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Comment Re:people still watch that crap? (Score 2) 106

You seem to know an awful lot about a series that you seem so dislike so much.

I can certainly criticize and critique episodes and movies, but obviously I liked/like Star Trek and won't slam it as-a-whole. Admittedly I didn't watch Enterprise beyond the pilot, nor did I see Nemesis or the second JJ Abrams movie.

I've seen a faux-documentary related to Prelude to Axanar that was pretty good. They got a lot of experienced actors to participate, and their costuming and sets were decent, and the writing seemed pretty good too. Certainly good enough to be better than the worst TOS and TNG episodes, probably ranking up in about the middle of the pack. Certainly not Measure of a Man, but not Shades of Gray either.

Comment Re:3 minutes is slow? (Score 2) 133

Well, it used to be common for gas stations to also have vehicle service bays for back when cars were a lot more finicky and in need of regular tuning, and part of that was the oil-change pit. Maybe those remaining stations with that setup will find that it's a good market to do electric car battery swaps with the old pits.

Comment Re:What can I do with a smart watch? (Score 4, Insightful) 232

No, it's a place where tech people with realistic views of what tech can do and bring want to see the proof that it's worth their while.

I'm still waiting for the killer-app for a smartwatch. I want it to be a central hub of sorts for my personal electronics that anything and everything essentially tethers through, be it over bluetooth or some 802.11 variant, so that everything can have network connectivity. The watch itself shouldn't actually do much- make phone calls as a speakerphone or through a bluetooth headset, provide very rudimentary mapping and navigation, notify of text messages and maybe read text messages and e-mail via text-to-speech, and show task lists and calendar and stopwatch timer events.

Everything else, like having a nice handset for phone calls, or a really good dialer that can do advanced contact list editing, or web browsing, or any other enhanced feature should work on the tablet or other personal device on one's person.

Comment Re:Turf (Score 5, Insightful) 141

Yeah, bad form, replying to AC that can't even figure out how to quote right...

Advanced service on cars is harder than it used to be, I will not dispute that. On the other hand, I don't have to have my ignition system or valvetrain or carburetor adjusted every few thousand miles anymore. I have to change the oil and filter regularly, lube the suspension, check the fluid levels for coolant, transmission fluid, brake fluid, power steering fluid, and top-off the windshield washer fluid and possibly change the wiper blades, change the engine air filter, and do a brake job from time to time, and after many years, change the brake fluid, change the transmission fluid and filter, change the differential gear oil, possibly change the power steering fluid, possibly replace the spark plug wires, possibly re-gap or replace the spark plugs, and possibly replace a passenger compartment air filter.

If more service than that is required in the first 80,000 miles then the manufacturer screwed up. There should be no need pull the valve covers, or to take the top-end off of the engine, or to pull the transmission out, or to do any of a bunch of other jobs to a car unless it's been subjected to something abnormal.

Electrics eliminate a lot of that. There's still chassis/suspension maintenance, cabin/passenger compartment stuff, and there could even be new tasks like re-lubricating electric motor bearings to prevent premature wear, but by and large, electrics have a lot less of those kinds of maintenance tasks to perform, and likely a lot of them could be self-service with proper documentation.

Comment Re:Philosophy (Score 1) 130

Except that a person has free will to self-identify, at least to an extent. There can be obvious delusion like Ugundan President Idi Amin, but it's fairly easy to say that a man born and/or raised in Scotland and who self-identifies with the culture of Scotland is probably a Scotsman, and even those men that don't self-identify but whose cultural perspectives derive from an upbringing in Scotland are still Scotsmen whether they want to be or not. Craig Ferguson holds American citizenship, but he's a Scotsman. John Barrowman is known as an American actor to American audiences, and even to most audiences in the UK, but he was born and raised in Scotland and speaks with a Scottish accent equally comfortably with his later-learned American accent.

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