Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Meanwhile... (Score 1) 302

This brings up another important piece of evidence we haven't seen- who, how, and where Russian agents caused Hillary to separate her emails onto an insecure server and write character revealing information that she would have preferred to remain hidden. If she hadn't have done that, Russians hacking her emails would not have had damaging effects even if such hacks did occur. If what the Russians are accused of is hacking Hillary's email and uncovering the seamy side of her character, they did us a favor that only a corrupt government would have a problem with.

Comment Re: Nope (Score 1) 302

Some of us still remember the evidence some of these agencies offered for WMD in Iraq. Hearsay by US intelligence agencies is not what I consider "evidence." What I want to see is names of actual Russian controlled accounts, specific evidence (not intelligence hearsay), of who the account owners are (actual names, not some generic characterization), along with the contents of the postings they made that are being characterized as election influencing.

Comment Re:Global Warming Alarmism (Score 1) 384

For one example, take the current rate, and project it back to Roman times. The difference would be in the 4 or 5 meter range if the rate had been relatively constant since then. But the Romans built structures at the shoreline that would be several meters underwater today if the rate had been constant, which is now only barely underwater: https://green.blogs.nytimes.co...

Comment The writing's on the wall... (Score 4, Informative) 277

Some of these corporations recognize that people are going to boot the GOP candidates out if the tax cuts don't "trickle down" as promised. And knowing full well that "trickle down" isn't the effect it's been sold to be, they are manually doing a little trickle down in order to keep the pitchforks at bay.

Comment Re:Not really (Score 3, Insightful) 368

Yes, nuclear power in theory, can be perfectly safe. But in practice, it is not possible to reduce the risk level to zero. And a non-zero risk level with nuclear power means that once in some period of time, be it 50 or 100 or 200 years, there is a chance of a serious problem. With any other technology, the possible severity of a serious incident is limited by the nature of the technology, where nuclear is not as limited. It was thought the Titanic couldn't sink. it was thought the o-rings on the Challenger were sufficient. The original Tacoma Narrows Bridge was designed at a time when engineers were unaware of the potential of aeroelastic flutter. It was thought that Fukushima could withstand the earthquake it was hit with and wouldn't be compounded with associated events. Risk assessment is an estimate of things that often can't be accurately quantified, and compound risks exist in all but the simplest risk calculations. Ultimately, evaluations of acceptable risk must include the magnitude of worst-case events, and not presume they can be avoided entirely.

Comment A disconnect between "diversity" and "meritocracy" (Score 1) 393

It seems to me the root of the problem is the fact that companies want to hire based on "merit" but that is contradictory to diversity because external to the company, educational opportunities are not equal and penalize people that to an extent can be connected with their diversity. Since a given corporation doesn't see itself as responsible for the lack of diversity in the surrounding society, it doesn't see that it should be the one to fix the problem. And since the problem is external to individual companies, and it isn't being held to account (and in fact, often made worse by government undermining educational institutions in favor of moneyed interests), the problem isn't getting fixed so people are looking to blame at the result rather than at the cause, because it is the result that individual people actually have to deal with.

Comment What's interesting... (Score 1) 118

is when you screen commercials from your environment, and then end up somewhere where you can't avoid it, it's astounding how incredibly annoying they are-- like standing without earplugs next to someone operating a jackhammer... Makes a ready reminder as to why you were avoiding them in the first place.

Comment Mildly amusing (Score 1) 54

Vine was mildly amusing for about 10 minutes. But a short video loop is not a tweet-- you would see it over and over until you manually advanced to the next video. What is needed is a stream that, akin to a twitter feed, will play one loop after another in a continuous movie as new segments are posted. I want to just sit back and watch all my follows in a mashup, not have to constantly click to get to the next one...

Slashdot Top Deals

BLISS is ignorance.

Working...