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Comment Re:Have you seen the tobacco packaging in Australi (Score 1) 1199

Wow. I hadn't seen this. Unbelievable.
This is another great example of ridiculous government regulation.

I'd be interested to see a statistic of how many smokers are unaware that their habit (or indulgence, in the case of those who do in infrequently) is harmful to their health.

Does the government really think that people don't know this?
Just another waste of money all around.

Comment Re:California needs to get itself under control (Score 1) 201

Actually, I have given reasons for why I hate California.
I hate it because everything here is completely nonsensical.

California is ranked 49 out of 51 for unemployment (not good at all): http://money.cnn.com/interactive/economy/state-unemployment-rates/
And at 7.25%, California has the great distinction of having the highest minimum sales tax in the US. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sales_and_use_taxes_in_California)

And no, my objection is not baseless. It's based on the fact that government spending on something like this ridiculous textbook program is a waste when there are other alternatives out there (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_textbook#Projects) already generating these things for free. Why should the state of California pour money into something that already exists? There are much more important issues to deal with (like that 10.6% unemployment rate, or being ranked #6 for state debt: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/24/states-debt-combined-may-exceed-4-trillion_n_1029162.html#s429797&title=6_California)

I have evidence backing up my claims. But go ahead and keep loving your socialist paradise while it continues to spend itself out of existence. At least I know I'll be moving back to sanity in a couple years.

Comment Re:California needs to get itself under control (Score 0) 201

Actually, my wife is here to attend a quality private institution that just happens to be located in this socialist state.

As for my "favorite little states", I am referring mostly to NY, which is half the population of but fares much, much better than California.
And New Yorkers may much high taxes per capita than CA residences, so you haven't got much to complain about there.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_tax_revenue_by_state)

Comment Re:California needs to get itself under control (Score 0) 201

Probably because most of those east coast states have anywhere from half (think New York) to 1/75 (Vermont) the population of California. It is much easier to achieve consensus and compromise with less people. What you end up with are a lot of great intentions that are picked apart until they either fail or become a shell of the actual intent. That being said, California still leads the nation on many issues and is probably best considered a testing ground of potential national ideas.

The whole life situation in California is much crazier than anywhere else I've ever been. Are you saying that it's harder for people in CA to make good decisions than it is for the nation as a whole?
I know it is nonsensical here because I've lived on both sides of the country, in big cities and small towns. Can you say the same?
I recently renewed the registration on my car. After spending over an hour looking for the renewal form on the DMV website I gave up and just went to AAA. They told me it's not actually called a "renewal" form in California. Unfortunately the CA DMV site never explains that anywhere on their site, and worse, they don't link to the form from any of their informational pages about the process!
Now go compare that to other states. It's pretty easy elsewhere (search for "NY DMV registration renewal" and see what I mean). Why is it harder here? I don't know, the state is just screwed up. No one thinks before they do things here.

Re: freely available educational material paid for by the government being a bad thing if not utilized

No it is not. Open access to material is always a good thing. If you don't like the way the Universities choose material for classes, then lobby the Universities directly or start your own University using the Open material.

Actually, you're just dead wrong here. A waste of money is a waste of money no matter how you look at it. If the CA government pays for these books to be developed and published and they aren't used, it is-- by any definition-- a waste of money [because the product of the expenditure is not being used].
I agree free access to educational material is a good thing (and if you had read my initial post you would know that), but I don't see this particular program benefiting anyone in any conceivable away unless it gains the support of the folks actually teaching the classes. [And again, how is the CA government going to head up the production of 50 text books for college courses if they can't even manage to have a proper link to a car registration renewal form online?]

We need to stop footing the bill for all the crappy southern states and instead demand a better return on the federal taxes paid by our residents.

Hmm. Or.. [stick with me here]... we could stop trying to spend money on worthless things like high speed trains between San Francisco and LA, textbook programs that won't impact anyone, and other useless expenditures before going after more dollars to waste!

The solution in government is never to get more money. That just drives inflation. The solution [for government, anyway] always needs to be keeping things as efficient as possible so that the government doesn't consume more of the income of the people it supports than absolutely necessary.
Throwing money away on useless programs doesn't help at all. Making existing programs more efficient first, and then trying to do wonderful things like give away educational materials (which are already available for free elsewhere) is a good thing.

Comment California needs to get itself under control (Score 2, Interesting) 201

This is ridiculous.
I moved to California a year ago to be with my wife will she attends grad school and I have been appalled at the insanity that regularly occurs in this state as compared to anywhere the East coast.

1) Freely available educational material is fantastic.
2) Having the government pay for freely available educational material that will not necessarily be used by the college courses they are intended for is bad.
3) Forcing professors to use the state-sponsored books would be even worse. The Government can't get anything right, so I certainly wouldn't want some bureaucrat deciding what books were going to be used in a course I was taking.
4) This state doesn't need to spend any more money on anything. Period. They need to get their spending under control before trying to enhance things. 10%+ sales tax? Very bad! And I can hardly wait to see my income taxes for the past year.

