Comment seen for what it is (Score 1) 431
"Maybe they fear that their creation story will be seen for what it is if pupils get to learn ideas supported evidence."
What would that be? I see nothing wrong with accepting the creation story in a theological context and evolution in a scientific context. I totally agree evolution should be taught in school over creationism since the context is science. But I also detest snide comments such as this.
Comment Web blew it all up? (Score 1) 333
'The tablet and phone app ecosystem is slowly, painstakingly reinventing everything I hated about the computer software industry before the web blew it all up.'"
Web blew it all up? Web sucks too.
Comment Why not fund Ultimate Frisbee with a Lottery Bond? (Score 1) 191
EOM
Comment Nothing wrong with paid software (Score 1) 433
Zero-cost, but certainly not Free Software; one has to wonder whether Open Source games with a "donation" build in the store would do better than proprietary games with upfront costs.
I would rather pay a dollar for a high quality game than have a dumb ad supported model. There is nothing wrong with people wanting to be paid for software they have written. What is wrong is people stealing it. Worse stealing it when it only costs a dollar.
Comment Pot calling the Kettle Black (Score 1) 302
I would say the same thing to Chuck:
http://www.ajc.com/news/nation-world/drones-at-home-raise-1460393.html
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Submission + - Facebook Data Collection Under Fire Again (computerworld.com)
The Independent Centre for Privacy Protection (ULD), the privacy protection agency for the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, issued a news release on Friday saying Facebook builds a broad, individualized profile for people who view Facebook content on third-party websites.
Data is sent back to Facebook's servers in the U.S., which the agency alleges violates the German Telemedia Act, the German Federal Data Protection Act and the Data Protection Act of Schleswig-Holstein. The agency alleges the data is held by Facebook for two years, and wants website owners in the state to remove links to Facebook by the end of next month or possibly face a fine."
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