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Comment 687 vs. 2.500.000 dead (Score 4, Informative) 319

As far as I remember in the whole history of civil nuclear power there were roughly 687 fatalities recorded by civil nuclear power, even if one includes cases of long term neglected diseases.

On the other hand, in the same time around 2.500.000 people died of hydropower with 250.000 alone in one major dam bust 40 years ago in china.

As nuclear power produced roughly 10 times as much energy in the same time based on "deaths per watt" hydropower is 35.000 times more lethal than nuclear power.

Tell this to the believers of the anti nuclear church and they will nail you to a cross... always look on the bright side of life...

Comment stupid rant (Score 1) 589

the whole article is stupid to the bone.

1. todays active defense systems are already capable of only engaging objects on a dangerous course and ignoring all others.

2. spamming thousands of missiles over days wouldn't go unnoticed by the target of the attack. in other words, the attacker will get taken out before he has done any relevant damage.

3. there is no nation on earth able to spam thousands of missiles for extended periods.

Now lets discuss how many cute kittens one must throw against an AEGIS cruiser to overwhelm its defences.

Comment 50 years old washing maschine (Score 1) 141

an eigth years old washing mashine?

thats nothing. my mom got rid of her 50 years old Siemens washing machine. It wasn't broken, it just had a leaky pipe and was dump like bread.

Ok, it had its "flaws", e.g. it took 30-60 litres of water for washing. BUT the water could be reused or be taken from rain or other third grade water supplies. In fact if done right you could use the same 30 litres of rain water to wash 20 loads of clothes.

Comment There are other problems... (Score 1) 561

There are even more problems, for example the whole hardware is only remotely related to common ARM plattforms. This goes as far as you are not allowed to use the cheap USB/HDMI/SATA/PCIE devices used in other systems because these are easier to hack.

Nice side effect: surface systems are inherently expensive because they are so uber special.

Seriously, microsoft must have been living under a rock. Windows has always sold because it was quite open in comparison with the competitors, not because it was totally isolated from the user.

Comment Where do run Steam? (Score 3, Interesting) 353

Don't take my writing too serious but what hardware is Steam4Linux supposed to run on?

My P3-Dualcore@1,33Ghz doesn't offer PAE so Ubuntu doesn't run.

My P4@3,2Ghz offers PAE but its Geforce 6800 - although technically within specs - fails starting TF2 because of some GL-extension missing. As the 6800 is the best native AGP solution available this is a dead end. At least it runs Penumbra although every level change will reduce FPS by 90%.

My Core-Q9550@3,4Ghz with its Geforce 260 is technically speaking just fine but officially I may only use Ubuntu 32bit and waste half of my memory (yeah, easy to work around) but still I need the uttmost updated bleeding edge drivers just to move the steam window around. Ayeah, 3D-unity and Steam hate each other. And every 3D game hates 3D-unity and Steam at once. So better disable 3D unity and close steam before launching the game or you will have 5fps.

My i7-3770K and also its Geforce 670 are too new for Unity. Couldn't get both running useful.

The only system running out of the box (mostly - WLAN runs better with hand compiled driver) is my netbook EEE 901 from 2008. Oh but I might mention that Steam needs between 10 and 25% of CPU even with all windows closed and doing nothing at all. So better learn to use cpulimit or your battery will be empty in no time.

Still its an interesting experience.

Comment Google has tenacity (Score 1) 286

Face it, today most corporations think at longest in quarter years. Remember how HP threw their WebOS away because it failed to start within a month? Or how Microsoft is scraping every major "strategic" produkt within half a year, be it Mono, Silverlight, Zune, Zune Shop and many more?

Google is different. When they come up with an idea they put work into it and then, big surprise, they stay true to it until it takes off. Android? Needed two year to take off. Google Search? Took two years to take off. This is true for nearly every Google product, instead of rushing and hyping their are creeping and assimilating. Yes, there was Google wave. Big hype, many early adopters. And in the end it died with a death rattle. It was rushed and not creeping.

Btw, Apple does it the same. Even if it doesn't take of they stay true to their product for some years before scraping it.

Think about it all you corporated bigheads, it is not about quarters. It is all about two to three years.

Comment BS (Score 0) 568

This is a bullshit record.

One nuclear power plant has nearly the same power, I have no idea why they claim "20 power plants":

Isar 2 alone produces 19GW which is close enough to the 22GW photovoltaic output. What kind of "20 nuclear power plants" did they compare to? Microscopic ones?

Comment Re:Everyone ignores Commodore (Score 2) 301

The C-64 was NOT better than anything. It was more economic than its competitors but not exactly bleeding edge.

Only two months after the C64 the Sinclair QL was released: For the same price you got 128k, an 68008/7Mhz, 512x200 graphics and two tape drives.

About power, the old Ataris and Apples were all a bit better, faster, more nifty. But they did cost a fortune in comparison to the C-64.

Honestly I didn't see much improvements in the first C-64 against my first PET2001/CBM3032. The C-64 had a slower CPU, a slower floppy, was less expandable and not much cheaper. Hell, the C-64 CPU was only half as fast as an Atari-800 and 50% slower than an VIC-20.

But you could get a complete System with floppy and printer for 1000 Euros in 1984. Noone could beat THAT.

Comment They had the right to ban lunix!!!!11! (Score 0) 186

And whatever you say, they had the right to ban communist limux from their system, really!

Every god loving america^W^W^Wmoney loving japanese company has to enforce protection of their control over their customers.

Only problem: by banning linux the shit really hit the fan. No matter if Sony is right or wrong, in the end they are simply fucking stupid for provoking the shit-fan.

Comment Steam Wallet is different (Score 1) 190

Steam Wallet is different. You can load it with variable amounts of money while the competitors only accept some values like â5, â10, â20 and so on. So you rarelly end up with money left on the steam wallet.

Also the wallet has another benefit: You can fill it BEFORE buying. Too often I couldn't buy a steam deal because my credit card wasn't accepted for some hours or because I tried to pay british pounds from a euro country and got blocked...

Comment borked infrastructure (Score 1) 757

When I visited the US last year I was SHOCKED about the totally broken infrastructure. Telefones, streets, public security, schools, this is all at a level I would have expected in a third world country. A poor one. Greed, corruption and indifference everywhere. Yes, there are some active people trying to make things better. But those few do it on their own, without help and backing and are not even a drip on a hot stone.

The OSCE estimates that the US would have to pay 130 billion dollars every year for 40 years to get the same infrastructure most euopean and asians countries have.

Or like a friend from russia said: The streets in the US look pretty much like in the sowjet union a year before collaps of the system.

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