Comment Re:A better solution: ?? (Score 1) 118
The description sounded a lot like it was after there was an embryo. How about the ones that DO have an embryo, I assume nothing else is done with that?
Or, maybe I'm very confused.
The description sounded a lot like it was after there was an embryo. How about the ones that DO have an embryo, I assume nothing else is done with that?
Or, maybe I'm very confused.
Anybody want to buy an old SGI workstation? No, seriously, there's on in my basement...
It is a shame there's no incentive for code dumps with at least zero liability and there's no mechanism for using things abandoned by the copyright holder and, more generally, that our copyright is so onerously long that the prior point matters. But... I'm not at all sure old workstations are in my top 10 important cases of software where that matters.
I still lament the outliner called "More" from around 1991 MacOS that I have still never found the equal of.
One of those comments I hope is a troll... because that this is earnest would be pretty depressing.
You seem to be missing the general concept that the amount of anything matters. How about I give you a penny and you give me $10,000? Sound good?
Yes, you cannot create and drive around an electric car with inherently zero CO2 emissions. I have no idea how you jump over the idea that the gas car might have many, many, many MORE emissions.
There are several reasons electric and hybrid are inherently more efficient.
Maybe there is somewhere with horrendously managed coal power and extremely well managed ICE, but that seems unlikely.
This sounds great.
I'm kindof uncomfortable calling this mineralisation because this is a mineralisation-DEmineralisation technique. It dilutes the definition of mineralisation as an alternative way to store carbon with probably greater resiliency to leaks.
It's akin to equating e.g. nuclear power to hydrogen -- one is an originating source of energy for humanity that can't store it and the other is a way of storing energy that doesn't not source it. Maybe using hydrogen as a mechanism to store and distribute nuclear power makes sense, but any comparison between them doesn't.
(Hydrogen fusion would be, but everybody calls that "fusion" and not "hydrogen"
On the one hand, I don't think that's a very good definition of trolling. On the other hand that might be the best definition you could hope to plausibly classify things as in a regular research study, so maybe that's why they chose it. (Although of course even in general, "no reason" almost never exists; it's a question of who is doing the discerning, how far they can see, and how remote it is to whatever topic is at hand)
I'd describe classic trolling as something like: communication whose primary intent is covertly eliciting an asymmetric negative emotional situation for others with disregard for the personal authenticity of the communication. Most commonly this is also an asymmetric investment (a large response compared to the trolling) saying things the troll doesn't even particularly believe, and the negative emotional situation is frustration and exasperation that can sometimes border on anger, usually community-viewable. I don't think it requires true intent so I would also include "for no reason" -- any communication consistent with that intent unless it shows clear evidence of alternative rationales.
There are several things it's not, at least to me:
2) conventional bullying and/or personal attacks. This is almost by definition overt rather than covert. [Often it seems it does have a reason too, but that's murkier.
]
3) Any means to a discernible end. e.g. Trying to draw out someone's authentic responses to primarily show the community truth about them -- perhaps to publicly uncover lies or inconsistencies or unpopular positions to lower the social status of that person. I think it has to be about generating their emotional reaction for its own sake. Provoking a bully to show they are a bully is, instead, a means to an actual end.
4) It's common to have SIWOTIS (Someone Is Wrong On The Internet Syndrome) where you have a strong tendency (perhaps some compulsion) to try to correct people who are egregiously wrong about something and you perceive have some hope that you can convince them to come around to the "correct" position. This makes a lot of sense if this correction is "please don't drink gasoline" but isn't limited to that. This is the easiest way to become a troll VICTIM because it's the easiest thing to exploit: Just strongly assert something concrete that's very wrong.
5) There are a lot of versions of attempting to have topical discourse that can start to look a lot like it, but I would disqualify anything that is using earnestly held beliefs.
5a) Discussing random topics on the internet that perhaps have no practical value and seem like a waste of time... describes a lot of the Internet. They're not calling that trolling, but for context I'd argue the "no reason" part would still apply here.
5b) Doing the above, it's relatively easy to end up in an argument with a stranger on the internet, even quite accidentally, because you're saying things in front of many strangers without a lot of historical context about who each other are or a lot of present context about what's going on right now. I would not consider this trolling, just a common red herring.
5c) And of course even you didn't do it explicitly it's certainly even easier to end up in an escalating argument if you have unmanaged anger issues or are a bully etc. That's being an assh*le, but I would not consider it trolling.
thank you
Way down in the tangents, but I'm pretty confused by the basic concept of NFC having computing power.
Can you catch me up?
It's a quote from the source... BUT it's egregiously distorted.
The next sentence is "However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound "
The journalist wrote that... followed immediately by ""However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound ""
Submitter cropped it.
also, omg my sig is so old. Guess I haven't posted in a while.
Personally I don't really understand anyone who is anti-nuclear in a world where we still burn coal, throwing literally more radiation into the air not to mention everything else. Leading visionary climate scientists like James Hansen support nuclear and it's even more true as we become more and more literally on fire.
And the article discusses all that in reasonable ways...
