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Comment Re:youtube is free advertising (Score 1) 197

Just a thought: It's also possible to stream a Youtube video with VLC media player by drag/dropping the link into the player. Which effectively lets you avoid the adds and have normal playback (i.e. no "smart" buffering).

I wouldn't be surprised if there were some way you could use that to download the video too, since, effectively, that's what a stream is. Downloading the video.

Comment For this to be feasible... (Score 1) 193

Assuming it can become the norm everywhere (huge assumption there)...

I imagine we will replace our coal plants with large battery plants to store all the extra power we get during the day so that these things can function well at night (having to only power sections of road with vehicles on them would probably make that very feasible).

Then the electricity bill wouldn't be for the actual electricity. It'd be for maintaining these large battery store houses and maintaining these roads. I mean really, if we laid out a ton of this stuff across the US (the desert regions specifically), I figure electricity would be dirt cheap if not free (aside from the aforementioned maintenance).

The only way I can see this actually happening is if the solar panel roads become ubiquitous, which as I said, is a huge assumption. The oil industry won't have it, and getting the capital to produce enough panels to make it worth while, then lay them across major highways would be massive. Then there's building the battery centers so that they can actually function at night (or we can shift to coal power for night time).

I think this is something that would definitely pay off in the long run, but probably won't happen for the same reasons other things similar to it didn't happen. i.e. big business and lobbyists.

Comment Re:So ... it covers these things? (Score 0) 129

Exactly. It almost feels like this was made just to make headlines. Don't get me wrong, progress is awesome, but at least be honest about it. For example, I'd consider honesty feeling the need to mention their considerations on Dark Matter and why/how they interpreted it in this model.

I don't feel like that's asking for too much personally.

Comment This is a perfect time to employ... (Score 1) 116

passphrases.

Because (ignore quotes) "bob is a dork and i hate my job" is largely easier to remember and more powerful than, "Tr0ub3c43r#$" [insert obligatory XKCD].

I mean really. If a person makes a passphrase as a full sentence (i.e. spaces, punctuation, capitalization, all the things grammar teachers teach), then that will give some part of school you likely never cared about some meaning in your life, and it would make your passphrases much more secure and easier to remember (i.e. it tells you a lot about your passphrase already).

Although the most annoying part (as always) is typos.

Comment Re:Democrats want you to fear Republicans! (Score 1) 105

Please do not use homophobia when describing such people.

TFA is talking about phobias as genetic. i.e. they aren't something you choose. They are what you are born with.

Homophobia, as you are talking about (AFAIK) is the kind of hatred that is a choice. It isn't fear. It's downright hatred. Fear can lead to hatred, but I think phobias aren't directly tied to that.

In other words, there is a thing that is homophobia, a literal fear of gays that is akin to fear of heights and spiders. But that is a genetic thing apparently and not the same thing as the "homophobia" taught by many conservatives.

They just accept their brainwashing to hate homosexuals, or fail to see it, or something similar. I say this as someone who identifies as a conservative. And as someone who sincerely believes he has homophobia in the sense of what that word really means. I get the flight or fight response when near someone I know that is openly homosexual unless I'm trained to do otherwise. I know this by way of an old friend I grew up with in high school who came out as soon as he graduated. It still bothers me to be around him, but I can be. Others like him cause a sort of panic response in me.

I'm just saying. Please stop making homophobia an insult to the morality of a person when the actual word means something different. It's what happened to retarded (mental retardation was a completely legit medical term once), and I don't see how those who make this word an insult are any different from those who made gay an insult personally.

Comment Re:How low can you go?(power density) (Score 1) 152

But that's where one of the, imo, impossible questions to answer comes up. What happens if the Universe is self-correcting like in all those Sci-Fi movies?

Like in time travel shows, where if you make a paradox, the universe corrects it in some fashion or another so it doesn't exist. Or at least accounts for it.

If that were somehow true in reality, then as the constants changed, they would adjust things as they were to be seen as if they hadn't changed. Effectively rewriting the evidence of the current universe to reflect how the universe would have been if constants were indeed constant even if that's not really the truth.

I know. That's a convoluted response, but while I don't particularly support that idea myself, it sort of shows what I think is important to consider about the idea that the constants aren't constant. That, logically, if they change, they will inevitably erase the evidence of the fact they changed in some way or another.

We have to use the constants to measure the constants. Which is sort of the equivalent of us using our senses to observe the world even though we all know they can be fooled [Insert Matrix connection here].

Simply put, there are certain ... "variations" of rules the Universe could go by that could very well prevent us from understanding it's past.

What you have to realize is that all the information we have obtained for the universe was obtained since recorded history started. i.e. not very long in the universe's lifetime. While we may be able to look at galaxies in the past since the light must travel and that takes time, that doesn't mean what we see is the same as the light was when it left (i.e. thousands to millions to billions to ?????? of years ago).

If we are to assume that the constants don't change based on space difference (i.e. 1 kilo is 1 kilo no matter where you are in the universe), but they can change (for whatever reason) as time passes, then if the light leaves and shows one thing, then, somehow, what makes light light changes (for example light's nature [photon & wave], or perhaps light's maximum speed, or something similarly basic or intrinsic to what light "is"].

If that were to somehow happen, what the light shows may or may not be different because it would change all light everywhere simultaneously regardless of how much time it's spent flying through space.

Maybe even the big bang isn't as we see it, and that was just a point where these constants changed from a universe we couldn't see or understand to one we can. Or something similar.

Basically, when the rules can change and we don't know why, the possibilities are endless in what could be the "absolute" truth about how the universe got from it's beginning to where it is now. It's not really different from the idea that we all just popped into existence, memories and all, 2 seconds before you read this message. We can't test it because we rely on the rules to test it, and that ends up being circular logic by default. Not that we shouldn't try, but I believe we need something that isn't tied to this universe to really understand it as it really is, but then we wouldn't understand it because we live in this universe.

And so, imo, the question is impossible to answer by the ways of science and how things work. But, we should still try anyway. It's what we do.

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