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176
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 06, 2012, 10:45 AM »
Deflation is a horrible thing. It sounds great when you first hear about it, but think about it: Deflation means that by simply sitting on a bitcoin doing NOTHING, the value of your savings increases. What if everybody did this? Believing that a deflationary economy could work is similar as believing in perpetual motion. Though, I admit that it is very intriguing to dream about outwitting nature or math.

A functional economy must favor those that take action more than those, who don't. That is why a mild, predictable inflation is necessary. Deflationary economy favors hoarders instead of producers of goods and services. In time, deflation drives active entities out of market and therefore the bitcoins in their current form cannot become widespread. They would kill every industry segment that would depend on them.

It may not sound that way, but I am a big fan of decentralized digital currencies for all the reasons mentioned by Renegade. I just don't believe in the current Bitcoin system.

Sorry was posting a message when this post was written.

I think this warrants a separate topic. Digital currency has a longer life span than actual currency. Almost everything digital is. So long as the process is rolling, the currency exists. There's no deadline for the mine.

Yes, deflation is still horrible but every digital concept does nothing. It's just parked there.

The only time it moves is when it cannot be maintained anymore and shuts down like a website or it goes the opposite way and someone finds a way to make it work...only then is it an actual economy with industry segment depending on them, yes?

177
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 06, 2012, 10:40 AM »
Deflation is a good thing. It increases the value of savings without resorting to usury - keep in mind that usury has been punishable by death in many places and at many times. (Usually by people who understood what it actually does.) Inflation destroys people's savings. The value of the US dollar is about 4% of what it was 100 years ago, thanks to inflation.
-Renegade

The problem here I think is that there's a difference between deflation and devalued currency that no one is willing to use and of those who plan to use them would find more value in immediately hoarding them as unlike gold mining, the real work being stated for Bitcoin is only as real as digital is real which it isn't really that real at all and only exists as real so long as everyone is digitally informed. (Like pc viruses aren't real to many people so many don't update their AV despite real objects being shut down.)

Which in turn busts the myth of:

The only thing Bitcoin needs is wider adoption my more merchants. If everywhere you went, you could use Bitcoins... would you use them? I sure as heck would.

Humans IMO really really need a huge major crisis to adapt. In fact this is history repeating itself. If everywhere you went you could barter, why would you use currency that has been hijacked by the concept of private banks? Right now why haven't people jumped on the idea of timebanking even?

Buying porn collection is one thing. Being removed from the economy is one thing.

...but how many are actually staking their priorities based on buying porn and how many are being blacklisted from the economy? There are probably more cancelled and banned private torrent accounts than e-commerce accounts and many people would still strive to return to those private torrent sites if that means exclusive access to a commodity at a lower price.

IMO at a beginning of a currency's life, inflation is more important than deflation because the idea is you want people to quickly adopt/quickly desire/quickly trade their own selfishness at the thought that the supply is of such value that it would be less desirable to save up for it. A bubble or gold rush if you may.

It also belies the fact that cash may be anonymous but salaries are not which all major currency needs to have: poor people who are much more willing to view them as money than as currency.

Cash anonymity is of low value to people who have to worry about gaining income in an economic crisis or a person worrying about actual privacy intrusion not just being blacklisted in a club or people who really need true anonymous transactions being done in anonymous settings and anonymous cash is the least of their worries.

Plus what about the other unknown factors anonymous cash brings? Some have even gone so far as calling Bitcoin illiquid. What does that really mean for people who want to utilize cash? Emphasis on the utilize. Not the hoarding, stocks world playing, off-shore money bank transferring sport that rich people play in?

178
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 06, 2012, 09:25 AM »
Not necessarily. We have to also accommodate the fact that bitcoin to non-economic people sound like digital storage of currency so while it may have some value, it is not a true competing currency and will never be.

With the right concept, that definitely opens up the possibility for bitcoin to turn small shops into banks much as prepaid cards are used in some poorer countries when it comes to cellphone text currency. An idea that won't impede the grander idea of Bitcoin as a hoarding material but would promote some movement in the actual currency.

