• Remember "Bit-Slice" Chips ?

    From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 7 02:33:09 2024
    Latter 70s they were The Thing.

    Needed a 64/128 processor in an 8-bit world, then
    bit-slice processors were yer fix.

    They were the basics of a CPU - but wired so you
    could physically attach them to MORE processors.
    All the necessary flags/registers/etc could be
    expanded wider and wider.

    You could buy 2-bit, 4-bit, slice processors and
    physically build something much stronger.

    I even remember hearing of them mentioned in some
    cheap TV series - some geek with his own R2D2
    clone that was WAY too capable for the era.

    TODAY ... well ... you can make a 64/128 on like
    a 1cm die - really party on a 2cm die.

    Bit-slice now - you'd loose far too much in
    the interface wiring. Really no longer a
    solution - unless maybe you need a 1024/2048
    processor :-)

    Kinda the same goes for 'Transputers' - parallel
    solution using ultra-speed (for the day) serial
    links between many processors to coordinate
    things between all the chips (they could have
    a shared memory area too).

    Older tech limitations spawned FIXES ... there
    were many. Some were very *clever* - might even
    have future apps.


    --
    033-33

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 7 14:29:03 2024
    On 07/12/2024 07:33, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Latter 70s they were The Thing.

    Needed a 64/128 processor in an 8-bit world, then
    bit-slice processors were yer fix.

    They were the basics of a CPU - but wired so you
    could physically attach them to MORE processors.
    All the necessary flags/registers/etc could be
    expanded wider and wider.

    You could buy 2-bit, 4-bit, slice processors and
    physically build something much stronger.

    I even remember hearing of them mentioned in some
    cheap TV series - some geek with his own R2D2
    clone that was WAY too capable for the era.

    TODAY ... well ... you can make a 64/128 on like
    a 1cm die - really party on a 2cm die.

    Bit-slice now - you'd loose far too much in
    the interface wiring. Really no longer a
    solution - unless maybe you need a 1024/2048
    processor  :-)

    Kinda the same goes for 'Transputers' - parallel
    solution using ultra-speed (for the day) serial
    links between many processors to coordinate
    things between all the chips (they could have
    a shared memory area too).

    Older tech limitations spawned FIXES ... there
    were many. Some were very *clever* - might even
    have future apps.


    As an engineer it always amazes me on how such little things the success
    of a technology depends.

    Aircraft could have been invented hundreds of years earlier if a
    lightweight power source had turned up, but steam wasn't good enough,
    and it took oil petrol or gas to make the power sources light enough.

    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good
    enough to replace IC.

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    Yet the advance of photolithography and quantum theory made the
    integrated circuit a possibility, the Cold War mandated the need for
    small light electronics for missiles, and here we are.



    --
    If I had all the money I've spent on drink...
    ..I'd spend it on drink.

    Sir Henry (at Rawlinson's End)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 7 18:35:53 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 07/12/2024 07:33, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Latter 70s they were The Thing.

    Needed a 64/128 processor in an 8-bit world, then
    bit-slice processors were yer fix.

    They were the basics of a CPU - but wired so you
    could physically attach them to MORE processors.
    All the necessary flags/registers/etc could be
    expanded wider and wider.

    You could buy 2-bit, 4-bit, slice processors and
    physically build something much stronger.

    I even remember hearing of them mentioned in some
    cheap TV series - some geek with his own R2D2
    clone that was WAY too capable for the era.

    TODAY ... well ... you can make a 64/128 on like
    a 1cm die - really party on a 2cm die.

    Bit-slice now - you'd loose far too much in
    the interface wiring. Really no longer a
    solution - unless maybe you need a 1024/2048
    processor  :-)

    Kinda the same goes for 'Transputers' - parallel
    solution using ultra-speed (for the day) serial
    links between many processors to coordinate
    things between all the chips (they could have
    a shared memory area too).

    Older tech limitations spawned FIXES ... there
    were many. Some were very *clever* - might even
    have future apps.


    As an engineer it always amazes me on how such little things the success of a technology depends.

    Aircraft could have been invented hundreds of years earlier if a lightweight power source had turned up, but steam wasn't good enough, and it took oil petrol or gas to make the power sources light enough.

    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good enough to replace IC.

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    Jesus christ... don't get me started! In the mainstream press people
    _still_ write and say that 100% solar or 100% wind is the only viable way.
    I cannot bear to read it! And when I ask how much a battery storage system would cost that could store all the power for a country, for x days, there
    is never an answer.

    Maybe, just maybe, it might be possible to have 100% solar in africa
    somewhere, but it would still need storage capacity for the night.

    Yet the advance of photolithography and quantum theory made the integrated circuit a possibility, the Cold War mandated the need for small light electronics for missiles, and here we are.





    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sat Dec 7 18:24:17 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there
    is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    Jesus christ... don't get me started! In the mainstream press
    people _still_ write and say that 100% solar or 100% wind is the only
    viable way. I cannot bear to read it! And when I ask how much a
    battery storage system would cost that could store all the power for
    a country, for x days, there is never an answer.

    They are ignoring the "storage problem".

    100% solar is possible, provided either:

    1) you ignore the storage problem and are willing to accept no power
    when the sun is not shining (note, interpret broadly enough to
    encompass "14+ straight overcast days" as well)

    2) are actually talking about "some day" far in the future when energy
    storage tech. has advanced to the point that storing enough excess
    solar to continue running past those days when the sun isn't shining
    is feasable (and affordable)

    But today, no, it is not feasable today, other than on a very small
    scale (single household) to be 100% solar and have sufficient storage
    to cover for some amount of "sun isn't shining" days.

    Maybe, just maybe, it might be possible to have 100% solar in africa somewhere, but it would still need storage capacity for the night.

    Nighttime is the big one. Until the world's electric grids are
    sufficiently interconnected that power generated in the Saraha Desert
    at noon can be shipped to the other side of the world where it is dark
    to supply power to that location there *must* be some storage, somehow,
    to account for night/twilight/a run of 14+ overcast days/etc.

    And, even if the world's electric grid was interconnected sufficient to
    ship solar power from Africa to the other side of the globe, we measly
    humans would simply use those interconnnects to try to enforce
    geopolitical rules on other locations we don't like by attempting to
    deny them "night time power".

    Yet the advance of photolithography and quantum theory made the
    integrated circuit a possibility, the Cold War mandated the need for
    small light electronics for missiles, and here we are.

    Throughout history, a great many of human's technological advances have
    came about because the "war machine" needed a more efficient way to
    strike fear in their opponents.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 7 19:01:09 2024
    On 07/12/2024 17:35, D wrote:
    Jesus christ... don't get me started! In the mainstream press people
    _still_ write and say that 100% solar or 100% wind is the only viable
    way. I cannot bear to read it! And when I ask how much a battery storage system would cost that could store all the power for a country, for x
    days, there is never an answer.

    Maybe, just maybe, it might be possible to have 100% solar in africa somewhere, but it would still need storage capacity for the night.

    In Africa, the greatest need is for light at night.

    Followed by refrigerators, and clean water.

    Then comes music sound systems and the TV and mobile phones :-)

    Back in the day the Cuban Marxists told the township boys 'come the
    revolution, you will all have swimming pools and a Mercedes.

    A Zulu friend from Soweto asked me to comment.

    I got in touch with someone in the then apartheid government who said
    'at the rate we are going there won't be enough water for every home to
    even have a flush toilet'

    30 years later, that is the reality of South Africa. And it's 30 years
    of communist government.

    There is barely enough clean water to drink.

    The only reliable power is one nuclear power station and a lot of coal
    ones. And the educated white 'Liberals' are wanting 'renewable energy'

    Sure by putting thousands of Rands of batteries in your house and solar
    panels on the roof you can survive a hot African night without power,
    and you need to because the grid load sheds every day in winter.

    But who will pay for it? The townships are effectively powered for free
    by people attaching crocodile clips to the overheads. And it is too politically sensitive to actually stop them...

    As usual after popular revolutions the next thing is those who grab
    power fucking everything up completely in a blaze of greed, nepotism and paranoia.


    --
    "A point of view can be a dangerous luxury when substituted for insight
    and understanding".

    Marshall McLuhan

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Sat Dec 7 19:12:44 2024
    On 07/12/2024 18:24, Rich wrote:
    Nighttime is the big one. Until the world's electric grids are
    sufficiently interconnected that power generated in the Saraha Desert
    at noon can be shipped to the other side of the world where it is dark
    to supply power to that location there*must* be some storage, somehow,
    to account for night/twilight/a run of 14+ overcast days/etc.

    When I did all these calculations years ago the answer that came up
    every time was 'nuclear is simply cheaper, more reliable, more self
    sufficient and in every way better'

    And, even if the world's electric grid was interconnected sufficient to
    ship solar power from Africa to the other side of the globe, we measly
    humans would simply use those interconnnects to try to enforce
    geopolitical rules on other locations we don't like by attempting to
    deny them "night time power".

    Or the Russians would cut the cable anyway, just for kicks.

    --
    “The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to
    fill the world with fools.”

    Herbert Spencer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From BlueManedHawk@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 7 15:15:30 2024
    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    <snip/>

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    <snip/>

    I've heard rumors of alternative technologies for energy storage being
    explored besides storage of electrical energy. One example would be a
    device that stores energy not as electrical energy, but instead as
    potential kinetic energy, storing the energy by lifting a large mass and releasing it by dropping the large mass. That particular one is one
    that i doubt will ever get off the ground, but the same basic principle
    of converting electrical energy to some other, more convenient-to-store
    form of energy is behind the ideas i've seen floated around.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to BlueManedHawk on Sat Dec 7 21:10:03 2024
    On 07/12/2024 20:15, BlueManedHawk wrote:
    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    <snip/>

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    <snip/>

    I've heard rumors of alternative technologies for energy storage being explored besides storage of electrical energy.  One example would be a device that stores energy not as electrical energy, but instead as
    potential kinetic energy, storing the energy by lifting a large mass and releasing it by dropping the large mass.  That particular one is one
    that i doubt will ever get off the ground, but the same basic principle
    of converting electrical energy to some other, more convenient-to-store
    form of energy is behind the ideas i've seen floated around.


    That is essentially the physics behind pumped (hydroelectric) storage,
    which achieves about 75% turn round efficiency. If you consider the size
    of the the lakes involved and the amount of energy that may be
    stored...you sigh and realise its better to build a nuclear power
    station that doesn't need the storage in the first place.

    It works, but without suitable geography the build cost is phenomenal.

    A much more reasonable solution is the molten salt cooled nuclear
    reactor where molten salt can be stored ready for peak power delivery
    above the capability of the reactor in its steady state.

