rather than just giving it to a select few OEMs.

    but many third-party Android vendors, not so much. While Asus has released their code, there are a host of companies that seem to have not done so, and Matthew Garrett is maintaining a list."

    We were sold on Android being an open source and free alternative to iOS and the like, but unfortunately the reality is proving anything but. Part of this is Google going back on their stance on what constitutes open, but also that they haven't more rigorously enforced compliance of the GPL by their OEMs.

    It's a shame they have to do this for companies other than Asus and Samsung (good GPL folk, IIRC), but companies have proved time and time again their misunderstanding of what their responsibilities are under the GPL at best, and knowingly ignoring them at worst.

  6. Re:BP Claims Gulf Well Has Been Stopped on BP Claims Gulf Well Has Been Stopped · · Score: 1

    I find it "distasteful" that a company knowingly cut corners on safety to raise short term gains at such a grave risk. My anger towards that can't begin to compare with what someone says on a silly Twitter account.

    Not trolling, I just find it bewildering that people are willing to come to the defense of BP over such tiny things when we've read all the shenanigans they've been up to. Same goes for Transocean.

  7. Re:Phone companies would stand to lose a lot on San Francisco Requires Cell Phone Radiation Warnings · · Score: 1

    I'm not a doctor, that's why I was asking. As a heavy mobile phone user, here's hoping your hint is correct!

  8. Re:Phone companies would stand to lose a lot on San Francisco Requires Cell Phone Radiation Warnings · · Score: 1

    riiight... because no one studied the effects of radiation on humans before phones came along....

    Yes, and I said mobile phone usage specifically. There are many different types of radiation, and many different ways of administering it.

  9. Phone companies would stand to lose a lot on San Francisco Requires Cell Phone Radiation Warnings · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I acknowledge we don't know the long term effects of any mobile phone usage because we haven't been using them long enough, but at the same time I feel uneasy. Phone companies would stand to lose so much money and have their industries labeled alongside big tobacco, so I can't help but think they're pouring as much research into studies that "prove" phone radiation is harmless. Even if they couldn't convince people, at least they'd make the water murkier.

    I dunno, my opinions on the ethics of big business have hit another all time low, for some reason.

  10. The coffee shop culture in Singapore on Starbucks Frees Wi-Fi · · Score: 4, Informative

    Probably not all that relevant to this discussion, but my SG$0.02.

    All the Starbucks branches here in Singapore have free WiFi provided you register first, it's part of the government's Wireless@SG initiative, which I can forgive the corny 1990s name for because it Just Works. The irony is this free internet is faster and more reliable than the ADSL I was paying a small fortune for back in Australia!

    There's a huge coffee shop culture here. It's really fascinating to see Starbucks (and Coffee Bean, and Killiney etc), even at 11pm they're absolutely packed with students studying on their MacBooks and business folk frantically typing away. I asked a few local friends why, and mostly it's because apartments here are so small an overpriced cup of coffee is a small price to pay for a comfy chair, relaxing music and a place to do some work on the Internets without your siblings making noise in your ear.

  11. Really hope they kick up as much fuss as China on US-Australia Tensions Rise Over Net Filter · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This news isn't on the scale of Google redirecting mainland Chinese search results to Google.cn but has more in common than Senator Conroy here in Australia would like people to think. Wait, no, that isn't even right, he's openly compared the proposed Great Firewall of Australia to the filters in China.

    When Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Federal Labor won the last election and Barack Obama and the Democrats won the elections in the US, Australian newspapers reported their first meetings as being one with kindred spirits, in much of the same way as George Bush and John Howard. This filter is perhaps the first large(ish) crack in this relationship, and I'm really hoping the Americans kick up as much of a fuss about Australia's laws as China's if the filter in Australia goes through.

    The problem for the voting public here is in our version of the two party system, the opposition are considered the more conservative party, and its new Christian far-right leader Tony Abbott has been fairly silent on the whole issue. One can imagine he supports it in spirit but doesn't want to seem as though he's agreeing with Labor. Either way, we're royally stuffed.

    In the meantime if you're an Aussie, don't forget the Electronic Frontiers Australia is accepting donations for their Open Internet campaign.

  12. The app's BASIC really wasn't that usable anyway on Commodore 64 Runs Again On the iPhone · · Score: 3, Informative

    I downloaded it before it got taken down the first time and had fun entering BASIC command for a couple of seconds before I lost interest. Touch screen keyboards are fine for quick SMS messages or email but I couldn't imagine being such a masochist that I'd want to enter entire programs in with one! I suppose someone with enough resolve could do some amazing stuff and create an alternative interface to the iPhone with 8bit PETSCII glory. Actually that would be kinda cool.

    Anyway despite that, I kept the application and won't be upgrading, if only just to (Mr Burns voice) honk off my Apple masters :).

  13. Hasn't this already been proposed? on Clean Smells Promote Ethical Behavior · · Score: 1

    This sounds like the theory proposed in Fixing Broken Windows.

  14. Re:777 slimmer and faster than 747 on The Flying Giant Is 40 Years Old · · Score: 1

    Actually, they're not. Super long haul flights are done in A340s and 777s. 747s haven't been used in this role for years. I do agree though about the 777 being a more comfortable aircraft to fly in. They're much quieter in the cabin too.

