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Comment Re:No harm done (Score 3, Informative) 630

Irritating. Even the mother didn't seem to clarify what was found, or the newspaper purposely stripped the info. I've read at least 30 stories on this and the are all very list on info including the mothers response below.

http://www.myfoxphilly.com/story/20385390/fi

Hell, I could have been that kid.

I have serious doubts about the picture sorce myself since it is not cited and there is a link about a weapons ban found below the story. If so, that's pretty dispicale.

Comment Re:No harm done (Score 0) 630

If this article from a local rag is indeed showing a picture of what they found, this may have been warranted.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/n-boy-arrested-bomb-making-parts-article-1.1223474

Note tha it doesn't indicate the source of the picture though. It looks like far more than common sink chemicals.

Comment Re:flip flop flip? (Score 2) 449

2002 when the US Consulate in the Karachi, Pakistan, was attacked and 10 were killed.
2004 when the US embassy in Uzbekistan was attacked and two were killed and another nine injured
2004, when the US Consulate in Saudi Arabia was stormed and 8 lost their lives
2006, armed men attacked the US Embassy in Syria and one was murdered
2007 a grenade was thrown at the US Embassy in Athens
2008, the US Embassy in Serbia was set on fire
2008, bombings in the US Embassy in Yemen killed 10

Where was the Republican rage during these attacks? That's right...there was none. No investigations. Not a peep.

You should also be aware that the 'gun scandal' was started under Bush in 2006. It just names over the years. All other details of the plan remained the same. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATF_gunwalking_scandal]

Maybe you missed it because it's not a good idea to throw stones in a glass house?

Comment Re:Question (Score 2) 780

The two are not mutually exclusive. A tax system can fund government and be fair. Ours currently is not. If the loopholes that these corporations exploit were closed and the government didn't have to close the gap by taxing middle America at a higher rate, much of our weak middle class economy issues would disappear.

Comment Re:Question (Score 5, Insightful) 780

I disagree. I think they are focusing on exactly that; abuse of the tax system. The current crop of GOP senators are very business friendly, and money plays a larger role in politics than in any time in the past. I can understand why Google takes this approach, but to appear unapologetic is just rubbing salt in the wounds.

Take individuals for instance. They get a very specific set of deductions, and are expected to take them. Because of the special interests and years of corruption in congress, we have businesses making billions in profit, and paying almost nothing in taxes. It may be legal, but it doesn't make it right. The system is geared to give every benefit to a business, and none to middle America.

What they are highlighting is not the fact that is illegal (it's not), but rather that it's unfair, which it is.

Comment Re:Hey, Apple has browser competition! (Score 1) 251

As I said, in essence, both correct. You could unininstall IE from Windows 95. They didn't make it difficult until Windows 98. Initially they just required them to bundle IE, or lose their right to distribute. They went farther with Windows 98 and make it difficult to unbundle from the OS.

Bolded part mine from your own quote:

Microsoft's exclusionary restrictions forbid, among other things, any changes by an OEM that would remove from the PC any part of Microsoft's Internet Explorer software (or any other Microsoft-dictated software)

Comment Re:Hey, Apple has browser competition! (Score 1) 251

Exactly. Simply being dominant in the market isn't illegal unless you leverage that to a competitors detriment, or lacking a monopoly, you could use something like an essential patent or collude with other small players on prices to put a dominant player at a disadvantage. In short, it's not how big your business is, but how you use it ;)

Comment Re:Hey, Apple has browser competition! (Score 2) 251

I suppose it could be viewed either way. The end result is the same. OEM's were prohibited from removing IE and putting any other alternative browsers under threat of losing their Windows distribution licenses for Windows 95. They didn't threaten OEM's with removal until Windows 98, when they then claimed it was integrated and couldn't be removed.

