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Comment Re:Doesn't matter (Score -1, Flamebait) 341

Ah, biomass. Chopping down forests in the USA so that it can be classified as "sustainable" fuel for biomass plants in the UK. Own goal for the environment. Coal is one of the most dense and cheapest forms of energy on the planet, so it involves much less harm to the environment than biomass, solar, and wind turbines (the last two of which require land clearing for any large installations).

You're also forgetting that the developing world cannot now, and will not for many decades to come at least, afford these "renewable" forms of energy. Preventing them from using coal is immoral, and smacks of green self-righteousness.

Comment Re:Doesn't matter (Score 0, Troll) 341

The embedded emissions in wind and solar are so high as to render them a complete waste of time. You do realise that coking coal is used in smelters to make all the steel to build these worthless contraptions? And the cement foundations for the wind turbines; cement is made from heating limestone & shale, releasing vast amounts CO2. You then have all the steel needed to prop up the solar panels, also made by burning coal. It all adds up, you know.

Just because you can see a shiny new wind turbine (that kills birds and bats in high numbers, by the way) doesn't mean all that CO2 released into the atmosphere during its production doesn't exist. Then you have the fact that wind turbines in cold areas draw electricity from coal-fired grids to keep them spinning during low wind conditions to prevent ice formation. Turbines also have to shut down in high wind conditions to stop them from breaking apart. A coal-fired plant is needed to back them up anyway, and you can't just flick the switch on a coal plant the moment the wind dies down, they take a day or more to get going. It would be funny if we all weren't paying for this huge waste of time.

Comment Re:The Pope's doubling-down on irrelevance, I see (Score -1, Flamebait) 341

There's no point trying to argue with somebody who HIMSELF has fingers in his ears about the actual data, which is here:

8 New Years Resolutions For Climate Scientists:
http://www.globalclimatescam.c...

The data relied upon by climate "scientists" are so tortured they no longer resemble original readings. Adjusting temperature records and making them up where there were none proves only the extent of this massive fraud.

Comment Re:Doesn't matter (Score -1, Troll) 341

You do know that there's PLENTY of scientific evidence out there which ISN'T funded by big oil refuting the ridiculous notion that carbon-dioxide is pollution? Just because something is funded by people with whom you have an ideological dispute it doesn't alter the quality (or lack thereof, as the case may be) of the writing on the page.

Most "climate science" is produced by rent-seeking alarmists whose jobs are dependent on a steady stream of government-funded group-think for their livelihoods. I would argue that this is the BIGGEST problem today. In fact, the state of "climate change" evidence (if you could call it that) is very analogues to medieval Catholicism:

Hypocritical Pope: Al Gore (flies about in jets all the time and has several electricity-guzzling mansions)
Heretics: "deniers"
Indulgences: carbon credits
Inquisition: the gullible mainstream media
Excommunication: the so-called "peer review" process which refuses to publish anything that doesn't toe the "CO2 is pollution" line

The past two to three decades have been an utter waste of time and money spent on this crap. You people could have been helping the world's poor by not providing them with unreliable/intermittent/costly "renewable" energy and letting them have coal-fired power plants to lift them out of poverty. But no, you prefer to hold them back. This is the great moral bankruptcy of this whole charade.

Comment Re:The Pope's doubling-down on irrelevance, I see (Score -1, Troll) 341

How many of these billion "Catholics" actually attend church other than for weddings, funerals, and baptisms? Ten percent of that figure, if you're lucky. But bums on pews doesn't affect the climate in any way, and certainly isn't going to make carbon dioxide any more or less of a "pollutant" simply because Pope Francis puts out a document. CO2 is good for the planet.

Comment Re:The Pope's doubling-down on irrelevance, I see (Score -1) 341

At least it's a non-issue insofar as carbon dioxide levels are concerned. The link between CO2 and increasing temperatures doesn't survive outside actual greenhouses to grow plants (which don't have their own global weather systems, oceans, etc, to counteract its isolation). Sea levels have been rising slowly ever since the end of the last ice age. This has happened in cycles since time immemorial, and will happen again. If anything, we could do with a lot MORE carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to help counteract the next ice age, and to increase fertiliser for plants, needed by the MANY hungry people you'd think the Catholic Church should actually care about.

Comment The Pope's doubling-down on irrelevance, I see (Score -1, Troll) 341

Climate change is a non-issue. The temperature has NOT risen since 1998. Fact. If people build homes on increasingly marginal land and closer to the sea or low-lying areas, then OF COURSE the effects of ANY climate event will be more severe! This is NOT proof that carbon dioxide is pollution.

Comment Re:SEARCHABILITY (Score 2) 249

Amen to that, brother! The search is terrible. We need the ability to sort by popularity, download count, most recent first or last, etc. And when you click the back button to go back a page, actually go back to the page as I had it previously, not a collapsed version of the category I was looking at. I HATE looking in the App Store for apps due to the cornucopia of rubbish. The crap to quality ratio is very high, alas.

Comment Re:Incrementing NSNumber in ObjC is UGLY! (Score 1) 636

I was receiving a pointer to an NSNumber in a recursive function and wanted to increment it so that the ultimate caller eventually would have the value. I guess I could use an int internally then set the pointer to the NSNumber to the final result of the int, but that seemed like just as much work. Anyway, I'm ditching Objective-C now that Swift is here, so it's no longer an issue

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