$ jlc (10,306)
Private Message- 251Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 6 months ago to Watch this all-electric ‘flying car’ take its first test flight in GermanyThere is also a dead space along Hwy 1 in the mid-coast of California. (I camp there.) So, yes, I certainly agree. (It would be nice to know that if something went wrong while I was camping, I could call for help...no such luck.)
Jan - 252Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 6 months ago to Ancient carvings show comet hit Earth and triggered mini ice ageThis is a discussion that is interesting. To the best of my knowledge, the pyramids were built in the 3rd millennium BC. (http://www.aeraweb.org/projects/how-o...) My argument is not based on 19th C assumptions, but on 20th C radiocarbon dating. I will readily agree that the pyramids could be a few hundred years older, but not 10K years older. If you have any sources for scientific dating that shows the pyramids are millennia older, I would like to take a look at it.
Gheorghiu's interpretation of the carvings at Gobekli Tepe is an interesting hypothesis - but it is only that. Schmidt, the original excavator of the site, does not endorse Gheorghiu's interpretation.
Jan - 253Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 6 months ago to Ancient carvings show comet hit Earth and triggered mini ice ageWe really, as a culture, need to do a better job of handling scientific disagreement. Continental drift, Lamarkism/Lysencoism, blank slate/genetic inheritance, pre-Clovis settlement of the Americas...all of these issues have been politicized and one side or the other declared anathema.
People have to learn that everything is a hypothesis; nothing is settled. Change is normal in science and disagreements need to be seen as part of the usual process.
I have read about the astronomical figures in Gobekli Tepe and think that is possible, but certainly not clear. And the cometary event is far from 'confirmed.
Jan - 254Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 6 months ago to Watch this all-electric ‘flying car’ take its first test flight in GermanyI think that a good parallel is that Africa and S.Am will not have to go through the phase of 'stringing miles of copper wire on poles' in order to have telephones. With this type of development, 'building networks of roads and bridges to access countryside' will similarly not be necessary for areas that go into development post roadless-travel vehicles.
This is also tangentially related to the Fermi Paradox.
Jan - 255Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 6 months ago to Watch this all-electric ‘flying car’ take its first test flight in GermanyWhy not ground travel? Even if this were restricted to near-surface use, flying at 10' above the ground over unpaved (but perhaps marked or electronically tagged) surfaces would be very useful.
It would mean that you could ride a fence line or monitor livestock or build a roadless house in the wilderness.
Jan - 256I would like that, Brett. You can email me directly at "jlc@schuylerhouse.com". I am interested in reading the details of your expo.
Yes, we are still in SoCal. (I was stationed at Mather for 2.5 years, though, so Sac qualifies as 'old stomping grounds'.)
Jan - 257I have not been posting for the last...almost a year, I guess, so I am not as aware of this as you are (and I don't do social media). I think that your observations are likely, though. I could counter that I occasionally post on io9 (flamingly liberal site) on matters of my interest, which might give them the 'ghost' impression of me.
Jan - 258I am sometimes dismayed to find that my tendency towards paranoia, which I keep sternly controlled, is not only correct but inadequate.
Jan - 259I thought you might be interested in this article on 'where California businesses move to'.
http://www.spectrumlocationsolutions....
Jan - 260Crow epistemology is interesting, but not what I was referring to. In facial research, a composite image made from 10 pics is found to be selected as more attractive and any individual; a composite made from 100 pics is selected as more attractive than the 10-fold composite, etc. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Average...)
If there is a composite language created from all of the languages extant, then it might actually be better at expressing all of the concepts we need, and it will probably be more logically constructed. Whether or not it is suitable for humans to use is, as you point out, another question entirely.
Jan - 261It is a tough decision. I have been looking at moving to Texas for a number of years now. The problem is that while Texas is definitely better than Calif, it is 'not enough better' (yet) to merit the dislocation of a move. For example, Texas would not have been able to 'protect' me/us (the company) from Obamacare regs.
I am curious about where people chose to go because it informs me of a potential choice as well.
Even in CA, the center is 'red' - not enough to offset the coastal population centers but still a lot of silent people who have been bullied into thinking that they are hicks and therefor not worthy of having opinions. One of the things I am looking for is for this element of the population to 'start talking'. It is possible that a collateral benefit of Trump's upcoming presidency will be that, even in Calif, the 'cool liberal kids' will now find people disagreeing with them. I am hoping that this might bring about a change in the political atmosphere.
If Trump can protect all of the US from the EPA and Obamacare, and enforce the 2nd amendment, that will give all states a bit of a breather.
Jan - 262Where will you go?
Jan - 263Well, the key to this article is the Harvard/Northwestern study. If that study is inaccurate, there are correspondingly more or less guns and/or gun owners.
I suspect that, like Heinleinian anarchists there are 'big mouthed gun owners' and 'small mouthed gun owners' (not sure if I am paraphrasing Heinlein accurately - corrections welcome); it is going to be a lot easier to count the former than the latter.
Jan - 264This makes me wonder about the structure of the internal language. We have all seen the studies where the perception of beauty is enhanced by averaging tens/hunderds of pictures into a composite human face; now we can postulate a situation where a hundred human languages are averaged to make a single artificial human language - one that might be better than all existing natural languages.
Jan - 265Rocky -
I looked into oral colloidal silver a few weeks ago and did not find anything scientific that substantiated all the claims made for it. Topical silver salve is, on the other hand, a known and tested remedy.
If you use the oral form of colloidal silver, you might want to do it in addition to conventional medical treatment.
