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Comment Re:Great! (Score 1) 255

"No."

Your comment seems to end rather abruptly. Did you lose carrier while submitting? I was sure you were going to say:

"No one can be told what Wave is. You have to see it for yourself."

*sigh* I guess we'll never know for sure, now.

Comment Re:tired of this crap (Score 1) 572

"Oh gimme a break, I've spent *hours* today thinking of the children, my wrist is too sore to do it any longer."

You must be Catholic!

A quick tip: use a rod to hit children so as to spare your wrists. IIRC it's somewhere in the Catholic manual, too. Chapter "Proverbs" I believe. I quite understand if you can't keep track of everything in the book, though. Thinking of the children is hard work. It's the same for me an Unix man pages. So many systems to look after, so little time. Oh well, we do the best we can I guess.

(I'm happy to have found at least one area of common ground with Catholics. We both fail to see the difference between physical and sexual abuse of children...)

Comment Re:tired of this crap (Score 1) 572

"Oh gimme a break, I've spent *hours* today thinking of the children, my wrist is too sore to do it any longer."

Ah, you must be Catholic! Just a quick tip: use a rod to spare your wrists, when hitting children. I believe it's mentioned in your operating manual as well. Somewhere under "Proverbs" although I do understand you wouldn't know the manual by heart as you're so busy thinking of the children. I have the same with man pages and watching many systems ;).

(I fail to see how physical abuse of children is any better than sexual abuse, and it seems that the Catholic church has come to the same conclusion. At last we have something in common...)

Comment Re:Vaccines aren't as simple as people think (Score 1) 416

I'm pro-vacination. Lets /really/ look at the odds, then:

>150mi women (CIA Factbook) in the US. Chance of contracting HPV during full lifetime: 90%. (hpvhealth.net).

If we estimate 2mi girls aged 14 a year, the maximum age to vaccinate if you /really/ want to get there before they become sexually active, we should have about 13 deaths each year due to the vaccine.

Chance of dying, annually, of HPV related cancer: "Between three thousand and four thousand women die of cervical cancer every year, with HPV being responsible for around 70% or more of all cervical cancer cases." (hpvhealth.net) Which means some 2450 deaths attributable to HPV related cancer annually. Those deaths are probably (I haven't researched those statistics) >35yo's.

Now calculate for yourself if you like the odds of 13 kids dying of the vaccine or rather almost 2500 deaths among adults. If you're gonna be nerdy about it, calculate the years saved/spoiled by either approach. Perhaps you can go deeper and calculate years in good health.

Comment Re:Still wrong (Score 1) 117

"if YOU can't understand how the vote is secured, refuse the voting system !"

Now that's an acurate description of how best to look at it.

Thing is, there's nothing inherently wrong with electronically supported counting of votes, as long as the votes themselves are each seperately available in physical form.

Here in the Netherlands we've recently switched back wholesale to voting with a red pencil instead of voting computers precisely because it's the only way to have those votes available for a true recount. Funny thing is, right after the most recent election officials started complaining counting was 'difficult, timeconsuming and old-fashioned'. Just a few days after said election, several districts have resorted to recounts that demonstrate why having the votes on paper instead of in a computer is a good idea.

Comment Re:Selection bias (again) (Score 1) 183

"PS. The harshest measures so far were against US companies. Does Intel and Microsoft mean anything to you?"

Might this have something to do with the fact that US companies have different strategies and simply do not want to change their ways for the European market but do want the benefits of that same market? Said in a different way: if they don't like the European rules they could choose to not compete in the European market.

Anyway, The good news (to you) is, that ms Kroes is leaving office for another post real soon now. The bad news (to you), is that she's leaving it for the post of foreign trade, which deals with ict, e-commerce en telecom, among other things. I wouldn't count her out just yet. In Europe, things will get better, as far as I'm concerned. I'm quite certain that the wave of ever bigger companies because of 'economies of scale' were bad for society at large and I hope the trend will be reversed.

Comment Re:Manually semantic != semantic (Score 1) 423

Replying to you, belatedly because of time difference, as you make the two points that interest me most:

"Once the structures are in place, more and more pieces of software will be written (and/or plugins will be written) to add tags to files wherever possible."

"The main thing, as the summary mentions, is that tagging cannot be locked into a specific context."

I think you're right on both counts and it makes me think again. As with science, immediate usability isn't always what counts most. I guess I was a bit too cynical and dismissive at first.

I'll take a wait-and-see stance for now. The problem that remains is, if anyone will use it untill it's been worked out to a point that it'll 'just work'.

The best chance for that, is if the tools allow people who already do tag simpler ways of working and tagging information is made portable. In other words, the KDE people may be on to something but I didn't get that impression from how the presentation I saw.

Comment Manually semantic != semantic (Score 4, Informative) 423

I saw a preview of the semantic desktop at the Open World Forum in Paris and I think it has the same down-fall as other initiatives: you need to tag most of it yourself.

Other people may be better at this than I am, but I can't even be bothered to tag my e-mails, let alone each and every file. Granted, this system does some 'auto-tagging' but to call it a semantic desktop because of that is a bit rich. YMMV and I like to be persuaded to look again.

Comment Re:I run it on a Macbook (Score 1) 1231

Well, I seem to have the exact same trouble with a KK 64-bit upgrade from JJ, on a dell Latitude E6500. I'm guessing all the Intel changes in the new kernel and the use of advanced features in that kernel by Karmic might have something to do with it. My desktop machine, on the other hand, is fine. Exact same upgrade but AMD/Nvidia hardware.

Another two useless data-points :)

Comment Re:Simple (Score 1) 250

And the simple truth is that you should be nervous. The cloud has distinct advantages that are being overshadowed by large disadvantages: the 'Next Big Lock-in (tm)'.

Basically this is the same thing 'our' community has been saying for years now: it's all about Open standards, Open document formats and Open API's. In classic style, the blogger either fails to see this point clearly or fails to clearly point this out. Your pick :).

Nicolas Barcet, the Ubuntu Server product manager at Canonical, held a talk at the Open World Forum in Paris last week. He explained how Canonical is putting its support behind Project Eucalyptus because they see an Open implementation of Amazon's API's as the way to force an Open standard for cloud computing. I think they may have a point.

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