> things you don't actively use, like your > dishwasher, water heater, refrigerator, and freezer
The "smart meters" do nothing, except make you pay more. The cheaper rate is applied "off-peak" ie when people are normally sleeping, generally around midnight to 5 am or thereabouts. A dishwasher with timer might make sense, except that I never use the dishwasher at all since I don't have one. The refrigerator and freezer...are you kidding? Do you only use your fridge between midnight and 5 am, and the rest of the time you want it shut off? Good luck with the food poisoning. As for the water heater, I use it when I take a shower, so I wouldn't appreciate it being shut off at 10 PM or so which is about when I bathe.
The vast majority (probably 90%) of the electricity I use is when I'm awake, which generally is not midnight to 5 am. That's true for almost everybody, other than serious insomniacs who stay up all night watching TV. You don't use much power when you're sleeping, since the lights will be off and you won't be showering or running the microwave oven or computer or TV, etc. Of course, the refrigerator/freezer will still run all night, but it will use less power since you won't be opening/closing the door. If it's hot maybe you'll have an electric fan running next to your bed, but how does the "smart meter" help you with that? You turn on the fan when you're hot, or the heater when you're cold, smart meter be damned.
I'm all for saving power, but a "smart meter" is a pretty dumb idea./div>
If this was happening in Russia, the USA would be condemning this as another of Putin's "severe human rights violations." Or if it was Zimbabwe, we'd be saying "what do you expect in a banana republic."
Maybe it is harmless to humans, but I am very skeptical. The BT endotoxin does very nasty things to an insect - I would not automatically assume that it is harmless to humans just because Monsanto says so.
Adding a gene to make corn "Roundup-ready" means you will be getting a lot more of the herbicide Roundup in your diet. Although the corn itself maybe harmless to eat, I very much doubt that the Roundup it contains is benign. Perhaps those lobbyists who work at Monsanto can demonstrate how safe it is by drinking a glass of Roundup in front of the TV cameras, and then get back to us a week later if they're still alive./div>
The whole space shuttle era should serve as evidence that making space craft "reusable" doesn't necessarily make it cheaper. I do realize that the space shuttle itself was not the whole banana - it had to ride into orbit on booster rockets which themselves were disposable. But the space shuttle program was sold to Congress as a way of making space travel cheaper because the shuttle component could be reused.
Meanwhile, the vastly cheaper Russian disposable space capsules now provide the only way for humans to reach the ISS. However, supplies are occasionally sent up on disposable unmanned rockets.
Thanks to Star Wars and similar movies, we're conditioned to seeing flying "space airplanes" with wings and wheels that can take off and land under their own power. As a practical matter, this just doesn't work. One lesson we ought to have learned by now: bringing wings and wheels into space makes no sense. [ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]/div>
The whole space shuttle era should serve as evidence that making space craft "reusable" doesn't necessarily make it cheaper. I do realize that the space shuttle itself was not the whole banana - it had to ride into orbit on booster rockets which themselves were disposable. But the space shuttle program was sold to Congress as a way of making space travel cheaper because the shuttle component could be reused.
Meanwhile, the vastly cheaper Russian disposable space capsules now provide the only way for humans to reach the ISS. However, supplies are occasionally sent up on disposable unmanned rockets.
Thanks to Star Wars and similar movies, we're conditioned to seeing flying "space airplanes" with wings and wheels that can take off and land under their own power. As a practical matter, this just doesn't work. One lesson we ought to have learned by now: bringing wings and wheels into space makes no sense./div>
I couldn't agree more with you, Dom. First there a great obsession with Trump's hairdo. Then suddenly I saw a bunch of posts by anti-Trump folks including a photo of Melania in the nude. And now a painting of Donald's dick. I can only guess what the next bad-taste cartoon or Photoshopped picture will be - perhaps Trump having sex with a sheep or playing with excrement.
I realize it's very old-fashioned of me, but I think it would be nice if presidential campaigns were based on discussion of real issues.