    The reality is that if anything really worked we would have seen it
    implemented already. 'Sustainable' energy is a chimaera that always
    needs 'more publicly funded research' and never really delivers.

    We will have to put up with its constant bleating and claims to be the
    'energy of the future' until enough people get so fucking fed up with it
    they demand something that actually works. Like nuclear power...

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as
    foolish, and by the rulers as useful.

    (Seneca the Younger, 65 AD)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 7 23:31:31 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 07/12/2024 17:35, D wrote:
    Jesus christ... don't get me started! In the mainstream press people
    _still_ write and say that 100% solar or 100% wind is the only viable way. >> I cannot bear to read it! And when I ask how much a battery storage system >> would cost that could store all the power for a country, for x days, there >> is never an answer.

    Maybe, just maybe, it might be possible to have 100% solar in africa
    somewhere, but it would still need storage capacity for the night.

    In Africa, the greatest need is for light at night.

    Followed by refrigerators, and clean water.

    Then comes music sound systems and the TV and mobile phones :-)

    Back in the day the Cuban Marxists told the township boys 'come the revolution, you will all have swimming pools and a Mercedes.

    A Zulu friend from Soweto asked me to comment.

    I got in touch with someone in the then apartheid government who said 'at the rate we are going there won't be enough water for every home to even have a flush toilet'

    30 years later, that is the reality of South Africa. And it's 30 years of communist government.

    There is barely enough clean water to drink.

    The only reliable power is one nuclear power station and a lot of coal ones. And the educated white 'Liberals' are wanting 'renewable energy'

    Sure by putting thousands of Rands of batteries in your house and solar panels on the roof you can survive a hot African night without power, and you need to because the grid load sheds every day in winter.

    But who will pay for it? The townships are effectively powered for free by people attaching crocodile clips to the overheads. And it is too politically sensitive to actually stop them...

    As usual after popular revolutions the next thing is those who grab power fucking everything up completely in a blaze of greed, nepotism and paranoia.

    And don't forget the swiss bank accounts, and the eventual retirement in
    Dubai. Plenty of african and arabian dictators in the dubai old peoples
    home I think. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 7 23:33:41 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 07/12/2024 18:24, Rich wrote:
    Nighttime is the big one. Until the world's electric grids are
    sufficiently interconnected that power generated in the Saraha Desert
    at noon can be shipped to the other side of the world where it is dark
    to supply power to that location there*must* be some storage, somehow,
    to account for night/twilight/a run of 14+ overcast days/etc.

    When I did all these calculations years ago the answer that came up every time was 'nuclear is simply cheaper, more reliable, more self sufficient and in every way better'

    This is the truth! Now cut all the regulation of nuclear in half, or
    remove them altogether and let the market regulate it, and it's even
    cheaper, and can be built at least 50% faster if not more.

    And, even if the world's electric grid was interconnected sufficient to
    ship solar power from Africa to the other side of the globe, we measly
    humans would simply use those interconnnects to try to enforce
    geopolitical rules on other locations we don't like by attempting to
    deny them "night time power".

    Or the Russians would cut the cable anyway, just for kicks.

    I still think the chinese boat sits between sweden and denmark. Will be
    fun to see what they find out once they get permission from china to board
    the ship and interview the captain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to BlueManedHawk on Sun Dec 8 00:04:07 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024, BlueManedHawk wrote:

    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    <snip/>

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is no
    storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    <snip/>

    I've heard rumors of alternative technologies for energy storage being explored besides storage of electrical energy. One example would be a device that stores energy not as electrical energy, but instead as potential kinetic energy, storing the energy by lifting a large mass and releasing it by dropping the large mass. That particular one is one that i doubt will ever get off the ground, but the same basic principle of converting electrical energy to some other, more convenient-to-store form of energy is behind the ideas i've seen floated around.


    There's the classic dam + pumps, and I also found this:

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2020/03/08/cesar-seasonal-energy-storage-in-basalt/
    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 8 04:17:02 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 21:10:03 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    That is essentially the physics behind pumped (hydroelectric) storage,
    which achieves about 75% turn round efficiency. If you consider the size
    of the the lakes involved and the amount of energy that may be
    stored...you sigh and realise its better to build a nuclear power
    station that doesn't need the storage in the first place.

    It works, but without suitable geography the build cost is phenomenal.


    https://www.wbur.org/news/2016/12/02/northfield-mountain-hydroelectric-
    station

    The company I worked for at the time also was a distributor for Trabon lubrication systems. I didn't have much involvement in that part of the business but I did a tag-along with the crew installing the system prior
    to the station going operational. It was impressive but it was also eerie knowing you were in a cavern under a lake. I was jealous. They had mult
    plants. iple workstations with every Rigid tool known to man, all shiny
    and new.

    It was designed to load balance the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant. Vermont Yankee was up for license renewal but the state opposed it. The power
    company won the suit against the state but decommissioned it in 2014 since
    it couldn't compete with gas fired plants.

    It sounded like a good idea 50 years ago. Damn, that means I was wandering around the plant 50 years ago. How time goes by.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 8 04:52:15 2024
    On 2024-12-07, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    The reality is that if anything really worked we would have seen it implemented already. 'Sustainable' energy is a chimaera that always
    needs 'more publicly funded research' and never really delivers.

    And, unfortunately, sustainable energy is in an uphill battle with
    people's obsession with "sustainable" growth. Now _there's_ a chimaera.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 8 05:01:35 2024
    On 2024-12-07, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    Latter 70s they were The Thing.

    Needed a 64/128 processor in an 8-bit world, then
    bit-slice processors were yer fix.

    They were the basics of a CPU - but wired so you
    could physically attach them to MORE processors.
    All the necessary flags/registers/etc could be
    expanded wider and wider.

    You could buy 2-bit, 4-bit, slice processors and
    physically build something much stronger.

    I even remember hearing of them mentioned in some
    cheap TV series - some geek with his own R2D2
    clone that was WAY too capable for the era.

    TODAY ... well ... you can make a 64/128 on like
    a 1cm die - really party on a 2cm die.

    Bit-slice now - you'd loose far too much in
    the interface wiring. Really no longer a
    solution - unless maybe you need a 1024/2048
    processor :-)

    Kinda the same goes for 'Transputers' - parallel
    solution using ultra-speed (for the day) serial
    links between many processors to coordinate
    things between all the chips (they could have
    a shared memory area too).

    Older tech limitations spawned FIXES ... there
    were many. Some were very *clever* - might even
    have future apps.

    Tektronix made a series of "desktop" computers back in the day.
    The 4051 was the first in the series and used a Motorola 6800
    processor. As far as I'm aware, the 4052 and 4054 made up the
    rest of the series. Those had the same processor, a 6800
    superset made from bit-slide chips (2900-2901-..., IIRC). IIRC,
    they ran about 20MHz except when accessing an external ROM pack.
    There were added opcodes for basic floating point operations.
    Even with BASIC using double-precision floating point numbers for
    everything numeric, they were faster at many things than
    microprocessors of the day. I was told it took a 486 at
    somewhere around 66MHz to equal or beat it.

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 8 04:24:33 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 23:33:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I still think the chinese boat sits between sweden and denmark. Will be
    fun to see what they find out once they get permission from china to
    board the ship and interview the captain.

    The part I liked is how they homed in on the Chinese ship. Satellite
    photos showed it moving slower than usual -- almost like it was dragging a giant hook behind it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Sun Dec 8 04:21:39 2024
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 18:24:17 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    But today, no, it is not feasable today, other than on a very small
    scale (single household) to be 100% solar and have sufficient storage to cover for some amount of "sun isn't shining" days.

    The solar companies here take another tack since pure solar isn't feasible
    this far north. According to them when the sun is shining you pump
    electricity into the grid, giving you credits when you're pulling from the grid. Even then I assume their payback figures are well cooked.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 8 01:08:41 2024
    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 07/12/2024 07:33, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Latter 70s they were The Thing.

    Needed a 64/128 processor in an 8-bit world, then
    bit-slice processors were yer fix.

    They were the basics of a CPU - but wired so you
    could physically attach them to MORE processors.
    All the necessary flags/registers/etc could be
    expanded wider and wider.

    You could buy 2-bit, 4-bit, slice processors and
    physically build something much stronger.

    I even remember hearing of them mentioned in some
    cheap TV series - some geek with his own R2D2
    clone that was WAY too capable for the era.

    TODAY ... well ... you can make a 64/128 on like
    a 1cm die - really party on a 2cm die.

    Bit-slice now - you'd loose far too much in
    the interface wiring. Really no longer a
    solution - unless maybe you need a 1024/2048
    processor  :-)

    Kinda the same goes for 'Transputers' - parallel
    solution using ultra-speed (for the day) serial
    links between many processors to coordinate
    things between all the chips (they could have
    a shared memory area too).

    Older tech limitations spawned FIXES ... there
    were many. Some were very *clever* - might even
    have future apps.


    As an engineer it always amazes me on how such little things the success
    of a technology depends.

    Aircraft could have been invented hundreds of years earlier if a
    lightweight power source had turned up, but steam wasn't good enough,
    and it took oil petrol or gas to make the power sources light enough.

    SOME of Da-Vinci's designs WOULD have worked if they'd
    had a chain-saw engine and prop. CONTROL ... well ...

    electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good
    enough to replace IC.

    Barely ... sometimes less than that.

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries :-)

    Some kinds of large fiber-based flywheels might
    do the trick - but they'd better be buried just
    in case ....

    Yet the advance of photolithography and quantum theory made the
    integrated circuit a possibility, the Cold War mandated the need for
    small light electronics for missiles, and here we are.

    We get along, we make progress in various ways.

    But, at least now, I don't see the "next wave" -
    something like transistors or IC engines or such.
    They promise 'quantum' and such, but the MEANS
    work against it.

    The FET was visualized in the very early 1900s by
    some Russian prof. Digital processing not long
    after by another Russian (some proto's survived).
    The general-purpose computer was Babbage/Lovelace
    in the mid 1800s. The issue was a BETTER MEANS
    of realizing the CONCEPT. That took awhile.

    Every time that 'better means' arrived - HUGE leaps.
    Sometimes it was SMALL stuff - but provided critical
    leverage.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 8 02:37:56 2024
    On 12/7/24 4:10 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 07/12/2024 20:15, BlueManedHawk wrote:
    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    <snip/>

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there
    is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    <snip/>

    I've heard rumors of alternative technologies for energy storage being
    explored besides storage of electrical energy.  One example would be a
    device that stores energy not as electrical energy, but instead as
    potential kinetic energy, storing the energy by lifting a large mass
    and releasing it by dropping the large mass.  That particular one is
    one that i doubt will ever get off the ground, but the same basic
    principle of converting electrical energy to some other, more
    convenient-to-store form of energy is behind the ideas i've seen
    floated around.