The crop of the quote is egregiously misleading. It wildly distorts the summary of the linked article to give it an anti-nuclear bias the article absolutely does not have.
The way this is clipped implies that der spiegel is saying nuclear power is immoral.
The very next sentence in the linked article is "However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound " and they then proceed to discuss that. This quote isn't stopping at the end of the article's summary or even a new section -- it's just clipped to mislead.
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Someone could have a reasonable discussion about the value of nuclear because values are subjective. But this summary is objectively wrong -- it objectively does not portray the der spiegel article is purports to summarize.
Even if you somehow think nuclear is not an improvement in stopping climate change... you're not making a very good argument by misleading quotations.
The OP is both very misleading (because of MSFT) and simultaneously true. But lots of active instances of IE will continue to exist on Win10/11.
MSFT has created a very confusing, misleading situation here that I had the unfortunate necessity to untangle so now I'm going to share here. Info below is all per MSFT.
On Win11 IE has never been enabled. On Win10 it'll be disabled tomorrow. In both cases it's only the standalone browser that is disabled.
But "IE" is the name MSFT gives to the standalone browser AND ALSO the identical name they give to older programming APIs e.g. in
So it'd be more accurate to say this change is "hiding the ability to invoke IE unless it's embedded in another piece of software". What's left really is more or less IE, even though it is definitely not "the IE standalone browser"
Their poor naming leads to confusing situations where even after you have supposedly totally disabled IE the IE control panel setting for whether JavaScript can run in IE is still controlling apps that embed IE. It's all very intuitive *eyeroll*. You also absolutely get e.g. an IE taskbar icon when this happens -- even on Win11! because this all works on Win11.
Edge's IE mode is totally a thing, but it's a DIFFERENT thing. Comments about about embedded IE have nothing whatsoever to do with IE Mode. Both embedded IE and Edge's IE Mode separately exist, even in Win11. The embedded IE user agent doesn't match EITHER standalone IE or Edge.
Here are comments stepping around embedded instances...
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftechcommunity.microsof...
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdocs.microsoft.com%2Fen-...
I see two basic ways to do this, not just one.
Big Tunnel: A tunnel to somewhere. This requires, as you note, a machine acting as a multiplexer somewhere.
Microtunnels. Many client machines using VPN tunnel software. This does not require that close machine, but DOES require installing VPN on many clients.
Microtunnels are possible, and definitely recommend a vendor who does that. You're basically just getting a package deal on 2345235 little VPN accounts.
The Big Tunnel could just be 3 lines of ssh and cron, but you do need a box on your side and a remote box.
It seems to me that what the OP really should use is a mature framework e.g. Drupal rather than rolling your own regardless of language choice.
BUT since this thread has evolved into a language choice I'm going to respond to that. I'm also going to come right out and say that this post will be very unpopular on Slashdot. [Hopefully I won't get sunk by too many mods saying -1 "opposite of my fanaticism." ] ColdFusion has a pretty narrow applicability, but it's ideal for the OP.
Con: ColdFusion per se is not free in source or beer. (allthough there are ports) BUT shared hosting is only infinitesimally more expensive, so this is an issue only if you'relocked into a certain host or you are goign to have aan armada of servers. [The local dev version IS free.]
Con: ColdFusion is not very popular. There's still a LOT more usage than most people seem to perceive, but it's obviously not up there with e.g. PHP. [Commercially ColdFusion missed its window. In ~1998 database driven web applications were relatively novel and it was awesome. In 2001 it was comparatively unstable at higher traffic values. In 2002 they threw out the underlying server product and now it's an interpreter plugin that runs on any J2EE server you want it to.]
Pro: CF is a mature, modern flexible, powerful, rapid development toolchain for making websites. Especially as a novice in web apps it's going to support you. It'll let you worry about your app and not the minutia and has automatic capabilities for all sorts of things. It does the right thing by default but lets you override if it you need to. [Aside: These advantages are rather similar to what's advertised for RoR which IS free... If anyone can tell me some awesome thing RoR does for a website that CF doesn't beyond the two "cons" I've listed above I'd really like to know -- so far no one has been able to give me a good one. I'm excluding outdated concerns e.g. that the 1999 version of CF wasn't OOP.]
Pro: CFML is a pretty ideal language for generating HTML because as a markup language the flow of your HTML remains obvious and readable. [PHP eventually adopted the ability to use a similar paradigm.]
I've heard some people say that CF is what Java Server Pages should've been.
Pro: CF IS Java. (server) You're running on a Java server and the things you already know about running that remain true.
Pro: CF IS Java. (language) Even moreso, you can literally inline Java code into CF code (much like old school ASM into C). In my time writing CF I've done this literally twice:
a. to use Java's sleep() [Note: I do not recommend using "sleep" when generating a webpage, but it was an exceptional circumstance.]
b. to use Java's image manipulation libraries from CF templates.
I'm not saying CF is ideal for all circumstances. Merely being non-free rules it out of a lot! But it really is -- at least in my opinion -- "how to build a web app on a Java server" and that has a lot of suitability as a platform for the OP.
If they can make penicillin out of moldy bread, they can sure make something out of you. -- Muhammad Ali