I'm not a Trump supporter, but I have to say that many of the anti-Trump folks are willing to sink so low that they manage to make Trump look good by comparison. And that takes talent./div>
When Neil Armstrong first set foot on the surface of the Moon in 1969, he said:
"That's one small step for a man; one giant leap for mankind."
This has been quoted many times, used in films, TV shows, satires, and so on.
Unfortunately, it's use violates the DMCA, and thus it was necessary to cancel the Apollo lunar exploration program in order to protect NASA's intellectual property.
This is also why we can't send humans to Mars, unless they're deaf mutes.
However, it's not a problem with robotic exploration of the solar system, since robots can't own intellectual property...
...yet. However, after the TPP becomes law, we can at last extend copyright law to robots, and such copyrights would be for a period of the robot's life plus 70 years. Since it's difficult to determine if a robot on Mars is still alive, we could be seeing quite a few "stranded copyrights" lasting until the solar system gets swallowed up by a big black hole./div>
> Bread packaging with nanodroplets of oregano and clove > essential oils can help keep bread free of mold > -- for more than 2 weeks!
The problem with nano-foods is that the effects of consuming them have barely been studied. A few years ago there was a big fad of consuming nano-milk because it led to much better absorption of calcium (about 10 times normal), thus leading to stronger teeth and bones. Great, except that evidence started to emerge that it greatly increased the chance of developing milk-alkali syndrome, which can cause kidney failure and death.
I have no idea if nanodroplets of oregano and clove essential oils is harmful. Apparently it kills bread mold. That's nice, but does it do anything harmful to intestinal flora? Without careful testing (which probably nobody is doing), we don't know. And that is the big problem with nano-foods - we are creating new substances and haven't tested them for safety./div>
In today's free-trade world economy, the USA is clearly falling behind in manufacturing. We cannot compete with China, especially since they can use nearly free prison labor. Slowly but surely, the US industrial base has crumbled.
Happily, our political leaders have a plan to solve this problem. Newly privatized prisons can supply cheap labor. Unfortunately, in the past it was a problem because real criminals usually aren't the brightest bulbs. But now thanks to national security laws, intelligent computer-literate individuals can be made into criminals. Think of all those kids who took out loans to attend college, only to graduate and are unable to find jobs. Now, by making them into prisoners, they can become productive. Furthermore, the 40 cents per day they earn in prison factories can be directly applied to repaying their college loans.
The only thing we need to change is to get a law passed so that when they die, their kids inherit the loan. Also, we'd better get a law that denies the right to have a passport to anyone with a college loan, so that they don't try to flee the country. Better yet, make it a crime to apply for a passport if you've got an unpaid college loan - that way we can recruit more prison workers to make our proud nation competitive.
Full employment, a profitable military-industrial complex second to none, and we can give China the finger. Looks like a win-win to me./div>
Noam Chomsky was a big apologist for the Khmer Rouge during the 1980s. Even as reports of the genocide kept filtering in, Noam insisted it was all just a smear campaign by the USA imperialists. After the release of the movie "The Killing Fields" and the fact that the genocide was too obvious to ignore, Noam essentially disappeared from public view, totally discredited.
He then re-emerged with 9/11 and has been going ever since as The Big Mouthpiece. Always looking for an issue to attack the horrible racist USA, and Israel, his two objects of loathing. So I'm not surprised he'd jump into this too, this it "proves" that America is racist.
Many young people - too young to remember Noam's Khmer Rouge lovefest - just believe everything this creep says. Noam spits out book after book, all saying pretty much the same thing, it's how he makes his living. He leaches off of well-meaning liberals who don't realize they are being had./div>
This idea of building a Cape Canaveral on the moon to help us to get to Mars more cheaply is moronic. Anytime you add complexity, you add cost, and often reduce the possibility of completing the original goal of the project.
The Space Shuttle was a perfect example. It was touted as a way to save money on space flight because the craft were "reusable." But instead it proved to be expensive and unreliable, and far less capable of leaving low-earth orbit than the very successful Saturn rockets that took us to the moon. Ironically, US astronauts are now dependent on the Russians for rides to the ISS, even though the Russian-built rockets are only slightly improved versions of 1960s technology.
