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Comment Dishonest (Score 1) 286

It's not even that *most* cops are dishonest (there are some), it's that even good cops make honest mistakes. What you don't want to do is give them anything to make such a mistake with. An, IMHO, it's human nature - especially for those in authority - to not want to admit to mistakes. So if they screw up and arrest you for something that turns out to be nothing, they often *WILL* want to find *something* in order to make you look like the bad guy, and not them.

Seriously, cops make me nervous. I was once accused of shoplifting from a store in the next city. Apparently somebody called in my plates. The cop said they had me on video. I volunteered to come in so they could see if the dude on video was really me, or I can identify if it was somebody I was with (hey, if buddy is visibly shoplifting on my ride, sorry but I'm not covering for him). The answer: "oh, sorry but I don't have the video on me, it's with officer so-and-so. However this is a serious crime. If you come in and 'fess up you'll likely just get a fine, service, and no record".

I tried to talk to the cop in the next city who supposedly had the "evidence" but he was never available, however I kept getting told to return the item and confess.

Eventually, I talked to the store owner. Nothing was stolen on the day in question. In fact, the store didn't even carry the product that was supposedly taken. The owner managed both stores in the city and nothing was take from (or existed at) either. However, the cops were damn convinced I'd stolen something. So I explained to the owner/manager what was up, and asked if *she* could contact officer X with case file Y. She apologized for the inconvenience and said she'd get it dealt with, even gave me some store credit for the hassle.

After that, the cops just stopped calling me. No apology. No "hey we f**ked up and didn't vet that there was an actual theft and not a false-accusation/prank-call". Weeks of stress and hell, and then nothing because *THEY* screwed up and didn't do their job, then couldn't drop it fast enough when it became apparent.

So yeah. Honestly, for the stress I probably should have just said "am I being charged with a crime. Should I discuss this with a lawyer." and let them either charge me or drop it. Certainly it was a *huge* amount of stress in my life, and I'm sure it was on my "police record" (which records police interactions) though obviously since it was fake there was no "criminal record"

Cops screw up. The problem is they generally won't admit to it. The less opportunity to screw up you give them, the better.

So yeah, the papers-please guard? Sorry, but if he's insistent on getting your phone without cause, then HE IS THE CRIMINAL. This papers please crap is along the same vein. It's not being a dick to exercise your rights, and it may save you a lot of hassle.

Comment Drinking and stress (Score 1) 454

Contributing factor yes, but how about the reason behind drinking. What causes people to turn to alcohol?

Some people are easily addicted, but for others it's often a mental trauma or stress of some sort. So, what about the effects of stress? What about the effects of over-working? Didn't a previous article just mention how much overtime Americans put in?

Alcohol is a factor, but frankly, that's on top of all the stupid shit that drives people to drink. It's also part culturally because it's considered an "adult" way to unwind. Personally for me the drinks are an addendum to gaming or various other activities I do to burn off stress.

I personally enjoy a couple (yes, that's two) rum and cokes after dinner on weekends. The only time I drink more would be if I have guests. However, I know lots of people that burn through that 50-60+hr work week - they've got nothing to do at home - and they hit the clubs or bar to get out and unwind. Those venues of course are primarily drinking establishments, so many of those people end up drinking as well.

I'm certainly not saying that drinking is good. I'm saying that people drink because of a variety of reasons that already contribute to bodily degeneration and ill health effects. It's more than likely the alcohol is a contributing factor, but often these stats are like MADD where they consider alcohol to be a contributing factor in a crash even when somebody drank at 9am and drove at 10pm, or if the driver is transporting drunk *passengers*.

Per the article: "Those causes of death also included falls; homicides; poisoning that involved pills or other substances along with alcohol; and suicides."
Drunk driving or motor impairment is probably easily tracable back to alcohol. But you've also got poisoning from multiple sources that just happen to include alcohol, and suicides which are probably spawned from the same reason that people drink, but not necessarily because of it...

Comment Simple enough (Score 1) 534

If they're a private corporate then they're not part of the government/police. If that's the case they don't have legal jurisdiction in police matters. Ergo, any time they bust into somebody's place, they're violating the law and not subject to any of the protections offered to a member of legal law enforcement.

No, you don't get to have your cake and eat it too.

Comment Re:I see a problem here... (Score 1) 380

Cheaper per gallon, or efficient enough in terms of mileage/torque. Diesel is generally more expensive than refined fuel (odd as that is), but it's still fairly popular.
LPG is also quite popular. It is generally cheaper than gasoline/diesel, but the trade-off is that it's less available, often not self-service, and is somewhat less efficient than gasoline.