Summary:
This is a terrible idea. The CA state government needs to start thinking about NOT defaulting rather than blowing money on ridiculous schemes with no payoff.
There are already some freely available texts anyway, from programs pioneered by top universities. Why not incentivize things like that rather than trying to take more under the government umbrella?

Comment Re:And what exactly did we expect? (Score 1) 1141

I, for one, have thought about most of those consequences and STILL DO NOT WANT A NANNY STATE.

I don't pay for health insurance because I will not give one penny to our overpriced healthcare system unless my life is in immediate danger. If that meant I had to die in the street, so be it. I'll stand up for my principles with my life.

Supporters of the Nanny State would expect the State to step in and protect them when they will stand up for something with their lives. Yet another choice they apparently aren't grown-up enough to make on their own.

For millions of years nature has naturally weeded out individuals that made poor decisions. Why should we fight against that so strongly rather than accepting that some people make bad choices (e.g., eating entirely too much) WHILE KNOWING THAT IT IS A BAD CHOICE and will pay the price?

Comment Re:Fukushima proved nuclear cannot be made safe (Score 2) 324

Yup.

And unfortunately the number of idiots living in the world far exceeds those that use their brains to think about the world around them.
I fear for the future of nuclear power. We'll soon be in some backward world where the crazies have forced us to use "renewable" resources that damage the environment far worse than nuclear power would ever be likely to. And how will people ever support fusion if they've rid the world of fission power through their ignorance?

I think the best solution was provided by one of the above posts-- burn the stupid people to power the world! It will provide power *and* reduce power consumption at the same time!

Comment So sad! (Score 2) 359

I love my RX-7! The rotary engine is really an engineering marvel. Too bad they never had the resources to work on the efficiency like everyone did with piston engines.

I was saving for years to be able to buy an RX-9 if/when it hit the market (Which has been rumored for years, and supposedly was coming near to release in the next few years... guess that wasn't the case).

So long, wankel!
(I'll still continue to love and drive my RX-7, of course...)

Comment Moon bounce (Score 4, Interesting) 386

My boss at the last place I worked had a number of extremely large dishes that he used for moon bounce: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EME_(communications)

Interesting stuff. I don't know how active and interesting the conversations are (as I understand there are relatively few people that do this) but from a technical perspective I think it's interesting to bounce a signal off the moon and listen to the result...

I've been told that his medium sized dish (approx 10' I suppose) worked best for this purpose...

I'm no expert on this; have only run into it before at that job...

Google

Submission + - iPhone Vs. HTC Evo Gets Employee Suspended (cnet.com)

Kilrah_il writes: Brian Maupin, a Best Buy employee, tired of not-so-educated smartphone buyers, decided to post 2 videos slamming both iPhone's and HTC Evo's fanboys. Although both videos became hits on YouTube, his employers didn't like the joke so much and suspended him. "Maupin told TechCrunch he was asked to quit but refused the request. At that point, Maupin says he was told of his suspension in advance of a review of the matter by the company's human resources department."

Submission + - Associations against our losses of freedom? 1

enigma32 writes: With all of the recent talk of law enforcement's issues with photography and the continuing degradation of the ability to travel without harassment or annoyance at trivial issues, I've become fed up with the situation. I'm really sick of losing my rights and feeling powerless to fix it. What organizations are you all involved in to help work against this problem? What politicians can I support to work against this idiocracy? How can we stop the senseless spending on useless security theatre gestures? What can I do to help?
Ubuntu

Submission + - ARM Cortex A9 Laptops to be Linux Powered (armdevices.net)

Charbax writes: In this video, Jerone Young, lead partner engineer at Canonical, explains some of the challenges that Canonical and other companies who are part of the new Linaro project have been working on for the past many months, in preparation for the now imminent release of a whole bunch of ARM Cortex A9 Powered laptops and desktops likely to be manufactured by giants of the industry such as HP, Dell, Lenovo, Toshiba, Quanta, Invetec, Pegatron, Compal, all of whome have been showing tens of early prototype designs of these ARM Powered laptops at trade shows around the world during the past year and a half. They work to standardize the boot process, write drivers to use graphics and video hardware acceleration, they optimize the web browser (Chrome and Mozilla), they implement faster DDR3 RAM and faster I/O bus speeds, they also optimize the software to use the new faster dual core ARM Cortex A9 processors. The goal is to have these upcoming ARM Powered laptops feel as usable to end consumers as Intel x86 based laptops/netbooks. With increased competition thanks to this alternative CPU architecture, prices of laptops and desktops could rapidly go down (sub-$149 laptops and sub-$99 desktops are likely), battery life could run much longer (up to 30-50 hours using a Pixel Qi LCD screen), sizes and weights can be much smaller. This could be the type of low-power, low-cost computer that the next 5 billion people in the world may use as their first computer.

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