As a concept, it actually has more long term business value to a mom and pop shop than say being promoted and advertised on a bunch of GroupOn clones to garner customer loyalty. Another way to look at it is that it's a Frequent Flyer-program without requiring the recipients to be frequent or discount/sales seekers. Such a concept will always have the potential of targeting a group of credit card addicts who are used to paying through handing a card.
179
General Software Discussion / Re: instant linux on winxp
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 06, 2012, 09:19 AM »
Can you expand more on how it helps you with web-banking?
180
Living Room / Re: Kiss Your Keyboard and Mouse Goodbye With The Leap
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 05, 2012, 06:15 PM »
Shucks! And just when it looked like we'll be saying hello to our keyboard and mouse.
181
No offense mouser but It's kinda surprising to hear a programmer/coder express such a question.

Isn't that the meta question all newbs have to ask ourselves every single day we live being ignorant of coding?  :P

The entrepreneur's answer is probably not just to make your game unique but compete with the existing product.

What was that saying? Know your enemy and you know yourself?
182
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 05, 2012, 01:18 PM »
Since nobody is using them, they will not become popular...
-vlastimil

I don't understand money but isn't this less of a deflationary problem than a general adoption problem? That is to say, they are not popular so barely anyone uses them and since nobody uses them/knows about them globally then it creates an identity problem not founded in most currencies that ride on state authorization?

If that is the case, then wouldn't the deflation problem be more of a feature than a flaw?

That is to say, if no one uses them, no one can get rich off them so most of the early adopters are actually neutralized from adopting the same hoarding approach they might adopt in other forms of currency.

Yes, that also means there's a high chance bitcoin is never adopted by buyers and sellers but as long as the deflation factor exists, there's also a strong chance of preventing early adopters from being hoarders and so long as that mentality does not foster, the only problem of Bitcoin is adoption instead of market manipulation pre-mass adoption.

Not that I use Bitfloor but I think this is a blessing in disguise. Bitfloor is part of a market manipulated concept to create a crevice for the Bitcoin flow and so long as people use such services and then be burned by such services, it helps bridge the trauma process for understanding why the lack of such an appearance are an improved feature for Bitcoin as a currency compared to the traditional idea of needing a form of exchange/storage service.

Also I think as with any currency, the problem is not government backing but people backing. I don't mean people adoption either. I mean the idea by which a certain concept becomes a "Duh!" principle to a large group of people that the existence of such a concept becomes accepted "as is" no different than say a God or a plant.

Government backing would just lead to bitcoin banking where not just government but online services try to paint Bitcoin as something it is not. On the plus side, government backing means dumb citizens like me must reconfigure our idea of transactional currencies especially where most poor people's concept of money coming from the ATM as a salary provider.

Also I think in this case of simplicity, government and private banks being lumped together is a much simpler version than trying to separate government from private banks especially in a time when there are many people who still believe in the idea that there is a heroic individual that government cannot bribe away. In other topics like the Federal Reserve, yes, separate gov from private banks but Bitcoin? I'd rather have my decentralized vs. oligarchy confusion cleaned up first and I think most of the world especially those living in the backwards part of the world would love to have that cleared up first too when it comes to Bitcoin.

183
I think you could get more feedback if you do a mock extended play youtube of the game as soon as possible. (Before the videos meant for the Kickstarter page.)

Basically just feature input stuff like implementing some of the suggestions listed and being able to see how they actually change from the default game in real time. Even the bad ideas and why they are bad ideas for the game.

Some people like me are slow on rule books and not many people have time for a pdf. A progressive video would be much faster to capture the progressive gist of the game. It may even get you faster feedback towards a gameplay mode.

