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Comment Re:Equality (Score 1, Interesting) 490

How did they control for biases coming from parents? Research that I've read shows that gender stereotypes start to be instilled within the first few days after a child is born. Unless they're testing with children that have never seen a toy of any kind before, then the toy experiments are not detecting biological biases, they're picking up on a mix of inherited and learned responses. There's a lot of very bad science done to try to claim that there are things that girls like and things that boys like, ignoring the fact that the things that girls like vary wildly between countries and even over time in the same country (for example, blue was a girls' colour and ping a boys' colour in most of Europe until 1-2 centuries ago, and horses have swung between the two as a stereotypical interest several times).

Comment Re:Rhino horns don't even work! (Score 4, Informative) 163

for the vast majority of the Chinese people, over 90%, do not believe in the effectiveness of the rhino horns

So that's a target market of only 136 million?

with the exception of those living in the Hong Kong and surrounding region (mainly Guangzhou)

Oh, and they're only concentrated in one of the wealthiest areas? Definitely not a problem then.

Comment Re:Infinity (Score 1) 1067

It's not a problem for floating point, where division by zero is well defined (it's a NaN value). And division by almost-zero is not a problem in floating point either, though if you're going down one of the pipelines for dealing with subnormal values then be aware that it's likely 10-100 times slower than normal floating point calculations.

Comment Re:Google is an advertising company (Score 1) 161

I'm surprised that it's taken this long. I've thought that MS and Apple should have been incorporating aggressive anti-tracking and ad blocking capabilities into IE and Safari for a few years, because neither company makes much money from ads, both could easily spin it as a user-centric decision, and it would hurt Google a lot.

Comment Re:Oh mozilla (Score 1) 351

How many times have you used Notepad/Wordpad instead of Word?

I use the Mac equivalent, TextEdit, quite often for jotting down quick notes and for quickly opening text files (including rich text and Word docs where I don't really care about the formatting). TextEdit is a very thin wrapper around the NSTextView class, and so is the same sort of not-quite-demo-app as WordPad, which is a thin wrapper around Microsoft's rich text editor control. I have Word, Pages, OpenOffice and LibreOffice installed, but I probably use TextEdit more than all of them combined, because for most simple things it just gets out of the way.

Comment Re:Fuck you Mozilla (Score 1) 351

Open source, like proprietary software, is supposed to be about what the contributors want. In the proprietary COTS model, it's easy to identify the contributors: they're the ones handing over money in exchange for the product. In the bespoke model - proprietary or open - it's usually the person paying the developers salary. In the mass-market open source model, it's much harder (and may be a mixture of volunteer devs / doc writers / bug reporters and so on, as well as some people funding the project). For Mozilla, most of the work is done by people who are paid, but their salaries come from from an income stream (money from the default search provider and so on) that makes it quite difficult to see who the contributors are. Technically, they're probably the users, since that's essentially how Moz Corp gets its money, but via a lot of layers of indirection.

Comment Re:Social mobility was killed, but not this way (Score 1) 1032

That's more or less the system in the UK. You get a loan that charges interest at the rate of inflation, plus some government funding if you qualify (lower income people only). The loans are guaranteed by the government and the interest and repayments are collected at the same time as taxes and assessed based on income (so you don't start paying them back until you're earning above a certain rate). The loans are issued by a not-for-profit company, effectively by the government though separate for accounting purposes. The government bets that having more people with degrees will increase tax revenues in the future. There is a fairly good market for rate-of-inflation investments (i.e. the other side of the loans), if they come with very low risk. Generally, if you have lots of money you want to have a reasonable chunk of it in something safe and have a smaller part in high-risk, high-return investments. Government-backed loans make a solid part of such a portfolio.

Tuition fees are also capped by the government (currently at £9K/year, which is a bit excessive. When I was a student the cap was £3K, which was a lot more reasonable. Unfortunately, the last government cut government funding at the same time that they put up the maximum requirement, effectively forcing most universities to raise their fees to £9K to keep the same per-student income. The Scottish and Welsh governments both pay the fees, so they really only apply to English students, which also causes a bit of friction).

Comment Re:It's not sharing if you are paying for it. (Score 1) 66

There was a study a couple of years ago from Harvard (and covered on Slashdot) that put the optimum price for maximising profit at 5/track. At that price, people don't think about buying music - they'll happily buy an album because they heard a bit of a song and liked it or a friend recommended the artist. The increase in sales, the study claimed, would more than offset the reduction in per-sale profit.

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