Comment Re:yes, ignore the masses (Score 1) 233
Nah that's old school. He's probably a dark enlightenment/neoreactionary type.
Nah that's old school. He's probably a dark enlightenment/neoreactionary type.
You are attacking an inanimate object.
If I put a plutonium rod on your desk, would you do anything about it?
It should be pretty hard to obtain an expendable human in the countries where the remaining rhinos live. C4 is very stable and won't go off on impact, but a stable and long-lasting detonator would be needed.
New idea: Give the rhinos an authentic-looking prosthetic horn with some C4 in it and a tensioned trigger wire running to the old horn stump. If some fucker cuts the horn off, BOOM.
That gives me a great idea - turn the poachers into middlemen. Get them to resell the fake horns at a large profit. It gives them a vested interest in passing off the fake horns as the real thing instead of making them compete with the fake horns, and the smugglers will be none the wiser.
(They suggested an alternative: taxing blank CDs and storage devices, sharing the resulting funds among rightsholders.)
Canada tried this, and naturally, it didn't satiate the rightsholders' infinite greed for long. Don't do this, it's pointless.
If the Mac app store is anything like the iOS app store, it would be a GPL violation to put LibreOffice in there:
In case you haven't noticed, for the last decade or so the gaming industry has been catering mostly to casual gamers and shitting all over hardcore gamers as a matter of course. And then when a rare product targeted at hardcore gamers comes out, you bitch.
I was going to upgrade from an Xbox 360 PC wireless to an Xbox One PC wireless, but I think I'll save up for this model now.
You know the prank where you leave a burning bag of dog poop on someone's doorstep, then ring the doorbell and run away? Voicemail is like stapling your message to that bag and acting like it's an acceptable way to communicate.
Improve your understanding:
Two words: Panorama mode.
Don't think so:
If that's true, why don't we already have programs that can make sense of human questions like this in text form?
The computer from Star Trek was indeed not so quick to answer, but they'd often ask it to run simulations that would bog down all of today's supercomputers and and give the results, so it's certainly more advanced even if it has a lower interface speed setting.
This one weird trick protects government systems from malware! How does it work? The developers don't want you to know!
Without life, Biology itself would be impossible.