    That is essentially the physics behind pumped (hydroelectric) storage,
    which achieves about 75% turn round efficiency. If you consider the size
    of the the lakes involved and the amount of energy that may be
    stored...you sigh and realise its better to build a nuclear power
    station that doesn't need the storage in the first place.

    It works, but without suitable geography the build cost is phenomenal.

    A much more reasonable solution  is the molten salt cooled nuclear
    reactor where molten salt can be stored ready for peak power delivery
    above the capability of the reactor in its steady state.

    The reality is that if anything really worked we would have seen it implemented already. 'Sustainable' energy  is a chimaera that always
    needs 'more publicly funded research' and never really delivers.

    We will have to put up with its constant bleating and claims to be the 'energy of the future' until enough people get so fucking fed up with it
    they demand something that actually works.  Like nuclear power...

    In the 1st world, suitable GEOGRAPHY is a BIGGIE. Land
    is EXPENSIVE ... an then the ultra-greenies will freak
    about tiny bugs and plants and fish.

    This limits hydro-anything. Basically if it's not already
    there, you ain't gonna be allowed to do it.

    Nuke, in some ways, IS easier. Hey, Iran is making LOTS
    of uranium these days ... :-)

    I'm a fan of "pebble bed" - but 'super hot' seems to
    be more popular real-world. A mistake IMHO.

    Modern flywheels - super-sized - COULD store rather a
    lot of energy. However you'd need to bury them a little
    Just In Case.

    Lithium packs ... just WAIT for the huge fire ...

    HAVE looked into what could be called "low-headwater
    hydro" ... ie tapping SMALL dams or even river flows.
    With modern design software efficient turbines MIGHT
    be made. Envision 'farms' of raft-looking generator
    platforms in the Mississippi. Low-RPM blades wouldn't
    even kill fish.

    Yea yea, I know the laws of thermodynamics - but if
    you can dip into 'low delta' CHEAPLY enough ....

    There just doesn't seem to be any 'perfect' solution
    at present. Even 99.9% efficient PV cells would not
    solve all the issues. For now, some sensible MIX of
    technologies is the best course. Alas POLITICS tends
    to squeeze the 'sensible' out of everything.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 8 08:18:56 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 01:08:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries

    I'm waiting for more accurate information but there is a rumor Musk may
    pivot to hydrogen. Great, another technology with no supporting
    infrastructure.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 8 08:15:53 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 02:37:56 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    HAVE looked into what could be called "low-headwater hydro" ... ie
    tapping SMALL dams or even river flows.
    With modern design software efficient turbines MIGHT be made.
    Envision 'farms' of raft-looking generator platforms in the
    Mississippi. Low-RPM blades wouldn't even kill fish.

    Rafters love low-head dams. They look so innocent.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 8 08:20:13 2024
    On Sun, 08 Dec 2024 04:52:15 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    And, unfortunately, sustainable energy is in an uphill battle with
    people's obsession with "sustainable" growth. Now _there's_ a chimaera.

    You can't have your Apple AI enabled laptop and eat it too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 8 12:12:47 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 18:24:17 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    But today, no, it is not feasable today, other than on a very small
    scale (single household) to be 100% solar and have sufficient storage to
    cover for some amount of "sun isn't shining" days.

    The solar companies here take another tack since pure solar isn't feasible this far north. According to them when the sun is shining you pump electricity into the grid, giving you credits when you're pulling from the grid. Even then I assume their payback figures are well cooked.


    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero or
    even creating an excess, while all the ones in this system would need
    energy at the same time (night) driving the price up, therefore again,
    needing some kind of storage.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 8 12:14:40 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 23:33:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I still think the chinese boat sits between sweden and denmark. Will be
    fun to see what they find out once they get permission from china to
    board the ship and interview the captain.

    The part I liked is how they homed in on the Chinese ship. Satellite
    photos showed it moving slower than usual -- almost like it was dragging a giant hook behind it.


    They had a wonderful clip on the swedish public news the other day, where
    the journalist takes a small boat with a radio and goes out to the ship, surrounded by a few navy vessels, and hails the captain. After a few
    attempts, they get a chinese man on the radio who speaks exceptionally bad english.

    They explain they are from the swedish public television and would like
    to interview him about the situatio, and the reply comes in the most english/chinese voice you can imagine:

    "I say nothing to you! I say nothing to you! Leave now!"

    So no cooperation there at the moment. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 8 13:41:12 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/7/24 4:10 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 07/12/2024 20:15, BlueManedHawk wrote:
    On 12/7/24 9:29 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    <snip/>

    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is no >>>> storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    <snip/>

    I've heard rumors of alternative technologies for energy storage being
    explored besides storage of electrical energy.  One example would be a
    device that stores energy not as electrical energy, but instead as
    potential kinetic energy, storing the energy by lifting a large mass and >>> releasing it by dropping the large mass.  That particular one is one that >>> i doubt will ever get off the ground, but the same basic principle of
    converting electrical energy to some other, more convenient-to-store form >>> of energy is behind the ideas i've seen floated around.


    That is essentially the physics behind pumped (hydroelectric) storage,
    which achieves about 75% turn round efficiency. If you consider the size of >> the the lakes involved and the amount of energy that may be stored...you
    sigh and realise its better to build a nuclear power station that doesn't
    need the storage in the first place.

    It works, but without suitable geography the build cost is phenomenal.

    A much more reasonable solution  is the molten salt cooled nuclear reactor >> where molten salt can be stored ready for peak power delivery above the
    capability of the reactor in its steady state.

    The reality is that if anything really worked we would have seen it
    implemented already. 'Sustainable' energy  is a chimaera that always needs >> 'more publicly funded research' and never really delivers.

    We will have to put up with its constant bleating and claims to be the
    'energy of the future' until enough people get so fucking fed up with it
    they demand something that actually works.  Like nuclear power...

    In the 1st world, suitable GEOGRAPHY is a BIGGIE. Land
    is EXPENSIVE ... an then the ultra-greenies will freak
    about tiny bugs and plants and fish.

    This limits hydro-anything. Basically if it's not already
    there, you ain't gonna be allowed to do it.

    Nuke, in some ways, IS easier. Hey, Iran is making LOTS
    of uranium these days ... :-)

    I'm a fan of "pebble bed" - but 'super hot' seems to
    be more popular real-world. A mistake IMHO.

    Modern flywheels - super-sized - COULD store rather a
    lot of energy. However you'd need to bury them a little
    Just In Case.

    Lithium packs ... just WAIT for the huge fire ...

    HAVE looked into what could be called "low-headwater
    hydro" ... ie tapping SMALL dams or even river flows.
    With modern design software efficient turbines MIGHT
    be made. Envision 'farms' of raft-looking generator
    platforms in the Mississippi. Low-RPM blades wouldn't
    even kill fish.

    Yea yea, I know the laws of thermodynamics - but if
    you can dip into 'low delta' CHEAPLY enough ....

    There just doesn't seem to be any 'perfect' solution
    at present. Even 99.9% efficient PV cells would not
    solve all the issues. For now, some sensible MIX of
    technologies is the best course. Alas POLITICS tends
    to squeeze the 'sensible' out of everything.

    Sounds like you have the perfect business idea right there! Given all the eco-fascism in the world, go on a fund raising tour to europe and they
    will literally throw money at you!

    And the best thing of all... it doesn't even have to work! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 8 14:58:38 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 01:08:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries

    I'm waiting for more accurate information but there is a rumor Musk may
    pivot to hydrogen. Great, another technology with no supporting infrastructure.


    Wow, Toyota would celebrate! I think they are still clinging to hydrogen.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 8 16:13:55 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 18:24:17 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    But today, no, it is not feasable today, other than on a very small
    scale (single household) to be 100% solar and have sufficient
    storage to cover for some amount of "sun isn't shining" days.

    The solar companies here take another tack since pure solar isn't
    feasible this far north. According to them when the sun is shining
    you pump electricity into the grid, giving you credits when you're
    pulling from the grid. Even then I assume their payback figures are
    well cooked.


    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero or even creating an excess,

    Already happens, fairly regularally in CA based on news reports.
    Midday wholesale electric rates often go negative (electricy suppliers
    will pay you to use electricity).

    while all the ones in this system would need energy at the same time
    (night) driving the price up, therefore again, needing some kind of
    storage.

    This is the current kink. There is often enough abundance midday that
    the price is negative (or generation is curtailed because it has no
    sink into which to go). Nighttime, however, is a very different story.

    Reality is, given current tech., pricing, and installed base, some form
    of "base generation" using existing tech. (coal, gas, nuclear, hydro)
    is required to last through the nights (and the 'days of overcast' that sometimes happen). Only two of the four are 'carbon free' and only one
    is suitable for use in geographic areas without significant volumes of
    water running downhill.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 8 16:18:18 2024
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Modern flywheels - super-sized - COULD store rather a lot of
    energy. However you'd need to bury them a little Just In Case.

    The physics of flywheels begin to bite you in the a** when you start
    trying to "supersize" them for storage of significant amounts of
    energy. You need exotic super strong materials (read as: "super
    costly" and/or "does not exist yet") to prevent them from pulling
    themselves apart rather explosively.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 8 16:28:25 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 01:08:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries

    I'm waiting for more accurate information but there is a rumor Musk may
    pivot to hydrogen. Great, another technology with no supporting
    infrastructure.


    Wow, Toyota would celebrate! I think they are still clinging to hydrogen.

    Unless there's been some new exotic materials discovered that solves
    the hydrogen embrittement problem, hydrogen on a large scale will
    either be very very expensive for the pipe/bottle replacements needed,
    or will simply create a different sort of "bomb" (vs. a lithum battery
    fire) sitting next door.

    A better 'solution' (although the catalyst tech may not yet exist) is
    some form of electrically driven catalyst that could extract CO2 from
    the air and synthesize some form of liquid fuel (liquid at STP). Then
    solar PV would have a "sink" for their extra energy, and the
    synthesized liquid fuel could be stored in normal non-pressure vessels, piped/transported via the existing liquid fuel infrastructure, and
    'burned' at a location remote from the synthesis to "move energy
    around".

    Of course the rabid greenies would see "burn fuel to make electricity"
    as bad, even if the fuel being burned was synthesized via Solar PV
    energy and atmospheric CO2 (plus likely water input as well, since one
    tends to need some hydrocarbon bonds to create a fuel that is liquid at
    STP).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Sun Dec 8 18:25:17 2024
    On 08/12/2024 16:18, Rich wrote:
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Modern flywheels - super-sized - COULD store rather a lot of
    energy. However you'd need to bury them a little Just In Case.

