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Comment The Rapture - Hottest Natural Sauce in the World (Score 1) 348

Torchbearer Sauces of sprawling Mechanicsburg, PA makes several very hot natural sauces, the hottest of which is called The Rapture. It's 30% Trinidad Scorpion pepper and 30% Bhut Jolokia pepper. They use habaneros...for flavor. And it has lots of that, too--it's a very smoky flavor that pairs well with sweeter dishes.

It's $20 for a 5oz bottle, which is a bit pricey but worth trying once for any fans of really, really hot sauces. It will last longer than you think, too--I bought a bottle and took it into work where half of it was quickly consumed by curious coworkers. That was a few months ago and despite using it once a week or so I still have around two fifths left.

Their other sauces are reportedly good as well, and cheaper, so make the shipping worthwhile if you're getting The Rapture. I like their spicy mustard myself; it's not the spiciest I've had by far but it has a good flavor profile.

Comment Re:Article (including Stringer) is misleading (Score 1) 169

Evidence suggests that today's modern humans did in fact evolve from a relatively small group of people (I've seen estimates in the 5-20,000 range)

Oh, sure, put the minimum at five! That handily dismisses the claims of those radical creationists who pose only two at the beginning! You see the bias, here, Slashdot?! Do you!?!? ;)

Comment Re:Sounds like a true scientist (Score 1) 169

The fact that you can communicate in whole sentences with other people means you're probably not a racist, as they are all extremely stupid people.

This isn't true at all. Some of the brightest minds of the 19th century were avowed racists, and I'm talking about discerning races among people whose skin colors vary less than the shades of a Saltine cracker. There was a lot of discussion in Europe about classifying the different European races; the Franks, the Gauls, and the Celts; and about which ones were really the Aryans. Funny thing, authors of each race would ascribe all the same positive traits to themselves, and all the negative traits to the other races. They all had evidence to back themselves up--though upon close examination none of it really stood up even at the time. Racial kinship shifted with the winds of European politics: the belligerent, beer-guzzling Germans of a decade ago were now the industrious, philosophical Germans of today, all because of a new alliance. For an in-depth, mostly dry but still kind of interesting read on this, see Race: A Study in Superstition, by Jacques Barzun, first published in 1937.

It is foolish to believe that things are any different today. Stupid people are not the only people who are capable of being wrong, or of being convinced by fallacious arguments.

Comment Re:Jammie's Really In A Jam Now (Score 1) 285

If she is truly out of appeals, it's time to start a donation site. I'd chip in $10 or so, as I'm sure thousands of others would. It'd be fun to keep a running count of the total donated in the unit of lost CD sales for the RIAA--show them that not only will their overly punitive tactics fail to stop people from filesharing, but they will continue to erode any goodwill the RIAA had in the first place.

Hell, have the FSF or someone run it and make it a charity for anyone who is being forced into bankruptcy by the big five--a respectable organization could easily handle the vetting process. Maybe the RIAA will pay attention when the lost sale counter hits 20,000 discs.

Comment Re:Hmm (Score 1) 239

I'm not sure the rising effectiveness of placebo indicates a general increase of suggestiveness. To me it would seem to indicate that people have more faith in modern medicine. We do have wonder drugs nowadays, and I suspect that for a lot of people their attitude going into a study is no longer, "this might work," but "this is a potent drug." If they are in the control group, that same belief means that they will experience more of the listed side effects as well.

Comment Re:Doesn't make sense (Score 1) 757

Not this libertarian. The Ryan Plan still results in an annual deficit increase, and doesn't touch the bloated military or defense budgets at all. It may result in a balanced budget...in 30 years. Tea Partiers shouldn't like this guy either, but the Tea Party movement stopped being about taxes and monetary policy shortly after it was born.

Comment Re:Doesn't make sense (Score 1) 757

And the best thing all of those people could do is to get together and vote for a third-party candidate. It doesn't matter which one; only that the effort is coordinated to pick one. How many disenchanted voters are out there? Getting them all on board is a pipe dream, and I'm not suggesting that a third-party candidate would win. Remember how Perot caused a stir because he got 18% of the vote? Imagine what could happen if we got someone above 20%, especially if the effort was publicized as being a protest vote.

With those kind of numbers and a concerted effort to show people that third parties can be viable if enough people decide to stop voting for the lesser evil, and if other people who are dissatisfied with both big parties take the time to vote, we could foster the growth of a healthier, multi-party system. The presidential election is the worst place to try for a win, but it is the best place to ensure exposure to the idea. Sort of an, "If we can get this far in the presidential election, imagine what we can do at the congressional, state, and local levels."

Publicizing it as a protest vote should also address the concerns of people who don't agree with the example party's platform. Alternatively a new party could be created whose sole platform is to make the system more amenable to third parties--call it the New Blood Party or something. That would take years to set up, however. A protest vote if heard and repeated by the right people could be easily organized by the time of this year's election.

