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Comment Re:Companies suing companies? But, but........ (Score 1) 115

Warning: Water is wet. (Oops, EU says you can't say that.)

you might want to research that story a bit further than just the initial headline. It turned out the claim was that bottled water is a medicine against dehydration (a medical condition). Not all forms of dehydration are cured by drinking water, and in some situations it is even harmful to the patient. So common sense prevailed and the claim was struck down.

Now if you want to have an argument about the quality of British press (who first ran the story), that's an entirely different topic.

Comment Re:Possibly the coolest cyberwar article I've read (Score 1) 131

the trouble with your argument is that it puts the means above the ends. Of course Jews should be respected and be able to live peacefully, just like any other human being. What people, like the GP, are saying is that the means employed by Israel do not respect the right of other human beings. That behaviour is not only morally saddening, it's feeding terrorism.

Comment A mixup and immediate corrective action (Score 1) 143

After reading the article and watching the video: what seemed to have happened is that the Labour party voted in favor by accident (some sort of mix up apparently), this was recognized immediately and the further procedure was halted until the error could be repaired. So nothing to see here, move along...

Comment Re:he's right (Score 1) 680

your sarcasm is misplaced and your assumptions unnecessary. if you want to see how multiple track systems work, look outside the US. For instance the essence of this system in The Netherlands:

- the primary school offers a single track system. Children advancing to secondary school receive a qualitative assessment from the primary school for the track they will likely be most fit for. The qualitative (and thus subjective) assessment is extended with a qualitative assessment ( a test ).

- students start secondary school with one or two years of single track education, before the school decides which track they will be allowed to attend

- students are able to downgrade and upgrade their track, depening on results and approval from school.

In practice the system works quite well, with some issues here and there (for instance there is no real feedback loop from secondary to primary school, so primary teachers don't really learn whether their subjective recommendations are any good).

Image

Julian Assange's Online Dating Profile Leaked 334

Ponca City writes "The Telegraph reports that an online dating profile created by Julian Assange in 2006 has been unearthed from OKCupid disclosing that the WikiLeaks editor sought 'spirited, erotic' women 'from countries that have sustained political turmoil.' Writing under the pseudonym of British science fiction author Harry Harrison, Assange described himself as a 'passionate, and often pig headed activist intellectual.' Assange said he was seeking a 'siren for [a] love affair, children and occasional criminal conspiracy' adding that he was 'directing a consuming, dangerous human rights project which is, as you might expect, male dominated' and added enigmatically: 'I am DANGER, ACHTUNG.' Among Assange's listed interests were the 'structure of reality' and 'chopping up human brains' – although he added the caveat '(neuroscience background)' lest the latter put off potential admirers. 'I like women from countries that have sustained political turmoil,' Assange wrote. 'Western culture seems to forge women that are valueless and inane. OK. Not only women!'"

Comment Re:The last release (Score 1) 606

Then it appears one peeks around the corner with an RPG and points it at a US helicopter.

Sadly, this was the only action by the people on the ground that could be interpreted as aggressive behaviour. Looking back at the video, it was clearly a mistake by the humans on the helicopter/control side.

People make mistakes so for a professional organisation like the US army you would want them to incorporate error-correcting behaviour into their procedures. What I find so saddening is that no such error-correcting behaviour can be traced in the conversations of the soliders. Once they decided on the RPG, there was no looking back. Had they been more open to alternative explanations, they might have concluded that after the initial salvo the additional shootings were too risky.

Regardless, pointing a large telescope camera at an attack helicopter in any circumstances, and especially those, was an incredibly naive thing to do by the journalist.

The video illustrates another worrying issue: the use of long distance warfare makes it incredibly difficult for the people under attack to communicate their intentions. How do you surrender yourself to a drone you can't see?

Google

Google Caffeine Drops MapReduce, Adds "Colossus" 65

An anonymous reader writes "With its new Caffeine search indexing system, Google has moved away from its MapReduce distributed number crunching platform in favor of a setup that mirrors database programming. The index is stored in Google's BigTable distributed database, and Caffeine allows for incremental changes to the database itself. The system also uses an update to the Google File System codenamed 'Colossus.'"

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