    The physics of flywheels begin to bite you in the a** when you start
    trying to "supersize" them for storage of significant amounts of
    energy. You need exotic super strong materials (read as: "super
    costly" and/or "does not exist yet") to prevent them from pulling
    themselves apart rather explosively.

    Exactly. Sentences like "COULD store rather a lot of energy." are simple hand-wavey nonsense,.

    The UK to be fully 'renewable' for example would need to store the sort
    of energy found in half a dozen medium sized strategic nuclear bombs.

    However you do that, its damned risky - hydrogen - spinning flywheels -
    hydro dams, batteries.

    In fact the safest energy store capable of doing it is a set of uranium/plutonium fuel rods. And then you don't need any renewable shit
    at all.

    Simples!


    --
    Of what good are dead warriors? … Warriors are those who desire battle
    more than peace. Those who seek battle despite peace. Those who thump
    their spears on the ground and talk of honor. Those who leap high the
    battle dance and dream of glory … The good of dead warriors, Mother, is
    that they are dead.
    Sheri S Tepper: The Awakeners.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Sun Dec 8 21:50:53 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 7 Dec 2024 18:24:17 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    But today, no, it is not feasable today, other than on a very small
    scale (single household) to be 100% solar and have sufficient
    storage to cover for some amount of "sun isn't shining" days.

    The solar companies here take another tack since pure solar isn't
    feasible this far north. According to them when the sun is shining
    you pump electricity into the grid, giving you credits when you're
    pulling from the grid. Even then I assume their payback figures are
    well cooked.


    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero or >> even creating an excess,

    Already happens, fairly regularally in CA based on news reports.
    Midday wholesale electric rates often go negative (electricy suppliers
    will pay you to use electricity).

    while all the ones in this system would need energy at the same time
    (night) driving the price up, therefore again, needing some kind of
    storage.

    This is the current kink. There is often enough abundance midday that
    the price is negative (or generation is curtailed because it has no
    sink into which to go). Nighttime, however, is a very different story.

    Reality is, given current tech., pricing, and installed base, some form
    of "base generation" using existing tech. (coal, gas, nuclear, hydro)
    is required to last through the nights (and the 'days of overcast' that sometimes happen). Only two of the four are 'carbon free' and only one
    is suitable for use in geographic areas without significant volumes of
    water running downhill.

    I agree.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Sun Dec 8 21:54:19 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 01:08:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries

    I'm waiting for more accurate information but there is a rumor Musk may
    pivot to hydrogen. Great, another technology with no supporting
    infrastructure.


    Wow, Toyota would celebrate! I think they are still clinging to hydrogen.

    Unless there's been some new exotic materials discovered that solves
    the hydrogen embrittement problem, hydrogen on a large scale will
    either be very very expensive for the pipe/bottle replacements needed,
    or will simply create a different sort of "bomb" (vs. a lithum battery
    fire) sitting next door.

    This is what my friendly neighbourhood AI had to say about it (caveat
    emptor!):

    The choice of materials for tanks, pipelines, and other storage systems is crucial. Hydrogen can cause embrittlement in metals, leading to cracks and leaks. Therefore, materials that are resistant to hydrogen embrittlement
    must be used. Common choices include:

    High-strength steel: Often used for high-pressure tanks.

    Composite materials: These can provide lightweight options with good
    resistance to hydrogen.

    Non-metallic materials: Such as certain plastics that do not suffer
    from embrittlement.

    2. Storage Methods

    Hydrogen can be stored in various forms, each with its own safety considerations:

    Compressed Gas Storage: Hydrogen is stored at high pressures
    (typically 350-700 bar). This requires robust pressure vessels designed to withstand these conditions without leaking or failing.

    Liquid Hydrogen Storage: At extremely low temperatures (-253C),
    hydrogen becomes liquid. This method requires insulated cryogenic tanks to maintain low temperatures and prevent vaporization.

    Metal Hydrides: Some metals can absorb hydrogen at certain conditions,
    forming metal hydrides. This method allows for safer storage at lower
    pressures but requires careful handling during charging and discharging.

    What about storing it as water, and producing it close to where cars need
    to be fueled up? I assume it would be very inefficient and probably
    difficult, or else someone would already have done it. But I do not know
    any specifics, so just genuinely curious.

    A better 'solution' (although the catalyst tech may not yet exist) is
    some form of electrically driven catalyst that could extract CO2 from
    the air and synthesize some form of liquid fuel (liquid at STP). Then
    solar PV would have a "sink" for their extra energy, and the
    synthesized liquid fuel could be stored in normal non-pressure vessels, piped/transported via the existing liquid fuel infrastructure, and
    'burned' at a location remote from the synthesis to "move energy
    around".

    Of course the rabid greenies would see "burn fuel to make electricity"
    as bad, even if the fuel being burned was synthesized via Solar PV
    energy and atmospheric CO2 (plus likely water input as well, since one
    tends to need some hydrocarbon bonds to create a fuel that is liquid at
    STP).


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 8 23:00:43 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 14:58:38 +0100, D wrote:


    Wow, Toyota would celebrate! I think they are still clinging to
    hydrogen.

    Toyota never bought into BEVs and favored hybrids. The Mirai is impressive
    but it points out the problem at this time.

    https://www.hydrogeninsight.com/transport/toyota-sued-over-lack-of- hydrogen-availability-for-fuel-cell-cars-in-california/2-1-1676965

    "A class action lawsuit alleges false advertising and misrepresentation
    over promises that H2 refuelling stations would be widely available"

    Hydrogen will need a real PR campaign. A company I worked for had a
    contract to produce the glass tubes for strobe lights. It was a glass
    blowing operation to form the corkscrew shape. Soda glass can be worked
    with oxy-acetylene but quartz glass needs a oxy-hydrogen flame. We had to
    get a permit to have a hydrogen tube trailer spotted on the premises
    despite hydrogen being safer than acetylene. I could see the fire marshall thinking 'bomb' when we said 'hydrogen'.

    The tanks have improved. In the '70s the weight of hydrogen in a tube
    trailer was ridiculously small compared to the wieght of the trailer. New materials reduce the tank weights and the DOT has increased the allowable pressure but it's still a transportation problem.

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural
    gas rather than green alternative energy sources.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 8 23:10:00 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 12:12:47 +0100, D wrote:

    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero
    or even creating an excess, while all the ones in this system would need energy at the same time (night) driving the price up, therefore again, needing some kind of storage.

    I can't say with certainty but my impression from what I've read is the
    idea is straight from Cloud Cuckoo Land as far as small residential installations go.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 8 23:07:25 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 21:54:19 +0100, D wrote:

    Liquid Hydrogen Storage: At extremely low temperatures (-253°C),
    hydrogen becomes liquid. This method requires insulated cryogenic tanks
    to maintain low temperatures and prevent vaporization.

    For the glassblowing operation we used LOX rather than conventional
    welding tanks. That was no problem but hydrogen is a whole different game.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 8 23:34:29 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    What about storing it as water, and producing it close to where cars need
    to be fueled up? I assume it would be very inefficient and probably difficult, or else someone would already have done it. But I do not know
    any specifics, so just genuinely curious.

    Hydrogen can be stored very safely as water. The earth's covered in a significant amount of "water stored hydrogen". :)

    The tricky part is you have to put in a rather significant amount of
    energy to convince it (the hydrogen) to let go of it's grip with the
    oxygen atoms that make up the water.

    And once you create it, and pump it into the car's pressure tank
    (you'll need a pressure vessel unless the car has a cryo-cooler on
    board, and the energy expended by the cryo-cooler would dwarf the
    energy needed to propel the car), you are right back to the
    'embrittlement' problem again.

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a 'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to Rich on Mon Dec 9 00:17:08 2024
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a 'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 9 00:17:07 2024
    On 2024-12-08, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    We had to > get a permit to have a hydrogen tube trailer spotted on the premises despite hydrogen being safer than acetylene. I could see the
    fire marshall thinking 'bomb' when we said 'hydrogen'.

    I guess there aren't that many people left who would automatically think "Hindenburg".

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural gas rather than green alternative energy sources.

    Local politicians seem to conveniently forget that the energy needed to
    produce liquefied natural gas for export (let someone else actually create
    the pollution by burning it) is going to take half of our formerly-abundant hydro power resources.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 9 00:07:04 2024
    On 12/8/24 3:18 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 01:08:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Well, Musk sells gigantic lithium batteries

    I'm waiting for more accurate information but there is a rumor Musk may
    pivot to hydrogen. Great, another technology with no supporting infrastructure.

    Heh heh :-)

    Hydrogen is DIFFICULT to deal with in a number
    of dimensions. You're right in that there's
    really NO sort of infrastructure for it either.

    However, at an "industrial site", creation+storage+
    use might not be THAT difficult an equation.

    However to get good efficiency you couldn't burn
    the hydrogen - huge FUEL CELLS would be required.
    Even then, considerable loss.

    Anyway, NOT gonna park an H2 powered vehicle
    anywhere NEAR my house.

    I'd suggested a little farm of maybe 5-10 meter
    radial-fiber based flywheels. Those ARE do-able
    and you'd be able to get back MOST of the energy
    put in. There always IS a danger of "rapid
    unscheduled disassembly" with those however, hence
    my advice to kinda BURY them a bit.

    Mag bearings ... they oughtta last 50+ years and
    are basically much lower, more robust, tech than
    fuel cells. Who needs hydrogen when you've got
    rotational inertia ?

    Cars ? Frankly isopropanol would be a GREAT
    low-polluting fuel, and less hydroscopic
    than methanol or ethanol. CHEAP ways to make
    it ... that's for the catalyst people to
    figure out. It WOULD work with the existing
    infrastructure with only a few gasket mods.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 9 00:20:01 2024
    On 12/8/24 7:17 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively
    combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    I've seen that too - close up. Blew out a reinforced
    CBC wall ...... sheer dumb luck nobody was in the
    filling room at the time or they'd have been Spam.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>


    High-pressure containers - esp ones that have to
    'cycle' often - are a bomb waiting to go off.
    Fatigue/corrosion take their awful toll - then
    BOOM !

    If the boom is a flammable gas ... far worse.

    Hydrogen CAN have its uses - but at "industrial"
    sites, not out in public. You can feed it into
    expensive fuel cells, you can mix x-percent with
    natural gas.

