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Comment Re:Sensationalism (Score 1) 431

Well said. But for the many, many cases for which we haven't tested, can't test due to ethical concerns, or can't sort out due to the massive complexity of the systems, well, we're not left with much to go on, are we? Part of science is that even things that are firmly believed can be unseated with appropriate evidence, and here we are overturning things all the time (cholesterol, fat, alcohol - all have piles of evidence on both sides about health benefits and risks), and it's hard not to blame people for growing a little weary of it all and starting to not trust things that are published. It's a shame so much of the weariment comes from the popular sensationalism ("For most people, taking a shower is not dangerous" - the disease is still quite rare even where people shower a lot) rather than the actual overturning of previous beliefs. There was a recent article in Science News (can't find it now) arguing how scientists really need to change their language when they talk to the public: particularly, that we're not completely overturning ("revolutionizing" is too commonly used) what we knew before, merely filling out pieces that were missing. Showers aren't all of a sudden dangerous, and we haven't invalidated the things we knew before about bacterial growth if you don't wash yourself (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-477378/Six-weeks-wash-The-soapless-experiment.html) or the history of humanity before sanitation... but all this is lost under the mound of social taboos against not showering and the mass of advertising (and more social expectation) that you should use various products, without investigation into safety.

Comment This doesn't seem to get at any real problem (Score 1) 792

What would this bill be aimed at, even hypothetically?
  • Carbon pollution? Better to tax gasoline and toughen up emissions laws.
  • Congestion? Isn't sitting in traffic already plenty of tax for that? Or if not (maybe you're not all in Seattle), implement a congestion tax (like London) or collect tolls for single drivers to ride in the carpool lane (like some areas around Seattle do, and more are planning to).
  • Wear on cars? Don't we already pay for this through auto maintenance and/or buying more cars?
  • Road pollution due to tiny shreds of rubber from tires? This is actually a nontrivial issue, but... tax tires and use the money for cleanup, in proportion to what's causing the damage.
  • Wear on roads? Isn't this already covered in vehicle registration, if a bit disproportionately? I suppose this is the one thing that might be well targeted this way (weight * miles), but isn't this a fairly small cost averaged over everybody, and probably not that far off from fair now?

I can't see any good coming from this, even without the RFID/GPS craziness (which just screams police state to me, but then I'm like that.).

Comment Re:Holy shit? (Score 1) 950

I hadn't really thought about the monitors as a motivation factor, since, despite being a math nerd and programmer, I really don't like all the emphasis on numbers as a way to measure fitness. We don't understand enough about medicine yet to be able to say for sure what's really good and what isn't (hell, there's still huge controversy about fat and cholesterol). Besides which, the only question I really care about is, "Does my body feel functional and capable and able to support me on all the adventures I wish to undertake?" But to each their own - I support finding motivations and learning styles that work for everybody far more than my own ideology about what people should or shouldn't think about fitness and how to get there. If having a beeping thing is motivation, by all means, use it.

Comment Re:I think you jumped the gun a little. (Score 2, Insightful) 489

I'd barely heard of the book, but my husband is a huge fan, so we went to the midnight show last night - that's how somebody who isn't a huge fan winds up having seen it already.

My opinion on it is straightforward: OMGITWASABSOLUTELYFUCKINGINCREDIBLE!!!!!!1!!eleven!!!!

Seriously. I sat there for three hours, wide eyed, only wishing there was more. It was beautiful and brilliant. Even my husband said "They did right by it."
Networking

Why the Mediterranean Is the Net's Achilles' Heel 195

An anonymous reader writes "A spate of broken cables has brought disruption for many of the world's Web users in 2008 — and the Med has been at the center of the problems. For political reasons, the Mediterranean Sea is an Internet bottleneck through which the majority of traffic between Europe and Asia is squeezed. That traffic must run the gauntlet of earthquakes and heavy maritime traffic to reach its destination. Better and stronger cables are urgently needed to avoid a re-occurrence of the 2008 outages."
Music

The RIAA's Rocky Road Ahead 542

The RIAA's new plan to enlist ISPs in its war on file sharing, once it announced it was calling a halt to new consumer lawsuits, is running into rough sledding. Wired reports on the continuing legal murkiness of the RIAA's interpretation of copyright law. And one small ISP in Louisiana asks the recording organization, "You want me to police your intellectual property? What's your billing address?"
Image

Christmas Tree Made From 70 SCSI Hard Drives 248

Trigger writes "At our work we were decomissioning six old HP/Compaq servers to clear up space for new servers and, naturally, each server had a fairly large raid array. Instead of formatting every hard drive (would have taken weeks performing a DoD level wipe) and disposing them all together with the servers, I decided to disassemble the hard drives and recycle them into something neat. With a lot (a lot) of patience, I made this shiny Xmas tree. In total there are around 70 old SCSI hard drives, between 9gb and 18gb in size each. They were nice and chunky, oldschool style. There were quite a few different hard drive models, which is good because they each had different bits which I could use. The Xmas tree is made with parts from hard drives only except for one nut which I had to purchase for $0.39." It's good to see that this guy has plenty to do at work.

Comment Re:Treatability & Offspring Factors (Score 1) 511

Well, there's the fungus toxin route too - death cap, destroying angel, and a handful of others will, about 3 weeks after consumption, dissolve your blood cells and kidneys. No treatment for that... just don't eat mushrooms you haven't had positively identified by an expert. That shouldn't discourage you from trying to find the tasty ones, as long as you're good 'n' sure what they are :)

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"Unibus timeout fatal trap program lost sorry" - An error message printed by DEC's RSTS operating system for the PDP-11

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