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Comment Re:Google doesn't target ads (Score 2) 233

His point still stands.

Advertisers are buying ad impressions for certain demographics. The advertisers are buying more ads for these jobs that target males.

It isn't Google doing this - they're just offering the advertising tools. It's the purchasers of the ads that are causing this to happen.

This is not complex.

OTOH, Google is allowing advertisers to target males in their employment ads, which is illegal under the Civil Rights Act. It's no different than if someone said "I want you to show this employment ads, but only to whites." If you say, "sure, no problem," then you're culpable too.

Comment Re:windows is exactly the problem. (Score 1) 249

For what windows does in the real world, other companies already do better and most importantly cheaper. games? steam is a household name.

I never did get it to work on Linux, on the very same machine on which it worked on Windows. Just always gave me a network failure. No firewall rules on the Linux box, same rules on the gateway, same IP. No uPnP. Windows is ten times the household name that Steam is. Virtually no AAA titles run on Linux, so you neeed Steam and Windows to play them.

word processing? a google docs enabled chromebook has that covered in spades along with social networking and internet.

Yes, but it doesn't actually deliver a better experience there; you have more flexibility on Windows. Sometimes a site craps itself in Chrome, I have the option to load up Firefox.

Windows is still compelling for gamers especially, and for people who run professional applications. It's true that chromebooks will do for most people who only websurf, but don't count Windows out yet. Especially for all those AMD GPU users, for whom the Linux driver is shit.

Comment Re:Die, white whale, die (Score 4, Insightful) 249

indeed there are many companies that resemble Microsoft, for instance Starbucks is the Microsoft of coffee and equally evil.

Yeah, like that time that Starbucks paid less than the average wage? Woops, they pay more. Or like that time that Starbucks put the competition out of business by dumping and then raised their prices, destroying jobs in the process? No, they put the competition out of business by being consistent, and they are totally willing to open a starbucks across the street from a starbucks so there's plenty of jobs. Wait, like that time they underpaid their suppliers? No, they pay more than fair trade amounts, although those amounts are arguably too low at least they've over the baseline. So in what way is Starbucks like Microsoft? Because they produce a product that more people want to use than the stuff you like?

FWIW I think starfucks coffee is ass and if I wanted a cup of sugar I'd just ask for it, but seriously, how is Starbucks like Microsoft? The occasional bullshit trademark lawsuit? That's lame, but nowhere near that territory.

Comment Re:Wow ... (Score 4, Insightful) 249

So, basically Microsoft successfully killed the actual Nokia, successfully transferred the IP to themselves, have completely screwed the pooch in terms of being able to manage an acquisition which never made any sense ... and now they've written off the purchase.

So, basically Microsoft got access to all of Nokia's IP and a big portion of their customer base for $7b in cash they didn't know what to do with, and destroyed a competitor in the process?

Is this anything but mismanagement and hubris?

Sounds like a bargain to me.

Comment Re: Fear (Score 1) 364

Well considering the numbers the GP post quoted were the DJIA composite I think pointing out that their P/E ratio is in line with historical norms despite being up 600% in 25 years is fine in assessing whether there is some huge bubble in that number.

If you want to look at the broader market the NYSE composite index has a P/E of 21.1 which is a bit over the 18-20 range that most risk averse investors would be looking for, potentially pointing to the need for a correction, but again hardly pointing to some huge speculative bubble that is going to wreck the economy.

Comment Re:Weather (Score 1) 80

Robbing energy from the wind is perhaps poorly studied and less well understood, but there's no doubt it will alter something, for better or worse.

Robbing energy from the wind is highly studied and well understood, and it results in a minimal localized heating effect (lack of cooling effect, actually) immediately downwind of the actual turbine, which is rapidly lost in the statistical noise. If you were able to use google you'd know this already. You do have to learn to filter out the hits from obvious idiots, but since your rhetoric matches theirs, you're probably suffering from confirmation bias. I know it can be hard to wade through the hits from jackholes who don't know what the fuck they're talking about, but all you have to do is just ignore all the results that give you a warm fuzzy feeling.

Comment Re:Power purchase preference or hard limit? (Score 1) 80

What I'm proposing is a little more honesty in PR.

What you're doing is complicating the issue because... who knows? Because you have sand in your asscrack? Why don't you go antagonize some of the members of the MIC who outright lie every time they communicate? You've got to pick on someone who's supporting renewables? Show me on the picture where the wind farm touched you.

Comment Re:My limited personal experience on the subject (Score 2) 364

My most recent ex-girlfriend, even though she had lived in America for a few years by the time we started dating, seemed to have this belief that you simply couldn't lose money in the stock market.

You should have taken her to a casino and used it to explain how markets work, then ask her where she thinks the money to build casinos comes from.

Comment Re:Harry Shearer wanted more money (Score 0) 100

I guess you haven't listened to his NPR Radio show. Unless you are die hard hippy level, liberal, who hates all things about Nuclear Power, Fracking, Catholic, Olympics, George Bush Jr. and you really really really hate the Army Core of Engineers.

Sounds sensible to me. All of those things are cancers. You want to think of the ACE as the good guys, but they build stuff that furthers our war efforts, whether economic or actually blowing shit up. They are there not to make the world a better place, but to make certain people richer, and they compete with non-military labor.

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