I think because it's based on real items, the video could be pulled off even as a chat room recording. The idea is really just like having a blog as obvious as it sounds. Seeing a game on a daily to weekly basis is often an underrated aspect of a card game. You think a game is fun under a certain setting but turns out there's a huge exploit or once more players are into it, the original mechanic isn't as sound as it is and the game progresses into something it's not. You really want to have "pseudo-professionals" more than beta testers as soon as possible for gameplay mode for card games.

Edit:

Oh yeah, I'm not really familiar with foods respected by different nations but certain cards could gain prestige if you sort of could have a special version of those food like california oranges or something. It doesn't have to be overpowered, just that it allows a certain gravity towards a gameplay mode rather than a subjective judgement.

Another idea is the ability to fuse ingredients that are not available in the default set of cards. The fusion doesn't really have to have a special property other than the allowance for someone to escape a trapped predicament. Like maybe certain foods can't be turned into edible paper but if you have rice, a player can "summon" edible printer even if it's not in the actual design of the rule book.
184
General Software Discussion / Re: instant linux on winxp
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 05, 2012, 11:59 AM »
Don't quote me on this but:

Lucid Puppy is dubbed Woof and it is fully compatible with the Ubuntu software repositories, allowing users to install any application or package that is available in the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx) operating system.

http://news.softpedi...u-10-04-176685.shtml

It's actually old puppy news and is still not as Windows user friendly as possible to test but an average Linux user would probably find it simple enough to understand. It just really depends whether you consider Ubuntu's programs to really be Ubuntu native apps and how rare are the software we're talking about here. Plus Qemu is still Qemu and Puppy is still Puppy. It's not going to look like Ubuntu even if you can put the software in it.

http://bkhome.org/woof/index.html

For a long time I have dreamt of a "magical script" that could download packages of some other distro, cut them right down to Puppy-size, then build a Puppy Linux live-CD -- and do all of this totally automatically.

 Finally free of front-line responsibility for managing the Puppy project, I had time to pursue this dream. The result is Woof.

 This is what Woof does:

Download another distros packages, so we don't have to host them anywhere (although in some cases the distro may not have a suitable package so we still need some of our own PET packages).

Totally automatially build a Puppy live-CD iso file, with your choice of packages.

Totally automatically build the 'devx' SFS file (which is how Puppy provides support for C/C++/Vala/Genie/Fortran compiling).

Support multiple distros.

Easily upgrade to a new version.

The end result is Puppy Linux
185
General Software Discussion / Re: instant linux on winxp
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 05, 2012, 09:16 AM »
I'm surprised QemuPuppy didn't work for you.

It's been awhile since I tried it but it is the most thought free Linux OS I've ever tried.

No knowledge required. Not even what resources to cut when a virtualized window is open. Just copy paste to usb and click like a regular portable app.
186
This was news back when mouser wrote that piece but unfortunately (no offense to IainB's effort) but I think any good analysis is better off predicting the death of Reddit or why Mixx might be wrong/right/would still fall despite turning into Chime.In using the death of Digg for reference.

It's not like movies like the Social Network didn't already hint at how most startups are designed to sell big before failing rather than being successful. Considering the amount of cash Digg generated for it's owners, it didn't really went wrong.

Edit:

I guess it's not really fair for me to post this but I've been frustrated by the direction of online communities and I'd rather most of these pretend gutsy analysis share risky predictions instead of explaining away stuff with hindsight at the safety of their case studies tower.
187
Doesn't automate anything unless specifically directed to.

Haha. That reminds me of the reason why I barely use rss readers anymore.

Nope. Haven't really found any app that does that.
188
Depends on what it means by "should".

For example a lot of people in the review section missed the point of this but technically if feedreader should work as "scrape your history" rather than "manually add/keep an opml" file then it would work exactly as someone thought it would:

https://chrome.googl...akkpdobmhedohgnmhpbp

Course with Remus everything is topsy turvy. Not just the feedreader if that's what you mean.
189
Living Room / Re: 50 Shades of Gray
« Last post by Paul Keith on July 14, 2012, 08:35 AM »
That in itself is an achievement though considering most have not heard of any erotica. It certainly has invigorated some of the talks about erotica's place in mainstream news.

http://articles.time...rilogy-indian-market

http://www.digitaltr...ul-digital-parodies/

Also:

As 30-year-old fan Jennifer Norling of San Francisco put it: "There's humor, there's love, it's intense. It's pretty much everything a woman would want in her love life."

