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Comment Re:The Audio Scoop (Score 1) 240

+1 Informative if I had any mod points, but it's your last paragraph that's really the most salient.

Music listening is not measured only by fidelity to the original recording, there's a whole gestalt that makes taking an LP out of its sleeve, placing it on the turntable, putting the needle down, looking at the glowing bottles of outer space and the sleeve art, and actively paying attention a much different experience than having iTunes on shuffle while you code or do laundry or drive to work, even if your digital setup is instrument-measurably better-sounding.

Car analogy (SORRY): It's the difference between driving a beautiful but cranky old car that needs ignition points replaced every few months, and a brand-new, in-warranty, utterly reliable, utterly forgettable midrange sedan. If you just need to get to work and the grocery store you want the latter, but an overall interactive aesthetic experience is enhanced by the more intimate involvement with the former.

Comment Re:Trust but verify (Score 1) 211

Promissory Estoppel
In the law of contracts, the doctrine that provides that if a party changes his or her position substantially either by acting or forbearing from acting in reliance upon a gratuitous promise, then that party can enforce the promise although the essential elements of a contract are not present.

Certain elements must be established to invoke promissory estoppel. A promisor—one who makes a promise—makes a gratuitous promise that he should reasonably have expected to induce action or forbearance of a definite and substantial character on the part of the promisee—one to whom a promise has been made. The promisee justifiably relies on the promise. A substantial detriment—that is, an economic loss—ensues to the promisee from action or forbearance. Injustice can be avoided only by enforcing the promise.

Comment Re:If only Bill Waterson inspired other cartoonist (Score 1) 119

Look how many papers are giving space to eternal Peanuts reruns. They're not even selected from the whole opus; I don't know if that's because Schulz didn't want older strips rerun or the syndicate doesn't want to introduce discontinuity by printing strips from when the characters looked different (Snoopy walking on all fours and not suffering macrocephaly, for instance.)

Comment Re:Why are those fire hydrants dark? (Score 1) 286

Yes. Back in the 70s you'd occasionally see them whimsically painted as robots or construction workers or whatever, but that was done by local residents. They put a stop to that for whatever reason and now they're all dark grey and silver. I don't know why. Hydrants in San Francisco are all white (except for this one.) The ones connected to cisterns instead of a water main used to have a different cap color but no longer.

Comment Re:If people would fight their tickets... (Score 1) 286

Reminds me of this Florida town, which annexed a tiny sliver of land connecting it to a quarter-mile stretch of highway so they could write speeding tickets.

at one point, the city's police force had grown from one officer up to 17, some of who were volunteers, some driving uninsured cars, and some who may not even been trained on using a radar detector

Ah, Florida.

Comment Re:Yay! Thank You! (Score 1) 234

Why didn't the citizens narc out this illegal behavior? It may depend on the state, but afaik working without overtime isn't something you can legally "volunteer" (read: be voluntold) to do as an employee.

Failing that, gang up and "educate" them. The labor movement didn't buy us a 40-hour workweek and basic safety standards by letting desperate scabs undercut it.

Comment Re:stupidity escalation (Score 1) 288

Marx has never stopped being essential reading, as a historical document if not an instruction manual. The people argh-blarghing about him being included in curricula are invariably those who have never read him and knee-jerkingly shout about socialism without knowing what the word even means.

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