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Comment Re:Uh, right. (Score 1) 733

If a bird is wounded, it is to be killed humanely after. Either the bird flies away clean or it's dead at the end of the day. There is no in-between.

Umm, that's not what the videos from their YouTube channel shows. It shows that many of the wounder birds are not collected to be killed and instead escape with their wounds. It also shows that in at least some cases, wounded birds were killed inhumanely. You're theorizing about what they do based on what they ought to do rather than based on the available evidence of what they actually do.

Comment Re:Uh, right. (Score 1) 733

Yes, but if you watch some of the videos they took from other events, you can see people doing things like kicking wounded pigeons and one adolescent who would pick up the wounded ones and then smash them against things (his knee, the ground, pigeon crates). That would generally be illegal animal cruelty. There's a difference between hunting animals and torturing them. I think that they're saying that their footage of this event contains similar abusive actions. The article doesn't say that every action at the event was illegal, just that they had been videotaping animal abuse. Unless you were there, I don't think that you can know that they didn't record animal abuse.

(As a side, someone should really monitor that particular adolescent. He appeared to be smashing the pigeons against things until they were dismembered and then cackling with glee. That's a pretty big warning sign of the potential for becoming a psychopath. I'm not saying that he is one or will necessarily become one, but if I were someone who knew him, I would keep a really close eye on him going forward.)

Comment Permission to mod/jailbreak? Huh? (Score 1) 423

I've read the DMCA. I've followed the court cases. I don't understand how jailbreaking a phone or modding a console would violate the DMCA, and I don't understand why people keep legitimizing the idea that it would by asking for DMCA exceptions. The DMCA says "No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title." And it defines "(A) to `circumvent a technological measure' means to descramble a scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without the authority of the copyright owner; and (B) a technological measure `effectively controls access to a work' if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation, requires the application of information, or a process or a treatment, with the authority of the copyright owner, to gain access to the work."

What work are we talking about if you mod your gaming console? Video games aren't scrambled or encrypted and they don't require the application of information or any process or treatment. You can run a video game in an emulator without doing anything to it. You just load it and run it. And you can easily copy a video game using a DVD or Blu-Ray reader and writer and an emulator will happily play the copy. The technological measures in a video game console are about preventing the console from running unauthorized software (including unauthorized copies of games), not about protecting the content on the gaming discs. As such, I don't understand how you would be violating the DMCA by modding your console. (Mind you, video game console manufacturers could change this if they started encrypting their discs, and they might next generation, but the current gen ones don't. They're signed, but they aren't encrypted.)

Likewise, I haven't seen any evidence that jailbreaking a smartphone would circumvent a technological measure meant to protect a copyrighted work. Now, once you jailbreak a phone, there might be software on that phone which you could circumvent, but that would be a separate act. Is there logic here that I'm missing or is no one else looking at what the law actually says?

Comment Re:Not so sure (Score 1) 172

I don't think that's what he's saying at all. What he's saying is that we have two problems right now. The first is that patents are being granted on general ideas rather than the steps to cause those ideas to happen. His analogy is that right now you can get a patent on the idea of sorting a list (which given some of the patents, I think is about right) even without any details of how you do it. When someone else finds a new, better way to sort a list, you can sue them and win. This argument, if accepted widely by the courts, would remove that.

The second problem is that patents are being issued for algorithms which simply shouldn't be issued because they're not novel or too obvious or because they're basically just math (and math isn't patentable). His analogy here is that you could still, if the argument wins, patent something like quicksort which he's saying shouldn't be patentable.

Comment Re:Polo (Score 1) 372

That's what I was going to suggest. They're bound as kids books so they're a little more likely to hold up to being read by a three-year-old than real comic books. They contain basically no words, so he can read them as long as he can figure out to follow the pictures in order. And if he's not quite up to reading them by himself, you can read them together.

