Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:But wait a minute... (Score 1) 208

Thunderf00t is a jackass, and I haven't seen the specific claims made in his video, but The Boring Company is actually a joke.

The tunnel is completely normal, nothing special about it at all. No magic low cost boring machine or special construction techniques. The Chinese dig them much, much faster for their metro systems.

The idea of using cars instead of trains is also dumb. Worse capacity, a lot more staff because Full Self Driving doesn't work even in a carefully controlled environment with one single file lane of traffic. As a novelty ride it's pretty mediocre.

Comment Re:Why not just go the whole hog... (Score 1) 112

Plausible deniability? You could claim you use it for the tasks they list, not a home defence system.

What's the legality of owning a flamethrower, and of using it on a suspected intruder? They seem to be readily available in the US, but would there be any issue with burning someone instead of shooting them?

Comment Re:As a rail fan (Score 1) 208

That's true, current UK political leadership is some of the worst we have ever seen.

But still, infrastructure projects should be able to succeed due to skilled civil servants running them. I think a major issue there is that we do so few big infrastructure projects that the civil service lacks of the skills and experience.

Comment Re:It's all by design (Score 1) 64

Maybe you missed it but I was talking about TikTok, which despite ByteDance's protests I'm sure you will agree is just a branch of the CCP.

Your claim that "foreign bashing" is the cause doesn't make sense. If it was, why have sales falling 19% after years of growth? You said it's being going on for years, i.e. the time when sales were growing.

And by the way, Chinese phones are popular in Europe. Huawei, Xiaomi, Honor... Which should tell you something about this "foreign bashing" you are projecting. How many European phones does the US buy?

Comment Re:As a rail fan (Score 3, Insightful) 208

That's certainly part of it, although I note that other countries manage to build this stuff in the lifetime of a single parliament, and certainly within the lifetime of a single ruling party. For example, the Tories have been in power in the UK for 14 years now, and still haven't built HS2. In that time other countries would have built it and been operating it, and I mean European countries.

Comment Re:As a rail fan (Score 4, Interesting) 208

Some countries just can't do infrastructure. The US and UK are prime examples.

Then you have countries like Japan, which take a long time to do infrastructure, but they do it. Maglev starting around 2030, 90% tunnels through mountains. And then you have China, which went from zero to 2/3rds of the world's high speed rail in about 15 years.

What we need to understand is why we can't build stuff. In the UK it's down to a combination of incompetence and lack of continuity. Every project is a one off and there is no steady supply of work for contractors, so even if it does get built any lessons learned tend to be forgotten.

Comment Re:Most of us... (Score 2) 47

In the UK, broadcast TV is the lowest quality. YouTube is considerably better, and Netflix is on another level.

OLED is good for other stuff too though. For photo and design work, it can be calibrated very well and offers HDR without the haloing.

The main issue for computer use is the non-RGB pixel layout, which makes text look poor compared to LCD. Subpixel anti-aliasing breaks. As soon as someone makes a reasonably priced 28" 4k OLED with a compatible subpixel layout, I'm upgrading.

Comment Re:It's all by design (Score 1) 64

Nah, this is a direct response to the US ban on TikTok on government devices. China mirrored it by banning iPhones for government use. Just like how many US citizens took the innuendo about TikTok and Chinese phones as a signal not to buy them, Chinese consumers switched to domestic brands too.

The US probably expected that, but was likely hoping that they had weakened Huawei and Chinese chip production enough to prevent Chinese brands making competitive phones. That failed quite dramatically.

Reap what you sow.

Comment Re:It's called work (Score 1) 223

From what I read they tried no disruptive protest, but didn't get any traction. At that point they decided that they were not happy working for Google if it continued to contract with Israel, so would try a disruptive protest. Either it would work, or they would be leaving anyway.

I can't blame them for making that decision. Some of them have family in Palestine, now either starving refugees with no homes or infrastructure, or murdered. Others just couldn't stand to be any part of that, no matter how small.

Comment Re:Well, there's one logical consequence (Score 1) 148

How much of that US military spending actually protects us, and how much is about projecting US power?

We have nukes in Europe. We have modern, powerful militaries. I'm sure if push came to shove, we could fund Ukraine ourselves.

While of course it's nice to be able to work with the US, I'm sure if you asked every social democracy would be keen to point out their independent deterrent. Some of them are on the front line with Russia, and their domestically developed weapons are world class.

Comment Re:Well, there's one logical consequence (Score 1) 148

The big difference is that there is immense pressure on women in China to marry young. By the time they are 30 they are considered "left on the shelf" and unlikely to ever marry or have children.

Having children is a very big deal, because the expectation is that those children will look after you in old age... Or after age 35, apparently.

Of course things are changing as young women want careers now, and are choosing to have only one or two children, but it's still a big source of pressure. One of the chief complaints of Western incels is that women have too much freedom and independence, meaning they are not forced to marry said incels.

China may get there eventually, but of course the other big difference is that the Chinese government is very likely to intervene if it ever becomes a serious problem. I expect they will start to push for more children soon.

Comment Re:Just bought... (Score 4, Interesting) 156

The handful of American characters in the trilogy like Frederick Tyler and Thomas Wade are particularly interesting, since they look so much like fun-house mirror distortions of Hollywood archetypes. I think it's a combination of the image we project to the world, and China's interpretation of that image. The result feels eerily familiar yet strange.

A common problem the world over. As a Brit, I get it with British people written by Americans. Japanese characters written by Westerners get it a lot. It's quite rare for authors to do a decent job with more than one culture, it seems.

It works in reverse too. A lot of the criticise I see of the Three Body Problem novels is down to people not understanding how Chinese people think about things. Again, the same applies to Japanese stories, and even when the translator provides notes to try to help the reader, it's usually insufficient. I thought I understood a lot of stuff until I actually learned Japanese and stopped relying on subtitles, at which point I realized that the translators were giving a paraphrased and Americanized version of the characters and plot that was only superficially the same.

Comment Re: Just bought... (Score 1) 156

I always thought it was odd that it took so long for Linux to get a decent scripting language. Well, arguably it still doesn't... You have shell scripts, Python, and stuff like Perl.

Decades ago we had ARexx for Amiga computers. Powerful scripting that could interact with applications and automate them. There have been a few attempts to replicate it over the years, but nothing comes close.

Slashdot Top Deals

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

Working...