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Comment Re:Rewarding the bullies... (Score 1) 798

What I'd like to know is: how does this phenomenon (both bullying, and the support of bullying by administrators) differ by country and culture? Is it like this in Japan or Europe? I know it isn't uniquely American; there was a movie a while ago from Belgium called "Ben-X" which was about a kid with Asperger's who was severely bullied and... whoops, almost spoiled it... anyway, it was interesting and definitely not American, so I wonder if things are generally better, worse, or the same elsewhere.

Comment Re:Rewarding the bullies... (Score 2) 798

There was a pretty good "The Outer Limits" episode about this back in the 90s. It posited a near-future where an angry college kid designs and builds his own fusion bombs, setting off one very small one as a demonstration then holding a classroom hostage with a much larger one. The episode ended with the note that if this kid could do this, it won't be long before lots of kids are able to do it.

Comment Re:Not getting funded. (Score 1) 157

I prefer to tele-commute, and save my vehicle entirely. With the cost of global communication being near zero, HD web cameras being disposable commodities, why commute at all if you're a knowledge worker?

Simple: because the managers don't want you to. Just look at Yahoo's Marissa Meyer.

Comment Re:Not getting funded. (Score 1) 157

Who's "we"? Anyone pouring money into any flying cars, electric helicopters, etc. at this stage is a fool. I'm certainly not contributing to any such projects.

It makes sense to invest in electric cars these days, since as Tesla has shown, they're perfectly viable (though a bit expensive still). Heck, GM proved them to be perfectly viable back in the late 90s with the EV1, except that too many entrenched interests didn't like them so GM killed it and crushed all the cars. You don't really need long range in an electric car anyway; 100 miles is more than enough for a commuter vehicle. It'd be nice if Tesla later came out with a smaller, cheaper low-range electric car expressly for commuters; I'd buy one in a heartbeat. I just got to drive a Model S and it's quite impressive, but I don't need that range for my ~15-mile commute nor can I afford those prices, but if there were a medium-performance two-seater with 70-mile range for $20-30k, that'd be pretty affordable and easily worth the money (when you factor in tax credits, lack of fuel cost, and lack of maintenance costs).

The tech's there for electric cars, but it just isn't there for anything that flies.

Comment Re:Not getting funded. (Score 1) 157

Well one thing you're forgetting is that with combustion engines, most of the energy in the fuel is wasted as heat. Of course, this is mitigated by the fact that part of the energy is coming from freely-available oxygen in the air (except in rocket engines), but still, with batteries ~95% of the stored energy goes to propulsion, whereas with ICEs it's more like ~20-25%. So we don't need energy density comparable to fuel, but still we're a ways off. With some of the latest developments, it might be feasible in a decade.

Comment Re:Doesn't matter if it gets funded. (Score 3, Informative) 157

You don't have to fly helicopters from any kind of designated area, as long as you're in Class G airspace. Of course, this excludes probably every municipality, and means you can only land in your backyard if you live in the sticks. And there's still the problem of where to land, unless your office is also in the sticks.

Comment Re:If you can learn to put a beer down while drivi (Score 1) 184

When I drive with my wife on longer trips, she frequently drives while I do navigation with two phones. One phone does the actual navigation (and sits in a windshield-mount), while I use a second phone to do things such as look for restaurants to stop at, check the reviews at those restaurants, etc. It'd be idiotic to prevent me from doing that and force us to pull over for 15 minutes just to figure out where we'd like to stop next, and would only increase our chances of an accident.

Comment Re:Human Nature? (Score 1) 184

if the object you were holding to your head wasn't a cell phone, just a block of wood, people would think it would be stupid to hold it to their head, but it wouldn't distract them from driving.

Back in the 90s, people used to do something much like that, and people thought it was cool: it was possible back then to buy fake car phones, so that you could drive around holding a fake phone to your head and talking to yourself. Why would you do this? Because car phones back then were really expensive (and totally portable phones even more so), so some people liked to buy these fake phones so they could look like they were rich, and impress all their neighbors as they drove by.

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