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Comment Re:GPAs are trash, yet companies still filter on t (Score 1) 118

If companies really did filter on that, it would be self correcting. Harvard would go from "All the Harvard grads that apply have excellent grades" to "Harvard grads used to always have great academic records, now most of them don't any more, let's hire grads from somewhere else."

But one does not go to Harvard to learn how to do a job, one goes to Harvard to meet the right people and their parents. And companies do not hire Harvard grads because of what they learned there, they hire Harvard grads because of who they know, and not what they know.

Harvard (and all the ivies) is the poster child of the old boy network.

Comment Re:quotas are BS (Score 3, Insightful) 118

Yeah, and what happens when 20% + 5 hand in A quality work?

Or everyone in the class has exactly the same grade? Is that a sign of an exceptionally good teacher with a small, well motivated class? Or a sign of an exceptionally bad teacher who has trivially easy tests?

In our effort to reduce everything to a simple algorithm with no human judgement, we fail to ask what actually matters.

How does the professor choose who gets the B? Give it to the student they personally like least, or to the one they like most to avoid looking unethical? It seems like forcing an unethical choice no matter what.

I'll get modded down saying it, but sadly, at Harvard, it will be based on ethnicity and expressed political ideology.

Comment Re:The geothermal plant already exists [Re:MS Pow. (Score 2) 71

3. They're a reliable customer of power. That means that they will alway pay the bill, even if it is high. The grid operators and generation plant operators can charge them a huge premium for bulk power, then use that extra revenue to build more power plants.

I needed a good laugh, but that is exactly the opposite of how it actually works. They will be a discounted bulk price, or they'll build somewhere that will. That discount will delay the building of any new generating capacity, because the utility doesn't have the income. And while they will reliably use power, big customers generally get - because again, if they don't, they'll go somewhere that will - generous payment terms (you have to pay within 30 days of receiving at statement, they may have months, or more), and often don't live up to those.

All of those fairly standard business practices are easier to arrange in third world countries. That's why they're building there, and not in the US.

Comment Re:Conversely... (Score 0) 399

Not believing in something for which there is zero evidence

Did you read what I wrote? Did you have a grown up explain it to you?

Do you understand the difference between "not believe there is" and "believe there isn't"?

Do you understand there is a difference?

Do you?

Because either your language skills (or intellect) are so poor you don't understand that, or you're deliberately constructing a straw man. Which is it? Idiot, or dishonest? Must be one or the other.

That's why normal people don't take you seriously.

Comment Re:Conversely... (Score 2) 399

I suggest you have a grown up explain the difference between "a religion" and "a religious belief," or, more precisely, "a belief of a religious nature."

And the difference between "not believing there is" and "believing there isn't."

Do you understand there is a difference?

Comment Re:Conversely... (Score 1) 399

Atheism means not believing in any gods.

That is exactly the redefinition I was talking about.

Do you not understand the difference between "not believing the is" and "believing there isn't"?

When you lump atheism and agnosticism together, you (as I noted) make coherent conversation on the subject impossible.

But perhaps that's your goal.

Comment Re:fortunately that's not what "conscious" means (Score 1) 399

A Harvard professor went to prison for scamming his family and friends out of $600,000 to send to a Nigerian scammer. From this prison cell, he insisted it was a legitimate deal that would have worked if the government hadn't interfered.

Once a delusion takes hold, there's very little chance of breaking it.

(And Dawkins has been delusional for a long, long, long time.)

Comment Re:Conversely... (Score 3, Insightful) 399

If one distinguishes between atheism and agnosticism (many don't, but that makes it impossible to have a coherent conversation with them on the subject), atheism is the affirmative belief there is no deity (where agnosticism is more "we don't know, "we can't know" or "I don't care").

Since proof that the deity of any major religion exists, or doesn't exist, is, by definition, impossible, that affirmative belief there is not God is exactly as much an act of faith as the belief there is.

And any faith can be proselytized for. And yes, Dawkins does. He's always been a bit of a nutbar, and more than a little bit of an asshole.

(I'll be modded down for saying that first part out loud, but that's inevitable when someone challenges a person's faith. Especially from someone who is in deep deniable that it is, in fact, faith.)

Comment Re:Training is not legal (Score 2) 76

The training is not legal.

Until the Supreme Court rules on it (and they will, eventually), the question remains open.

After all, Google Won Authors Guild v. Google at trial. Many of the same arguments will apply here.

The issue to pursue here isn't what they did with the pirated material, it's how they pirated it.

(Commercial use can affect the penalties for infringement, but it's a factor in whether or not it is infringement.)

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