Comment Re:Hello, this is Linus Torvalds, and I pronounce (Score 1) 383
No, I prefer it before he had an Americanised accent, thanks.
No, I prefer it before he had an Americanised accent, thanks.
Jobs, Gates, Musk, Torvalds. Probably the US founding fathers, and Einstein and Edison.
Thats a stretch! All of those men were brilliant high achievers, but only one group was ruthless enough to launch a war that killed a hundred thousand people, mostly their own, and achieved no obvious gain except to the 1%-ers. (Were Canadian commoners so much worse off?)
Much as I admire the intellect of people like Jefferson and Adams, they took assholeness (ruthlessness?) to a level that makes Bill Gates look like a saint.
Are you saying you think objecting to an adult having sexual relations with a 13 year old girl is puritanical?
I'm saying it is a lesser issue than rape, an aggravating factor, but mostly objecting to the emotional language that equates it with child abuse. Puritans tend to see things in black and white, and accuse anyone else of condoning the crime.
> He fucked a child, barely a teenager.
Your puritanism is showing. Do you want to lock up her boyfriend at the time, also?
The real crime is non-consensual sex, and I wouldn't forgive that easily at 16 or 26 either.
Its not quite so simple. Polanski pled guilty only to a lesser charge, and fled when there was the threat of a very long sentence, despite the plea bargain.
Unfortunately the case became political, and the judge was later removed from it, after he fled.
Even the victim was , and remains, sympathetic to his plight. The guilt is not in question though. Nothing like the Assange case in that way.
Its not HFCS specifically.
Other countries like Australia use plain old sucrose, and have followed the same path of increased obesity and diabetes.
And sugar is only one part of the changes is diet and activity.
Whens Pied Piper going to release their Algorithm?
Apparently, they just discovered that such algorithms can in practice be patented in the US.
All they needed to do is license the patent, and watch the money roll in.
All that coding was a waste of time, and has been shut down.
given so few wild rhinos are left, how about giving them all prosthetic horns, to reduce their value?
It would still be a story, because you can use 3D printers for that too, if you really wanted to.
It started when bicycle helmets became mandatory across all Australian states in the early 90s. They've been hacking chunks out of personal freedom ever since.
No - it started long before that. Seatbelts in cars compulsory from 1970. Motorcycle helmets before that. Horns on horseless carriages.
If bicycle helmets are your biggest whinge, you've been lucky so far. Try something like building a house, or running a small business, and see how many pointless regulations there are to make your life difficult. At least helmets are useful, even if the laws are not.
ladies with a house-full of cats are just self-medicating?
The US has ten carriers. China, Russia and France have one each.
The Navy is always fighting the last war. In 1939 they had too many battleships. Now they have too many aircraft carriers and too many SSBNs. This wastes massive resources. A good thing they are paying at least a little attention to newer threats.
Your English is OK, but you misunderstood my native idiom.
Your quote agrees with my point - weight of mammals does not increase with cube of height as Stormy Dragon said, but with the square. Hope that is clear now. We agree!
OK, I guess English is not the AC's first language. The question was rhetorical and idiomatic. See the sentence that came after it.
No idea what the AC is trying to say there, but there is some relevance in the last section 'Biomechanics' and a link to : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Animals, including people, do not scale isometrically, ie no cube law.
I think there's a world market for about five computers. -- attr. Thomas J. Watson (Chairman of the Board, IBM), 1943