    But as a general-purpose 'motor fuel' ... NO !
    Besides, no proper infrastructure for it.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 01:13:44 2024
    On 12/8/24 1:25 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 08/12/2024 16:18, Rich wrote:
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

       Modern flywheels - super-sized - COULD store rather a lot of
       energy.  However you'd need to bury them a little Just In Case.

    The physics of flywheels begin to bite you in the a** when you start
    trying to "supersize" them for storage of significant amounts of
    energy.  You need exotic super strong materials (read as: "super
    costly" and/or "does not exist yet") to prevent them from pulling
    themselves apart rather explosively.

    Exactly. Sentences like "COULD store rather a lot of energy." are simple hand-wavey nonsense,.

    Nah ... not entirely.

    The modern take isn't a big ring of steel - but closer
    to the 'wire brush' you see on cheapo grinding machines.

    However the 'wire' is well organized carbon/graphite/nanotube
    fibers spinning in a vacuum. It's incredibly strong - and if
    one or two fibers break it's not such a huge deal. The whole
    thing spins on mag bearings and there are magnets/coils not far
    from the axle that serve as booster/generators.

    In short, DO-able ... and NOT insanely expensive. CAN hold
    rather a LOT of energy too.



    The UK to be fully 'renewable' for example would need to store the sort
    of energy  found in half a dozen medium sized strategic nuclear bombs.

    Um ... probably more.

    However you do that, its damned risky - hydrogen - spinning flywheels -
    hydro dams, batteries.

    In fact the safest  energy store capable of doing it is a set of uranium/plutonium fuel rods. And then you don't need any renewable shit
    at all.

    Simples!

    Nuke reactors CAN indeed be very good. The TRICK is in
    making them accident/terrorist-proof. "Pebble bed" is
    pretty "-proof" - and according to some news China is
    building a number of such plants. Thermodynamically
    the 'hot' reactors seem more favorable and the US/EU
    is tilting that way (a mistake imho).

    There's STILL the issue of dealing with the nuke waste.
    Takes ten forevers for it to decay. The French actually
    encapsulate and store it AT the plant site. For others
    like the USA, a bunker in the center of large military
    bases might be better - you can keep an eye on it and
    have thousands of soldiers as guards.

    As for the ever-promised 'fusion' ... at this point
    I'm gonna say "FORGET IT". The only places to even
    get a speck over energy input are gigantic laser
    facilities. It's not PRACTICAL in the least with
    anything remotely like our current sci-tech.

    My FEAR is that somebody will figure out some
    Stupid Quantum Trick to flip matter into antimatter,
    and convert like a kilogram during the test :-)

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 9 06:14:12 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 00:07:04 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    However to get good efficiency you couldn't burn the hydrogen - huge
    FUEL CELLS would be required.
    Even then, considerable loss.

    It has infrastructure problems but Toyota's fuel cell vehicle is feasible. Excluding catastrophic tank failure I don't think hydrogen would be more
    of a problem than propane.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 9 01:16:22 2024
    On 12/8/24 7:17 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    We had to > get a permit to have a hydrogen tube trailer spotted on the
    premises despite hydrogen being safer than acetylene. I could see the
    fire marshall thinking 'bomb' when we said 'hydrogen'.

    I guess there aren't that many people left who would automatically think "Hindenburg".

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural >> gas rather than green alternative energy sources.

    Local politicians seem to conveniently forget that the energy needed to produce liquefied natural gas for export (let someone else actually create the pollution by burning it) is going to take half of our formerly-abundant hydro power resources.


    Awwww ... did somebody fail to mention that ? :-)

    How puzzling .......

    This entire field has been horribly contaminated
    by politics/ideology/fanaticsm. Expect NO sane
    solutions.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Mon Dec 9 10:49:48 2024
    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    What about storing it as water, and producing it close to where cars need
    to be fueled up? I assume it would be very inefficient and probably
    difficult, or else someone would already have done it. But I do not know
    any specifics, so just genuinely curious.

    Hydrogen can be stored very safely as water. The earth's covered in a significant amount of "water stored hydrogen". :)

    The tricky part is you have to put in a rather significant amount of
    energy to convince it (the hydrogen) to let go of it's grip with the
    oxygen atoms that make up the water.

    And once you create it, and pump it into the car's pressure tank
    (you'll need a pressure vessel unless the car has a cryo-cooler on
    board, and the energy expended by the cryo-cooler would dwarf the
    energy needed to propel the car), you are right back to the
    'embrittlement' problem again.

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a 'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    But how is this solved in existing hydrogen cars? Hydrogen cars exist, so surely they must have some way to at least mitigate this problem?

    As for converting hydrogen "on site" I can imagine two limiting factors.

    1. The speed of conversion. Can you convert hydrogen on site, fast enough,
    to fill up a car in 5-10 minutes?

    and

    2. The cost of converting water to hydrogen in a smaller setup, vs doing
    it somewhere central and shipping it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 9 10:47:30 2024
    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 12:12:47 +0100, D wrote:

    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero
    or even creating an excess, while all the ones in this system would need
    energy at the same time (night) driving the price up, therefore again,
    needing some kind of storage.

    I can't say with certainty but my impression from what I've read is the
    idea is straight from Cloud Cuckoo Land as far as small residential installations go.


    I did some research and calculation of how much it would cost with
    hydrogen storage for a solar powered house in sweden, and 10 years ago, I
    found a pilot project in northern sweden, and the cost was about 1 million
    EUR (give or take).

    A couple of months ago I had a look around, and the cost as far as I could estimate, for storage, had dropped to about 500k EUR.

    If the decrease in cost continues, it would become feasible with solar in sweden in about 12-20 years time if you're doing it as a hobby.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 9 10:51:47 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively
    combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    How did this happen? In sweden, there is an epidemic of bombings for the
    past couple of years, since crazy drug dealing arabians are waging some
    kind of war with hand grenades, and car battery bombs in the bigger
    cities.

    Would using scuba tanks be a cheaper way for them to bomb each other?

    Also, how does a car battery bomb work? I'ev seen videos of exploding
    lithium batteries, but that does not look as efficient to me as just
    producing good, old, gun powder at home and making your own.

    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>



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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 9 10:53:54 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-08, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    We had to > get a permit to have a hydrogen tube trailer spotted on the
    premises despite hydrogen being safer than acetylene. I could see the
    fire marshall thinking 'bomb' when we said 'hydrogen'.

    I guess there aren't that many people left who would automatically think "Hindenburg".

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural >> gas rather than green alternative energy sources.

    Local politicians seem to conveniently forget that the energy needed to produce liquefied natural gas for export (let someone else actually create the pollution by burning it) is going to take half of our formerly-abundant hydro power resources.

    This is not a local sickness among politicians. In sweden, the politicians
    were all hyped about creating "green steel" asking the government owned
    (or part owner, don't remember exactly) steel company to "do it"!

    The problem?

    They would need their own personal nuclear powerplant to do it, since it
    would require half of swedens total electricity generation capacity to
    create said "green steel". ;)

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 9 10:44:32 2024
    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural gas rather than green alternative energy sources.


    Very interesting! Had no idea! I find it funny that this is somehow never meantioned by the green crowd.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 12:49:20 2024
    On 09/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?
    It's easier and legal to get a car battery.

    These gentlemen are not very scientific.
    Making gunpowder from chickenshit is quite complex.

    Did you know that acetone - a highly useful solvent used extensively by
    people who make glass fibre components, is also used by people who brew
    up and purify various drugs. Beware ordering a gallon of it...
    The IRA used ammonium nitrate, because it was at that time a legal
    fertilizer. Today it is controlled and comes mixed with something that
    stops it going bang.

    We used to use sodium chlorate - a weedkiller that is now also banned

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    Only the government gets to use the good stuff.


    --
    Civilization exists by geological consent, subject to change without notice.
    – Will Durant

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 12:55:37 2024
    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking
    exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put together scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory
    produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim






    --
    "The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow witted
    man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest
    thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid
    before him."

    - Leo Tolstoy

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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 14:10:03 2024
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for
    your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for
    months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-viento-renovable>

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 13:01:17 2024
    On 09/12/2024 09:44, D wrote:


    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing
    natural
    gas rather than green alternative energy sources.


    Very interesting! Had no idea! I find it funny that this is somehow
    never meantioned by the green crowd.

    The theory is that surplus electricity can be used to make hydrogen by electrolysis.

    This is of course far more expensive than natural gas, but since when
    have and EcoCrap™ merchants ever bothered to take their sock s off and
    learn to count beyond ten anyway? The government will pay for it!

    It all goes back to the fraudulent EU and its compact with German
    manufacturers to mandate 'Renewable energy' *whether it worked or not*.

    The same goes for BEVS heat pumps, smart meters and all the other crap

    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels we would be all nuclear by
    now...and be making synthetic diesel


    --
    You can get much farther with a kind word and a gun than you can with a
    kind word alone.

    Al Capone

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 13:30:40 2024
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is
    no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for
    your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has
    hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics

    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days,
    before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.



    --
    The New Left are the people they warned you about.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 13:32:13 2024
    On 09/12/2024 13:15, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely
    good enough to replace IC.

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    <https://legrandcontinent.eu/es/2024/10/11/en-noruega-circulan-mas-coches-electricos-que-de-gasolina/>

    The EU has made that a mandatory requirement.

    All that has happened is that people are buyng second hand diesels and
    the electric car plants are shutting down




    --
    Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people.
    But Marxism is the crack cocaine.

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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 14:51:02 2024
    On 2024-12-09 14:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there
    is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for
    your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy
    for months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-
    energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-
    viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has
    hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics

    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days, before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Just google deeper and you will find the months.

    Yes, certainly there are occasions when it doesn't work, it is early
    days. You just can not say that conclusively "it is impossible to do".

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 14:15:21 2024
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good enough to replace IC.

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    <https://legrandcontinent.eu/es/2024/10/11/en-noruega-circulan-mas-coches-electricos-que-de-gasolina/>

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Mon Dec 9 15:35:28 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 12:12:47 +0100, D wrote:

    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that
    all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero
    or even creating an excess, while all the ones in this system would need >>> energy at the same time (night) driving the price up, therefore again,
    needing some kind of storage.

    I can't say with certainty but my impression from what I've read is the
    idea is straight from Cloud Cuckoo Land as far as small residential
    installations go.


    I did some research and calculation of how much it would cost with
    hydrogen storage for a solar powered house in sweden, and 10 years ago, I found a pilot project in northern sweden, and the cost was about 1 million EUR (give or take).

    A couple of months ago I had a look around, and the cost as far as I could estimate, for storage, had dropped to about 500k EUR.

