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Comment Re:If you are afraid to be known for your comments (Score 1) 582

Maybe there is no great conspiracy against your wonderful "facts" and opinions.

There's a joke that is probably a better fit.

If one person calls you an ass, you can laugh it off.

If two people call you an ass, you can walk away.

If a bunch of people call you an ass, you should have yourself fitted for a saddle.

There's an URL around here somewhere for tin-foil hats.

Comment Re:lasting awesomeness? (Score 1) 153

If you want a "killer app", figure out how to make an online barter market that can do barter chains. If that's the right term; #1 wants this, and has that, #2 has the other thing and wants the other other thing, #3 has that.... Stitch all the wants and haves together and everybody gets what they want with no currency being exchanged at all. Currency is just a common denominator and has no intrinsic value.

Comment Re:Corporate executives are smart. (Score 3, Informative) 541

The original version of the healthcare plan was written 15-20 years ago, including the mandate, by the Heritage Foundation, well known as a pinko-commie-lib think tank. (For the mouth-breathers out there, that's a joke). Go look for other Heritage Foundation proposals and see what you think.

Comment Re:Fearmongering in 3...2...1... (Score 1) 322

I believe that most people in the world are good and generally trustworthy. I think that most of them will help, if they can. From what I can see, their ability to help is severely limited. Mostly by the laws of physics, mathematics and unintended consequences. There is a limited amount of arable land. There is a limited amount of water. There is a limited amount of energy to use to support a civilization. As a civilization, we don't know exactly where we are with respect to the hard limits, but there are numerous indications that we've exceeded some of the limits.

To just wishfully assume that we'll pull some rabbit out of the hat and push all those limits back just when we need to, frightens me. It frightens me because I think it stops people from thinking about the hard alternatives that might avert the die-off.

That's some of my own wishful thinking too. I wish that we could avoid a major die-off. But, given our history so far. I don't see civilization acquiring enough wisdom, selflessness, or resources to avoid it.

Comment Re:Fearmongering in 3...2...1... (Score 1) 322

And exactly what is going to get all this extra food production going? Good wishes?

If the food is going to be produced in the western economy it's going to have to be sold for enough money to cover the cost of increasingly expensive fertilizer, seed, land, labor, and fuel that mechanized agriculture uses. If it's going to be produced in the under-developed parts of the world, the productivity of the local farmers is going to have to be increased dramatically. There's no plausible mechanism for that sort of productivity increase.

If you look at the agricultural commodity markets (in particular the price spikes), a lot of the price elasticity seems to be gone, which may be a sign that the mechanized agricultural industry is at maximum capacity. We may be only a couple of crop failures away from food rationing.

Another indication may be the "Arab Spring" upheavals. A number of the press reports credited food riots with starting the unrest.

Comment Re:Doesn't matter (Score 2) 559

The electric car that's sitting in my garage right not has enough smarts built into it now to only charge when the utility rates are the cheapest, as published by the electric company that is providing my electrons. They even have a special rate schedule and meter to work with the car charger. Find another piece of FUD.. (The car is a Ford Focus EV.)

Comment Re:wayland (Score 1, Troll) 259

I work every day on 2 or 3 X based systems with all the individual windows coming to a triple-headed X desktop driven by an Nvidia GTX 660.

Even the netbook that's driving my FDM printer runs X clients remotely, very nicely and Cura displays its 3D renders from the netbook to the X desktop system just fine using OpenGL remote. By the way, the netbook has NO OpenGL hardware.

On that same X desktop machine every Linux Steam game that I've tried works without any problem.

You want to re-invent the wheel, go right ahead, don't let me stop you. Just quit trying to displace something that works amazingly well for everything I want with some spatch-cocked thing that you cooked up to scratch your own itches.

And stop making asinine claims that nobody wants to do what I do every day.

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