Comment Re:Two Things (Score 2) 414

Of course, that's assuming that takeoff and landing are 30 minutes. Sometimes I've been on a plane which had to wait out on the tarmack for as long as an hour (and there have been other cases which were quite a bit longer which I didn't personally experience). How do I deal with all that time? Well, if my seatmate doesn't feel like conversing, I usually read a book. I don't think that wanting to read a book when there's nothing else to do means that I have a sad little life, but maybe you think that makes me some sort of information freak or something. Except that books are big and bulky, so I've switched to a happy little ebook reader which is like half the size of a paperback and holds several hundred books. Except that I can't use my ebook reader because it's a gadget, even though, being an e-ink display, its emissions of any sort are really pretty minimal. People don't have to turn off their hearing aids, and those are probably about the same level of emissions. So, perhaps, if they reevaluate things, then I'll be able to read my ebook while waiting patiently and quietly for take-off. Is that really so terrible?

Comment Re:I disable my airbag (Score 1) 756

A lot of the collision sensor for airbags are just bits of mercury in a slanted tube. When there's a sudden enough deceleration, the mercury goes up the tube and makes a connection. But this can also happen if the car hits downwards fast enough. I had this happen in my 96 Camry when I was going quickly down a steep hill and there was suddenly a level train track crossing which acted like a jump ramp. I hit the brakes, but not in time and my front end was briefly airborne. It came down hard and bottomed out the suspension and hit the pavement. It wasn't a really hard hit on the pavement (no bend in the frame or even damage to the steering), but it was enough of a collision when it hit that the mercury got bounced up and Bam! airbags went off. I had my hands at about 3 and 9 or slightly lower and got the hell scrapped out of the skin on the inside of my arms and the whole thing scared the hell out of me, but otherwise, no problems.

I also initially thought that I'd killed the car because the whole thing was suddenly silent and filled with smoke. Of course, it wasn't actually smoke, just the corn starch that they use to lubricate the airbags. And the sudden silence wasn't entirely real. The engine was actually still idling quietly, I just didn't realize it. And the radio had shut off because the sudden pressure from the deploying airbags had pushed the knob in and turned it off. All I had to do was push it again to turn it back on. Really, aside from needing a new front-end alignment (done) and new airbags (which I haven't gotten because they'd cost more than a replacement car), the car was fine.

Comment Re:SSDD (Score 1) 494

You're going to blame the UN for the failure of Hans Blix to find all Iraqi weapons? If you've forgotten your history, the reason that Blix didn't do that was because the US got impatient and decided to start a war rather than waiting for the end result of the process. He and his team were still working until they got pulled out for their own safety once it looked like the US was going to invade.

And, in the end, after they invaded the country, none of the weapons that the US insisted that Hans Blix hadn't found ever showed up. No nuclear program. No mobile bioweapons labs. None of that stuff. The fact of the matter is that Blix and his team accounted for almost all of the biological and chemical weapons in Iraq, and there were no nuclear weapons. So how, exactly, is that a UN failure?

Comment Re:SSDD (Score 1) 494

Please don't try and rewrite history. When the US declared war on Iraq, there had, in fact, been a UN weapons inspection team headed by Hans Blix operating in Iraq until just a few days before. They got pulled out by the UN because it looked like the US was about to declare war on Iraq, and they didn't want their weapons inspectors getting killed. The UN had said "let them in or else" and Iraq had let them in in November of 2002. The only issue which was in question was whether or not Iraq was being fully cooperative with the inspectors or not.

Comment Wrecking Skylines? (Score 4, Informative) 488

Really? With the train station in Kyoto? Seriously? I've been there, both in the train station and in the surrounding area. It's big, but it's not exactly skyline wrecking unless you happen to live in an apartment which directly faces it. There are plenty of other buildings nearby which are close to the same height and once you get about two blocks away, you can't even see it from the street. If you don't believe me, here's a picture from above which shows the surrounding area. Plenty of other 8+ story buildings in the area. Here's a view from the top of the hotel in the train station. What skyline is it that they're destroying exactly?

Kyoto is a lovely city. It has myriad beautiful temples and gardens and the nearby country-side is lovely. People flock to it to see the cherry trees when they are in bloom. But none of these things are very tall. Most of the famous temples aren't even visible when you're half a block away from them, nevermind part of the skyline. It does not now have an impressive skyline and if it ever did, it must have been centuries ago, and although the train station big enough to be clearly visible for a couple of blocks around, it's not exactly a sky-scraper. Honestly, its width and shininess stand out as much as its height. So, if the person writing the article thinks that the Kyoto train station (which has far more non-shinkansen platforms than shinkansen platforms) is too big or too shiny, then fine, but saying that it wrecks the skyline is just dumb.

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