But, please, don't call it "mommy porn."

Though James said she doesn't want to be "a social commentator," she isn't a big fan of the term some journalists and pundits have used to describe her books' erotic content and female fan base.

"I think it is disparaging. It's actually quite misogynistic," she said. "Women like sex. If it's done well, it's really quite good fun."

http://today.msnbc.m...7363/ns/today-books/

Oh and it's twofold so neither is wrong. The first was the e-book phenomenon but....

much of the success of the “Fifty Shades” trilogy may simply reside in its packaging. After acquiring English rights in March, Vintage Books released digital editions of all three books, followed by print versions in April featuring relatively tame covers compared with bodice-rippers of yore. Where one might expect two milky bodies intertwined, the covers of books one and two feature a gray silk tie and a bedazzled face mask.

“We felt that discreet, tasteful covers certainly would being in new readers who may not have bought the books with more explicit covers,” Vintage Books spokesman Russell Perreault said.

The formula seems to have paid off, and since then, the romance industry has been keen to reap the benefits of judging a book by its cover. Not long after the series took off, Harlequin and other publishers began reissuing old titles with toned-down covers.

“What may have tipped the scale for the ‘Fifty Shades’ trilogy in particular are the nondescript covers. For whatever reason, the classic ‘clinch’ covers on a lot of romance novels tend to carry a stigma of being ‘old-fashioned,’ so the covers on ‘Fifty Shades’ may have made the books more approachable for a larger range or readers,” RT Book Reviews Editor Audrey Goodson said.

“Certainly, there are some who might prefer to read romance on the privacy of an e-reader, but what’s really refreshing for me to see is the large number of women reading ‘Fifty Shades’ on the subway and at the coffee shop. It simply proves that while covers may play some role in readers’ preferences, it’s what’s between the covers that really counts.”

http://wtvr.com/2012...its-runaway-success/
190
Considering that Linux is lacking a powerful feed reader and this installed without a hitch, Remus is shaping up to be one of the most powerful replacement out there.

This looks like it has the potential to compete with RedNotebook, Thunderbird and a Linux RSS reader at the same time.

Thanks for sharing.
191
Living Room / Re: 50 Shades of Gray
« Last post by Paul Keith on July 14, 2012, 08:11 AM »
Nope. I'm probably one of the earliest DCers to have known it probably cause sex fiction is *cough* one of my interest and so I was trying to make a vague innuendo to the answer.

Still, the Q was for ladies and no way will you catch me answering this thread straight even though the straight answer is Twilight sex.  ;)
192
Living Room / Re: 50 Shades of Gray
« Last post by Paul Keith on July 14, 2012, 07:43 AM »
Gray is great because unlike white it's not so bright for your monitor and unlike black, it's not some hipster reverse psychology pretending to be much clearer and friendlier to the eyes while making every letter seem bold.
193
If I'm not mistaken, you can use ifttt.com to send e-mail to Evernote but that just puts you at the mercy of Evernote.

Dropbox works in a similar manner I think minus the reply part since there's no reverse post new note button.

I could be sorely mistaken though. I just thought the tech is possible since Evernote has an e-mail feature and ifttt.com has the pipeline.
194
DC Gamer Club / Storyteller
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 06, 2012, 12:54 PM »
storyteller locked cells-thumb-478x281-4125.jpg

Recently found this on the recently opened gaming forum, Gamerspot: http://gamerspot.net...eads/storyteller.85/

Developer's Site: http://www.ludomancy.com/blog/

From the same thread, a poster shared this link explaining what the game is about:

http://indiegames.co...ller_daniel_ben.html

As illustrated in the photo above, players are first given some text and are tasked with arranging icons to fit the story. Hovering over the icons below the strip gives players some hints as to how the icons can be useful to convey the meaning of the text.

