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Comment Re:Super AMOLED a welcome upgrade (Score 2) 176

I own a Tab 1, 2 and Note (all 10" versions) and I must say that the Tab 2 is absolute rubbish compared to the other 2. It is amazingly non responsive (slow).

The Note is fantastic and the Tab 1 is pretty good - but what the hell did they do to the Tab 2? That thing was a step backwards from the Tab 1, I hate it.

Comment Re:Classify net access as a utility? (Score 1) 343

It was an idea, not necessarily something I desire or believe in, but something that may be worthy of discussion (even if it's just to highlight why it's such a terrible idea)

Having said that, utilities are not necessarily defined as you describe: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.... I'm not in the US so my perspective may differ from yours.

Perhaps you should google "snowden nsa" or something.

I'm obviously aware of the NSA and Snowden. But in reality, this spying/monitoring/surveillance (or what ever you want to call it) is going to happen regardless of who controls the infrastructure, we've already witnessed that.

I certainly recognise that the idea of having it be a utility is suited to the utopian version of our world and while we're all living in a oligarchy it will certainly have its issues.

Comment Re:As someone who... (Score 1) 154

I doubt the situation is the same for America and for volume distribution, but I can have an item shipped from China to Australia for less than I can post the same item within Australia - often when including the purchase price of the item. Yep, that's right, just the postal cost within Australia is more than the purchase price + postage cost from China to the same location in Australia.

There most certainly are some odd shenanigans going on here.

Comment Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score 1) 202

Please excuse my absolute ignorance, but I was under the impression that classical information channel was only required to transmit one of the entangled photons. If one of the entangled photons (or what ever it is that is entangled) was transported elsewhere (truck, fiber optics, what-not) the two entangled would still maintain the same state (spin etc) and information could then be transmitted faster than light by changing the state of one and reading the state of the other.

I'm sure I just displayed my ignorance and lack of any understanding of QT, but there are sure to be others with this same understanding so it may be worth while pointing out where I've got this wrong.

Is your last sentence "You cannot do that with classical means, because you'd need to measure the state, thereby collapsing it into a classical state." the reason why this does not work?

Comment Re:The reality is... (Score 2) 310

I don't agree.

Memorizing facts such as the times tables is a tool in its self. Facts allow us to problem solve in real time without the need to calculate all the constituent parts used in the decision making process.

Memorized facts are one tool of many that allow is to solve problems and learn new things.

Comment Re:Really? (Score 1) 310

I'm not sure why everyone here is discussing teaching and the use of computers in school - it has very little to do with the premise of the article.

This has nothing to do with the classroom or school and everything to do with outside of school.

I'm also convinced that excessive computer (read Internet/Games/Entertainment) use does hinder the social and real world skills of children.

Instead of climbing trees, going fishing, building things in dad's shed, experimenting with the things around the house and most importantly doing these things with their friends/siblings/etc (ie, developing social skills) a lot of children now just play games, browse the web (read social sites), etc.

I don't believe that the social interaction they have online is a replacement for real world social interaction - if anything is mostly harmful (physiologically) albeit entertaining, nor is are the skills they learn online a replacement for real world skills.

Comment Re:No explanation for why though? (Score 2) 254

Point 1) from that link:

You won’t get it from eating steak

Often when there’s a mad cow outbreak, panicked people stop eating red meat which is then pulled from supermarket shelves. But humans can’t get the disease by simply eating regular cow meat. Generally, a human will only be infected if they eat the nerve tissue—brains or spinal cord—of an infected animal. People cannot get the disease by simply eating muscle meat like ground beef or steak, or by drinking milk from an infected cow. Additionally, humans cannot spread it to each other through casual contact. However, people who have spent more than 3 months in an area where many cases of mad cow disease have been reported aren’t allowed to give blood in the U.S.

Point 2) (reflecting on your original comment):

Thoroughly cooking meat won’t help

You could scorch the meat, roast it into shoe leather, nuke it beyond recognition, and boil it for hours on the stove, but that won’t protect you from the deadly CJD variant. The prions aren’t affected by heat or other methods used to kill food-borne pathogens. Prions can survive in extremes, requiring upwards of 1,800 degrees of heat to be neutralized. Even sterilization processes used by hospitals are largely ineffective.

I never claimed that the infectious agent is not present in the meat. But 'well' cooking your meat isn't going to help your (awesomely intelligent non dipshit) chances of not getting CJD in any case. So keep destroying that meat 'just to be safe' though.

I'm totally comfortable eating my delicious rare fillet steak - CJD is the least of my concerns.

I would be concerned if I was you though since the first sign of CJD is being an obnoxious tosser.

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