I can think of no better way to sabotage Mars exploration than to divert resources to building a moon colony for mining and manufacturing fuel and parts for the Mars journey./div>
I signed up with PureVPN for a year's subscription only to discover that they block torrents. The promised "refund if you cancel within 3 days" didn't pan out. Just so you know./div>
Unfortunately, the company appears to be based in the USA. I fear that using them would weaken my anonymity rather than enhance it. Too bad, since I am in the market for a new VPN./div>
Most of the world has banned NiCD batteries, but the USA still allows them. They are far more toxic to the environment than NiMh batteries. Plus the latter hold a charge longer. So I would urge everyone to go with NiMh./div>
I live in Taiwan. Our current president has been down on his hands and knees begging the USA to let Taiwan sign up for the TPP. We have a presidential election early next year - the candidates for the party that is currently leading in the polls (the DPP) is also begging to join the TPP. The likely nominee for the other major party (the KMT) has said nothing - I suspect she's cool to the idea, but she is also less likely to win because of her pro-China ideology.
Taiwan is not even a party to the current TPP negotiations. It's also unlikely we'll be admitted because China would object. It is largely due to China's objections that the DPP wants to join to TPP (sorry for all these acronyms - the DPP is the Democratic Progressive Party). The KMT (Kuomintang) leans towards China, but the current president will bend over and spread for the USA anytime, which is why he wants to join the TPP.
Why does Taiwan want to sign up for the TPP without even knowing what it says? Because the TPP is from America, the land of the free, home of the brave, home of Hollywood and Disneyland, etc. So the TPP must be good. After all, if you can't trust the USA, who can you trust?/div>
It's cold on Mars, so heat is required to keep people alive. Not to mention necessary to melt ice for water, and process the air to make it breathable.
Any attempt to send humans to Mars will mean we'd better get serious about 4th generation nuclear power. There is simply no other way to keep humans alive on Mars. The current 3rd generation nuclear power plants are not up to the task, since they are water cooled, and Mars is not exactly overflowing with water. Plus generation 4 has the added advantage of consuming its own nuclear waste.
Other alternatives for energy on Mars? Almost nothing. Fossil fuels - even if they existed on Mars - would be useless given the lack of oxygen with which to burn them. Wind power...yes, Mars is windy, but with an atmosphere less than 1% of the density on Earth, a 100 mph wind on Mars is less powerful than a one mph wind on Earth.
There is solar. But given the super cold nights, it's unlikely that enough heat energy could be collected and stored during the daytime to survive the night. Storage of solar energy on Earth is barely doable (pumped storage is most feasible), but would be far more challenging on Mars where water cannot be stored on the surface in liquid form.
So we'll have to get over our anti-nuclear allergy, or else forget about sending humans to Mars./div>
Windows XP, an operating system you can trust
Re: Old Problem
> when they caught fire. Napalm is nasty stuff.
No excuse! She should have burned to a crisp rather than expose Facebook users to such debauchery./div>
Re: Re:
> dishwasher, water heater, refrigerator, and freezer
The "smart meters" do nothing, except make you pay more. The cheaper rate is applied "off-peak" ie when people are normally sleeping, generally around midnight to 5 am or thereabouts. A dishwasher with timer might make sense, except that I never use the dishwasher at all since I don't have one. The refrigerator and freezer...are you kidding? Do you only use your fridge between midnight and 5 am, and the rest of the time you want it shut off? Good luck with the food poisoning. As for the water heater, I use it when I take a shower, so I wouldn't appreciate it being shut off at 10 PM or so which is about when I bathe.
The vast majority (probably 90%) of the electricity I use is when I'm awake, which generally is not midnight to 5 am. That's true for almost everybody, other than serious insomniacs who stay up all night watching TV. You don't use much power when you're sleeping, since the lights will be off and you won't be showering or running the microwave oven or computer or TV, etc. Of course, the refrigerator/freezer will still run all night, but it will use less power since you won't be opening/closing the door. If it's hot maybe you'll have an electric fan running next to your bed, but how does the "smart meter" help you with that? You turn on the fan when you're hot, or the heater when you're cold, smart meter be damned.