Throughout the game, players will be introduced to a handful of characters at several stages in their lives and with several different personalities. These add chronological and psychological variables that must be manipulated to tell the story correctly. Storyteller also contains a few inanimate objects such as a treasure chest and cage to associate a wealth or imprisonment status, and I feel Benmergui could easily add several more objects to make for new story-puzzles before releasing the game.

Later in Storyteller, Benmergui introduces more mechanics like having to place text bubbles in the story. Even further on, certain comic cells become locked, preventing any text or characters from being changed. It's like being given all the details of one part of a story while having to construct the parts around it.

Benmergui announced last year on his blog that the game would take about a year to complete, putting it at a late June 2012 release, for at least PC, Mac and iPad. While players have to wait a little while longer to experience Storyteller, Daniel Benmergui is going to share more about the game in an upcoming interview.


195
DC Gamer Club / Re: Quantum Conundrum
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 06, 2012, 08:08 AM »
Thanks. It looks pretty interesting. Can't say it's something I've ever seen from Square but I don't keep up with their games anymore.

The look and design looks less like Portal and more like Evil Genius. The plot has me worried though. Seems like it's going to be a desolate game again. (I've only played the Portal flash game though and didn't finish it nor get to the middle.)

Maybe I'm the minority in this but any else feel like Portal's physics can best be pushed to an improved hybrid action/puzzle game like a 3d version of Wild 9 with better storytelling or PSI-OPs with a better lesson?
196
Living Room / Re: Beyond Gamification. Designing up Maslow’s Pyramid.
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 06, 2012, 07:59 AM »
Sorry, I don't see it. How did it seem like the discussion was:

"You can move beyond gamification by designing up Maslow's pyramid." (OWTTE)

When did this happen???

Plus the example above wasn't a proof of failing to communicate IMO.

It was more of a proof of failing to clip quotes correctly.

You omitted and ignore all the supporting elements of ...life does not end at all... took it into isolation and therefore by replying to it in isolation, you easily misunderstood it.

How can this compare to the above where suddenly you've combined gamification with designing up Maslow's pyramid?

If you do an entire search for the posts in this thread, you'll find that this came out of nowhere. It's an entirely new context that you've seen yet cannot be substantiated by any direct quotes, clipped or not clipped.

Worse, how can you turn this back on me and say:

yet I refuse to drag us into the gutter with a "Tu quoque" (Latin: "you also") in response to your ad hominem.

When the very reason you're post is not as antagonistic is because you removed/did not include the part about how I sunk into a state of ahamkara?

I don't mind people leaving as I still haven't improved my communication skills but right now, you're not doing a neutral service. By leaving at this juncture after having raised an entirely new direction yet again out of nowhere, you're basically dragging me into the gutter by portraying me as the one who offended you by mistakenly assuming you for being antagonistic yet instead of clearing up those misconceptions, you omit them entirely and bring up a new line of statement without any indication where you ended up having this conclusion with the exception of bolding up seems.

Then you continue to spend your time both repeating what you said (after once again repeating that there's no point in discussing because we seems to come off like we're repeating ourselves) and then railing on this new context that you saw. Sir, I don't mean no offense, but just stating that you don't intend to drag us into gutter is not a keyword for a spell that won't drag us into the gutter especially when it is only you that isn't dragged beneath your last words.
197
Living Room / Re: Is Linux just a hobby?
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 06, 2012, 07:39 AM »
No the arguments can't be moot because,

1) productivity is not just based on speed (i.e. time management)

2) speed is also based on the user's knowledge and skills with utilizing certain aspects of a feature (say mouse clicks vs. hotkeys)

3) You were the one who lumped the other side as all not using measured results so you raised the issue. By calling it a moot argument, you would be calling your own original statement a moot argument.