So per your point, we just need a tipping point of
* power (accelerate curve, torque)
* efficiency (MPG, L/km, etc)
* price
*availability

It doesn't have to accel on all four, but winning on two of the first three (and coming close on another) is usually enough that you start to see an increase in availability.

Comment Re:waste of time (Score 1) 380

If you breathe the vapors it can cause permanent damage to your lungs. If you get it on your skin, you can easilly get a nasty chemical burn. The vapor is flamable and forms explosive mixtures with air. It reacts violently with a variety of compounds.

Well, we'd never want to put something in vehicles that is dangerous to inhale in vaporous form, or is volatile/explosive. Oh wait...

Mind you, gasoline is nicer on the skin than a relatively pure ammonia... but it's probably still not something you want to have prolonged contact with (especially given the flammability).

Comment Re:We keep getting closer to a dystopia (Score 1) 135

These days it's more:

Defendant: My router runs a free wifi hot spot to provide internet access for people.
Prosecutor: Your router, you're liable for all the traffic
Defendant: But my ISP is the one that turned on the hot-spot. I don't even want it!
Prosecutor: Doesn't matter, it's in your house. You're responsible.

Comment Features (Score 1) 427

I've already got a Pebble. There are many things I like about it but things I would love to see:

* Inductive charging /w a decent charging base
* Ability to "answer" a call (rather than only suppress ring). This is doable with Pebble but for some reason requires a ton of extra software on the phone
* BT Microphone on the watch (this will likely kill batteries unless new battery tech comes out)
* Better battery life (I get about a week).
* Works with multiple languages (Pebble only seems to support English)

Comment Re:Mandatory features: (Score 1) 427

Most of these the Pebble seems to meet.

* Acceptable aesthetics : Pebble
* Ability to use normal wrist straps : Pebble
* MINIMUM 36-hour battery life: Pebble (I charge mine approx weekly and it has never run down)
* Rootable & reflashable as I see fit: I've read about people re-flashing a Pebble with modified firmware, but I'm not sure how customizable it actually is.
* At least two tactile hard buttons that can be easily pinched independently of one another and used as a modifier key with the other: Pebble (for tactile buttons, usage depends on programming)
* Real, honest-to-god e-ink (not LCD-based "e-paper"): Not aware of any "smartwatch" that does this

Comment Re:Nice (Score 1) 276

You think I associate with terrorists? Charge me.

OK, the problem with this: Once you charge somebody, you need enough to get a conviction. Maybe you're still gathering evidence, whatever. Maybe you're collecting enough to round up a whole group at once (because once you nail person A, then B and C are going into hiding).

You still don't want this guy blowing up planes, but you haven't got enough paperwork done to ensure you can lock him up. People knew that Elliot Roger had issues. Police even checked him out. They didn't arrest him. They didn't take his guns.

Comment Re:And guess how many vacation days we Americans g (Score 1) 710

Bob isn't able to do the new work. Management needs to send him to training. Frank can take care of it in the meantime

Bob is still having issues with this new system, more training. Frank can take care of it in the meantime

3 years down the road, Bob still doesn't know how to stop/start a Unix service or manage the backup system. Well, actually he might if he tried, but Frank is still the one that gets poked to handle it all. Really, Bob is just somewhat lazy and is milking the system. Bob *could* be fired, but it would take another several years of fighting between the union and management, and that's expensive. So install Bob manages a few servers in the old system, and Frank gets 1.5x the work.

And yes, this *does* happen in unions. I worked in one shop where the guy wasn't coming to work, was mis-using company resources, and basically did it all with a smirk. It took them *years* to get him out, and years again of fighting to keep him from being brought back.

I've also been in union management. Even if you know Bob is being a useless turd, you still need to defend his lazy ass. Meanwhile, Frank is being overworked, and Sally is being screwed over but you're too busy dealing with the Bob's of the world to help out the honest employees to the extent that's needed.

Oh, but *everyone* gets a 3% raise this year based on negotiated contracts. That includes Frank - who more than earned it - and also Bob, who definitely did not.

Comment Sewage processing (Score 1) 96

I remember reading about some projects that attempted to create fuel from processed sewage/bacteria. IIRC they planned to have some test plants in eastern Canada (Ontario?). Anyone know about those

Garbage-in-gas-out seems like a good plan. If we could also get "human waste in, gas out" then we're doing even better in terms of managing the nasty side-products of "civilization"

Comment Re:Jerk off material for the Greenies (Score 1) 96

Yeah... based on the previous comments it basically seems that they're able to get away with it because the province of Alberta has less whiners (NIMBY's) who block any useful large project that doesn't "look pretty". As an "oil province" they're pretty used to fairly large non-pretty industry.

We have similar issues getting stuff implemented in my province.

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