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Comment Re:yes (Score 1) 1010

"My cousin is dyslexic and has terrible trouble reading and doing mathematics, but he's sitting pretty on a pile of cash and he's great at his job."

Okay, I'll take your anecdote to the next level -- since your cousin is apparently rich, but dyslexic, obviously schools don't need to teach kids how to read, either. Anecdotes are fun!

Comment Re:Maybe I'm Understanding This Wrong (Score 1) 465

I've only read the ars writeup, and not the paper itself, but here's the impression I get:

Using your stated setup, the apparent "violation of causality" from this experiment comes in that measurements showing that A & D are entangled happen *before* the entangling of B & C. So in a completely arbitrary sort of timeline-form:

0:00 - A & B are entangled. C & D are entangled.
0:01 - A is sent to Alice. D is sent to Bob. B & C are sent to Victor.
0:02 - Alice measures A. Bob measures D.
0:03 - Victor decides whether or not to entangle B & C.

In the cases where at 0:03 Victor decides to entangle B&C, the measurement taken at 0:02 shows A & D as entangled.
In the cases where at 0:03 Victor decides *not* to entangle B&C,the measurement taken at 0:02 doesn't seem to show A&D as entangled.

From this, we get the apparent break in causality, in that a measurement taken at 0:02 is apparently affected by something that doesn't happen until 0:03.

Comment Re:Yeah, yeah...everything enjoyable is bad for yo (Score 1) 283

I can't tell if you're being serious or not, especially with, " Even if it would turn out that people are too stupid in aggregate and would technically benefit from a despot or anything less that direct and absolute democracy."

At what point does "technically benefit" not equal better? I know this isn't exactly a single-factor situation, but since we're only talking about a single situation, when you say something is beneficial (or perhaps, *more* beneficial), that pretty much by definition means it's better.

And in my opinion, a 24-hour Athenian democracy like you seem to be advocating is great in the same world where communism is great or libertarianism is great : a utopia where every human is perfectly-informed and respectful of every other human. Maybe we'll get there one day, but we don't live in that world today.

Comment Re:Sprint and T-Mo should merge (Score 1) 301

I'd argue that prior to the last few years where smart phones have become incredibly popular, Sprint tended to offer some of the best/most advanced phones available (other carriers did as well), so your argument that they offered "the worst phones" seems completely wrong to me.

Comment Re:Comparative Advantage... (Score 1) 598

I don't know. The Soviets did some cool stuff with duct tape and bailing wire (Sputnik, for example!), but I'd hardly call them technological geniuses. If they could build aircraft carriers, there's no reason at all the Chinese couldn't. It seems more likely the Chinese just took a cheaper option in this case.

Comment Re:Longer Answer: (Score 5, Insightful) 657

How much of that renewable energy is subsidized? Considering Spain's current budget issues, I hope not much, because otherwise the price of energy in Spain could be very unstable.

I'm certainly not anti-renewable, but nuclear energy is such an attractive alternative I hate seeing all the fear-mongering that goes on with it.

Additionally, the link you provided says that only 32% of Spain's electricity is generated from renewable sources, not "over half".

Comment Re:No surprise (Score 1) 339

I'm confused how China could not have built one on their own at this point? The F-117 was designed in the 1970's, so "stealth" isn't exactly a new concept. China has a big enough economy to dump billions down the drain figuring out how to build a stealth aircraft, it wouldn't be surprising at all to me that they could achieve it without stealing any US technology.

Whether or not it was entirely a home-grown effort is a different question, but it may include stolen tech only because it was cheaper to steal than to reinvent.

And to say "this was really quick" seems incorrect to me. The F-117 was debuted to the general public twenty years ago. It's likely the Chinese knew it existed before then, so they certainly could have started their own research program long ago. Considering that the F-117 went from initial design to flying prototypes in less than ten years (using 1970's computers, no less), there's no reason to think the Chinese couldn't do something similar using more modern technology.

Comment Re:They should make it a national park or such thi (Score 1) 951

I'm not sure it's a matter of the animals not caring about a shortened lifespan "as long as they are freed from the intimidating human presence."

Lots of animals actually tend to do much better in what we would consider dangerous levels of radiation than the average human would. While there are still negative effects, they tend to be less pronounced in animals.

While Elena's site does not mention it, even in disaster areas that claimed the lives of humans (citizens who did not evacuate and rescue workers) very quickly, the animal populations in those areas continued living for a much longer period of time, although most of the animals did eventually die from the radiation, as well.

And of course wild animals are going to take over somewhere that humans have moved out of, they're going to exist whereever they can, even within range of "the intimidating human presence."

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