Comment Re:Not gonna happen (Score 0) 383
It's simple: If your law says you can slap your wife anytime you like and kill your daughter if she offends you, you don't get nuclear power.
It's simple: If your law says you can slap your wife anytime you like and kill your daughter if she offends you, you don't get nuclear power.
You know exactly how that would go.
GM would start producing luxury cars made out of "food."
Cable boxes would come with heart rate monitors so cable TV could be considered a "medical expense."
Yes, it gets people to slow down until immediately after the speed trap, then they speed up again.
So the only result is traffic congestion and speeding tickets.
> It's not a cop locating app,
That is literally all I use it for.
I'm just saying.
I speed all the time and I use Waze to know when to slow down.
Speed cameras are bad because the speed people drive is determined not by the law, but by the speed other people drive.
It is collective reasoning that decides how fast people drive.
That's why when you're driving down I-280 the speed limit is 65 but everyone drives 80.
If you put speed traps all up and down I-280 it's not going to slow people down, it's just going to punish poor people who are driving the same speed as wealthy people.
"...a nonprofit scientific and educational organization funded by the insurance industry."
Sounds legit.
Mostly managers complain about open floor plans because they have to actually prove that they have an entire day's worth of work to do and justify their salary.
Hi, former Comcast support representative here.
Those cards do nothing, they're just placebos.
You dial the support number and punch in the code, and the switch drops you right into the same queue with everyone else.
At the call center we called them "idiot cards" because you'd have to be one to think they were any benefit to you.
We usually handed them out ironically to the least deserving customers.
As Doc Martin once said "it's the thin end of the wedge."
Now that terrorists have successfully prevented a movie release with threats of "911-like attacks," everything they want done will be done using that threat as the basis.
This is a simple case of knowledge as power.
Telling people they shouldn't use software to avoid freeway traffic is like telling black slaves they can't read because they might learn what it's like to have a life outside the plantation.
Knowledge exists whether or not you want it to and you can't force ignorance.
If someone discovers a way to improve their life in a way that is perfectly legal and legitimate, such as driving down a street in front of your house, you have no right to complain.
If you think the system is working, ask someone who's waiting for a prompt.