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Comment Re:Seems about right (Score 4, Interesting) 380

There's really no need to have cable anymore unless you want live sports. Practically everything else is available online for free.

That and cable news. I would love to get my parents to switch, it kills me to see them sending $100 to Comcast every month. But they are absolutely addicted to the talking heads. I have tried to introduce them to online news, but so far online news is mostly text based with short video clips. Until there is a mainstream site that streams 24 hour news presented by a human, they (and many others) will never give up their precious cable.

Comment Re:There's always a downside (Score 1) 533

No No No, every argument about Solar/Wind energy is so far away from meaningful topics. You are going to get nowhere protesting their ugliness when compared to oil and coal. You will also get nowhere with numbers, as many people stop listening as soon as you quote a figure. This is a proper way to frame your argument:

1. In order to get off the hydrocarbons, we will need to increase our electrical consumption many times.
2. Solar and Wind power will never provide a base load. What if a volcano erupts and you have a decade of bad weather?
3. Solar and Wind suck raw materials at a rate that does not justify their wattage offering. Nobody in their right mind would call intensive mining "green".

This way, you don't get bogged down in arguments about whether Solar/Wind can replace our future need at year X, if they are deployed over area Y, and meet efficiency Z. The three arguments above illustrate to anyone why we should focus on modern nuclear first, and only afterwards be considering Solar/Wind in certain areas for peak demand.

Comment Re:look at me lookatmeeeeee (Score 1) 80

I'll be very happy when corporate controlled social networking dies a natural death and there is an open-source, easily manageable solution for attention whores.

You know what is hilariously ironic about that statement? Slashdot is a corporate controlled social networking platform, and has been since long before Rob left. Only after this community is able to produce an open-source, easily manageable, non-corporate alternative will I begin to pay attention to people who claim that Facebook is replaceable.

Comment Re:Public v. Private (Score 1) 73

I don't really see how IPv6 could help this problem, the government can still just operate a bunch of nodes, and then block anyone who tries to connect using tor. And nothing will ever ease the risk of operating an exit node, where you can get slammed for other people's traffic. The only reason Tor works in other countries is because of legal arguments about Tor operators not being liable for Tor traffic. Outside of a local network or a darknet where all peers know each other personally, there is no such thing as un-censorible network. That is why it is important to take an interest in government.

On an unrelated note, I don't see you point about IPv6 being DOA. In torrent swarms, I usually connect to 1/4 to 1/3 of the users using IPv6. Contrast that to zero this time last year.

Comment Re:bandwith of flash drive or SDHC card (Score 2) 73

I would venture a guess that most of those Chinese tourists are part of the privileged upper class who live (or reside) in one of the economic zones that the Great Firewall doesn't cover anyway. Their lives are relatively good, and they are not going to rock the boat.

The people behind the firewall are in no position to leave, even for a short while.

Comment Re:Typical TED BS (Score 1) 272

Because of the nature of piracy, any speculation about its effect on the market is just that, speculation.

So allow me to speculate. From casual conversations with people over the last decade, it seems to me that piracy was far more "mainstream" (and thus common) in the early days than it is now. Services like Napster, KaZaa, and Limewire were popular and easy to use, providing an essentially iTunes-like experience: "type song into box, click download". When people casually spoke of "downloading a song", it was clear they meant these services.

Now, the simplest method in widespread use is torrenting, and for many people that is just too many steps. I have coworkers who used Limewire religiously, but simply can't/won't navigate the world of torrents. Not to mention the fact that many torrent index sites are COVERED in porn, which is a real turn off for the mainstream (especially girl) crowd.

So where did all those former Napster/KaZaa/Limewire users go? They went to iTunes, because even though it costs money, it provides the experience they understand and are used to. So what I'm suggesting is that piracy in numbers of people is less of a problem in 2012 than it was in 1999-2006.

Comment Re:Poor people exist (Score 1) 568

The amount of paper/wood/plastic school supplies my elementary school "required" easily cost more than a budget notebook if spread out over 2-3 years.

Of course, I'm picturing some kind of ARM Linux notebook, a First World OLPC of sorts. But if it was done the way every institution I have seen does it, then you need Dell Core iX desktops with 22" screens and a full copy of Microsoft Everything. Either that or a fleet of 17" Macbook Pros.

I mean, they are buying those with tax money. At that point it becomes a matter of thrift, not of fanboyism.

Comment Re:My suspicion (Score 1) 398

So true. As my biology professor loves to remind us, " organisms are the product of genes interacting with an environment". The notion that species wide changes must occur at the genetic level, and thus at evolutionary time scales, is a very blunt view of nature. If I took a swamp frog out of the swamp and left it in the desert, and it survived, it would no longer be a swamp frog. I think there is a lot of truth to this, especially when applied to autism (or any other psychological condition really).

We evolved to live in a very physical and socially collective world. In a few generations we have changed to a very cognitive and individual society. I would not be surprised if phenomena like autism were responses to this change. Not evolution and not social conditioning, but developmental responses. For instance, I read a lot growing up, and for better or worse it had a lasting effect. If I had been born 500 years ago, I could be genetically identical, but without growing up with books I would be biologically a totally different person.

Comment Re:Not Surprised (Score 4, Interesting) 370

€1.2M from hardware because demands are lower for Linux compared to Windows 7

This is an often overlooked additional benefit, especially if you use a lightweight environment. A modern distro running LXDE and LibreOffice can make 10 year old hardware an adequate machine for 90% of office uses. As a bonus, future upgrades to ARM PCs would be essentially transparent to the users.

Comment Re:Eisenhower's farewell adress (Score 4, Informative) 155

Fascinating. For those who are curious:

In this revolution, research has become central, it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.

Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers.

The prospect of domination of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present – and is gravely to be regarded.

Comment Re:Conflict of Interest? (Score 1) 311

Or it provides a convenient excuse for why the rest of the world is passing the US just about every technological pursuit, except maybe online advertising or "Cyber consulting".

The brief period of time during which it was a plausible business model to design things in the US and make them elsewhere has ended. Foreign engineers are just as capable as US ones.

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