Comment Re:Not a theory! (Score 0) 129
So how come if I say "The Theory of creationism" on Slashdot I'll get crucified?
How come that theory shouldn't be taught alongside the Theory of Evolution?
So how come if I say "The Theory of creationism" on Slashdot I'll get crucified?
How come that theory shouldn't be taught alongside the Theory of Evolution?
I actually completely agree. I studied music for one semester in college before I changed to engineering, and so I heard a lot of baroque and so forth harpsichord music.
I also, back in the day, used high-speed tape-to-tape cassette recording. I remember recording somethings like Metallica (old school metallica) and being surprised and how similar, sped up, it sounds like classical harpsichord music.
I haven't tried listening to archetypical country sped up.
Studies (which I'm too lazy to look up, but I'm sure others can find easily) show that it doesn't cost that much more to make goods in the US and Europe, labor and environmental regulations and all
Actually a Slashdot article from last year says that's not true, it was more expensive in the US.
http://hardware.slashdot.org/s...
Now there's always more to the story. I'm sure the Google closed factory has lots of other reasons, and this being Slashdot I'm sure many people will point out to me how I'm completely wrong. And maybe I am. But my point is, someone tried it and came to the conclusion that it costs that much more to make goods in the US that its not worth it.
What city are you in that literally "every" UberX car (I'm assuming UberX because there are some strict requirements for the Black Car and up service) is messy and unwashed? I've had both, nice clean cars and awful cars. And you give the awful cars and drivers 1-star ratings. And if the ratings go too low Uber fires that driver (that's what one driver told me anyways).
But that's my experience, in Atlanta. I love Uber in ATL. And all the drivers I've talked to (maybe 8-10) like working for Uber. And a ride from Hartsfield to Buckhead? $50-60 with taxi, $25 with UberX.
I'm no Uber shill, but I guess I'm a fanboy.
Good one! I think this one is also apropos:
Ha, good point! I didn't think IW was that good yet I played it to completion (which I don't do very often with games) so it must have been good enough.
The problem, other than the console-itis, was that the original DE was SOOOO good, it would have been hard to step into those shoes.
Check out the animated Invasion movie.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...
Does IMHO a much more faithful representation of what the MI is really like.
That's....a very sad story. How old is your niece? If she's only 15-20 then this makes sense. I bet when she's 30-40 it might suddenly matter to her to see the audio tapes of her father.
Or maybe not. Some people grow into things like this. Others don't.
I'm of two minds on this.
One the one hand, being a pragmatic engineer and business strategist, I agree with you. Amazon's drone project would never really work.
On the other hand, I really WANT it to work. And, historically speaking, whenever radical disruptive change happened there were people who always said "that will never work", backed up by plenty of sound reasoning and scientific fact.
Yeah, sure, say what you will about how smart you are. I'm just saying.....disruptive technologies tend to either a) catch everyone by surprise or b) had lots of naysayers or c) both.
50k a year isn't too bad if you were debt-free. Imagine no rent, car payment, mortgage, student loan bills, etc.
So part of the path to wealth/early retirement? Get rid of your debt! (easier said than done, I know)
Interestingly, it could be both.
Parts of it are almost certainly historical, especially the New Testament. Historians are fairly confident that they really are letters written around 100AD from one person to another.
Now, is everything that is said in those letters "truth"? That's the tricky part.
But its just like reading, say, one of Thomas Jefferson's letters. Its certainly non-fiction. Thomas Jefferson definitely wrote it. Was he wrong with what he said? Maybe, maybe not. But its not fiction.
The Old Testament is more interesting. Various oral histories, stories, myths, etc, that were passed down from generations and finally codified. Sprinkle in some poetry, some songwriting, some genealogy...whether or not its "truth" its still of interesting cultural significance.
As several people have mentioned in this story, have you tried audiobooks?
Check out this link....scroll down to the section on "Engine Sound".
http://auto.ferrari.com/en_en/...
They actually tune it musically.
The richest company in the world (Apple) makes products that are only intended for a very small percentage of even a wealthy nation's population
I'm not sure that's accurate. You're thinking MacBook and iPad, but let's think iPhone and iPod.
I only have a few minutes, but I found this: http://www.mactech.com/content/study-looks-demographics-iphone-ipod-touch-users
Most iPhone users only have an income of >25k, Since the US median is 60k, that means that the iPhone is sold to basically everyone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States
I'm not trying to be a pedantic jerk, but I think this article and comment thread touches on a VERY important issue and I want to make sure we have all the facts right so we can analyze it.
Who are these people that lay awake at night worrying about whether someone will have an abortion?
The same people who lay awake at night worried about people dying of starvation and/or violence. Whether or not you agree with whether an unborn child is alive or not, in their worldview the unborn child is alive, thus it is murder.
Whether or not you are pro-life or pro-choice, I think understanding the pro-life worldview is not difficult. Its the same as whether or not you believe the earth is flat, or only 6,000 years old. Even if you don't believe it, you can at least intellectually comprehend that there are people that do.
Always look over your shoulder because everyone is watching and plotting against you.