Comment Re:Blacklist, please! (Score 4, Informative) 293
No matter what language it is in, it is not in "Brazilian"
No matter what language it is in, it is not in "Brazilian"
the whole point of locations is that they be basically what the death camps are today- aka, public places, museums
No. As a funny side note, it's amazing how some officials go out of their ways to avoid labeling these places as "museums". The new expression "documentation centeres" was coined for museums in non-museum-worthy places.
Well, maybe one half still has get to get used to is, but in general it usually is.
what's the going insurance rate on giving cancer to people for decades and rendering large swaths of land unlivable for generations?
I heard that's rather cheap as with 20+ years between exposition and cancer, you can blame it on anything else.
Don't worry. What they hear sounds completely different. I doubt anyone learned to pronounce the umlaut correctly. Actually, it would sound more like what you'd get when French or English speakers sing "deutschland über alles".....
:-)
Amazing how that works at such low energy. I could imagine that a simple LED creates enough radiation for that trick to work!
No:
It shows that all people who have been tested so far and claim to have electromagnetic sensitivity don't have it.
Yes:
There is no reason to assume they have a real illness
But No again:
That's no proof.
That's scientifically rather unsatisfying.
On the other hand, we have scientifically proven, that humans ARE sensitive to higher levels of EM fields. It's safe to assume that the threshold varies from person to person. It's also safe to assume, for 99% this threshold is orders of magnitudes away from the levels we receive from the nearest cellphone and wifi,
But it doesn't answer the question about the lowest possible level that someone could be sensitive to!
The psychosomatic electrosensitivity is not connected at all to the real effects. But it makes serious research about possible effects of low intensity exposition almost impossible as it will be inevitably get mixed up.
Nope. We're looking for falsification.
Those experiments only show that no subject sensitive to those low levels has been studied yet.
Granted, it would be easier if you had not to test a bunch of wackos who CLAIM to be sensitive at those levels. And it would be a safe guess and you wouldn't even have to think of designing experiments to prove or disprove low level sensitivity if you could show that high energy levels don't have an effect either, but high levels have an effect.
So we're in the scientific dead end of "we haven't found a pink unicorn/electrosensitive person yet, but have no proof that they don't exist"
Yes, but it's far far more difficult to find out the threshold on how radiated, how far away, how sensitive you have to be to become sterile, or to be completely safe, or to receive damage with which probability. 90%? 0.09%? What probability is considered safe, which one is measurable at all. What about long term effects?
Would be much easier if you could start by showing that even high doses of EM radiation had no ill effects. But now quantitative studies have to be done. Even harder when 99% of those people feeling bad when seeing a cellphone tower are indeed... well.. just say: without organic diagnosis.
Especially hard if you have experiments that prove that you CAN indeed manipulate the brain with elecromagnetic stimulation:
http://www.heise.de/tr/artikel...
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com...
So we're way past the "is there a measurable effect - yes or no" phase.
no serious scientific study has been able to establish that electrosensitivity exists
How come nobody had the common courtesy of a "simple" double blind experiment?
Well I doubt that such an experiment would establish that electrosensitivity exists....
The C++ master knows C, too and never forgets that he is still programming as close to the "bare metal" as with C. The only thing between him and the processor is the compiler, and no virtual machine, bytecode, or CLR runtime. C++ is a tool to write good (readable, reusable, "object oriented") C code.
I wouldn't say you're wrong, but you're coming from a different angle. You're right with the basic problem: The pink craze. But the other one is bringing girls (back) into tech!
Yes. We're very far away from solving #1. Especially if, as stated in the article, a whole industry pushes FOR toy sex segregation. (NOT sex toy segregation.)
But while we're waiting for the toy industry to bring back a gender neutral toy segment, shouldn't we try to bring science toys into the girls department nevertheless? So at least this won't get even worse? And if that means case modding kits not only available in sci-fi-military style, but also in pink-unicorn-style... well, I don't care.
Of course teaching about Hedy Lamarr and Marie Curie and Emilia Earhart and Heidi Hetzer and Walentina Tereschkowa of course will help, too. And NOT in a special "Womans achievments that didn't made it into regular curriculum" class.
Aha.. so you're one of the men who are trying to hold back women from using their full potential!
Isn't it nice to have arguments ready that prove you're doing it wrong no matter what you do....
TFA actually explains why this isn't done anymore, but then decides to go on about the pink STEM toys instead of offering solutions to the actual problem: Increasing toy segregation in general.
Byte your tongue.