4) Blind tests are more important than being opened to measured results. In fact, while opening up is important to users less willing to experiment, it is also deadly for more intelligent users who might be biased towards a positive result.

5) A small increase in productivity can't make up for the longer time to adopt a new piece of interface and Linux by default is plagued with other areas that are just as time consuming besides the DE/WM.

Mind you you're wrong. It doesn't require any advanced user to keep up with developments to know how dynamic Linux WMs can be. You're showing your faulty prejudices here.

You can't even figure out something as basic as I think Linux WMs are dynamic so just because I raised the issue of Gnome 3 you immediately assumed:

Sure it is not for you because you're not even keeping up with the changes in the WM and you are not even sure how those DE's are changed or from where they are forked and for what purpose.
-mahesh2k

...when caught on this you went back on your statement and rephrased the question into:

How many of them were more productive and eye candy or say polished at the same time? There was nothing unique in them when they were just mimicking the traditional desktop features that you can find on any other desktop. Problem with linux haters is that they're open to apple or windows innovation in UI or some design crap but if open source community does any innovation there is criticism for the sake of it, atleast criticism out of no strong points.
-mashesh2k

Problem with people with prejudices is that they jump to conclusions.

1) Desktop features can still mean many things depending on how the usability goes. It's not traditional vs. new but you're trying to lump those to paint a straw man where you can then argue against "criticism out of no strong points".

2) Many Windows user do use things like BB4Win.

3) If Gnome 3 was polished, there wouldn't have been as much complaints.

4) You talk all these good game but really the only example you have stated so far is Gnome 3 and the only thing you have hidden behind so far is Gnome 2. I don't deny that you may be more knowledgeable and aggressive at keeping up with news of development but it's like a mainstream fan talking about mainstream stuff and then railing all about polish and then flip flopping and talking about productivity all without defining much of them and when asked for proof after raising their measured data argument, then goes back on their statement and just say the argument is moot and you have to be open to the argument at the same time.

Sorry. Your vague line is contradictory. You can't say you follow developments only to say it's all about productivity only to then say it has to be polished only to then say some other things when the context was whether Linux simply has dynamic WMs/DEs. You're making new criterias as you're caught when you know my original statement is true so long as you don't make statements as as you go along:

Even in pre-Gnome 3 days there were many WMs/DEs unique to Linux especially when you factor in other micro-apps that change how windows are managed but are not full shells.

Some proof:

http://gnome-look.or...w.php?content=107488

http://gnome-look.or...w.php?content=101604

As small as these were, these were generally what got people excited about windows management in general and you didn't have to be a techie or a Linux user or even a constant development news stalker to grasp your mind around that these were fresher concepts that didn't need to hide behind what's new or old or mainstream.

The fact is you've already listed the facts:

MATE came after Gnome 3 because G3 is bad/was not polished. If you want to soften it up then fine: Gnome 3 is mediocre/above average/average.

MATE came after Gnome 3 because people wanted Gnome 2 but there was no way to go back to Gnome 2 on Gnome 3.

Hence from the beginning it was bad. Again, two words forced change. You want to make it semantic with things like settings, fine: forced default change.

It doesn't matter what new things you keep bringing up. You were the one who first replied to me, I clarified what my post meant based on your initial statements, and I simply replied based on the information you wrote at the time.

Not only that, some of the new issues you bring up are pretty sketchy. MATE never retained gnome 2 completely. That was one of the arguments why people constantly railed on Gnome 3. They said MATE is not just doing it for them.

...then some of the things you insert are flat out malicious. Secretly injecting the word superiority so that you can argue that Gnome 3 is superior for example:

Your asssume that MATE retains the superiority of old interface with that fork

I'm not saying you're intentionally planning it out but come on! Show a little sincerity here will you?

Is it really that hard for you to get the hard fact that Gnome 2 came before Gnome 3 and MATE only gained in popularity after because Gnome 3 wasn't doing it for certain people?

Is it so hard to understand that MATE's maturity is linked to the maturity of Gnome 3 because MATE's maturity is linked to getting back the maturity of Gnome 2?