    If the decrease in cost continues, it would become feasible with solar in sweden in about 12-20 years time if you're doing it as a hobby.

    And therein lies the problem. Most of the "storage" systems are on an exponential increase growth curve. But total energy usage per country/worldwide is so large, that it will take twenty plus years of "doublings" each year before the storage tech is on par with today's
    level of consumption. Meanwhile, in twenty plus years, usage has
    itself likely increased, so storage is still behind in total, just not
    as far behind as it is today.

    Yet, if the 'climate folk' are to be believed, we need to achieve zero
    carbon input into the atmosphere yesterday, not twenty plus years into
    the future.

    So assuming the "no carbon" goal is required, we can't get /there/ from
    /here/ without something like nuclear to handle what 'storage' claims
    it will be able to do, in twenty plus years.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 16:01:34 2024
    On 09/12/2024 13:51, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-09 14:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there
    is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for
    your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy
    for months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-
    energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-
    viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has
    hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics

    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days,
    before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Just google deeper and you will find the months.

    No, I wont

    Yes, certainly there are occasions when it doesn't work, it is early
    days. You just can not say that conclusively "it is impossible to do".

    You yourself have shown that it is impossible to do.

    Your example proves my case.

    No one has done it yet, nor its it likely they ever will, unless its a
    tiny island with lots of hydro power.

    It is impossible to do for most ordinary countries

    And the cost of that attempt was insane.

    --
    Truth welcomes investigation because truth knows investigation will lead
    to converts. It is deception that uses all the other techniques.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Mon Dec 9 16:10:55 2024
    On 09/12/2024 15:35, Rich wrote:
    So assuming the "no carbon" goal is required, we can't get/there/ from /here/ without something like nuclear to handle what 'storage' claims
    it will be able to do, in twenty plus years.

    Its all nonsense.

    I spent ages analysing all the options and nothing in the end was
    cheaper or more effective overall than nuclear power, and that wouldn't
    cover the industrial and transport uses of fossil fuels any more than 'renewables'...

    You can't drive a truck on batteries across America, or a container ship
    from Taiwan.

    Sweden is investing in new nuclear power..

    In the end the rising price of fossil will move us towards nuclear power
    simply because it offers a competitive cost benefit vis à vis systems of inordinate complexity based on intermittent renewable power.

    The future will be mainly nuclear, and since once you have any nuclear
    at all there is no reason to make it more expensive and less reliable
    and destroy the environment with renewable energy, no one will.

    Renewables aren't dead yet, but they are beginning to smell..



    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and
    wrong.

    H.L.Mencken

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Mon Dec 9 17:01:38 2024
    On 09/12/2024 16:52, Andy Burns wrote:
    "Carlos E.R." wrote:

    there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works
    for them.

    But neither .uk or .es have ~90% hydroelectric power
    I always find it amazing that people say things like 'I an so totally
    off grid' and you look at what they have done and how much fossil fuel
    was used to build it and transport it to their homes, and how much food
    they buy still uses natural gas for fertilizer and how their homes
    feature things made of steel, plastics and cement or brick...and an
    internet connection...

    And you just think what a delusional bunch of 'see-you-next-tuesday's
    they actually are.

    The whole renewable fantasy is like a 2 year old saying 'look mummy, I
    can jump over a toy rabbit, and then again at 5 years old 'look I can
    jump over a chair - by the time I am 50 I will be able to jump over tall buildings with a single bound!'

    Greens would be rather sweet if they hadn't been given a vote.

    --
    “There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.”

    —Soren Kierkegaard

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 16:52:01 2024
    "Carlos E.R." wrote:

    there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works
    for them.

    But neither .uk or .es have ~90% hydroelectric power

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Mon Dec 9 17:27:29 2024
    On 09/12/2024 17:23, Andy Burns wrote:
    The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    The hexamine fuel used by camping stoves and model steam engines is now outlawed, the bad guys figured out how to make a well known military explosive from it

    Mmm. yes. I had to look that one up.

    All the fun has gone out of chemistry


    --
    WOKE is an acronym... Without Originality, Knowledge or Education.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 17:23:04 2024
    The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    The hexamine fuel used by camping stoves and model steam engines is now outlawed, the bad guys figured out how to make a well known military
    explosive from it

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 21:49:25 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?
    It's easier and legal to get a car battery.

    These gentlemen are not very scientific.
    Making gunpowder from chickenshit is quite complex.

    Did you know that acetone - a highly useful solvent used extensively by people who make glass fibre components, is also used by people who brew up and purify various drugs. Beware ordering a gallon of it...
    The IRA used ammonium nitrate, because it was at that time a legal fertilizer. Today it is controlled and comes mixed with something that stops it going bang.

    We used to use sodium chlorate - a weedkiller that is now also banned

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    Only the government gets to use the good stuff.

    I think making gun powder is very simple. There's loads of youtube videos,
    and I imagine that a couple of pipe bombs would be far easier and more explosive than car battery bombs.

    Fun fact... a swedish wanna be terrorist was caught because he went into a hardware store bought 20 car batteries and the store thought it was
    suspicious that a bearded gentleman from the middle east should suddenly
    buy 20 car batteries! =D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 21:50:28 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put together scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim

    This is the government. No SMR:s in sight. They are thinking about "safe" traditional ones.

    If they get it done in 10 years, and if they dare to explore SMR:s, I will
    be happily proven wrong.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 21:51:48 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:44, D wrote:


    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural >>> gas rather than green alternative energy sources.


    Very interesting! Had no idea! I find it funny that this is somehow never
    meantioned by the green crowd.

    The theory is that surplus electricity can be used to make hydrogen by electrolysis.

    This is of course far more expensive than natural gas, but since when have and EcoCrap™ merchants ever bothered to take their sock s off and learn to count beyond ten anyway? The government will pay for it!

    It all goes back to the fraudulent EU and its compact with German manufacturers to mandate 'Renewable energy' *whether it worked or not*.

    The same goes for BEVS heat pumps, smart meters and all the other crap

    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels we would be all nuclear by now...and be making synthetic diesel

    Is electricity the primary cost driver of synthetic diesel?

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with their ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they didn't
    see it coming. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 22:33:04 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is no
    storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-viento-renovable>

    I asked my friendly neighbourhood AI about the project:

    The Proyecto El Hierro, aimed at making the island of El Hierro in the
    Canary Islands self-sufficient through 100% renewable energy, faced
    significant challenges that led to its partial failure. Here are the key reasons for its shortcomings:
    1. Overly Ambitious Goals
    The project initially aimed to achieve a 100% renewable energy system
    based on wind and pumped hydro power. However, this target was
    fundamentally flawed due to the island's geographical limitations. Studies indicated that achieving such a goal was unrealistic given the required
    energy storage capacity and the island's topography, which could not accommodate the necessary water reservoirs1
    2
    .
    2. Technical and Operational Issues
    During its operational phase, the system struggled with grid integration
    and efficiency. For instance, while the project aimed for a wind energy penetration rate of approximately 65%, it only achieved about 34% in
    practice during its first year of test operation1
    . The capacity factor of the wind park was significantly lower than
    expected, indicating inefficiencies in energy production and management1
    .
    3. Energy Losses and Inefficiencies
    The design of the system resulted in high energy losses—estimated at
    around 40%—due to inefficiencies in pumping water and converting wind
    energy into usable electricity1
    . The hydro power contribution was disappointingly low, accounting for
    only 3.9% of total energy generation, which highlighted flaws in the
    overall system design1
    .
    4. Dependence on Diesel Backup
    Despite its renewable ambitions, El Hierro continued to rely on
    diesel-powered backup systems during periods of low wind or water
    availability. This reliance undermined the project's goal of complete
    renewable self-sufficiency2
    3
    .
    5. Marketed Expectations vs. Reality
    The project was marketed as a pioneering model for renewable energy, yet
    it failed to meet its claims. This discrepancy between marketing and
    actual performance has led to criticism and skepticism regarding its
    viability as a model for other regions aiming for similar goals1
    3
    . In summary, while Proyecto El Hierro has made strides towards renewable energy use, its ambitious goals were not fully realized due to technical limitations, operational inefficiencies, and an ongoing dependence on
    fossil fuels for backup power.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Mon Dec 9 22:34:39 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good
    enough to replace IC.

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works for them.

    <https://legrandcontinent.eu/es/2024/10/11/en-noruega-circulan-mas-coches-electricos-que-de-gasolina/>

    This is thanks to massive government subsidies, and enormous taxes on
    cars, and has nothing to do with the feasibility of the technology itself, compared without the carrots and sticks of taxes.

    It is actually quite fun, because the norwegian taxes on cars has been a
    hueg benefit for the rich in norway and the ones who cannot afford an
    electric car have been punished, so the millionaires love the norwegian
    car tax system.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:35:41 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is no >>> storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for your >> information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for months, >> not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics

    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days, before
    the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Let me add to that the the islands does not have a lot of heavy industry
    or data centers, and that the climate and nr of sun hours per year helps
    as well.

    Impossible to scale up. I could argue that solar is great in the sahara,
    but that does not make it feasible at scale, so bad example.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:36:38 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 13:15, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Today's electric cars fail because the batteries simple are barely good
    enough to replace IC.

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric cars >> than IC, so it works for them.

    <https://legrandcontinent.eu/es/2024/10/11/en-noruega-circulan-mas-coches-electricos-que-de-gasolina/>

    The EU has made that a mandatory requirement.

    All that has happened is that people are buyng second hand diesels and the electric car plants are shutting down

    Also note that due to the progress of the nationalists in the latest EU election and the crashing car sector in germany, the EU will prolong the
    sales of ICE vehicles in order not to completely destrou one of its few remaining industries.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Mon Dec 9 22:37:49 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024 12:12:47 +0100, D wrote:

    Is the grid prepared for this working at scale? And it seems to me that >>>> all solar would "sell" at the same time, driving down the price to zero >>>> or even creating an excess, while all the ones in this system would need >>>> energy at the same time (night) driving the price up, therefore again, >>>> needing some kind of storage.

    I can't say with certainty but my impression from what I've read is the
    idea is straight from Cloud Cuckoo Land as far as small residential
    installations go.


    I did some research and calculation of how much it would cost with
    hydrogen storage for a solar powered house in sweden, and 10 years ago, I
    found a pilot project in northern sweden, and the cost was about 1 million >> EUR (give or take).

    A couple of months ago I had a look around, and the cost as far as I could >> estimate, for storage, had dropped to about 500k EUR.

    If the decrease in cost continues, it would become feasible with solar in
    sweden in about 12-20 years time if you're doing it as a hobby.

