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Comment Re:Yes and No ... (Score 3, Insightful) 58

Comparing the tech available now with the 1940s-70s is silly.

And saying that political oppression can be separated from doing scientific research shows you know little of history or research or innovation. Look up Lysenkoism. Look up Winnie the Pooh in China. Look up the Stasi. Look up the history of electronics research in East Germany and the USSR.

Oppressive regimes breed snitches, who are incredibly eager to make up lies about colleagues and neighbors to reduce the competition. You have led a sheltered life if you have never experienced that kind of atmosphere.

Comment Re:Yes and No ... (Score 4, Insightful) 58

Ideological dictators are immune to reason, logic, facts, and everything else which one can argue with. Greedy dictators are at least open to alternatives.

"Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be "cured" against one's will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals." -- C.S. Lewis

Comment Yes and No ... (Score 3, Insightful) 58

Yes, because they have to; an embargo is a one-shot weapon which can never be undone. It also makes all countries, not just the embargoed one, more distrustful of trade relations.

No, because China is a dictatorship, and an ideological one at that, the least open to the free thought and innovation and cooperation that brings innovation. It's not that the USSR and Nazi Germany were incapable of innovation, but their engineers and scientists would have innovated more without having to look over their shoulders and wondering who was today's snitch.

Comment Re:Why did Apollo returns not show this? (Score 2) 28

I wondered about that too. Seems unlikely a lab would be that sloppy, but it also seems unlikely astronauts would be sloppy choosing and handling samples.

Another answer is that the Chinese water beads are very localized from some comet that hit nearby, and few other locations have such water beads.

It will be interesting to see how this shakes out over the next few years. I wonder if there's any way to detect these water beads from orbiting satellites.

Comment Why did Apollo returns not show this? (Score 2) 28

The Apollo missions brought back a lot more mass, IIRC. Why did this water not show up in them?

A possible answer is that the Apollo samples were hand-picked by humans. Maybe they only selected rocks, not dirt and dust. Maybe such small pieces fell off during selection and inspection. Maybe the Chinese samples were picked up as scooped material.

Comment Re:About the only way... (Score 2) 85

It's also the only way to get the bonus features -- commentary by the cast and crew, deleted scenes, and sometimes the "making of" features are interesting, like when there is lots of CGI or spectacular stunts.

I'd drop my DVD subscription in a heartbeat if ...

* You could stream bonus features.
* You could stream old movies.
* They'd make their streaming site useful.

Comment Peck's Bad Boy (Score 2) 45

I've found the best way to clear my mind before sleep is read something completely unrelated to anything else that requires no subsequent thinking. Sometimes owner's manuals for some new simple gadget. But the best by far is the short stories in Peck's series of Bad Boy stories. He wrote them for his Newspaper in the 1880s to increase circulation. They are 3-4 pages, a 5 or 10 minute read, with delightful illustrations. The Bad Boy is a teenager always getting into trouble, like putting signs in the grocer's produce -- "Cabbage the cat has slept in, 5 cents". The bad boy's father is a drunk, his mother is a saint, the grocer is a cheat, the preacher is a hypocrite. The bad boy lines his father's had with limburger cheese. He wraps a card deck in his father's pocket handkerchief and soaks it with rum so his church speech goes haywire. My favorite is when he learns the grocer has rigged a darning needle beneath a hole in the counter where the bad boy sits, with a string to pull and stab the bad boy. The bad boy puts a piece of wood in his pocket and sits down. While the grocer is leaning down to see what is wrong, the bad boy gives up his seat to the preacher who has just strolled in, the preacher gets stabbed, and the bad boy leaves as they are rolling around the floor.

They are not politically correct by any means, but they were in a family newspaper in the 1880s.

There are probably thousands of similar books. Find any collection of 5 minute reads, none with cliffhanger ends. Nothing does better at separating daytime thinking from nighttime nothing.

Comment Re:Ancient stuff (Score 1) 523

I remember discovering you could muck with the add tables to use any base less than 10. I don't remember now how the multiplication tables were organized and whether they could also be changed to different bases.

We did have 1311, but I don't remember address 00796 particularly.

A friend and I had a contest to see who could get the most instructions on one punched card. I won with, I think, 120, overlapping data and instructions. It typed THIMK over and over on the console typewriter. One sense switch changed the speed, another halted it. It was THIMK because the M was the halt instruction.

Comment I approve this policy (Score 2) 152

"Friendly reminder: Slashdot continues to allow users to post comments and stories anonymously as an "Anonymous Coward." This is something that's been criticized since its inception, but it's something we think is important and plan to continue for the foreseeable future."

I do indeed approve this policy. It is a fine policy.

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