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Comment Re:Word unlocked. (Score 3, Informative) 276

As soon as all the corrections which happened to be necessary in any particular number of The Times had been assembled and collated, that number would be reprinted, the original copy destroyed, and the corrected copy placed on the files in its stead. This process of continuous alteration was applied not only to newspapers, but to books, periodicals, pamphlets, posters, leaflets, films, sound-tracks, cartoons, photographs -- to every kind of literature or documentation which might conceivably hold any political or ideological significance. Day by day and almost minute by minute the past was brought up to date. In this way every prediction made by the Party could be shown by documentary evidence to have been correct, nor was any item of news, or any expression of opinion, which conflicted with the needs of the moment, ever allowed to remain on record. All history was a palimpsest, scraped clean and reinscribed exactly as often as was necessary. In no case would it have been possible, once the deed was done, to prove that any falsification had taken place.

George Orwell, 1984

Comment Re:Mail? (Score 1) 292

Same situation here, and for the same reasons. I access my mail almost exclusively by IMAP in Thunderbird, so there would be no difference in the user interface if I switched to GMail (Plus, the security is better: Yahoo! still doesn't in this day and age support https access to its web interface. Terrible).

Comment Re:Marketing Scam (Score 1) 440

The creator of this, Rob Rhinehart, is a software engineer, not a nutritionist or a dietician. His background is probably the reason why he got the idea to do that clever little marketing twist which geeks find appealing. Honestly, you make it sound like nobody ever had the idea to make a meal substitute. I'm not going to waste my time comparing costs with the meal replacement you mention, because I'm sure I could easily find something similar and cheaper, but you wouldn't accept the comparison because you don't know it.

Comment Re:This is why I have a 1 week delayed install pol (Score 2) 254

Yes, I run Debian stable now for that very reason. I realized after I posted that it was rather dumb to compare security updates to program updates. With that said, I'm not sure how I am supposed to take your comment Ubuntu!=Linux. How is that addressing anything that I have said? I'm not trying to bash any distribution in particular, I like apt, I think it's the best packaging system out there in the Linux world right now, and I like Debian. However, I just wanted to point out that the update process on Windows is often a lot smoother than what most people on desktop-oriented Linux distributions experience. On Windows, you update most of your programs by hand, but hardly anything at all ever breaks. On Linux, everything is automated, but if your distribution releases anything more than security patches, chances are high you're going to see some breakage which may not be fixed until the next major release. Good luck fixing what just broke.

Comment Re:This is why I have a 1 week delayed install pol (Score 1, Insightful) 254

I used to run Linux on my desktop (and I still run it on one of my laptops), and honestly Linux has nothing, nothing to envy to Windows in regards to troublesome updates. True, updates to Linux are to the whole environment, while you have to update nearly everything by hand on Windows, but at least on Windows the programs still work after the update. On Ubuntu and once or twice Debian testing, I've had the following software stop working: Nvidia driver (no gui, joy), mpd, OSS4, SSHFS, dm-crypt /tmp and swap, wireless driver. Nvidia and wireless drivers are especially annoying in that I used to have fiddle with them on every kernel update (plus, I have to find a cable to plug my laptop to ethernet, how quaint). SSHFS, mpd and dm-crypt happened on an upgrade from a major version to the next, but OSS4 and the drivers just broke out of the blue. I don't think I ever upgraded from a major version of Ubuntu to the next without issues.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 272

What makes you think it will be cheaper to revive the species once it is extinct? The rhinos are already being taken care of since they are in a zoo, it's probably not very expensive to try to mate them together at the same time as feeding them and providing for their needs. If it was so easy to restore lost species by cloning or restoring frozen eggs, maybe we would have done it already. But I doubt it has ever been done.

Comment Re:Whole Trial is bullshit (Score 1) 325

once Martin jumped on him and started bashing his head against the pavement (as all evidence suggest he did)

I'm not sure where you got that from. The wikipedia article linked to in the summary mentions about the opening statement for the trial, and I quote, "The prosecution's statement focused on the lack of evidence of bodily harm to both Zimmerman and Martin (...)".

Comment Re:rather have money (Score 1) 524

Sorry, I misunderstood you post because I did not read it in the context of the OP. I thought you meant to say to proponents of private healthcare argued that somehow organ transplants would have been faster under "their" system. Now I see you simply stated in which circumstances someone could die waiting for surgery under "our" system. Again, my apologies.

Comment Re:rather have money (Score 1) 524

As another poster said, a link to back that kind of assertion would be appreciated, along with an explanation of how a private healthcare system is supposed to speed up the process of finding a compatible donor for an organ transplant. But then, the post I was replying to said nothing of the sort, so I will not go on a limb and risk making a straw man of that person's position.

Comment Re:rather have money (Score 4, Informative) 524

How long will you have to wait to get it? Canada, NZ & UK have pretty long waiting lists for expensive procedures (don't know about other countries), and people regularly die waiting for them.

Funny, I live in Canada, and I never heard of that. You might want to call the local newspapers, they would certainly be interested in this. There must be a liberal conspiracy to hide it all. In all honesty, I think it's sad that you're willing to believe this crap. The truth is, there are people here who choose to pay for treatments in private healthcare facilities, but it's always for non life-threatening procedures when they don't want to wait.

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