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Comment Re:Next up (Score 1) 101

To be fair, I'd rather be an ethnically-Persian-to-some-degree Jew or Catholic living in Iran than the equivalent in Palestinian controlled Gaza. The Iranians pride themselves on at least paying lip service to tolerating Persian Jews and Christians, as opposed to forming mobs and murdering them. For example, Iran actually has a Jewish member of Parliament. Of course, democratic/representative government there is basically a sham since it's all under the ayatollah.

And yet, Iran is the most imminent threat to Israel and Iran's rulers routinely scream about their murderous intent involving WMDs.

Bottom line: Iran is a weird place.

Comment Re:Bubbles (Score 1) 130

Before anybody dons the proverbial tin foil hat, consider:

1. It is not possible to exert mind control over an intelligent and reasonable person simply by throttling their social media streams.
2. The "stuff you don't like" that it hides is more likely to be worthless drivel than desperate attempts of the suppressed Resistance to unify against The Man.

This is all speaking as an outsider -- I don't use Facebook and I can't imagine what would make me want to (to each his own, I suppose).

Comment Re:Brain surgery? (Score 1) 790

cheaper to snip around in their brain than house them for 20 years

I can think of somewhere else to snip first that would probably have a significant effect. (And no, I don't support punishment of "thought-crimes", even though as a parent I can't help but perceive risk from people inclined to such things.)

Comment They're still of interest in the field (Score 4, Insightful) 124

If you hosted a well known "true black hat" hacker at the conference they would still command everybody's respect purely for their abilities, and everybody would want to hear what they had to say. You take for granted that much of it is going to be a lie, but it's still more interesting and on topic than (say) inviting a politician to speak.

Comment I like Swift pretty well (Score 1) 315

Just from what I've seen (not a user yet) Swift seems like an intelligently put together language. But I'd like it a lot better if somebody ported it so it can be useful across multiple platforms. I'm a C# developer who uses Xamarin's platforms, and compiling my code for all the major mobile and desktop platforms is a really good feeling. (Paying Xamarin's licensing fees isn't, but you know how that goes.)

Comment Re:Well, (Score 2) 112

With regard to Windows Phone you may have a point. Microsoft and Nokia have really aggressively pursued the low end of smartphones, particularly outside the USA, and have been seeing some traction in terms of devices sold.

However, in terms of profits, it's pretty much Apple and Samsung [running Android]. Bleeding millions of dollars has certainly done something, but I'm not sure what Microsoft's plan for the endgame is at this point.

Comment Re:Astronomy, and general poor night-time results. (Score 1) 550

My sister had that done as a Type 1 diabetic with severe cataracts. The cataracts are gone and she jumped to perfect correction of her nearsightedness, although she immediately needed to start wear bifocals for near vision, despite being in her 20's. Not entirely sure how that worked, but that's all I know.

Comment Re: Astronomy, and general poor night-time resu (Score 1) 550

No, they put a few drops of some chemical on your eyes, then wait a few minutes, and the chemical forces your pupils to dilate, in other words the hole at the front of your eye gets bigger and more open. Then they can look inside your eye and see if the retina looks healthy -- it gives them a bigger hole to peer through.

After the procedure your eyes take a while to re-adjust so the pupil stays dilated for a bit. My eye doctor gives patients free eyeshades if they don't have sunglasses with them, as it can be really hard on your eyes to go out in the sunlight with pupils still dilated -- sunlight can be extremely bright and painful. It wears off over an hour or two and your pupils get back to normal.

Comment Re:"Thus ends "Climategate." Hopefully." (Score 1) 497

I disagree. We are not entitled to say that a change in carbon will effect a change in net energy that we can predict using simple measurements. One reason is that a change in carbon causes changes in other features of the atmosphere that have a profound effect on the planet's warming or lack thereof. Climate change is chaotic and, thus far anyway, it's been impossible to predict over the long term.

Check out this article explaining why this is complex. For example, changing the CO2 changes the water vapor in the atmosphere, which will quickly goof up your best intentioned "back of the envelope" calculations.

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