I'm all for saving power, but a "smart meter" is a pretty dumb idea./div>
banana republic without the bananas
At least Zimbabwe has bananas./div>
The devil is in the details
Adding a gene to corn to make it juicier or tastier is probably harmless.
Adding a gene so that the corn produces its own pesticides is now common (it's known as "Bt-corn"). Here's a description of it:
https://entomology.ca.uky.edu/ef130
Maybe it is harmless to humans, but I am very skeptical. The BT endotoxin does very nasty things to an insect - I would not automatically assume that it is harmless to humans just because Monsanto says so.
Adding a gene to make corn "Roundup-ready" means you will be getting a lot more of the herbicide Roundup in your diet. Although the corn itself maybe harmless to eat, I very much doubt that the Roundup it contains is benign. Perhaps those lobbyists who work at Monsanto can demonstrate how safe it is by drinking a glass of Roundup in front of the TV cameras, and then get back to us a week later if they're still alive./div>
(untitled comment)
Meanwhile, the vastly cheaper Russian disposable space capsules now provide the only way for humans to reach the ISS. However, supplies are occasionally sent up on disposable unmanned rockets.
Thanks to Star Wars and similar movies, we're conditioned to seeing flying "space airplanes" with wings and wheels that can take off and land under their own power. As a practical matter, this just doesn't work. One lesson we ought to have learned by now: bringing wings and wheels into space makes no sense.
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]/div>
Reusable rockets are more expensive
Meanwhile, the vastly cheaper Russian disposable space capsules now provide the only way for humans to reach the ISS. However, supplies are occasionally sent up on disposable unmanned rockets.
Thanks to Star Wars and similar movies, we're conditioned to seeing flying "space airplanes" with wings and wheels that can take off and land under their own power. As a practical matter, this just doesn't work. One lesson we ought to have learned by now: bringing wings and wheels into space makes no sense./div>
Re: It never ceases to amaze me
I realize it's very old-fashioned of me, but I think it would be nice if presidential campaigns were based on discussion of real issues.
I'm not a Trump supporter, but I have to say that many of the anti-Trump folks are willing to sink so low that they manage to make Trump look good by comparison. And that takes talent./div>
Why the Apollo program was really cancelled
"That's one small step for a man; one giant leap for mankind."
This has been quoted many times, used in films, TV shows, satires, and so on.
Unfortunately, it's use violates the DMCA, and thus it was necessary to cancel the Apollo lunar exploration program in order to protect NASA's intellectual property.
This is also why we can't send humans to Mars, unless they're deaf mutes.
However, it's not a problem with robotic exploration of the solar system, since robots can't own intellectual property...
...yet. However, after the TPP becomes law, we can at last extend copyright law to robots, and such copyrights would be for a period of the robot's life plus 70 years. Since it's difficult to determine if a robot on Mars is still alive, we could be seeing quite a few "stranded copyrights" lasting until the solar system gets swallowed up by a big black hole./div>
nano-foods
> essential oils can help keep bread free of mold
> -- for more than 2 weeks!
The problem with nano-foods is that the effects of consuming them have barely been studied. A few years ago there was a big fad of consuming nano-milk because it led to much better absorption of calcium (about 10 times normal), thus leading to stronger teeth and bones. Great, except that evidence started to emerge that it greatly increased the chance of developing milk-alkali syndrome, which can cause kidney failure and death.
I have no idea if nanodroplets of oregano and clove essential oils is harmful. Apparently it kills bread mold. That's nice, but does it do anything harmful to intestinal flora? Without careful testing (which probably nobody is doing), we don't know. And that is the big problem with nano-foods - we are creating new substances and haven't tested them for safety./div>
We need more prison labor
Happily, our political leaders have a plan to solve this problem. Newly privatized prisons can supply cheap labor. Unfortunately, in the past it was a problem because real criminals usually aren't the brightest bulbs. But now thanks to national security laws, intelligent computer-literate individuals can be made into criminals. Think of all those kids who took out loans to attend college, only to graduate and are unable to find jobs. Now, by making them into prisoners, they can become productive. Furthermore, the 40 cents per day they earn in prison factories can be directly applied to repaying their college loans.
