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Comment: Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is (Score 2) 286

by OshMan (#35221312) Attached to: TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1
10 years ago when I bought the Tivo, SageTV if it was even available yet was in its infancy. Regardless I believe I paid less than $300 dollars for the Tivo box so your $590 solution wouldn't have been much of a savings if any. Also, I've got to say that myTivo has far outlasted any PC I've ever owned. It took almost 10 years to fail, and I think the only problem is with the modem. But I've moved on to Roku rather than repair it.

Comment: Re:For those who like this sort of thing, this is (Score 2) 286

by OshMan (#35220738) Attached to: TiVo To Brick All Remaining UK PVRs On June 1
As one of the "fools" who paid for lifetime service I'd like to inject some facts here. I paid something like $300 for lifetime, and used that service for almost ten years before the box failed from hardware issues. Had I not purchased the lifetime service I would have paid somewhere around $1200 for that service during the same time. In fact I could still repair the box and keep using it if I chose. So please explain to me where it was foolish to pay $300 rather than $1200?

Comment: Re:"Faith Science Basis?" (Score 1) 714

by OshMan (#32421444) Attached to: Australian Schools To Teach Intelligent Design
I would argue that ID can not accurately/honestly be presented as a "theory" at all, at least not in the sense of the word as used by Science. Because that would connote that it had amassed a body of supporting evidence, which it has not. However, ID could honestly be presented as a hypothesis, although a nearly useless one in that it makes no predictions and is fundamentally (pun intended) un-testable. Perhaps it could be used as a good example of a poorly formed hypothesis? ID could also be useful fodder in a discussion of Occam's Razor, but it would need to be in the role of a negative example which introduces unnecessary additional assumptions.

Comment: A point well missed (Score 1) 135

by OshMan (#32043826) Attached to: Life's Building Blocks Found On Asteroid 24 Themis
Whether this "implies" that the building blocks of life were delivered via this method is a secondary hypothesis. I feel that a more important implication is that these "building blocks" can develop in a particularly harsh, non-earth environment. This gives more credence to the notion that life could have arisen on the primordial earth as postulated by science. And it gives credence to the notion that life may well have arisen elsewhere in the universe.

I can read your mind, and you should be ashamed of yourself.

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