Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:Consequence culture? (Score 1) 182

This is indeed consequence culture, but working exactly the opposite way to the way you intend it. The consequence of the US increasing the hostility of its border crossings is that it sees a drop in international visitors. For some in the US, that's a feature, not a bug; but not for the organisers of this event or for hoteliers or others who rely on international visitor income, and not for the games industry etc.

Comment Re:Seriously ...? (Score 1) 156

I am going to engage with you in good faith, although I suspect I may regret it.

You are arguing that if someone writes a post that "is a simple statement of the poster's perspective on [an] issue", then that in itself should not be cause for vilification. But a poster's perspective can be absolutely obnoxious. Their perspective may be a Nazi perspective or a pro-paedophilia perspective or a pro-slavery perspective. Just because something is said calmly or in a measured way does not make it morally neutral.

And people ought to be free to respond to a statement in whichever way they please, including expressing vehement opposition. Anything less and you are asking them to self-censor so that one voice, the original, gets heard at the expense of others.

Your position is muddled and not thought through.

Comment Re:Seriously ...? (Score 1) 156

It is truly incredible that you think that what the OP was referring to in that picture were the *masks*, as opposed to, I dunno, the giant guns and tactical gear. You are so deep in the rabbit hole. And also hilarious that you point to those countries and think we don't fucking notice that you don't point to a Nordic country, or Spain, Italy, the UK, Germany...you're so pathetically transparent.

Comment Re:Riiigggghhhhtttt... (Score 1) 29

That's a very silly way of thinking. It's not like this robot will be used for only one operation, and the costs of that surgeon are a lot higher than just a plane ticket.

Seriously, why would you assume that the people who bought this thing are gibbering idiots incapable of running the numbers to ensure they get value for money? The people who will make the decisions will include the CFO, the CMO, the CMIO, senior surgeons, etc. They understand maths and finance and budgets and medicine and the cutting edge of tech and have bought and chosen not to buy kit many times before.

Also, you pulled that maintenance figure out of your backside, didn't you? There's no way it costs anything close to a million bucks a year to service. You're just making up a story to help yourself feel better. Prove me wrong by showing links to the numbers.

Submission + - BYD releases Blade 2.0 with 5min charging & 600+miles range (evpowered.co.uk)

shilly writes: BYD has released its newest LFP battery, which will launch in markets outside China this year in the Denza Z9GT, a high-end shooting brake EV. The new battery delivers range of 621 miles on the CLTC cycle (about 440 miles on the EPA), can charge at 1500MW, works well at very low temperatures, and is extremely thermally stable. BYD is also rolling out new "Flash" 1.5MW chargers with 20,000 being deployed globally this year.

(Speaking personally, I could think of nothing worse than driving 400 miles, stopping for only five minutes, and then driving another 300 miles, but this seems to be very important for some people).

Comment Re:Riiigggghhhhtttt... (Score 1) 29

I would say “both-and” rather than “not even”, but yes, volumes really matter. This was a key concept behind the reorg of stroke services in London (done by the incredible and formidable combo) of Ara Darzi, Ruth Carnall and Hannah Farrar, back in the day when we had half-decent investment in the NHS. It saved hundreds of lives a year.

Comment Re:He was not hiding. (Score 1) 197

Oh really? There's plenty of authoritarian regime who have been unable to prevent collapse in the face of an external attack in recent years: Syria, Libya, Iraq, Serbia, etc. A few managed to survive or resurge, eg the Houthis in Yemen and Taliban in Afghanistan. But it's a pretty short list. It's also not obvious that the path to survival was a hardline crackdown.

Comment Re:But why? (Score 1) 197

I’m mot incorrect; what’s true is that the stats are highly contested. The stat saying almost all Iranians are Shia Muslims comes from the Iranian regime. It ignores the very obvious fact that many Iranians are actually Zoroastrians, and there are significant other religious minorities including Christians and Bahai, although much persecuted. When you look at independent surveys like GAMAAN, the stats are startlingly different. I also note that 50k out of 75k mosques have closed down.

The most likely truth is that many Iranians are allowing themselves to be nominally labelled as Shia because anything else is too challenging in an Islamist society.

You’ve also oversimplified Shia demographics, eg Azerbaijan is majority Shia.

Slashdot Top Deals

How often I found where I should be going only by setting out for somewhere else. -- R. Buckminster Fuller

Working...