The only thing we need to change is to get a law passed so that when they die, their kids inherit the loan. Also, we'd better get a law that denies the right to have a passport to anyone with a college loan, so that they don't try to flee the country. Better yet, make it a crime to apply for a passport if you've got an unpaid college loan - that way we can recruit more prison workers to make our proud nation competitive.
Full employment, a profitable military-industrial complex second to none, and we can give China the finger. Looks like a win-win to me./div>
Re: Noam jumped the shark a long time ago.
He then re-emerged with 9/11 and has been going ever since as The Big Mouthpiece. Always looking for an issue to attack the horrible racist USA, and Israel, his two objects of loathing. So I'm not surprised he'd jump into this too, this it "proves" that America is racist.
Many young people - too young to remember Noam's Khmer Rouge lovefest - just believe everything this creep says. Noam spits out book after book, all saying pretty much the same thing, it's how he makes his living. He leaches off of well-meaning liberals who don't realize they are being had./div>
Cape Canaveral on the moon
The Space Shuttle was a perfect example. It was touted as a way to save money on space flight because the craft were "reusable." But instead it proved to be expensive and unreliable, and far less capable of leaving low-earth orbit than the very successful Saturn rockets that took us to the moon. Ironically, US astronauts are now dependent on the Russians for rides to the ISS, even though the Russian-built rockets are only slightly improved versions of 1960s technology.
I can think of no better way to sabotage Mars exploration than to divert resources to building a moon colony for mining and manufacturing fuel and parts for the Mars journey./div>
blocked torrents
based in USA
Re: How was it done?
Of course, hacking could have been via security holes in php programming, rather than the OS and server software.
As someone very sceptical of systemd's security, I also wonder if that could be the source of the breakdown./div>
How was it done?
NiCD should be banned
because America
Taiwan is not even a party to the current TPP negotiations. It's also unlikely we'll be admitted because China would object. It is largely due to China's objections that the DPP wants to join to TPP (sorry for all these acronyms - the DPP is the Democratic Progressive Party). The KMT (Kuomintang) leans towards China, but the current president will bend over and spread for the USA anytime, which is why he wants to join the TPP.
Why does Taiwan want to sign up for the TPP without even knowing what it says? Because the TPP is from America, the land of the free, home of the brave, home of Hollywood and Disneyland, etc. So the TPP must be good. After all, if you can't trust the USA, who can you trust?/div>
nuclear power
Any attempt to send humans to Mars will mean we'd better get serious about 4th generation nuclear power. There is simply no other way to keep humans alive on Mars. The current 3rd generation nuclear power plants are not up to the task, since they are water cooled, and Mars is not exactly overflowing with water. Plus generation 4 has the added advantage of consuming its own nuclear waste.
Other alternatives for energy on Mars? Almost nothing. Fossil fuels - even if they existed on Mars - would be useless given the lack of oxygen with which to burn them. Wind power...yes, Mars is windy, but with an atmosphere less than 1% of the density on Earth, a 100 mph wind on Mars is less powerful than a one mph wind on Earth.
There is solar. But given the super cold nights, it's unlikely that enough heat energy could be collected and stored during the daytime to survive the night. Storage of solar energy on Earth is barely doable (pumped storage is most feasible), but would be far more challenging on Mars where water cannot be stored on the surface in liquid form.
So we'll have to get over our anti-nuclear allergy, or else forget about sending humans to Mars./div>
More comments from Paraquat >>
Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by Paraquat.
Submit a story now.
Tools & Services
TwitterFacebook
RSS
Podcast
Research & Reports
Company
About UsAdvertising Policies
Privacy
Contact
Help & FeedbackMedia Kit
Sponsor/Advertise
Submit a Story
More
Copia InstituteInsider Shop
Support Techdirt