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Comment What about heat? (Score 1) 245

Let's say that Elon is right and the economics of space-based solar energy make the expense of launching into orbit worthwhile. Let's also say that we manage to avoid the Kessler Syndrome that Elon's companies have largely helped to make more dire.

Compute generates heat. Lots and lots of heat. And heat is difficult to dump in space. How does he plan to get around that not insignificant engineering problem?

I'm not saying it's impossible. I'm saying it's not going to happen in three years.

Comment Bell & Howell (Score 1) 523

Way back when, Apple hadn't yet established relationships with public schools. School administrators didn't know how to classify computer equipment, anyway. The Bell & Howell company came to the rescue: they were vendors of audiovisual equipment like film projectors. Bell & Howell agreed to let Apple use their connections with school districts in exchange for the computers being rebranded as Bell & Howell equipment, in Bell & Howell livery.

This is why the first computer I ever got time on was an all-black sleek Apple II+ that looked like it belonged on the Death Star.

The original Bell & Howell Apples are now almost completely forgotten about. But man, do I ever have fond memories of them.

See one for yourself here.

Comment Re:"crypto" vs. "cryptocurrency" (Score 4, Insightful) 50

I came to say exactly this. The editors of this site should know their audience. Their audience is the tech sector, not the financial sector. The White House trying to "oversee crypto" in the sense of the financial sector -- that is, overseeing cryptocurrencies -- is great news. There's a lot of BS in cryptocurrency and it really needs oversight. On the other hand, the White House trying to "oversee crypto" to the tech audience comes across as trying to oversee cryptography, which smacks of the kind of BS the Clinton Administration tried to pull with key-escrow and the Clipper Chip - all of which was really, really bad.

Comment Re:Darwinism At Work (Score 1) 417

Unfortunately Darwin won't select just for being anti-vax. In areas with a lot of anti-vax sentiment, many hospitals are being overwhelmed by COVID-denying patients who treat the medical staff like shit. Consequently medical staff are getting overworked and burning out. Consequently hospitals are closing to new patients that don't have COVID. Consequently people are dying of other things that a hospital would be able to treat if they had the beds and the staff bandwidth.

This is going to get a lot worse before it gets better, and your best chance of surviving what's coming is to get vaccinated and move to an area that voted for center-left parties (since there seems to be a correlation between conservative sentiment and COVID denialism).

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If computers take over (which seems to be their natural tendency), it will serve us right. -- Alistair Cooke

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