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Comment We will avoid it late and suddenly, or not at all (Score 1) 51

I don't think we should expect to see steady progress toward a climate solution, I think it's going to happen quite suddenly after some combination of the technology to do it getting cheap enough and the climate producing enough "shit's getting real" moments for a large fraction of the first-world population. At that point either we'll get our asses in gear and set up oceanic and atmospheric carbon sequestration megastructures all over the planet with maybe a little SRM sprinkled on top, or we'll be too distracted or impoverished to do anything about it for some silly reason or another and all the disastrous predictions will come true because this is a problem we're collectively too stupid as a species to solve. That's a real possibility.

Comment This does sound like a good plan (Score 1) 5

Anybody else ever play You Don't Know Jack with three other people? I think that was the first really clean and comprehensible party quiz game, and a YDKJ title seems like it would be a good fit here.

Pretty much any cellphone can now do a decent imitation of a Wiimote (besides the sensors, you could also use camera data) and it would also be hilarious to see people accidentally chuck their phones across the room while bowling.

Comment Re: A waitlist? (Score 1) 32

Marketing say so! They would never lie.

Mozilla keeps thinking that they can make Firefox popular without the nerds somehow. But all the shit that makes it better than other browsers is nerd shit, so they need nerds to advocate for it, teach other users how to use those features, etc. Meanwhile they seem to actually be trying to alienate us. Just like in the movie, here it the pulse, and here is their finger, far from the pulse, jammed up their ass. Pretzel?

Comment Re:Flying Car? (Score 1) 24

You are correct, they absolutely, positively do not have a flying car. They have a drone that comes out of a cybervan. And it's six-wheeled to boot, which would be cool in an off road vehicle but absolutely sucks on pavement. I did not bother to look up whether it has rear steering because IDGAF about it even if it does, even though that would be kind of neat. The rest of it is dumb.

Comment Re:What about top speed? (Score 1) 69

Also, the only realistic way to create a true "unintended acceleration" without pedal misapplication is something getting stuck in the pedal or the pedal getting stuck down

I see you didn't read the Toyota unintended acceleration report by the Barr Group, and have nothing of value to add to this conversation.

Comment Re:A lot of factors, but... (Score 1) 148

There is definitely correlation between race and academic performance in America, but there is no reason to think there is causation, or much causation. What little causation exists would be hard to tease out and is likely because of immigration selection. An Asian who comes to America likely is here because they out-competed their peers to make it here. My customers are almost completely immigrants from China and India and are mostly in tech. They are largely smart people who did well back home and do even better here. Their kids, on average, perform well too, but in addition to coming from the parents who could get through all the selection processes to get and stay in the US, they also have access to great schools, great nutrition, tons of extracurricular activities, and good genes for their races. If I go to India or China, I'm going to find a far dumber distribution of people, and even then, most of that will be because of economic circumstances, not genetics. The genetic component, of the US grabbing mostly the cream, lowers the average intelligence of these countries by a vanishingly negligible amount.

A child with genius genetics who is raised by wolves will effectively be a moron. A sub-100 IQ person who receives immense resources can graduate college. When I was done with him, a low-IQ autistic kid I taught, fully verbal but pretty damn simple, passed his college English classes and wrote proper, passing rhetorical analysis essays for exams without help. It took years of work, from late middle school on, but he got there. Both his mom and dad have PhDs. He reads at at least an average level for American adults, which is not that impressive in general but is for him.

Comment Re:As intended (Score 1) 145

Overproduction is an absolute requirement for a market economy to function, you incredible dummy.

Yes, overproduction is necessary. But it's also waste. And if you get too much of it, then it's unsustainable.

You people are so pig fucking ignorant about everything

Fine words from a coward.

Comment Re:Stop calling it Firefox (Score 2) 32

I don't want anything in the browser that I have to worry about whether it's turned on and spying on me or not.

Anything like that should be an add-on so it can be not just disabled but removed (assuming it's shipped with the browser.)

My pet Firefox peeve is with mobile. It's shitty and getting shittier. Not only does it have a javascript-related memory leak they haven't bothered to fix for many years, but now it's hanging when trying to upload images. It works once or twice and then on the third try the browser hangs. It takes a long time to get through to kill it too so it looks frankly like yet another memory leak.

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