Comment Re:"very telling" indeed (Score 0) 157
Greenwald is a thinly veiled attempt to convince an entire generation not to vote
true
Greenwald is a thinly veiled attempt to convince an entire generation not to vote
true
Just asking this question (in a serious context) is foolish and ruining America:
Greenwald's argument is very telling: that society can rely on corporate interests for protection. Is it true that representative government is a lost cause and that lawmakers would never knowingly yield authority?
The enemies of freedom want us to be asking fsking moronic questions like this!
**of course 'representative government' isn't a lost cause**
The fact that we are even putting this on
good info thanks!
what does some random 17 year old with rich helicopter parents have to tell us?
seriously...
all these "child prodigy" stories are bullshit and nothing more than advertisements for the parents
well, if you're sure then i believe you...it's just that if there's no ban then it'd be crazy not have been developing it for space...
so we could have been using nuclear in our spacecraft this whole time?
see, like any kid in the 80s with an interest in space and too much time in the library, i wondered why we didn't have a RAMJET powered single stage to orbit space plane powered by a big version of 'mr fusion'
or something like that anyway...the X planes were on the cusp back in the 60s for crying out loud...
i thought there must be some kind of archane law like that, otherwise it would be foolish not to use nuclear power...
but if you're sure...
Is this all about a treaty between NATO and Russia?
We can't send anything nuclear into the atmosphere.
Mr. Gladwell, thanks a bunch for taking questions from us! I read you book 'Blink' and it was definitely value-added, esp. the story about war games...and how they gamed the war games.
My question: How do you, personally, evaluate research science? How do you differentiate the good research from hype? What is your process for evaluating scientific research?
I ask because everyone in media is quoting "research" now..."pop science" is a thing in our culture...I'm interested in how *you* a person known for writing about science, evaluates the research.
___________
When I did data analysis in grad school, any human survey research would automatically send me to the Methodology section to see **the actual text of the questionaire** that was given. I find that helps me fight through the hype of an unscrupulous article
aw, c'mon now!
everyone in the known universe wanted to see those harpoons...they didn't launch...that's a failure...
same with the retro-booster
but it is nonsense to call it a disaster
a 'disaster' is a shuttle exploding, or a probe failing because of metric/english unit conversion errors (google it)...
for this mission...if Rosetta had missed it entirely, no rendevous...or if the lander had totally not worked...maybe that's a 'disaster'
but this is not that
what you say is true, but i think your attitude is a bit off...
sure those are failures, but ESA has alot of catching up to do...how many ESA astronauts have been killed on the launch pad?
how many ESA shuttles have be lost?
ESA should celebrate success wherever they find it...
no excuses of course...they should just...do better next time!
Linux isn't a total solution for education/academia but it's definitely in the mix all over the place
at my last university, all the computer labs were iMacs that could boot into windows or the reverse...keyboard and mouse were standard on all...it really was just preference
it also depends on where you tried to implement Linux...for graphic design as much as i hate it they have to use Adobe CS which doesn't reliably run on Linux...obviously GIMP should be part of the cirriculum, but you can't go in there with janky Ubuntu ACS installs and expect them to say yes
in general you're right...
i'd want a "tech cart" with laptops for all of them so they can take quizes and such...instant grading for multiple choice quiz...which frees up the teacher to focus on students with special needs
but yeah, inherently you're right
that's what happens when consumers are not locked into M$ products: they abandon them for better alternatives
M$ products are awful, and when they have to compete in the free market, they lose
how much of M$ profit is from US Federal and State level government contracts? that's your tax dollars
alice/bob = if Bob can figure it out, then you can...theoretically...the same way Bob does. I don't think this is an earth-shattering claim.
one-time pad = if and only if you destroy the key sheet...from the wiki: "Both Alice and Bob destroy the key sheet immediately after use, thus preventing reuse and an attack against the cipher."
Bob/Alice as hostage...one way to intercept the message is to stand next to Bob with a gun to his head...if you get my meaning...no this is absolutely not any proof that all crypto is breakable...but once it gets to the receiver, and decoded...it's not crypto anymore...its just some info in a person's head
thanks for responding...i learned a bit about Claude Shannon I didn't know...
also, I don't think my assertions were that far off base from the start, but "perfect secrecy" does definitely exist in theory just as any message that can be received can be intercepted in theory
you don't think so?
in what manner?
i'm not trying to debate i'd just like to see an example
i know my analogy sucked, but the principle is important
if you can access it, it's not secure
that's all i'm really getting at...which is still not that insightful...but someone else called me a phony below and it kidna hurt my feelings
You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred. -- Superchicken