  15. Re:Nice to see fact moving faster than fiction on NASA Plans Test of New Plasma Drive · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're absolutely right. Collective will of corporations, governments and people (land, labour, capital and enterprise for those economically inclined) towards a single goal in the past has resulted in amazing things being achieved. Alas it's just too uncommon for all three groups to be interested in the same things at the same time, because they have different priorities and perceived needs.

    What I'm hoping for now is that with the shrinking of the world there is a huge opportunity for corporations, governments and people to work together regardless of their geographic location quite unlike any other period in our collective history.

    Optimistically, together we can achieve so much. Realistically, I think we're still more interested in spending our land, labour, capital and enterprise resources on killing each other over differences such as religion, resource allocation and political ideology.

    As a terribly politically incorrect end note though, the jet turbine engine was created as a direct result of war. Who knows, a new cold war may have people racing to other planets, comets or solar systems instead of our moon. It's interesting to think about: how much of our progress is just making sure someone else doesn't do it first?

  16. The Camino folks have it just right on Firefox Users Stay Ahead On the Update Curve · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I use Camino as my browser on my Mac and choose to leave the home page as the default "Camino Start" page. Its very minimalist, just shows a small Google search box, and a link to the latest version which changes colour to red if my version is outdated.

    No in-your-face messages, no irritating popups, no external syncing software... though I guess it only works if you keep it as your home page. Makes sense to use a feature that's built into every web browser (sarcasm aside): the ability to load a web page!

  17. Re:Stupidest os release? on Windows XP Lives, Thanks to Linux · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Bob wasn't an operating system. Still, I think it was one of the more interesting and innovative things to come out of Microsoft in a long time, I had lots of fun playing around with it when it came out. Problem was, I was 9 when it did. I can't imagine people with things to do would have found it useful.

  18. Re:Finally! on NASA Planning Mission To 40-Meter-Wide Asteroid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're right, they shouldn't have sent people to the moon, it was too expensive. Think of all the money they could have saved if they sent a few robots up there.

    I'm sure Rosie would have loved to volunteer!

  19. Re:MS: "Our customers are our beta testers." on Windows XP SP3 Released To Manufacturing · · Score: 1

    And of course therefore if you yourself never had a single problem with it, then nobody else did.

    Windows XP SP1 was not "a damn good OS" (nor any version of Windows for that matter, but leaving that aside). If it was, there would have been no need for SP2.

  20. Quick comment about support on Internet Sites Biased Towards Supporting Suicide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just a quick comment regarding the intertubes usefulness for support. My mum died after her 12 year battle with cancer at the end of last year; I was stuyding externally so I could help take care of her as she was getting weaker.

    In all honesty I don't know where I would have been then or now without the Internet. Within a few hours of realising the unthinkable happened I had people literally from as far away as Alaska and South Africa (I live in Singapore) sending their condolences and thoughts, it really was something else.

    Also I think people tend to think of support in the fairly narrow sense, don't underestimate the pleasent distraction and coping help you can get from tinkering with source code from your favourite FLOSS app or OS, say for example FreeBSD. Really got me through some tough times.

  21. Has an "incentive" been offered you think? on ODF Editor Says ODF Loses If OOXML Does · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I lived in Malaysia last year (very nice, warm people with a really dodgy government), whenever a major project is stalled or changes direction, or when a prominant politican flips on a seemingly heartfelt poisition overnight (happens more regularly that you think) we all nod our heads and know that he probably got a new Porsche.

    Why can't I shake the feeling that this guy has been bought off? Heck, Microsoft has shown it's willing to pay off Swedish votors for OOXML and a slew of other shady dealings.

  22. Re:It's the people, stupid. on The REAL Reason We Use Linux · · Score: 1

    And what does the spelling of a word have to do with reasons for using Linux?

  23. Hard disk sounds are useful on The Joy of the Flash Drive · · Score: 1

    I equate the audible sounds of hard disks to pain in us mere humans: it's not pleasant, but it's damned reliable indicator of when something is wrong.

  24. It's the people, stupid. on The REAL Reason We Use Linux · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Granted I'm a FreeBSD guy [insert comment about why BSD is dying here] but I think the arguments are basically the same as for Linux. I agree with most of TFA, but I enjoy using FreeBSD and other Free software for another important reason: the people.

    Despite the fact commercial products can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars, their technical support services nearly always suck: they're slow, obscure, vague, answered by people who don't know what they're talking about or are reading off a sheet of paper that assumes everyone they reply to is an idiot, or at the very worst you don't get an answer at all. Just speaking from my own experience.

    Now granted there are plenty of jackarses on forums for Free software and the like, but on the whole I can post a question and generally get a useful response and in a fraction of the time. Plus if it's for a particular piece of ported software, generally I can either contact the port maintainer or the creator of the software directly and get helpful answers. I've NEVER got that from commercial software vendors. That's what makes the difference.

  25. Stephen Fry said it like this on The Obesity Epidemic — Is Medicine Scientific? · · Score: 1

    As the great Stephen Fry once commented (paraphrased): it's not about what you eat, it's how much of it you eat, and if you say "that's too simplistic, it doesn't work for me" just look at starving people in Sub Sahara Africa then try saying that again. Then again, that's an admission that people have to make about themselves, and people would prefer to blame other things.