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Comment Re:our fault (Score 1) 276

Yes they do. Especially when you require people to jump through hoops they do not want to jump through, like register to comment.

At my office there is some complicated password policy, and they expire every 90 days. No one at my location has been able to compose an acceptable password from scratch. The only thing that works is to to subtly modify your existing password.

We suspect that the unique password rule actually compares your new password against all passwords every used by anyone else in the company. Which is about as unfriendly as sites that give you no help in choosing a unique username ("Sorry 'xX_Bob246783_Xx' is not available, try again")

Comment Re:No dude... (Score 1) 199

No, I put in that part specifically because some places do not have trash disposal via taxes. In my town there are at least 4 private haulers that most people have contracts with. I'm sure there are a few people who choose to haul their own trash to a landfill on an as needed basis.
But there is no municipal (or pseudo municipal) trash service.

Comment Re:A standard business problem (Score 1) 199

Good luck getting requirements that are written in law revised or waived.

Ever have a requirement that you could point to and say: "Strike that requirement and I can cut the schedule in half" Yet it is still a challenge getting everyone to agree on changing it. Now imagine the people you are negotiating with is Congress.... and they have to pass a law in order to agree with the changes... and any attempt to re-open the requirements attracts hundreds of lobbyists trying to figure out how to change the requirements in order to get their paymasters a bigger share of the profit.

Comment Re:No dude... (Score 3, Interesting) 199

That shipped sailed long ago.

Everyone has to pay for trash disposal. You have no choice. You can't burn it, you can't pile it on your property.

You either haul it to a private landfill and pay them. Or you pay a private hauler to take it away. Or you pay taxes that pay a private hauler with a government contract to haul it away.

Anything else is illegal.

Comment Re:Question (Score 2) 128

The fusion of heavier elements actually liberates less energy, and above some point (iron?) fusion of nuclei is a net loss of energy, which is why heavy elements are so much rarer than the lighter elements. They are all 'parasitic' losses of energy that are only produced during supernova.

A "binding energy" chart shows that light elements should be fused to release energy and heavy elements should be split to release energy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Binding_energy_curve_-_common_isotopes.svg

Comment Re:How about just battery fires also? (Score 1) 264

No, this is not true.

Once a car starts burning there's a lot of fuel that has a high ignition point so is unlikely to start burning, but once lit is almost impossible to put out, which is why cars tend to burn down to scorched patches of pavement.

The tires are fuel, the plastic dashboard is fuel, the foam in the seats is fuel, the rubber hoses in the engine compartment is fuel, lots of rubber and plastic material, all flammable fuel.

Comment Re:private dumb: $20K. Govt dumb: $400 billion (Score 2) 327

In many cases government inefficiency is caused by Congress. Congress funneling money to their districts, to their contributors, etc.

Just look at the difficulties when they were trying to close military bases. Congressmen always wanted to keep "their" base open.

The same thing with prohibitions on the government from using its size to negotiate contracts to its benefit (i.e. drive down the prices of drugs that it buys). These are inefficient transfers of public money to private industry mandated by Congress.

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