[Complaint: U.S. v. Microsoft Corp.] (source: http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/f1700/1763.htm)

18. Second, Microsoft unlawfully required PC manufacturers, as a condition of obtaining licenses for the Windows 95 operating system, to agree to license, preinstall, and distribute Internet Explorer on every Windows PC such manufacturers shipped. By virtue of the monopoly position Windows enjoys, it was a commercial necessity for OEMs to preinstall Windows 95 -- and, as a result of Microsoft's illegal tie-in, Internet Explorer -- on virtually all of the PCs they sold. Microsoft thereby unlawfully tied its Internet Explorer software to the Windows 95 version of its monopoly operating system and unlawfully leveraged its operating system monopoly to require PC manufacturers to license and distribute Internet Explorer on every PC those OEMs shipped with Windows.

20. Microsoft designed Windows 98 so that removal of Internet Explorer by OEMs or end users is operationally more difficult than it was in Windows 95. Although it is nevertheless technically feasible and practicable to remove Microsoft's Internet browser software from Windows 98 and to substitute other Internet browser software, OEMs are prevented from doing so by Microsoft's contractual tie-in.

Comment Re:Hey, Apple has browser competition! (Score 4, Insightful) 251

A monopoly is not illegal. If you abuse a monopoly, thats when it becomes a legal matter. Microsoft threatened vendors when they wanted to put other browsers on their OEM builds and that's what made it illegal. just bundling your own browser is not illegal. Threatening to kill a vendors access to the market dominant OS if they put a competitors browser on is definitely illegal.

Apple is not a monopoly, they are not doing anything illegal, and they can put whatever browser they choose on their devices. I agree with the parent. If you don't like it, don't buy it, and obviously many don't since Android is the dominant OS, no?

The market health seems fine to me.

Comment Re:Republicans hate the UN (Score 1) 297

Actually the members of the security council are bound to assist and/or defend civilian populations. In othe words, they are doing alone in many cases, what the UN should be doing collectively.

Responsibility to protect
Security Council Resolution 1674, adopted on 28 April 2006, "reaffirms the provisions of paragraphs 138 and 139 of the 2005 World Summit Outcome Document regarding the responsibility to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity". The resolution commits the Council to take action to protect civilians in an armed conflict. The Security Council's role in implementing the responsibility to protect is not limited to taking collective action against mass atrocities (pillar three of the responsibility to protect), but it can also make important contributions to structural and operational prevention of genocide, war, crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity (pillar two of the responsibility to protect).

Comment Re:HP DVD Drives (Score 1) 330

A few points. In a perfect world with a CD in pristine condition, you will still have mastering errors. In the real world, day to day use will cause far more imperfections in a disc, and assuming the reader can just read everything without any read errors is a generous assumption, especially at 48 or 52X.
You do not rip at 1X
Even EAC will hit read errors it can't correct or that need multiple passes to get good data.

When reading an audio CD at a max rated speed for the drive (say 48X or 52X), you are at the limit of the drives specs for vibration, and max rotational speed. Start moving the head around to re-read a block and you will see what that does to your read times. Throw in a heavier head for an RW or especially for a lightscribe, and you get poor ripping performance.

Comment Re:HP DVD Drives (Score 1) 330

So in the world you live in, they can cram both the read and write lasers into the same space and weight of a read-only laser? It's common knowledge that RW gear wears out quicker, has slower seek times, slower max read rates, and generally underperforms against CD-ROM drives. The extra gear adds to the weight of the heads, vibration, and wear and tear. The first two have a direct impact on performance.

If your statement about power were true, then all DVD-RW drives would perform exactly the same as their -R counterparts, and that just doesn't happen.

It's a basic question of physics. The RW head is bigger, heavier, and creates more vibration and slows drive performance over a read-only ROM.

Comment Re:HP DVD Drives (Score 1) 330

I'm using heads in a slightly ambiguous term, and you do realize that they are still called 'heads' (albeit 'laser heads')? I'm guessing you probably spell police in your spare time? You seem the type.

You know as well as I do that a burner has a much heavier head (comparatively speaking) laser unit than a simple rom. It's the primary reason most RW drives are slower than read only DVD drives.

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