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Comment Re:Let me see if I've got this right... (Score 1) 139

This may be a bit confusing, but Australia is not in the EU, using three articles about Australia does not support your argument.

The Italian one looks like a disagreement over if they had a presence in Italy to then be forced to pay taxes there as well. They did not have a presence in Italy, but Italy claimed that they use network lines and servers in Italy, so should have to pay there too despite having no business presence in the country.

The problem is, almost universally, businesses are taxed on their profits, if they have expenses to a central corp somewhere else that makes their profit disappear, they have less profit to be taxed. Much like Ikea does with their locations in the US, they offshore the profit to reduce their tax load.

https://europeangreens.eu/news...

You act like this is a purely American thing, while European businesses do it to the US as well.

Comment Re: No live rounds... (Score 1) 167

Just to sum up, your definition is wrong from a biological standpoint on two main counts and probably on a third (which is dependent on context and on further information from you).

One is all the women who only have one X chromosome and no Y

Would they express as a woman, who knows, but I would call that a genetic abnormality, which would not likely be female, or able to produce offspring, so not a woman.

or who have XY.

That would be a man.

The second is all the men who have XXY chromosomes (approximately 6 million) who your definition claims are women.

That would be because they are partially or fully a woman, so would count as a woman.

Comment Re: Actual stateless refugees being shot by robot (Score 4, Informative) 167

Since that door has always been open to the Palestinian people should they choose to go through it, I would say yes. It isn't Israel that keeps sabotaging the peace process. It isn't Israel that believes that the only solution is extermination, that is the Palestinian perspective.

Comment Re: Problem has been known for decades (Score 1) 68

I started in the Wolf 3d era, so around the same time. VR is different, though there are very few games that cause me issues, one of which is a roller coaster simulator, the up and down, and I take off the headset.

Most games I have no issue with at all, but I will start having a bit of an issue when the movement in the headset is a bit slower than my physical movement. With AR, it would likely be even worse, since the rendered object movement wouldn't match the physical object movement, which could cause disorientation

There are also games, that for a couple hours are no big deal, but over time cause mild sickness.

I would have to use whatever they are using to see how it works, to get more of an idea.

Comment Re:Speaking of the truth (Score 1) 136

Your reply has nothing to do with mine. Did you read mine and the one before it?

When you receive a subpoena, wouldn't you expect to acquire the records out of storage to look through to satisfy the subpoena? This has nothing at all to do with your comment, they are separate issues.

I said nothing about what you bring up, but feel free to rail against Trump, even though you didn't actually say a single thing that referred to the conversation you replied to.

Comment Re:Problem has been known for decades (Score 1) 68

There is a bit of difference between hours worth of usage and a few minutes from car sickness as well.
There is a certain percentage that don't get motion sickness, but from hours of VR (or AR in this case) start to get nausea from the slight mismatch between movement induced by the processing requirements and draw speed.

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