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Comment Re:Took You Long Enough (Score 2) 85

I honestly don't even understand what the point of your argument. I could totally kill somebody with a butter knife but the chances of my success are FAR less than if I had a bowie knife and tried the same.

UK law allows fixed blade carry with a "good reason" as a defence but that's the key word. A chef with a roll of knives on his way to work is a good reason. A sailor carrying a sheath knife is a good reason. A guy out camping is a good reason. Even so cops could totally hold and charge you all the same if they think you're bluffing and you might have to prove it in front of a judge. Fortunately cops exercise common sense and judgement, but good luck with your hypothetical.

UK knife law also requires folding blades to be less than 3 inches. It limits their utility to be used commit assaults and on the consequences of the assault. The reasons for this are obvious.

Comment Out of all the AI startups (Score 1, Interesting) 28

Anthropic is the one that seems to deliver something more useful than just a lame chatbot. I will not be surprised when the bubble bursts and herd is thinned that that it will be the likes of Grok and OpenAI that die first - they're useless outside of themselves and neither has other products & services that could cushion the cash cost required to sustain them.

Comment Re:Burying the lede (Score 1) 85

In Ireland people get a PPSN (like an SSN) when the birth is registered. The PPSN isn't frequently needed but it might be asked for when registering the kid for a school, applying for a passport, applying for benefits on their behalf

In the UK, people get a national insurance number at the age of 16 for tracking tax / pension contributions & social security payments. I assume the measure is intended to issue the number at birth for similar reasons.

Comment Absurd (Score 1) 139

Anyone who knows 3d printers would recognize the sheer absurdity of suggesting a printer infer it is making a part for a gun. By the time a model reaches a printer it has been sliced and turned into GCODE from hundreds of parameters and there is NO WAY that any printer could tell what the hell it is printing. Nor could the software which does the slicing, since parts could be oriented any way making it extremely hard to recognize a part. And even if there was a database to search against matching shapes in 3d space is hard. And even if there was some code which attempted to align and check a part it could be easily circumvented - wipe the DB, alter the source code, negate the test, alter the part etc.

If states want to ban ghost guns then make the penalties for doing it so severe that it discourages people doing it. And start improving ways that ghost guns can be forensically matched back to the printers that made them so that if someone was suspected of making parts, that it could be proven in court.

Comment Re:Getting out my popcorn (Score 1) 91

Metaverse was such a predictable failure that there is no way anyone with a creative or gaming head on their body would have shat out what Meta produced. It is the product of market studies, and demographics, and committees with final say by Zuckerberg. Something so boring, and without reason to exist, that people who Horizons rarely ever went back. They didn't even need to spend billions to know it was a terrible idea because Sony had already proven the point with Playstation Home which was arguably better than Horizons but still boring and pointless.

If Meta had instead chosen to make a fantasy RPG where people can make interesting characters and go out into the world and progress, explore etc then it would have had way more success. Or a Battle Royale style game. Or a bunch of well formed leisure pursuits - tennis, chess, sailing, arcade shooters, racing, pinball etc. Or all of the above over time. But they didn't. It was complete intellectual bankruptcy and lack of imagination.

Comment Re:Fun fact (Score 1) 63

It'll leak all over the place. Hydrogen under pressure is too bulky to use in aircraft. It would have to be liquid cooled and it would leak all the way from the plant to the plane. Because as hydrogen warms up it evaporates and that gas has to be vented. Now perhaps we could vent / burn it safely, or perhaps we can't.

But the real question is why chase hydrogen at all when more viable alternatives exist - battery and synthetic fuel. Hydrogen is a precursor to making synthetic fuel and it requires more energy but at least it can be captured in a single place and not bleed out continuously.

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