Comment Where's the pain? (Score 1) 186

I understand that it would be frustrating to see years of labor on a theory go down the tubes, but at its root the finding means that we now have a slightly better understanding of reality. I would think that for many if not most people in the field, if the implications are as stated in the summary, this is exciting because we have a better idea of what direction to theorize in. Falsification is just as if not more important than making hypotheses.

Comment Re:Irony (Score 1) 246

The Supreme Court of Oregon has explicitly ruled that erotic/sexual displays are a form of protected speech.

Is this accurate? The sibling to the parent comment quotes the law in question which specifically states that public indecency is among other things,

An act of exposing the genitals of the person with the intent of arousing the sexual desire of the person or another person.

So it appears to me that the reason he was not convicted is precisely because his intent was not to be erotic or sexual, only nude. And that makes perfect sense given the context of the protest--he was making explicit* the fact that the scanners essentially nudify everyone, at least from the vantage point of the Viewing Room, and that the TSA is quite invasive in general. Oregon recognizes that not every naked person is necessarily being sexual, and it'd be nice if the rest of the country caught up.

*In this case, the pun happens also to be the most accurate description.

Comment Re:Esperanto! (Score 1) 394

I think images are the way to go, though I'd be more inclined to have some sort of pictograms with text below to show what particular nouns and verbs mean instead of classic works of art.

I also think that storing things in realspace--graven images on metal--is far better than encoding it on a hard disk. Part of me can't help but wonder if ancient civilizations had more technology than we realize; if the things we regard as bits of detritus aren't packed with meaning. After all, if a pre-computing society got hold of a hard drive, what would they make of it? There couldn't possibly be thousands of volumes of information engraved on something you can hold in the palm of your hand, could there?

The rest of me realizes this is likely nonsense, but it is food for thought.

Comment Re:It's like this. (Score 1) 878

Welcome to Idiocracy.

I was with you until that very last line.

There is much to be said in favor of a well-constructed piece of writing. I don't know all the technical jargon and I'm sure I have some habitual mistakes or idiosyncrasies, but when I write, especially if it is to be a long piece, I want to construct it with care. I am learning, though, that that is very much a personal preference.

If someone makes all categories of mistakes you mention--spelling, usage, capitalization, and punctuation--yet still manages to get his point across, where is the harm? It grates on me in an aesthetic sense, but neither is every man a painter and musician. Why should I expect a level of mastery in writing that is not a given for other areas of skill? Writing is a creative endeavor; it happens also to be saddled with the task of carrying meaning in ways that art and music are not. Many if not most people don't know the basic rules of melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic structure in Western music, and we don't hold that against them. Many if not most people don't know the basic rules of color theory and...the other rules of painting which I am too ignorant about to even name, and we don't hold that against them either.

If the meaning suffers from an abundance of mistakes, then by all means ask for clarification and get fed up. I do. If the meaning is clear, then the hard-to-accept fact is that the language may be evolving in a way that is ugly to you and me. Someone else mentioned Chaucer, whose Canterbury Tales are a struggle to read in the original Middle English, and with spelling particularly offensive to my eyes. Is this contemporary shift meaningfully different? The rules for language are, or at least began as, descriptive rules. They tell us what the language was doing at the time. If people are no longer following the now-prescribed rules, and are doing so in a fairly consistent manner, I think it points not to their stupidity but to a semi-conscious decision that they don't care about the classical English rules and aesthetics, and are going to instead use what is convenient for them to use. I don't like it either, but it's a leap to go from "this person does not write with care like I do" to "this person is an idiot." By that measure, any foreigner who is just learning English, or has only learned enough to get by, is also an idiot, and that should be an obviously false conclusion.

So write with care; some of us appreciate it. If you are lucky enough to create any lasting works, you may be remembered for your skill. I have been impressed by the writings of William James in many ways, and his clarity of thought and writing is a big influence on how I write. Yet, now that I think about it, he used a mix of the formal and the casual that was in his own time regarded as unruly at best. That could prove to be instructive today.

Comment Re:really?? (Score 2, Interesting) 1134

Google searches aren't CLI any more than this comment text box is. A CLI google search would be more like typing out the URL "https://www.google.com/search?sugexp=chrome,mod=18&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=command+line+interface" by hand. And browsing through the results pages is very much unlike a CLI.

I think it's more accurate to say that we are getting a better understanding of CLI behaviors that work well, such as the app launch shortcuts and text expanders you mentioned, and incorporating those into everyday use. I certainly believe that the CLI retains its function, and it is without a doubt the best tool for certain jobs. It's not great for browsing, or any operation in which you aren't quite sure when you start out where something is or how it works, but if you know those things from the outset it is very easy to string a number of commands together to get the exact output you desire.

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