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Comment Re: So enforce the same working standards (Score 2) 240

America is the only country in the world whose government still explicitly allows slavery. Itâ(TM)s right there in the 13th Amendment.

Only the small requirement of having been convicted of a crime applies, and it turns out that the U.S. also just so happens by complete coincidence to have the largest number of incarcerated people in the world and sentences that are far longer than the rest of the world.

And then we learn that a hugely disproportionate number of them arenâ(TM)t white.

They work. Including in industries that supply parts to automobile manufacturers. Like this one; where American slave labor is causing wages to collapse for people who arenâ(TM)t enslaved.

https://www.al.com/news/2025/1....

Comment Re: He's Not Wrong. (Score 1) 240

The U.S. Auto industry supports around 11 million jobs. 280 million Americans drive cars.

Your math isnâ(TM)t mathing. 11 million is an order of magnitude fewer jobs than there are Americans who need cars.

Also? This idiotâ(TM)s company deserves to fail for his having said this at all. Shame on their Board for failing the investors by hiring him. They deserve what theyâ(TM)ll get.

Comment Re: Gas guzzling V8s don't seem like a good idea (Score 1) 384

So youâ(TM)re opposed to the regulations that help American EV manufacturers but not opposed to the ones that force Americans to pay more for every car? Tariffs are why EVs are expensive. And the subsidies donâ(TM)t really make them cheaper for consumers either. Chinese EVs are perfectly well inexpensive.

If capitalism canâ(TM)t compete with Communism with Chinese Characteristics then it deserves to lose.

Comment Are there engineers working there? (Score 0, Troll) 48

I'm not sure why there aren't competent engineers working at these places. They keep making the dumbest decisions possible, it seems.

Like, put the datacenter underground and it doesn't need as much cooling.

Put the datacenter in an underground chamber built like a yakchal and it needs even less cooling.

The problem is that the datacenter engineers don't seem to know very much about how to build things, as evidenced by their continued massive use of power and freshwater. And their validation of the classic "they forgot to account for the weight of the books."

Comment No distinction between neurotypical and neurodiver (Score 1) 25

Neurodivergent brains have about 2-3 times the synaptic connections that neurotypical brains do. They are physically different, distinctly. It is not some deficiency in a neurotypical brain.

This basic fact makes neurological research that doesnâ(TM)t control for the known-different kinds of brains unreliable. They have failed to create a scientifically-valid experiment because they didnâ(TM)t control for an obvious physical difference. Mixed the apples in with the oranges and tried to draw a valid conclusion.

It may be nothing here - there could be no difference for this purpose. But we donâ(TM)t know that for sure because of this poorly designed study lacking an obvious control.

Comment RTFO (Score 5, Interesting) 162

I realize that this is Slashdot, &tc... but please read the full opinion. As it makes clear, the Supreme Court (in an 8-0 decision, with the Chief recused) agrees that this aspect of the patent system is broken. As it also makes clear, the responsibility for fixing the broken patent system lies entirely with Congress.

This opinion is a good example of the Supreme Court essentially telling Congress to get its act together and fix the broken patent system. In the meantime, the Court reiterates what the problem is with the patent system in this case, and provides a solution for Congress to implement. But the Court is not empowered to fix the broken statute by itself, so it has to essentially settle for restating what the current broken statute says, and enforcing the law that's on the books.

Since the broken statute is not unconstitutional - Congress was empowered by the Constitution to act, and it did, poorly - the Court can only point out the flaw and hope the Congress fixes it.

Science

The Physics of a Rolling Rubber Band 226

sciencehabit writes "Modern physics can get complicated. Sure, researchers know exactly what forces act on a ball rolling down an incline — an experiment that helped Galileo develop universal laws for movement and acceleration. But what happens when a deformable shape like a rubber band rolls around? A new study reveals that the faster it goes, the more squashed it gets (video included)."
Google

Google Under Fire For Calling Their Language "Go" 512

Norsefire writes "Since releasing the 'Go' programming language on Tuesday, Google has been under fire for using the same name as another programming language that was first publicly documented in 2003. 'Go!' was created by Francis McCabe and Keith Clark. McCabe published a book about the language in 2007, and he is not happy. He told InformationWeek in an email: 'I do not have a trademark on my language. It was intended as a somewhat non-commercial language in the tradition of logic programming languages. It is in the tradition of languages like Prolog. In particular, my motivation was bringing some of the discipline of software engineering to logic programming.'"
Movies

Hollywood Backs Swedish Movie Streaming Site 156

paulraps writes "Forget Spotify and Skype: the latest strangely-named-but-hey-it's-free service from Sweden offers users streamed on-demand movies free of charge, has deals with two major Hollywood studios, and is called Voddler. Since its launch two weeks ago, the service has signed up a quarter of a million users and has almost the same number queuing for an invitation. After signing deals with Disney and Paramount, the company provides access to thousands of films, which are shown uninterrupted after a barrage of ads. The target is the file-sharing generation: 'Our customers can be sure that Voddler is totally legal, secure, and that there are no risks of computer viruses infecting their machines from downloaded files,' says executive vice president Zoran Slavic."
Microsoft

Bing To Use Wolfram Alpha Results 179

angry tapir writes "Microsoft is rolling out some enhancements to its Bing search engine, including some that rely on computational information delivered by Wolfram Alpha. That means that people will be able to search for some complicated information, and the search engine will be able to compute the answers. In a blog post, Tracey Yao, program manager, and Pedro Silva, product manager at Microsoft, give some examples."

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