Comment: Re:Not really a moving narrative (Score 4, Informative) 236
By the way, the magazines that can be had for less than $18 per year are actually subsidized by advertising. The true cost of printing + mailing a full length (around 100 pages / perfect binding / good paper / good printing) magazine is around $5 - 10 per issue per customer. Add in production/design/content costs, and the actual cost of a single magazine can be anywhere from $20 - 30. If you take a look at the sale prices of unsubsidized (ie magazines with no ads) - you can find that the cheaper magazines use poor quality paper, while the really glossy ones (which are usually high art / high fashion mags) costs around $30 per issue.
Hope this clears up some things.
Comment: Re:Wait, what? (Score 1) 217
I think you give human kind too much credit - you think that we're so smart.
I see a lot of this kind of language "that the cells are so sophisticated that we still don't know much
Why do you think we're so smart? What if we're actually the dumbnuts of the Earth? Heck, we still don't know much about quantum mechanics and the physical nature of the world - why should we be able to know everything there is to know about the chemical and biological underpinnings of life?
In my opinion, it'll take at least another couple billions of years before any sentient being on Earth will come to understand how the cellular machinery came to be. When it took a few billion years to evolve, don't you think it would take at least that long to understand? When you get to 2 or 3 billion years old, then you deserve to ask that question - Why don't we get it yet?. Until then, please understand that we don't know jack about the real nature of how biological organisms are put together, and all we can do is continue to experiment, continue to learn.
Comment: Intel vs. McAfee via IV (Score 5, Interesting) 189
Comment: go naked? - strip? (Score 5, Interesting) 325
I was wondering if it is acceptable to the TSA for me to request a private room, and strip naked to let them do a visual only examination to prove that I'm not carrying anything dangerous. They can look as closely as they want, as long as they don't touch me.
I have no concerns about privacy, but I do have a problem with xrays and a person feeling me up.
But I have no problems about getting naked. Is that an acceptable for the TSA? I will try it next time I go through an airport.
Comment: Re:RTFA before commenting (Score 1) 629
Comment: NOT an icelandic company (Score 1) 142
Choi + Shine is not an Icelandic company! I wonder where the heck the submitter got that. Their website puts their address at
Choi+Shine Architects office
358 Tappan St
Brookline, MA
02445
Comment: Re:Not what you think (Score 1) 201
In any human, mitochondria ONLY comes from the mother. The mitochondria in the sperm are clustered at the base of the flagella and are used to provide energy for swimming. After insemination, the father's mitochondria are "discarded", left outside of the egg. There is also no worry that the father's mitochondria is "too different". So in current human biology, the mother's mitochondria is extremely important, as any defects/dna damage will be inherited by the offspring.
The father's mitochondria decides how energetic the sperm are when competing to fertilize the egg. The mother's mitochondria are carried on in the offspring.
Perhaps the genetic engineers will one day find out how to implant the father's mitochondria back into the developing egg.
Comment: Re:Naturally, the passwords were not in clear (Score 3, Interesting) 214
If you read the article, the Apache folks were compromised before the Atlassian breach - and in the article, it appears Apache contacted Atlassian regarding the xss compromise which was used 2 days later directly on atlassian itself.
Comment: Re:FreeBSD ports can't be relied upon (Score 2, Informative) 143
Comment: Re:Mod Article Flamebait (Score 3, Insightful) 143
Comment: Re:And here's why (Score 1) 294
I believe the real idea is that if you spent $1 billion in helping the OSCAR project along, you would have something useable by now. Even though OSCAR is only, as you say, a part of a larger solution, it still doesn't excuse the massive useless waste of space and money that eHealth Ontario represents.
If you take $1 billion dollars, and contribute it to Linux development, what would do you think would come out of it? Ask the same question for OSCAR, and you can start to see the real questions at hand.
Electronic Gaming Monthly Coming Back 45
from the back-from-the-dead dept.
Comment: Give Metrix a try (Score 1) 186
I was in the non-profit space about a year ago, and we were thinking of trying out "Metrix" http://metrix.fcny.org/index.html . Developed by/for the Fund for the City of New York, it's a contact management / funding/donor tracking system built on top of MS Access, with integration into excel and word (mail merges). Since it builds on top of MS Office suite (ie word, outlook, excel, access, along with the free ms sql product), which most non-profits need to get licenses for anyways, it's a good fit if you're already on the Microsoft path.
I'd like to see something like Metrix built on top of Openoffice if there is such a thing.
Storm Worm Botnet "Cracked Wide Open" 301
from the after-honeynets-let's-try-bugzappers dept.