Comment: Re:Nope.. (Score 5, Funny) 116
Comment: Re:The Princess Bride (Score 1) 292
Did you watch that movie? The game was entirely random, but Westley won by cheating, he poisoned both cups. You can't do that in RPS.
Poison both cups before you start playing and make sure he drinks from his...
Comment: Re:I can beat the computer... (Score 1) 292
My score is 12 wins, 11 ties, 5 losses so far...
Great, now do it another 300 times to prove to a statistically significant level that you're got ESP.
Comment: Re:You call that a rant? HERE'S A RANT! (Score 1) 638
*appluads*
Mod that rant up by 101 points.
Comment: Re:This is why I set down ground rules (Score 1) 638
I need to get this printed on a t-shirt!
Comment: Re:Get over it. (Score 1) 638
I've found saying "no" helps a lot, as does being in a relationship since I'm no longer allowed to fix things based solely on the hotness of the user.
I'd say that was a perfectly acceptable metric for deciding whose PC/laptop to fix; so would my girlfriend...
Comment: Re:Get to the planets? (Score 1) 145
How about NASA figure out how to get to _orbit_ first? They've been fucking that part up for the past 30 years, and I don't understand why it needs to be pointed out to them that it is the first and most critical step to getting anywhere else.
Good point - the US Navy test fired a railgun projectile at Mach 5 speeds at a target 110 nautical miles away utilising 33 megajoules of energy.
NASA is looking at the possibility of using a railgun to launch craft into space at Mach 10 speeds. A rail launcher study using gas propulsion already is under way, but maybe using electromagnetic acceleration is more feasible?
Comment: Re:Develop spacefaring technology first (Score 3, Interesting) 145
Although the defense spending is huge, it's still less than that for health care.
I'd far rather see a country spent more money on healthcare than on killing people. If the US Government really wants to save money, they should build less aircraft carriers - the incoming Gerald R. Ford class aircraft carrier, will cost $14 billion including research and development, and the actual cost of the carrier itself would be $9 billion each - nearly $100 billion in total for a like-for-like replacement of the eleven Nimitz and Enterprise class carriers in active service.
By comparison, the UK spends two and a half times as much on Health as it does on Defence.
Comment: Re:Develop spacefaring technology first (Score 1) 145
What permanently dark side of the planet? Contrary to beliefs in the '60s, Mercury is not tidelocked. It's rotational period is 59 days, making three complete rotations in two orbits.
You could get around this by having a mobile operating base for any manned mission to Mercury that stays out of direct sunlight to avoid frying its occupants. Its 3:2 spin-orbit resonance means that a single day on Mercury last exactly two Mercury years, or about 176 Earth days - so a single fixed point on the surface would be in daylight continuously for 88 days. Given that its radius is 2,439.7 ± 1.0 km, it has a circumference of 7667.6 km, so you'd only need to be able to move 87.1 km/day, or 3.63km/h.