Comment: Re:I don't want (Score 1) 403
Comment: Re:Probably not the last B&W - but theatre onl (Score 1) 105
Comment: Re:Probably not the last B&W - but theatre onl (Score 1) 105
The point being made was Cox is shooting on B&W film stock, then transferring to digital for editing/post, and since there's loss of the range of grey/tones when you transfer from analog to digital images, why bother? My point was even with that loss, the range of tones would still be greater than color film stock transferred to digital then desaturated, or shooting digital then desaturating.
Better now?
Comment: Re:Probably not the last B&W - but theatre onl (Score 4, Insightful) 105
Comment: Re:What's the point? (Score 1) 158
It's a dance with the devil to try to build your success on the kindness of others, but at the same time, remembering Wheaton's First Rule of Human Interaction ("Don't be a dick") as well as the fact that the success of one's platform is correlated to the number of people who made your platform more fun because of their involvement would be a good thing.
Comment: Re:Just talking about Quake Lan Parties (Score 1) 65
Comment: Re:folding@home (Score 1) 96
*shrug* I've never been as big fan of humanity so I don't really care about that. Gravity waves though... Flying cars, gravity gun... How can anyone resist?
But you kind of need humanity to a) develop new gravity wave technologies and b) then actually enjoy the benefits of said new technologies. Unless of course you see these new gravity wave devices as a lagniappe for your robot and AI friends.
Comment: Re:Here it comes... (Score 0) 540
I'm not Mormon, and frankly, I find the religion a little weird. That being said it is absurd not to put things on a relative scale. The weirdness and widely known evil of the COS is orders of magnitude worse than LDS.
I don't know about that. Scientology, for all its ills and faults, doe not try to subjugate women. LDS, on the other hand, thrives as a result of it.
Comment: Re:When does it become V-GER? (Score 1) 271
Comment: Re:Indian sweat shops (Score 4, Interesting) 441
Meanwhile if you had gone to business school you would be relevant forever and probably better paid.
Nope, the same applies to business. People in their 20's are willing to worker longer hours and for less money than someone who is older, has a longer resume and is worth more in salary, and is less willing to devote stupidly long hours to a career which is already established. Those industries which can make their quarterly reports look good by throwing more workers at a problem will always be inclined to hire those who work longer for less. When I think back to my 20's and what I thought was a lot of money then versus what I know I need now, I realize why I was easily exploitable. It's not because you're good and smart, it's because you might be good, you might be smart, but they'll settle for how long you'll work for as little as they can pay. If you turn out to be a rockstar, they might promote you, but more than likely they'll use you for what they can get out of you, and then hire a replacement when you get a job that pays more for fewer hours.
Not that correlation equals causality, but the fact an employee thinks it's a great idea to work hard to buy an expensive cell phone to take pictures of food from a trendy restaurant is not lost on upper management.
Comment: Perhaps Norville Barnes is really a French name (Score 1) 35
Comment: Re:I think that's all college students (Score 1) 823
So why there is a lot of intelligence with regard to understanding processes and theories (such as major shifts in mathematics and astrophysics), the common sense/executive function parts of the brain are a while away from development and dominance.
The upside of this, IMHO, is making videos of the lighting of farts and assorted bicycle/skateboard pranks and stunts. While I've learned enough at my age to know that in practice these are not good ideas, I still admire the late-teens, early twenties mindset that feels compelled to think this stuff up and make me laugh.
Comment: Re:Dick Cheney (Score 1) 216
Dick Cheney has a pacemaker...
Had. He has a transplanted heart now.
Comment: Re:Interesting questions (Score 2) 112
It is nothing of the sort. It is the best fucking economic system yet devised by man, despite the recent abuse of it by government and corporations.
If it's subject to abuse, and it is (and has been for centuries), and because of those abuses, can drive the world economy to its knees, which was within several hours of happening in 2008, how again does it make it the best fucking economic system yet devised by man?
If I was going to put my trust in the best fucking economic system yet devised, I'd want to make sure that it could indeed negate the abuse. That's yet to occur.