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Comment Re:Did they mention the yummy GMOs (Score 4, Informative) 320

There are actually a few differences that can have real consequences. For example, simple cross breeding is a fairly slow and limited process that gives us time to see if a problem is developing. It is further limited by the need to stick with plants that can cross-breed in the first place.

Another factor is that not all genetic modification techniques lead to the plants breeding true. The next few generations may be substantially different from the original.

If the work was being done in a verifiable cautious manner, it might be OK, but there is a history of modifications that "can't escape to the wild" being spotted in the wild. It's somewhat amusing the number of weeds that gained roundup resistance from roundup ready canola. Also amusingly, in spite of Monsanto's claim that only their transgenic techniques could have produced roundup ready crops, traditional breeding has managed it in a few cases including in coca.

Comment The important question... (Score 3, Interesting) 150

The article does not mention where the cost of this error is going to fall. This seems like an important detail. On a sufficently complex project, one of the bevy of subcontractors fucking something up isn't a huge surprise; but I would be very, very, disappointed if NASA wasn't able to contract sufficiently vigorously to make the vendor eat the cost of delivering the goods as specified, rather than paying them for their effort no matter how well or badly they do.

Comment Re:I'd Like To See Electronic Voting Work (Score 1) 105

The simplicity of a salt isn't the issue, it's the size. More salt confounds the process.

As for the question of your ballot being void, you can't know. Any more than you can know that your ballot didn't somehow end up in the river or burning in someone's fireplace before it made it's way to be counted (as I said, not perfect).

However, the election officials and press observers can know if a lot of void ballots get checked from residential addresses (remember, validating void ballots triggers an investigation). Presumably, the large number of void ballot validations after the election might cause such measures as enabling voters to check if their ballot is void or not (now that the election is over and the controversy is starting to boil).

At that point, nobody will be able to prove that their particular ballot was meant to count but was issued void, but there will be enough people complaining that it becomes evident something is wrong and likely of a criminal nature.

Comment Re:Must hackers be such dicks about this? (Score 1) 270

You seem really desperate to see him as public enemy #1. I can see that nothing short of major brain surgery can change your mind. Certainly the absence of anything happening and their apparent inability to get a warrant hasn't convinced you.

If law enforcement walked past you, stopped, then turned and looked right at you, you're saying you are too clueless to guess you are of interest to them? Sorry to hear that.

Comment Re:Sadly, I don't see an "out" for AMD (Score 1) 133

I certainly don't agree with him on Windows and I have no strong feelings about Steam, but he is quite right about the CPUs.

When the story broke on the cheat embedded in the Intel compiler, I actually gave it a spin and looked at the assembly code. I also actually patched it out and saw the difference on an AMD compute node. I routinely see AMD perform on-par with Intel in compute intensive jobs.

The very top end Intel processors are faster than the top end AMD, but unless your constraints include "must fit in a shoe box", you will get more bang from the buck buying more AMDs.

Comment Re:Must hackers be such dicks about this? (Score 1) 270

I'm saying that they didn't feel that the "threat" was serious enough to divert the plane. After, the lack of anything happening at all is a pretty good clue (for the cluefull) that the "threat" which could have been a bit of dark humor was, in fact, a bit of dark humor.

As for the rest, I'm guessing that the combination of the feds looking right at him and an IQ above 60 told him who they were there for to at least 90% certainty.

This kind of idiocy is exactly what gets innocent people killed by cops.

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