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Comment Re:Ah not to worry. (Score 1) 135

My son (8) has a peanut allergy. I asked his allergist about the cause and was told me that there's no clear consensus. There is apparently lots of evidence pointing to environmental causes and also lots of evidence pointing to genetic causes, while the actual truth probably has elements of both. It's also possible that different people have different causes.

In a way he's lucky because he's repulsed by even the smell, and his reaction seems to be to vomit instead of going onto anaphylactic shock. I'm very aware though, that the next time could be much worse, so I do carry his epinephrine as a matter of routine. We also have taught (and continue to teach) him that he needs to be careful about what he eats (eg: ask the wait staff / cook, read the labels).

Comment Re: Excuse me? (Score 1) 148

Perhaps I was just a little too young to really get into Myst, but The 7th Guest really grabbed my attention! I never managed to beat the microscope puzzle, but it doesn't affect the story much to just skip it.

The song at the end (Skeletons in my Closet) is also excellent!

Comment Re:"The sky is killing! The sky is killing!" (Score 1) 36

The airspace is controlled by the FAA but as soon as the drone touches the ground the jurisdiction changes.

IANAL, but I fully expect to see future /. articles announcing laws/ordinances to effectively limit drone delivery, and I also expect some of them to hold up under scrutiny.

Comment Re:Do any of those actually require *censorship*? (Score 1) 214

I didn't know so I checked.

According to Merriam-Webster censor is:
  • (noun) a person who supervises conduct and morals: such as:
    1. an official who examines materials (such as publications or films) for objectionable matter. Usage example: "Government censors deleted all references to the protest."
    2. an official (as in time of war) who reads communications (such as letters) and deletes material considered sensitive or harmful.
  • (verb) to examine in order to suppress (see suppress sense 2) or delete anything considered objectionable. Usage example: "censor the news"
  • (verb) also: to suppress or delete as objectionable. Usage example: "censor out indecent passages"

This differs slightly from this definition, but in both cases it looks as if there is no comes-before requirement for an act to be censorship. Perhaps it was the case before the information age but no longer, it appears.

Submission + - Signal app experiencing worldwide outage (ndtv.com) 2

JoeyRox writes: The Signal app network is down worldwide. Users are able to log in but can't send or receive messages. When contacted about the outage, Signal's COO Aruna Harder said "We have been adding new servers and extra capacity at a record pace every single day this week, but today exceeded even our most optimistic projections. Millions upon millions of new users are sending a message that privacy matters, and we are working hard to restore service for them as quickly as possible." Signal was downloaded by 17.8 million users over the past seven days, a 62-fold rise from the prior week. Brian Acton, who co-founded WhatsApp before selling it to Facebook and then co-founding the Signal Foundation, said that the expansion in recent days had been "vertical".

Comment Inside Man (2006) (Score 1) 893

I'm a sucker for heist movies, and Spike Lee made one where you end up rooting for the cops AND for the robbers by the end. Denzel Washington, Clive Owen, Jodie Foster, & Christopher Plummer give memorable performances, and yet so few people know about it.

The only people I know who have seen the movie are: 1) the friend who told me about it and 2) the friends/family I've talked into watching it with me. I don't usually watch movies more than once, but I've seen this one at least half a dozen times.

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