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Comment Re:Science fiction comes to life, again (Score 4, Interesting) 176

One thing not well documented (but it is covered if you take the tour at the Minuteman National Historic Site):

A missle will not launch until at least two capsules "vote" for launch. For a capsule to "vote" - both operators must engage the key within N seconds of each other.

So a person would need to, in addition to stretching their arms, twist two additional keys in a separate capsule using some sort of portal technology. Someone with such techology likely does not need nukes.

Also, as I understand it, in addition to the key turn, there is additional validation of launch codes by computer nowadays.

Comment Re:DebianNoob (Score 1) 450

No they can't. There is more to being able to buy out a company than merely having sales income.

Also, SAP and CA's sales income is irrelevant for comparison here, since they aren't in the operating system business.

The truth is, as far as platforms SAP and CA customers can run their software on, RH is a VERY big fish. If RH made a change that impacted Oracle or CA - Oracle or CA would have to adapt.

Comment Re:Google hate. Again. (Score 1) 59

Also, if I am understanding various things I've read correctly:

Owners of the slabs did NOT want to sell the slabs to Google (Google was fine with this)
Owners of the slabs WANTED to move the slabs to a more public place (Google was fine with this)
Owners of the slabs asked Google for some time to figure out how to move/where to move two gigantic concrete slabs (Google gave them this time)

What I'm not sure of is whether the owners took longer than expected to move the slabs than Google originally agreed to, leading to this story of "eviction"

Comment Re:This seems a missed opportunity (Score 1) 59

Based on other comments:

Google bought the building, but the owners did NOT want to sell the wall pieces to Google. The owners WANTED to move them to a more public place.

However, since moving gigantic slabs of concrete and finding a proper place for them is difficult, the owners asked for time to move the items in question after the sale.

Comment Re:What's the name of the drug? (Score 5, Informative) 140

Yeah. Before insulin was discovered, Type I diabetes was a death sentence.

You would effectively starve to death within a year of symptoms showing up, regardless of how much you ate. (IIRC, actual starvation could prevent/slow the progress in some way)

However, once you've been on insulin therapy for a while, eventually you'll be in trouble within hours of insulin becoming insufficient. (An especially big problem for pump users - people using long-acting insulins like Lantus probably will have 1-2 days before they're in serious trouble after stopping administration of insulin.)

This reminds me of rumors of studies a decade or so ago involving administering long-acting insulin to diabetics in their "honeymoon period" (After diagnosis and starting insulin therapy, in many cases a diabetic's requirements for injected insulin will drop to near zero after not too long, but this only lasts for a few months after it starts) - reducing load on the pancreas seemed to prolong the period, allowing them to rely on their pancreas to handle meals and such.

Of interest is the "52 people between the ages of 19 and 45 that have received a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes within the previous three months" - That's a VERY rare category of people. The most interesting is that 3 months is typically within that "honeymoon period". Diagnosis of Type I diabetes that late in life is very uncommon (which is why Type I is often called juvenile diabetes). There's also the fact that this might be far less effective on diabetics who have had the disease for years, who basically have no remaining beta cells. (In most cases, Type I diabetes in mice is artificially induced - in humans the root cause is that the immune system attacks beta cells, however, this might allow at least some of the cells to survive the onslaught by preventing a failcascade due to the cells being overworked.)

Comment Re:Justify my love (Score 1) 47

Like maybe a kind of mesh network/anonymous proxy capability or some kind of distributed file system where you could subscribe or publish content that would get automatically replicated between devices when they came in range of each other. Maybe some kind of messaging/bulletin board communications.

Ooh, like a cross between Freenet and FidoNet? I'm in. I don't know that this is the right software, but PirateBox shows a lot of potential and runs on the same hardware.

Comment Justify my love (Score 1) 47

Why do I need one of these? Seriously, I want one, and I could buy the hardware off Amazon for $35 and download an installer for free to make my own. I just can't think of a single legitimate reason why I should have one beyond "it's really neat". Help me, geek brethren and sisthren: why do I need to buy and set one of these up?

Comment Re:Get rid of numbers (Score 5, Interesting) 130

You just described EMV, which all retailers will be effectively required to accept by October 2015 in the US. (It's not completely mandated, but the fraud liability shift effectively mandates it. After Oct. 1 2015, *retailers* will be fully liable for magstripe fraud.)

EMV is widespread in Europe, it's been slowed down due to political bullshit from MCX in the USA.

Comment Re:Terrible (Score 5, Interesting) 430

You are looking at this through your own cultural lens. Take a step back and look at in the context of the broader culture and conditions in which these men live. Polygamy and much shorter lifespans for women has created a shortage of marriageable women in Afghanistan. This coupled with severe cultural taboos on pre-marital sex(in the case of Afghanistan, it's not just a taboo, it's illegal) means that for many men, especially those on the lower rungs of the economic ladder, other men are essentially the only way they can have sex.

This is not much different from any other situation where women are rare to non-existant(prison, the front lines of a war etc). In these situations men often engage in what is referred to as "trade", but of course none of them wants to label themselves homosexual because:
a) homosexuality is taboo and/or illegal where they come from and/or
b) they aren't actually gay, they are only engaging in homosexual behavior because that's all they have available to them.

It doesn't surprise me at all that men in Afghanistan are having sex with each other but not declaring themselves to be gay.....

Comment Handing in a blank ballot is fine, too! (Score 1) 551

If you can't stand anyone running, still vote, but don't actually vote for one of those people. Don't write in anyone, either. Just turn in a ballot without any selection in that portion. In very small numbers, this doesn't do much. But suppose that 20% of voters effectively said "none of the above; they all suck". Imagine an officeholder who won the popular majority but was only selected by maybe 30% of voters. It would be awfully hard for them to toss around ideas like "I have a mandate!" or "the voters clearly elected me to..." when not many people actually did.

Comment Re:SpamAssassin & DKIM (Score 1) 139

That's not how it works. SpamAssassin scoring is "stupid" and stateless, which is a deliberate (and good!) design. You don't write rules like "give negative (less likely to be spam) scores to valid DKIM signatures, but positive scores to invalid signatures". Instead, you write two rules: "add 3 if there's a DKIM signature" and "subtract 3 if the DKIM signature validates". The net result is that unsigned email doesn't get a DKIM-related score adjustment. Email signed with an invalid signature gets 3 added to it. Email with a valid signature doesn't have a net gain or loss (+3 for DKIM signature present, -3 for DKIM signature valid = 0 net adjustment).

Those positive scores have zero to do with SpamAssassin's opinion on valid signatures. They reflect a judgement on invalid signatures. If you're faking signatures from joeuser@example.com, you're probably up to something.

Submission + - Cheap tablets: low RAM + SSD = acceptable? 1

TheSHAD0W writes: This $99 tablet was mentioned in an earlier story, running Windows 8.1 on only 1GB of RAM. Is it usable? Will it last?

For $99 you can't expect much more than a toy, but I'm wondering how well it'd work for real-world use. 1GB is low, but you're swapping to a SSD, not a magnetic disk; if the swapping were intelligent enough, it might be workable. A friend wondered about "handling a bunch of tabs" in a browser; has anyone tried this?

Then there are longevity issues; doing a lot of swapping to a SSD will tend to kill its life span. Still, for $99, would you be okay with having to replace it after 3 years or so?

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