Some of the new stuff you're bringing up are just so weird. You realize how close you sound like a cult member when you say things like:

open source community always cares for people

It's all over the place. Again, I probably won't get you because you're accusing me of making shit up and by showing you where you're making shit up it's probably coming off like now I'm the one accusing you back but you have to see some of the obvious faulty jumps to logic you're making up.
198
Living Room / Re: The universe is geometrically flat?
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 05, 2012, 07:54 AM »
Maybe I don't understand the meaning of "geometrically flat" but I thought it was a known fact that the universe was flat. :huh:

I remember explaining to a friend about the flatness of the universe back in 2006. She, too, was having trouble comprehending it. I thought I was doing a bad job explaining it, but maybe it is the concept itself that is difficult for some people to understand?

I dont understand it - but I dont know anything about it.
Does it mean there is no third dimension? (I know there are probably other dimensions, but that's hard to grasp too.)

There will always be a third dimension as you are able to witness a third dimension all around you.

I don't trust WMAPs honestly. All these measurements rely on some faith that what is currently being measured is the same across the entire span of the universe. It'd like trying to measure the entire human body as a tick who judges the universe based on the layers of skin it can penetrate. It might not even know whether it's on a dog or a human so how can it take that into account?

I think another flaw about the flat universe is this thought that something which does not need energy would then introduce concepts within it that does need energy. It's on the same level as saying you're measuring "the magical output" behind an infinite scroll that writes itself and using the current space that the infinite scroll occupies as a measuring stick, you determine the characteristic of the magic that occupies that scroll and then make the mistake of measuring it through that. Such a method won't even get you near the architect of the scroll maker or replicate the magical output in the same manner. i.e. You still wouldn't be able to produce another flat universe until you figure out what replaces that zero total energy and if you do, it might not be considered energy, but it still would be utilized like an energy/engine for another infinite flat universe in order to establish the original theory but like a duplicate copy of an infinite scroll, it doesn't necessarily guarantee that both infinite scrolls are created through identical methods.

To shorten: Even if someone knows about the universe, all they can do is measure it based on their assumed parameters which is based on the surrounding environment they are able to measure in. How then can anyone in that situation even know what the "basic" parameter is not just for a different planet but for the entire universe?
199
Living Room / Re: Is Linux just a hobby?
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 05, 2012, 07:36 AM »
Stating quick tasks does not equal measured results either FYI especially when it comes to productivity.

Stating Linux is very dynamic on WM/DE changes front these days is also not much of a statement. Dynamic compared to what? Even in pre-Gnome 3 days there were many WMs/DEs unique to Linux especially when you factor in other micro-apps that change how windows are managed but are not full shells.

Mate is related to Gnome 3 because Mate was a reaction to Gnome 3. You know it's bad design when someone needs to recreate an old interface. Not only that but you can't hide behind the amount of time it needs since you didn't specify such an amount and you're railing on people not providing any measured result. These two are contrary.

This is how Mate relates to Gnome 3. If Gnome 3 waited for MATE's maturity then there would have been less complaints. Instead it was force change. A change that wasn't just forced upon Linux newbies but forced upon long time Gnome users.

It is also disingenuous to both call the OP's words drivel and then to rely on his drivel to redefine the meaning of hobby according to him. Drivel means you can reinvent what he really meant when he said of hobby to support your own bias on what drivel really means. It also goes counter to you ignoring his drivel. Again this is a strawman rebuttal. You omit crucial words such as "Ifs", you would rather side with what you consider drivel than what the common lay person understands as hobby or even what that article defines as unprofessional forced change, you are merely supplanting your own bias instead of debunking anything.

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Living Room / Re: The universe is geometrically flat?
« Last post by Paul Keith on June 05, 2012, 05:01 AM »
Even if one were to know the universe, I doubt it can be depicted by geometry. (How would you measure a black hole with any form of math besides probability?)

Still...interesting article. Thanks.
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