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Comment Re:Tempting. Very tempting. (Score 0) 43

I would be very interested in applying for something as cool as working for Space-X. I have experience in aerospace, software development, aerodynamics, cryogenics, embedded hardware development, and non-IP embedded network engineering.

I would be. But.. Mcgregor, Texas? And are these jobs even real, or are they just ones that exist in the mind of PR-wonk? I'd have to relocate, learn a new language or two. I do not speak Texan, which might be a bit of a deal breaker. Would the benefits out weigh the costs?

If you can get enough 'normal' people to live in a smallish area, you can carve out a small niche of humanity from the giant wasteland of Texas. It works for Austin, Richardson (near Dallas) and, to a lesser extent, the region near the Johnson Manned Space Flight Center south of Houston.

Besides, Texas has some real advantages. Guns, Country Music, err, and a couple more, just drawing a blank at the moment.

Comment Re:Can't say I'm surprised (Score 2) 47

What's really interesting about this tale is that is was designed for Steve Fossett, a friend of Branson's for a single dive into the Marianas trench. It was bought off of his estate (along with a catamaran mother craft) for a measly one million dollars. At that price, one of the oceanographic institutions should have picked it up as it would be pretty useful for shallower dives - lots of interesting places in the ocean not quite as deep.

But Branson, the PR hack that he is, wanted to take it down repeatedly to abyssal trench depth, something the designers had hissy fits about. Seems silly. Not much to see at the very deeps. Much more fun at a couple of hundred feet. If you want to scare yourself, you can just book passage on a Nigerian ferry or similar foolish stunt.

Comment Re:And where are all the hurricanes? (Score 1) 187

Are you willing to stand up against Dr Amanda on pro-GW site and explain to her that she is jumping at sensational conclusions and that few random heat waves are in no way indication of bad effects of global warming? Risk getting called denialist just because of pointing it out.

Yes. This is exactly what we should be doing. The National Wildlife Federation is not a credible institution as far as climate change is concerned. They are a very pro statist organization with more emotion than science. They're pissed that humans are over running parts of the planet and any bit of information that supports the 'bad human' posture is good news to them.

A significant problem is that this is complex issue with many unknowns. You can't feed that sort of thing to the media providers and consumers. It's just too hard. So it has to be broken down into something very, very simple.

"Four legs good, two legs bad."

Comment Re:Can you say... (Score 2) 266

Your view of the American system is hopelessly naive. It is already a complicated mix of public / private - so complex that there are literally tens of thousands of people involved in figuring out the minute details of how to actually deliver care. CMMS (Centers for Medicare / Medicaid Security) is a government entity that both pays money - directly to providers and to other companies and, simultaneously, regulates payments AND sets standards for 'private' companies to pay.

Medicaid (a government entity paid for by both states and the Federal government) IS the 'insurer of last resort' for complex, very ill patients.

There is nothing 'either / or' about this system. In fact, one of the biggest complaints about the system is in fact, that it is so "OR" - so friggin complex that nobody can figure it out. This leads to administrative waste, poor care and job security for those tens of thousands of people. Just about the worst system you could have come up with.

Comment Re:I have studied the issue extensively (Score 0) 53

And, I have found that copying text from other papers is more common in some nations than others, but the outcome is generally the same for authors who copy extensively: Their papers don't get cited much.

Funny. That's exactly what TFA said.

It's almost as if you plagiarized it.

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