    And therein lies the problem. Most of the "storage" systems are on an exponential increase growth curve. But total energy usage per country/worldwide is so large, that it will take twenty plus years of "doublings" each year before the storage tech is on par with today's
    level of consumption. Meanwhile, in twenty plus years, usage has
    itself likely increased, so storage is still behind in total, just not
    as far behind as it is today.

    Yet, if the 'climate folk' are to be believed, we need to achieve zero
    carbon input into the atmosphere yesterday, not twenty plus years into
    the future.

    So assuming the "no carbon" goal is required, we can't get /there/ from /here/ without something like nuclear to handle what 'storage' claims
    it will be able to do, in twenty plus years.


    Amen!

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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:34:38 2024
    On 2024-12-09 17:01, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:51, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-09 14:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there
    is no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but
    for your information, we have an island that goes with renewable
    energy for months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-
    energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-
    viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it
    has hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual
    statistics

    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days,
    before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Just google deeper and you will find the months.

    No, I wont

    Yes, certainly there are occasions when it doesn't work, it is early
    days. You just can not say that conclusively "it is impossible to do".

    You yourself have shown that it is impossible to do.

    Your example proves my case.

    No one has done it yet, nor its it likely they ever will, unless its a
    tiny island with lots of hydro power.

    It is impossible to do for most ordinary countries

    And the cost of that attempt was insane.



    I have proven that it is possible. Just do it, eventually. We have to do
    it to survive. I'm lucky to have no descendants.


    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:40:10 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 13:51, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-09 14:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is >>>>> no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for
    your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for >>>> months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion-
    energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-
    viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has
    hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics >>>
    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days,
    before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Just google deeper and you will find the months.

    No, I wont

    Yes, certainly there are occasions when it doesn't work, it is early days. >> You just can not say that conclusively "it is impossible to do".

    You yourself have shown that it is impossible to do.

    Your example proves my case.

    No one has done it yet, nor its it likely they ever will, unless its a tiny island with lots of hydro power.

    It is impossible to do for most ordinary countries

    And the cost of that attempt was insane.

    This is the truth! We currently do not have the technology, so it would be refreshing if the EU socialist nobility could stop pissing away our money.
    But that's not likely to happen any time soon. I am happy that the UK
    left, and I do hope that after Starmer has failed, that the UK can work to become the financial power house of the world again.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:42:13 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 15:35, Rich wrote:
    So assuming the "no carbon" goal is required, we can't get/there/ from
    /here/ without something like nuclear to handle what 'storage' claims
    it will be able to do, in twenty plus years.

    Its all nonsense.

    I spent ages analysing all the options and nothing in the end was cheaper or more effective overall than nuclear power, and that wouldn't cover the industrial and transport uses of fossil fuels any more than 'renewables'...

    You can't drive a truck on batteries across America, or a container ship from Taiwan.

    Sweden is investing in new nuclear power..

    In the end the rising price of fossil will move us towards nuclear power simply because it offers a competitive cost benefit vis à vis systems of inordinate complexity based on intermittent renewable power.

    The future will be mainly nuclear, and since once you have any nuclear at all there is no reason to make it more expensive and less reliable and destroy the environment with renewable energy, no one will.

    Renewables aren't dead yet, but they are beginning to smell..

    I agree. Nuclear is the future. There will be smaller niche cases for
    solar and wind, in country side homes during the summer, or by using tax subsidies to get some extra solar into data centers, but as you say, once
    our nuclear knowledge has been rebuilt and regained, it should be
    possible, in theory, to build traditional nuclear in 3-5 years (I think
    south korea is doing it in 5 currently) and SMR:s will hopefully be even faster.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 9 22:44:00 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 16:52, Andy Burns wrote:
    "Carlos E.R." wrote:

    there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works for >>> them.

    But neither .uk or .es have ~90% hydroelectric power
    I always find it amazing that people say things like 'I an so totally off grid' and you look at what they have done and how much fossil fuel was used to build it and transport it to their homes, and how much food they buy still uses natural gas for fertilizer and how their homes feature things made of steel, plastics and cement or brick...and an internet connection...

    And you just think what a delusional bunch of 'see-you-next-tuesday's they actually are.

    The whole renewable fantasy is like a 2 year old saying 'look mummy, I can jump over a toy rabbit, and then again at 5 years old 'look I can jump over a chair - by the time I am 50 I will be able to jump over tall buildings with a single bound!'

    Greens would be rather sweet if they hadn't been given a vote.

    Let me add another off the grid fallacy... technology. Imagine how many factories, components, supply chains you need for a modern electric grid.
    When it breaks, you'll be very happy to have some good old oil, nuclear
    and what ever else you have to power that enormous dependency you have due
    to "smart grids" and renewable power.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Mon Dec 9 22:35:33 2024
    On 2024-12-09 17:52, Andy Burns wrote:
    "Carlos E.R." wrote:

    there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works
    for them.

    But neither .uk or .es have ~90% hydroelectric power

    Excuses.

    Now, back to Linux?

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 23:40:35 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:49:48 +0100, D wrote:

    But how is this solved in existing hydrogen cars? Hydrogen cars exist,
    so surely they must have some way to at least mitigate this problem?

    https://www.toyota.com/mirai/

    "How Safe Is Hydrogen?
    Mirai’s hydrogen fuel tanks have been rigorously tested and proven to meet Global Technical Regulation No. 13. * If the hydrogen sensors detect a
    leak or a collision, the hydrogen tank valves will automatically close to prevent more hydrogen from escaping while any hydrogen that is leaked will safely return to the atmosphere."

    That doesn't address the integrity of the composite fuel tanks.

    https://unece.org/sites/default/files/2023-07/ECE-TRANS-180-Add.13-
    Amend1e.pdf

    That's a definite tl;dr document but as far as I got it seemed to
    recommend controlled leakage before the tanks burst and tried to determine
    the number of cycles before problems occur. However one paragraph was a disclaimer saying they don't have enough real world data to be sure.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Mon Dec 9 23:51:35 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 17:23:04 +0000, Andy Burns wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    The hexamine fuel used by camping stoves and model steam engines is now outlawed, the bad guys figured out how to make a well known military explosive from it

    That must be an European thing. Amazon still shows Coghlan's hexamine
    tablits for my Esbit stove. If I use Tor, which comes out of the rabbit
    hole in the Netherlands today it says they can't be delivered to my
    address.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 00:01:06 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 21:49:25 +0100, D wrote:

    I think making gun powder is very simple. There's loads of youtube
    videos,
    and I imagine that a couple of pipe bombs would be far easier and more explosive than car battery bombs.

    When I was a kid I could walk down the street to the local pharmacy and
    buy potassium nitrate and flowers of sulfur. The pharmacist probably knew
    what I was up to but kids were expected to blow things up back then. I
    could also get iodine crystals for my nitrogen triiodide experiments. It's
    too unstable to be very useful but it does make a nifty purple cloud when
    it blows.

    I only remember one kid getting injured and that was from the low rent
    activity of stuffing match heads into a CO2 capsule. Darwinian selection
    at work.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 00:47:06 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:01:17 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It all goes back to the fraudulent EU and its compact with German manufacturers to mandate 'Renewable energy' *whether it worked or not*.

    Going off on a renewable energy kick, decommissioning your nukes, and
    pissing off the major supplier of cheap energy in your part of the world
    is a real recipe for success. Cynically, the US will be happy to sell you
    LNG that it has a problem using domestically due to the 1920 Jones Act.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 00:42:30 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:44:32 +0100, D wrote:

    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing
    natural gas rather than green alternative energy sources.


    Very interesting! Had no idea! I find it funny that this is somehow
    never meantioned by the green crowd.


    https://www.brightgreenlies.com/book

    'Bright Green Lies' by Derrik Jensen.

    Jensen is not a fossil fuels industry apologist by any means. He is one of
    the founders of Deep Green Resistance that is considered too radical by
    some environmentalists.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Green_Resistance

    The book gets somewhat redundant as he works his way through the various
    green technologies. For each he starts with the extractive industries that
    are required. Solar cells? There are two prevalent technologies for PV
    cells. One uses cadmium and tellurium and the other copper, gallium, and indium, plus silicon. What is the impact of producing these materials? How
    are they mined, transported, and processed? How much heavy equipment must
    be produced? How much energy is used during the smelting or other
    processing? What other materials are needed for completed PV panels?

    After the PV panels are produced, what is required for site preparation?
    What are the ecological impacts of huge solar projects? What is required
    to produce and install the distribution network?

    The same analysis is done for wind, hydro, and so forth. The 'renewable
    energy' technology is the tip of a huge iceberg of antecedent processes studiously ignored by the bright green environmentalists.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bright_green_environmentalism

    They parallel the cornucopians that believe there will always be a technological solution to allow our comfortable life style without taking
    any hard decisions.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Tue Dec 10 00:56:18 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 14:15:21 +0100, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    Desktop Linux works for many people including myself. However, Windows
    remains the dominant OS.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 00:59:19 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 17:01:38 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I always find it amazing that people say things like 'I an so totally
    off grid' and you look at what they have done and how much fossil fuel
    was used to build it and transport it to their homes, and how much food
    they buy still uses natural gas for fertilizer and how their homes
    feature things made of steel, plastics and cement or brick...and an
    internet connection...

    As I mentioned in another post Derrick Jensen asks embarrassing questions
    like that. It's helpful to adopt extreme tunnel vision.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 01:02:15 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 00:52:15 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 21:51:48 +0100, D wrote:

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with
    their ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they didn't see it coming.

    There is a lot of that going around. The French managed to get the RN and
    NFP on the same page while Trump has collected a menagerie of strange bedfellows.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 01:05:21 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 12:55:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory produced control system, and that's it.

    Where were you planning to build your concrete structures? Have you done a complete environmental analysis and responded to the lawsuits by environmentalists and groups that don't want a nuke in their particular
    back garden?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to John Ames on Tue Dec 10 01:25:13 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 10 04:41:52 2024
    On 2024-12-09, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Renewables aren't dead yet, but they are beginning to smell..

    I agree. Nuclear is the future. There will be smaller niche cases for
    solar and wind, in country side homes during the summer, or by using tax subsidies to get some extra solar into data centers, but as you say, once
    our nuclear knowledge has been rebuilt and regained, it should be
    possible, in theory, to build traditional nuclear in 3-5 years (I think
    south korea is doing it in 5 currently) and SMR:s will hopefully be even faster.

    It's going to be a hard sell, though. The peepul want nothing to do
    with that nook-yu-lur stuff. As one hayseed said, "We don't want
    no damn atoms around here."

