Comment Re:Something is missing (Score 1) 359
Comment Re:Something is fishy in Denmark (Score 1) 594
Comment Re:Not what he said. (Score 2) 594
Comment Re:Verizon is going to get in trouble (Score 4, Informative) 139
Comment Re:DRM ahoy :( (Score 2) 551
Comment Re: daily mail reporting (Score 1) 555
Comment Re: hmmmm (Score 1) 129
Comment Re:Lack of friends (Score 1) 146
He also happens to be quite handsome (of course I am not impartial in that). It is amusing to see how many of the little girls at the dance school go out their way to greet him (while he hardly acknowledges their existence). I think he will be OK.
Haha. I think of my 4 year old the same way. The girls in his school always approach him to say hello, and he usually just ignores them. When I tell him "June said hello to you buddy. Say hi to June.", he looks at her and says "Say hi to June.". I joke to my wife that he will charm some sweet girl with his looks when he is older and she'll be willing to look past his "quirks".
Comment Re:Repetition leads to suicide (Score 1) 146
Of course, feeling empathy and being able to express it are two different things. I'll often feel extreme empathy towards someone, but won't be able to find the words to let the other person know how I feel.
This is something I struggle with too. I tend to get overwhelmed and end up just saying nothing sometimes. I very often resort to (sometimes long winded) emails to get my feelings out. My 4 year old might be too young to really see how he will be in this regard, be he always approaches the person "having an issue" with a look of great concern, but does not say anything to them.
Still, he deals with things that I've never had to deal with and takes other things in stride when I struggled with them. For example, he dives head first into social situations even if he doesn't fully understand how he's being inappropriate. I was always more socially-timid, afraid that I'd make a misstep and embarrass myself.
I have a similar situation. My son jumps right into social situations and actually LOVES observing what everyone is doing. He is totally unaware of his "social mis-steps", such as not saying hi back when someone says it to him, or repeatedly saying what someone is doing over and over when excited. At times, he also resorts to humming and "flapping" in excitement (though not as intense as I've seen in some other children). When I was his age, I used to hide behind my mother in similar situations. I have also been socially timid all my life due to "over thinking", and have learned to "put on an act" to hide this fact in most situations. In fact, many people are very suproised to hear that I am so socially timid.
Comment Re:Repetition leads to suicide (Score 1) 146
Comment Re:The company is suing FAKE reviews (Score 5, Informative) 210
Comment Re:Fake Reviews and Libelous (Score 2) 210
Comment Re:The future is coming. (Score 3, Informative) 214
Why laptop battery life has very little relation to life of an EV battery:::
1) Laptop batteries have no active cooling. The battery will disable itself right before it gets hot enough to blow up. As a battery goes over 100 degrees F, it's life span starts to plummit.
2) Laptop batteries have warranties that last only a few months (instead of 10 years), so are over-driven/abused in order to inflate the laptop's run time. Draining the battery below 40% and charging above 90% can cut battery life by more than 50% (Depending on how often and how much this is done). If the laptop battery dies in a year due to the abuse, oh well. We can just buy a new one for $50.
Why an EV battery will last 2-3 times longer than a laptop battery:::
1) Many states require a 10 year warranty on the EV battery. If the capacity drops below a threshold (I think 70%), it is considered faulty and replaced for free. Manufacturers thus engineer the battery management system to baby the EV battery.
2) An EV battery is designed to work in frigid cold and extreme heat without killing itself. They are engineered to be very robust and will be actively cooled if they get warm.