Comment Re:I can't think of a non-evil use for this (Score 1) 215
Not to mention: Mars will be worse.
Not to mention: Mars will be worse.
Only you would do that.
Heat is just atoms moving around, after all, so negative temperatures are easy:
just make the atoms move backwards.
That would be manslaughter.
I'm sure they can't wait to put them selves in a position to very publically benefit financially from the first such murder...
In simple standard case, it's just a matter of an identical twin with a different age. Can't see what's ethically questionable or complex about that.
But there's a hidden snag: normally, there would be no reason to do that. Once there is a more specific motive, the questions start popping up. Most cases have parallels already, but safe, efficient cloning would make them more accessible and likely:
Clueless idiots raising a clone to be a replacement for a lost child isn't in principle any different from clueless people today raising a normal sibling to be a replacement. But it might be more *likeley*.
Conceiving with the specific aim of transplanting is already an ethical conundrum we have to handle today, but with cloning it would be a lot more promising in fulfilling its aim, and the request much more common. Hopefully w'ed be able to grow organs without a clone by then, but you never know.
It's as simple as that, anyone saying otherwise has anti-semitic agendas.
While you do have some other valid points, this one basically equates to "if you're not with us you're against us", which means you automatically lose the discussion. Better luck next time.
No, but it sums up all the useful/practical ones.
If you only have two inputs, there are only 4 rows in the table,:
| A | B |
| 0 | 0 |
| 0 | 1 |
| 1 | 0 |
| 1 | 1 |
This yields only 16 possible output columns:
0000 - does not vary with input
0001 - AND
0010 - not commutative
0011 - reacts only to A
0100 - not commutative
0101 - reacts only to B
0110 - XOR
0111 - OR
1000 - NOR
1001 - XNOR
1010 - reacts only to B
1011 - not commutative
1100 - reacts only to A
1101 - not commutative
1110 - NAND
1111 - does not react to input
That makes 6 potentialy desirable operations. The seventh is NOT, which takes only one input.
The not commutative ones could conceivably be put to useful work, but in physical designs the asymmetry is impractical, and you can trivially construct them from other gates if need be. In fact some of the useful ones ar also usually constructed from combinations of the others, and all of them *can* be constructed from combinations of NAND gates.
You should team up with this guy..
Amen. When people don't even spot the glaringly obvious (and frequently demonstrated) flaw that uregulated markets don't remain freee for very long, it's really hard not to extrapolate about their general capacity for evaluating societal systems or for logic in general.
There's the Unseen Hand of Adam Smith, and then there's the unseen hand of Santa Claus. Thay are not the same.
-- all it takes is keeping two lengthy sets of logic rules with highly complex behavior and formulated in different laguages in perfect sync at all times
There, I fixed it for you.
Funny.
But on the serious side, more like
// This comparator is performance critical and intentionally left messy after empirical optimisation.
or
// Since extrudeStrands() has side effects we don't control, we can't use the Gnocci pattern here.
That sounds harsh, and of course it doesn't fit 100% of the time, but if you look closely enough it is true a frightening part of it.
The only thing you can trust is the code.
When I write comments it is usually to say "this code might look like an opportunity for this or that refactoring/optimisation. Don't do it becauase..."
Yes, ideally the code should express this directly, and commetns are an admission of defeat, but sometimes we are defeated.
For the sake of argument accepting the premise that baked/fried carbs is the bugaboo: it is not expensisve at all to replace bread with boiled/steamed rice or potatoes. Impractical, maybe, but a lot of the world do eat rice as we do bread, so it can't be that bad.
Apple haven't exactly been earning their benefit of the doubt lately...
The cost of feathers has risen, even down is up!