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Comment Re:Rational decisions are relative to wants (Score 1) 439

Well then by your definition my Linux system contains spyware since it also checks for updates.

There are a few differences:

You can choose to prevent any software in your Linux system from updating, either individually or collectively. You can choose to prevent any software in your Linux system from "calling home" and/or sending data about you.

The updates you received are Open Source programs, and have been reviewed by a community of experts and users before being deployed.

Using Linux -or any other general use OS- lets you choose what programs to install or use. You can install paid-for software, open source software, or even create your own software, without being a prisoner in a walled garden where competition doesn't exist. If you are in the garden, everything is pretty, but you end up paying more and getting worse software, and your data and apps are used as hostages and can be remotely erased or blocked from you, at the whim of a private company.

Comment Re:Paranoid and unfounded (Score 1) 360

If solar panels were the norm then they might become half as expensive, but batteries, charging systems, and installation won't be.

Economy of scale would affect not only the panels, but the rest of the components as well. Even installation will get less expensive, as the installation procedure gets streamlined and the components better designed, both for efficiency, inter-operability and ease of installation. If I had to place a bet, it would be that the rest of the components would drop prices even more than the panels.

Comment Re:It's not even that easy (Score 1) 265

I must disagree. While washing your hands wouldn't probably do shit in preventing the spread of the Plague, other factors surely would. Frequently washing clothes would reduce greatly the amount of fleas and flea eggs, hence lowering the infection rates. Ditto for taking frequent baths. A sewer system wouldn't make rats disappear but it would keep them away from most humans. In the middle ages there was plenty of food in the streets for rats -garbage, dung, animal corpses...- which made it impossible to isolate rats from the population. And, lastly, the plague could also be transmitted by air, in droplets of body fluids in the victim's breath. Those funny face masks that were so fashionable during the Swine Flu outbreak would have helped a lot in this context.

Comment Re:Do you even know what a conspiracy is? (Score 1) 347

Hummm... From the Merriam Webster 11 Collegiate Dictionary:

"...2 a : an agreement among conspirators b : a group of conspirators

synonyms see PLOT"

'Group' is a synonym of 'set' - " 21 : a collection of elements and especially mathematical ones..."- and sets can have a single element.

Perhaps it's stretching it a bit too much, but I think that you can "conspire with yourself" the same way you can "plot by yourself".

Of course, the legal meaning of 'conspiracy' is a different matter.

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Whisky Made From Diabetics' Urine Screenshot-sm 226

It's doubtful that any other distillery will come up with a whisky that tastes like Gilpin Family Whisky because of its secret ingredient: urine. Researcher and designer James Gilpin uses the sugar rich urine of elderly diabetics to make his high-end single malt whisky. From the article: "The source material is acquired from elderly volunteers, including Gilpin's own grandmother, Patricia. The urine is purified in the same way as mains water is purified, with the sugar molecules removed and added to the mash stock to accelerate the whisky's fermentation process. Traditionally, that sugar would be made from the starches in the mash."
Privacy

Full-Body Scanners Deployed In Street-Roving Vans 312

pickens writes "Forbes reports that the same technology used at airport check points, capable of seeing through clothes and walls, has also been rolling out on US streets where law enforcement agencies have deployed the vans to search for vehicle-based bombs. 'It's no surprise that governments and vendors are very enthusiastic about [the vans],' says Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. 'But from a privacy perspective, it's one of the most intrusive technologies conceivable.' Rotenberg adds that the scans, like those in the airport, potentially violate the fourth amendment. 'Without a warrant, the government doesn't have a right to peer beneath your clothes without probable cause,' Rotenberg says. 'If the scans can only be used in exceptional cases in airports, the idea that they can be used routinely on city streets is a very hard argument to make.'"

Comment Re:Patented inventions (Score 1) 219

patenting or copyrighting them is not really that different from patenting or copyrighting integers.

And copyrighting integers is not different from trademarking common words like Apple or Windows. "Whoever has the gold, makes the rules".

I hope none of THEM reads your post, or we'll start running short of integers any time soon. ;)

Note: My browser had some hiccup while editing and sent my other, half finished post of his own volition, I promise! I'll leave now and discreetly perform seppukku.

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Lies, Damned Lies and Cat Statistics Screenshot-sm 175

spopepro writes "While un-captioned cats might be of limited interest to the /. community, I found this column on how a fabricated statistic takes on a life of its own interesting. Starting with the Humane Society of the United States' (HSUS) claim that the unsterilized offspring of a cat will '...result in 420,000 cats in 5 years,' the author looks at other erroneous numbers, where they came from and why they won't go away."

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I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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