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Comment Re:Two can play at this game (Score 1) 638

There is always further to fall (I didn't think we could get worse than Reagan... And yet we continually managed).

Yeah bringing down "stagflation" ( inflation averaged 12.5%, compared with 4.4% during Reagan's last year in office, unemployment rate declined from 7.5% to 5.4%) , then starting one of the biggest economic booms, initiating the START treaty (actually eliminating nuclear weapons and reducin warhead counts for the first time ever), and setting up the fall of Communism without the horror of a war or bloody revolution in Europe. Real gross domestic product (GDP) grew during his eight years in office at an annual rate of 3.85% per year; Nobel Prize winners Milton Friedman and Robert A. Mundell, argue that Reagan's tax policies invigorated America's economy and contributed to the economic boom of the 1990s. That Reagan was really terrible, yeah? I suggest you learn a bit more of the real history of that era. I was a kid, and I remember Carter and the misery, and how Reagan (and the Dem Congress, truly bipartisan) worked to repair the damage done.

Comment Re:So It's Come To This. (Score 1) 160

If their supply of diesel is cut off, do you really expect them to have a supply of hydrogen, which is refined from natural gas? (It can be made in other ways, but this is how it is done.)

US has massive natural gas reserves and production - it is an exporter of natural gas, over 1.4 trillion cubic feet to Canada and Mexico alone, via pipeline. So obtaining hydrogen from that source will not be a question like crude-oil based diesel or gasoline fuel might be. Thats likely why they chose it, the environmental angle is just a PR bonus

Comment Re:USB keypad (Score 1) 300

Just buy a USB number pad and call it a day. They cost $30 for wireless ones, i have one i used forever as a macro keypad for WoW rather then drop $100+ on the G15 keyboard.

I know this is slashdot, but really, Read The Fine Original Post, the one at the very top before all the comments.

For practicality reasons, an external USB keypad is less convenient than a built-in one.

Comment Re:Not only that... (Score 1) 569

The Swiss are also the beneficiaries of very mountainous terrain (notoriously hard to attack) and VERY heavily armed (An assault rifle in most homes). Plus in their history (there's that word again, history), the Swiss were feared mercenaries, and even the subject of treaties regarding use. There have also been civil wars, and repression of the populace. You seem to omit those. Switzerland is unique in its position, and hardly applicable as a realistic example, plus they too, have had blood in their past as I showed. Again, human nature is just to bloody to disarm.
Hardware

"Brainput" Boosts Your Brain Power By Offloading Multitasking To a Computer 121

MrSeb writes "A group of American researchers from MIT, Indiana University, and Tufts University, led by Erin Treacy Solovey, have developed Brainput — a system that can detect when your brain is trying to multitask, and offload some of that workload to a computer. Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), which is basically a portable, poor man's version of fMRI, Brainput measures the activity of your brain. This data is analyzed, and if Brainput detects that you're multitasking, the software kicks in and helps you out. In the case of the Brainput research paper (PDF), Solovey and her team set up a maze with two remotely controlled robots. The operator, equipped with fNIRS headgear, has to navigate both robots through the maze simultaneously, constantly switching back and forth between them. When Brainput detects that the driver is multitasking, it tells the robots to use their own sensors to help with navigation. Overall, with Brainput turned on, operator performance improved — and yet they didn't generally notice that the robots were partially autonomous. Moving forward, Solovey wants to investigate other cognitive states that can be reliably detected using fNIRS. Imagine a computer that increases the size of buttons and text when you're tired, or a video game that slows down when you're stressed. Your Xbox might detect that you're in the mood for fighting games, and change its splash screen accordingly. Eventually, computer interfaces might completely remold themselves to your mental state."

Comment Re:Not only that... (Score 1) 569

I recommended you learn history - apparently your grasp of history only extends to Wikipedia. Rather poor examples, you must be joking. Pax Romana? Constant small wars and battles all around the edges of the empire - study your history, you can start with Boudica and her routing the IX Hispana Legion in a rebellion. And you overlook the rest of the world - for instance the Han Dynasty's 100+ years Sino-Xiongnu war. Pax Britannica? An even bigger joke - you completely overlook the US Civil war, and lots of smaller wars like the Crimean war (Charge of the light brigade), the Opium wars in China, the Russian-Japanese wars of the early 20th, and the multiple Prussian wars in Europe, and even the Boer war towards the end of the period. Pax Americana? Come on, you should know better. For the US itself, there are a ton: Korea, Vietnam, Panama, Bosnia/Serbia/Kosovo, Iraq (twice), Afghanistan (Both the US and the Russians have had a go there). World wide there have been nearly innumerable colonial, then tribal wars that cause massive starvation in Africa, not to mention the Arab-Israeli wars, Indo-Pakistan. and numerous insurgencies all over the place like the Moro-Islamic Liberation Front in the Philippines (who really need a different acronym if they want to stop people from snickering). Like I said, you need to learn some history. Come back when you learn the lessons of said history. Thanks for playing, have a nice day.

Comment Re:Not only that... (Score 1) 569

War is not so much a matter of weapons as of money -- Thucydides That was 25 centuries ago. Care to give even one instance of an extended period in civilized history in which war did not occur? That was what the point (which you apparently completely missed). Human nature insures there will always be war, naively wishing war would not happen doesn't make it go away. Santayana was right: Only the dead have seen the end of war. It is not a matter of if you have to spend money on military and war, its how much (and how well spent the "much" is). "A wise man in times of peace prepares for war." -- Horace's ancient advice still rings true down all the centuries. The only real choice is not whether to spend, but how much. War is such a horrid thing that it is incumbent to spend enough money and time to preclude one if possible, and to win one quickly and as bloodlessly as possible if not.

Comment Re:Not only that... (Score 1) 569

Your problem is, human nature. Those who beat their swords into plowshares will till the soil for those who have not.

It's not human nature, it's your civilization and its institutions. ... Violence is human nature, war is not.

I suggest you take a few history courses. War of some sort or another (for gain or subjugation) has existed as long as any human civilization larger than a family has existed.

Comment Re:Not only that... (Score 5, Insightful) 569

Give me the money that has been spent in war and I will clothe every man, woman, and child in an attire of which kings and queens will be proud. I will build a schoolhouse in every valley over the whole earth. I will crown every hillside with a place of worship consecrated to peace. ~Charles Sumner

It'll be a great day when education gets all the money it wants and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy bombers. ~Author unknown, quoted in You Said a Mouthful edited by Ronald D. Fuchs

Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron. ~Dwight D. Eisenhower, speech, American Society of Newspaper Editors, 16 April 1953

I'll just leave these in this thread...

Nice sentiments. But far too idealistic and unrealistic. Your problem is, human nature. Those who beat their swords into plowshares will till the soil for those who have not.

Comment Re:No one sees... (Score 1) 397

you are rather simpleminded and frozen in your political outlook if you think the D party doesnt covent defense spending nearly as much as the R party. Two sides of the same coin.

You're the one who's "frozen in your political outlook". Obama's budget proposal would cut military spending. By quite a bit, in fact. See for yourself. Click the department totals tab.

Nice fantasy: depending on Obama's budget. I live in reality. Obamas budget was defeated by a unanimous vote (0 voting for, 414 D and R voting against) in case you didn't notice. Try to read what I said instead of being frozen to your preconceived "D Good R Bad" misconception: 2 sides, same coin. Learn. Or else all you will ever be is a convenient dupe for one side or the other.

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