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Comment Re:Fewer candidates to draw from... (Score 1) 580

This isn't about meta data, that's the beauty of it. A polygraph indicates a subjective lie, meaning you are telling what YOU think is a lie. If you truly believe you did nothing illegal than the polygraph will indicate a truthful response when you say "No" to the question "Have you illegally downloaded music?"

Comment missing the most important point (Score 1) 221

The President and First Family was not there! The agents on duty would know this. If they had shot this man on the front lawn the headline would have been "Mentally ill Person KILLED needlessly by the Secret Service". Since he wasn't carrying anything, and weapon would have to be small, at most a bomb strapped to him, and the Prez no even there they made the right call. If you want to play what-if the Prez was home, I suspect there would be more agents on duty and they would react more aggressively.

Comment Re: Great one more fail (Score 1) 600

" As long as it's not government mandated" Here is Massachusetts we already have politicians working on legislation and the tech doesn't even exist yet. " there are still plenty of normal mechanical only 1911's and .38 specials" They'll solve this in the legislation by restricting sale and transfer. If you have one you'll be OK but you won't be able to buy, sell, or transfer one.

Comment I'm confused (Score 1) 448

OK this may be a scam. But passive RFID devices have been around for a while now. They get their power from a transmitted signal and then reply. These are common. Why wouldn't this work on the Bluetooth frequencies? I'm sure the Bluetooth transmitter has a much lower output but that's a matter of sensitivity not possibility.

Comment my favorite question (Score 1) 692

The questions are unusual, I would have loved to hear the rationale behind them. One I like to ask, and was often asked why, was "What kind of car do you drive?" I found it a good personality indicator when other factors where taken into account. Such as income level, career level, family situation, age, and a number of other little things I pick up during the interview. It was also a great way to turn it into a conversation which tells you a lot more than an interview will.

Comment This is ridiculous (Score 1) 175

First, a "panic" button already exists. It's called speed dial. Set it to dial 911 if you press and hold 1 for whatever amount of seconds is required. Second, at least around here, the PD gets the cell location info on a 911 automatically, and the address on a land-line. So from this standpoint this whole post is unworthy of being posted. My voice dial takes it a step further and assumes anything it doesn't understand is a 911 call. This makes it sooo much fun when I say call it it responds with "Calling 911". As for the calling 911 because you didn't get your nuggets. Really??? Does this really deserve discussion. How about we just act like adults. The whole world is going to hell and you're trying to justify stupid behavior. Try being a little less PC. Besides, it's not a criminal act to forget the nuggets, their omission would need to be deliberate. I doubt the people at McDonald's care enough about you to want to piss you off by doing this deliberately. Besides I've yet to see a McDonald's manager who, when dealt with reasonably, didn't just say "sorry here are your nuggets, and here's a coupon for some free one next time", or "sorry here's you money back". These stupid calls come from people who need to be noticed and think they are better than average and can't accept that like most people, myself included, the world will continue, you will live and die, without being noticed by all but a few, and being important to even less. Get over yourelve, just because one stupid person got a reality show doesn't mean you deserve one too.

Comment Re:Henchman (Score 1) 1010

"You save only 59 seconds over 8 miles by going 75 instead of 65. Do you really have to pass that guy? Do the Math!" You have a point. IF you are driving a very short distance and it's all on a highway it's not worth it. But where does this happen? My nearest on-ramp is more that 4 miles (more than 8 round trip) away and all single lane residential 30-35 mph (no passing). The highway is minimum 2 lanes, usually 3, sometime 4, and slower traffic is supposed to keep right. If they do that then passing isn't a problem. The problem comes when self righteous people don't keep right because they feel they have the right to slow everyone else down, usually to 55 because they want to enforce "more economical" driving on everyone else. BTW you can be cited for "Failure to keep right" I wish this was enforced. Try driving slow on the left on the Autobahn, you'd become unpopular very fast. And has anyone studied the difference in gas mileage doing 65 vs.75 on a modern vehicle? When I bought my new vehicle in 2012 I did. I commute to work every day, same stretch of highway. I did a week of 55, a week of 65, and a week of 75, and I couldn't measure the difference is gas usage. I was actually trying to see if I could really get what the manufacturer said was the highway mph, I never got closer than 1.1 mph under. But I did see a major difference if I was constantly slowing down and speeding up because people were driving in the left lanes (3 lanes) and weren't passing. And before someone says anything, I was able to maintain speed by going into the office later in the day to avoid the traffic. Lead, Follow, or get the F!@# out of the way.

Comment price fixing (Score 1) 569

BS, it's price fixing, either specifically or just an "understanding" among providers. In my town we have Verizon FIOS, Verizon DSL, Comcast, and RCN. So with 3 major providers of high-speed internet (DSL isn't high-speed) there should be some competition. But no, the cost is the same as in areas that have only one cable provider and Verizon DSL. This doesn't fit with a fair market, and it's not because of deregulation which would be nothing but government price fixing. We already have price fixing, we don't need to add government and increase our costs with government fees and taxes. Add to this that when you work out a speed/feature comparison the cost of all three are surprisingly (sarcasm) close.

Comment from personal experience (Score 1) 786

I worked at a company that lived off it's US government contracts, and they were all HHS. And maybe it's just HHS, but the whole way they do contracts is messed up, in my opinion. If it wasn't for a few people in the contracting community the abuse and waste would be so bad nothing would get done. And everyone knows it, but no one says anything because rocking the boat is the easiest way to get tossed out. I saw a web site developed with no technical oversight of the subcontractor, no milestones set, very limited testing, and then days before being turned up, canceled by the government. Development, equipment, facilities, all for nothing. But everyone got paid. The preceding is my opinion and in no way represents anything...

Comment Re:Hydrogen is indeed quite dangerous... (Score 1) 479

Or inside the passenger compartment. Don't get me wrong, batteries burn too. But we shouldn't close our eyes to the real world. Almost any flammable gas or vapor is "safe" if it's in an open or well vented area. You just don't get the concentration levels you need to make it dangerous. But in the right environment, like the enclosed area inside a car, even sawdust (airborne) is a big problem. Remember, hydrogen is odorless and colorless, a leak could result in a flammable or explosive concentration inside a vehicle before anyone even notices. And before someone says it, sure add an odor, I'm sure that will do wonders for the efficiency of a fuel cell.

Comment Our right to Facebook (Score 1) 192

Facebook is a business. Facebook is not a "right". You choose to subscribe. They may be dominant, but they are not a monopoly. It's a free market. If you don't like what Facebook did go somewhere else. The number of "Friends" someone has on Facebook is inversely proportional to how much I want to be one of them (this last is a personal opinion, you don't get to argue about it). Social media is a government plot to get you to give away information they can't legally take (ok, now I'm trolling).

Comment Re:Different versions of Windows (Score 1) 180

"No OS problems? No hangs or bluescreens with W95 or W98? That's unusual. " Windows 95 and 98 in the last 5 year??? I pretty much stay with the current version of the OS, at least what shipped OEM with the desktop/laptop, so no 95/98 in the last 5 years. I also don't do home networks, businesses know that reliability is more important than a user being able to change a system setting. Frankly most of the problem business systems I've seen were because of poor implementation, noone pays attention to details anymore. As for bloat, remember a Windows install include a lot of junk most people don't use and includes support for far more hardware and software, again rarely used. I've created Windows Embedded images with a full GUI that fit on a 256MB cfash.

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