Jan - 266Uh. Can you provide me with a scientific article or clinical trial that shows that? I can find where Vit C kills Mycobacterium spp in Vitro and where it provides benefits (lower chemotherapy time; greater resistance against initial infection) in live beings (humans or pigs) but I do not see any way to consider it a 'cure'. If it is, then this is 2M people per year whose lives are saved for very little money - Vit C is cheap.
Jan - 267I think I can help you here. There is a Gerontology Research Group out of UCLA which has an email list to which I subscribe. Some of the people on that list may be interested in squeezing your genetic code for all that it is worth. Please send me a private message if you would like a contact.
Jan - 268Posted by $ jlc 9 years, 1 month ago to Big Pharma's Manufactured Epidemic: The Misdiagnosis of ADHDI have a slightly different slant on this problem. Whilst I acknowledge that the facts of overdiagonsis are probably correct, I think that a significant portion of this is not due to evil pharma but because people go to the doctor expecting a 'magic pill'.
We have known for decades that doctors (a) typically prescribe antibiotics for viral infections, and (b) almost never do a culture and sensitivity to determine a causative bacterial organism and what antibiotic it specifically is sensitive to. This is not because Pharma is trying to sell more antibiotics or because the doctor is lazy-bad: It is because the patient genuinely expects to go home(right now!) with a pill that will make everything better. He looks at the doctor with puppydog eyes (and will bitch like hell if not given a prescription). The doctor gives him what the patient wants. This results in antibiotic resistant bacteria, which is not a good thing.
Similarly, the non-ADHD kids who are problem children are probably 'helped' by the prescription. "... clinical trials found that therapeutic doses of amphetamine and methylphenidate result in modest yet unambiguous improvements in cognition, including working memory, episodic memory, and inhibitory control, in normal healthy adults." So, it does the magic it is supposed to do, which encourages doctors to prescribe it and people to take it.
I do not have a problem with adults taking Ritalin if they want to - It is not my job to run their lives. I do think that the psychiatric path of least resistance that results in prescribing drugs to non-ADHD kids is unethical and should be investigated as such.
Jan - 269Ok. Count me amongst the officially amazed.
Jan - 270Is this real? Does anyone have info indicating that this is not just a gif? What is the technology?
The turns look like the Laws of Physics are being dissed; the scenes with both the flier (at the very top of the screen) and the jet skis in them look suspicious.
Jan - 271Posted by $ jlc 9 years, 1 month ago to SEC investigating Exxon Mobil on climate change, accounting practicesBut one does have to take into account that the purpose of this investigation is not to 'right a wrong' but to enforce political correctness. Exxon Mobil has dared to publish data and expectations that do not agree with global warming - and that is not to be continuanced by the liberal body politic.
This is about conformity as much as regulations or accounting.
Jan - 272Take what blarman and johnpe and several others advise to heart: Get back on the horse and ride it again. I failed my first two tries; On my third try, I looked so nervous that the examiner took a Valium out of his desk drawer and offered it to me. I was offended enough by this to overcome my nervousness and I did just fine. Ha!
I generally 'test well' but certain tests for physical abilities seem to bypass that and I have trouble. Persist!
Jan - 273I have researched this several times, as I am approaching that age. I found a citation at one point that indicated that Clinton succeeded in linking Social Security and Medicare such that you could not receive payments on the former unless you signed up for the latter. This quote was in context of 4 or 5 people who were trying to take this to the Supreme Court for judgement - but I have not subsequently been able to find that information. (I think this is a key word problem, not that the info is not there.)
I too do not want to sign up for MCare but I resent that I will not see any return on the money I have been forced to invest in MCare and SS if I do not sign up for both. I want my money back!
I too do not intend to retire, which sounds boring and fraught with peril, so I will continue to have my work insurance - but apparently I am not allowed to not let MCare interfere with me medical life.
If you find additional info, please post it. I will look again to see if I can find the mandatory MC-SS requirement and post the link if I do.
Jan - 274I have done modestly well by buying my current home and my previous house from the 'white elephant' discard heap. What I could bring to the table that other people could not is 'imagination'. I think that this applies to the future of 3D printers.
Having the capability to create things (let us assume the Star Trek 'replicator' level of capability of printers that Temaklos specifies) does not magically endow 95% of humanity with the imagination or inclination to create their own products. What you 'sell' is your ability to imagine a product that other people would like - like selling a book: The book contains letters and words that are in the common domain, but it has proprietary plots and characters that are copyrighted.
Anyone can stroll up to a replicator and say, "Tea. Earl Grey. Hot." but if you want the unit to reproduce a new gourmet dish, you buy the right to that recipe from the chef who created it. Similarly, you can order your shipsuit for free, but if you like the latest fashion that the actress wore on the Holovid, you buy the design from the studio.
What 3D printers add to physical society is what we are currently experiencing with information technology and news: the dissolution of gatekeepers. It used to be that the news you heard/saw/read was filtered through a few major 'gates' - now we have people posting their videos directly on the Net and there is nothing that social censors can do to stop them.
I am looking forward to an increase in the sophistication of 3D printers that allows me to be free from the fetters of 'what people in Paris tell me I am supposed to want'. I can do a much better job imagining my world than they can. And if other people like my ideas, I will be glad to sell them to those people.
Jan - 275The liberals I have spoken with correctly do not care if Hillary is guilty of various crimes: All they care about is that she will enact the programs, policies, and philosophies they believe in. Since these policies involve a lot of 'taking' and a belief that 'Since I am one of the correct-thinking elite, rules do not really apply to me.' it is immaterial to them if Hillary is 'first in taking' on a personal level as well.
I think that she will probably win. The only chance that she will not is if the polls reflect a bias of conservatives being asked less often/ being less willing to be surveyed. If that is the case, then there might be enough secret voters to tip the scales, even if a thumb is on it.
Jan