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 10 04:46:06 2024
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    On 12/8/24 7:17 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your AI's
    number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself
    explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go. And
    that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    I've seen that too - close up. Blew out a reinforced CBC wall
    ...... sheer dumb luck nobody was in the filling room at the time
    or they'd have been Spam.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>


    High-pressure containers - esp ones that have to 'cycle' often -
    are a bomb waiting to go off. Fatigue/corrosion take their awful
    toll - then BOOM !

    If the boom is a flammable gas ... far worse.

    Hydrogen CAN have its uses - but at "industrial" sites, not out in
    public. You can feed it into expensive fuel cells, you can mix
    x-percent with natural gas.

    But as a general-purpose 'motor fuel' ... NO ! Besides, no proper
    infrastructure for it.

    For a 'motor fuel' it is difficult to replace the benefits of liquids
    that do not need pressure vessels (beyond their own evaporation
    pressure, which is usually quite mild). We have an entire setup in
    place for transporting, storing, and dispensing liquids (gas/diesel
    pumps).

    But, to avoid more 'carbon' in the air, the liquids have to be
    synthesized somehow from carbon already in the air. And that we don't
    have on a scale large enough to be a source to replace our current
    liquid fuels.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 10 04:55:22 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively
    combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    How did this happen? In sweden, there is an epidemic of bombings for the
    past couple of years, since crazy drug dealing arabians are waging some
    kind of war with hand grenades, and car battery bombs in the bigger
    cities.

    Would using scuba tanks be a cheaper way for them to bomb each other?

    Likely not as cheap as a car battery. I see a 2.3L mini scuba tank on
    Amazon for $299 (no idea how big a 2.3L mini tank really is). I can
    get a car battery for about $100 at the local auto-store.

    And the scuba tank will not also spray sulfuric acid over everyone when
    it goes "bang". And short of an armor peircing slug, it is probably
    more difficult to get a new scuba tank to go "bang" vs becoming a brief
    high speed rocket or spinner.

    Also, how does a car battery bomb work?

    Perhaps google would answer your question... Or perhaps google would
    report you to the authorities for even asking the question?

    I'ev seen videos of exploding lithium batteries, but that does not
    look as efficient to me as just producing good, old, gun powder at
    home and making your own.

    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?

    Lack of education maybe? They can buy the car battery at an auto parts
    store (no education required, just the local currency) and they likely
    have a "script" passed down that they have no idea how/why it works,
    but if the do x, y, and z, it does work.

    Making gunpower does require some knowledge and skill -- although
    presumably it too could be scripted. So perhaps the 'authorities' are
    watching the gunpowder precursor purchases, but not watching 'car
    battery' purchases?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 10 04:59:11 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?
    It's easier and legal to get a car battery.

    These gentlemen are not very scientific.
    Making gunpowder from chickenshit is quite complex.

    Did you know that acetone - a highly useful solvent used extensively by
    people who make glass fibre components, is also used by people who brew up >> and purify various drugs. Beware ordering a gallon of it...
    The IRA used ammonium nitrate, because it was at that time a legal
    fertilizer. Today it is controlled and comes mixed with something that stops >> it going bang.

    We used to use sodium chlorate - a weedkiller that is now also banned

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    Only the government gets to use the good stuff.

    I think making gun powder is very simple. There's loads of youtube videos, and I imagine that a couple of pipe bombs would be far easier and more explosive than car battery bombs.

    Perhaps then it is easier to cart the car battery bomb in somewhere
    that a large pipe with caps on both ends and a wire out one end would
    raise suspision?

    Fun fact... a swedish wanna be terrorist was caught because he went into a hardware store bought 20 car batteries and the store thought it was suspicious that a bearded gentleman from the middle east should suddenly
    buy 20 car batteries! =D

    Not the sharpest knife that was ever in the drawer.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 10 05:08:30 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    What about storing it as water, and producing it close to where cars need >>> to be fueled up? I assume it would be very inefficient and probably
    difficult, or else someone would already have done it. But I do not know >>> any specifics, so just genuinely curious.

    Hydrogen can be stored very safely as water. The earth's covered in a
    significant amount of "water stored hydrogen". :)

    The tricky part is you have to put in a rather significant amount of
    energy to convince it (the hydrogen) to let go of it's grip with the
    oxygen atoms that make up the water.

    And once you create it, and pump it into the car's pressure tank
    (you'll need a pressure vessel unless the car has a cryo-cooler on
    board, and the energy expended by the cryo-cooler would dwarf the
    energy needed to propel the car), you are right back to the
    'embrittlement' problem again.

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively
    combusting as part of the pressure release.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    But how is this solved in existing hydrogen cars?

    I have no idea.

    Hydrogen cars exist, so surely they must have some way to at least
    mitigate this problem?

    Do they really? On more than a 'lab experiment' model?

    As for converting hydrogen "on site" I can imagine two limiting factors.

    1. The speed of conversion. Can you convert hydrogen on site, fast enough,
    to fill up a car in 5-10 minutes?

    That would likely require some major power input for the "splitting up" of water molecules on site. Likely somewhere on the order of existing
    electric car "super chargers" -- or perhaps even more.

    and

    2. The cost of converting water to hydrogen in a smaller setup, vs doing
    it somewhere central and shipping it.

    You can convert water to hydrogen using just a battery, some wire, and
    some containers. It is (or at least was) a common physics experiment
    in high school physics class.

    Now, doing so, even on a small scale, in a volume sufficient to fuel a
    hydrogen powered car, well that's a whole level more complex than the
    physics experiment demonstration. That is if you want your "hydrogen generator" to be reasonably safe for the "average joe" to use and
    reasonably long lived. Not the least of which the compressor to
    achieve 450-700 bar (your AI's numbers again) worth of compression to
    fuel the car will be a somewhat expensive component, and every "unit"
    will need one unless the car comes with its own built in pressure boost
    unit.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 01:11:56 2024
    On 12/9/24 11:46 PM, Rich wrote:
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    On 12/8/24 7:17 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your AI's
    number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself
    explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go. And
    that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    I've seen that too - close up. Blew out a reinforced CBC wall
    ...... sheer dumb luck nobody was in the filling room at the time
    or they'd have been Spam.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>


    High-pressure containers - esp ones that have to 'cycle' often -
    are a bomb waiting to go off. Fatigue/corrosion take their awful
    toll - then BOOM !

    If the boom is a flammable gas ... far worse.

    Hydrogen CAN have its uses - but at "industrial" sites, not out in
    public. You can feed it into expensive fuel cells, you can mix
    x-percent with natural gas.

    But as a general-purpose 'motor fuel' ... NO ! Besides, no proper
    infrastructure for it.

    For a 'motor fuel' it is difficult to replace the benefits of liquids
    that do not need pressure vessels (beyond their own evaporation
    pressure, which is usually quite mild). We have an entire setup in
    place for transporting, storing, and dispensing liquids (gas/diesel
    pumps).

    But, to avoid more 'carbon' in the air, the liquids have to be
    synthesized somehow from carbon already in the air. And that we don't
    have on a scale large enough to be a source to replace our current
    liquid fuels.


    The catalyst people ARE getting better with grabbing
    CO2 and turning it into various 'fuel' hydrocarbons
    again. If there's hope for "CO2 Capture" it's with
    these scientists.

    They don't even HAVE to "break even" - just kinda
    sorta CLOSE. That'd be significant - "good enough"

    Again, as for 'motor fuel', I suggest isopropanol,
    and it has a decent 'octane rating' - around 112.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 01:49:04 2024
    On 12/9/24 4:49 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 8 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    What about storing it as water, and producing it close to where cars
    need
    to be fueled up? I assume it would be very inefficient and probably
    difficult, or else someone would already have done it. But I do not know >>> any specifics, so just genuinely curious.

    Hydrogen can be stored very safely as water.  The earth's covered in a
    significant amount of "water stored hydrogen". :)

    The tricky part is you have to put in a rather significant amount of
    energy to convince it (the hydrogen) to let go of it's grip with the
    oxygen atoms that make up the water.

    And once you create it, and pump it into the car's pressure tank
    (you'll need a pressure vessel unless the car has a cryo-cooler on
    board, and the energy expended by the cryo-cooler would dwarf the
    energy needed to propel the car), you are right back to the
    'embrittlement' problem again.

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively
    combusting as part of the pressure release.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    But how is this solved in existing hydrogen cars? Hydrogen cars exist,
    so surely they must have some way to at least mitigate this problem?


    "It" is NOT solved, not at all. They're bombs.

    We keep hearing of exotic compounds that will absorb
    a lot of H2 at relatively low Ts & Ps ... but they do
    not seem to pan out for industrial-scale production
    (kinda like all the 'improved' lithium cells). What
    seem great in a square MM lab test chamber, well .....


    As for converting hydrogen "on site" I can imagine two limiting factors.

    1. The speed of conversion. Can you convert hydrogen on site, fast
    enough, to fill up a car in 5-10 minutes?

    No.

    And a LARGE amount of energy is lost (and heat produced)
    during the conversion. The catalyst people MAY make this
    a bit better, but STILL .....

    And also, from WHERE comes the ENERGY to create the
    electricity to create the hydrogen ? Probably coal/oil.

    Generated H2 from 'intermittent' sources like PVs or
    windmills or whatever ... there ARE uses for it, but
    in INDUSTRIAL settings, not on I-10. Take yer carbon
    advantage THERE and be happy.

    and

    2. The cost of converting water to hydrogen in a smaller setup, vs doing
    it somewhere central and shipping it.

    There's no real INFRASTRUCTURE for dealing with hydrogen.
    It's NOT just the same as NG/propane.

    Hydrogen basically goes into those 4-foot steel cylinders.
    That's IT. Oh, pressure-cycle those 100+ times and somewhere
    in there there'll be a BIG Badda Boom.

    Hydrogen is a drug-induced Greenie hallucination.

    Gotta do MUCH better. It's gotta be REAL.

    OK ... nasty POLITICS ... the further left wants to vastly
    RESTRICT travel. Makes it much easier to CONTROL people, even
    limit their experience of what happens 'elsewhere' so the
    Ministry Of Truth (John Kerry in charge, of course) can create
    entire new realities.

    As such, CRAP/expensive/impractical vehicles SERVE that
    purpose. They want your entire existence/experience to
    be within 'bicycle range'.

    Yes, evil-minded people DO exist - and too many of them
    go into Government.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 01:54:05 2024
    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff' :-)

    Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
    schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

    Houston, we have a problem .............

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 10 08:01:09 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Tue Dec 10 09:56:20 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    On 2024-12-09 17:01, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:51, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-09 14:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 09/12/2024 13:10, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-07 15:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    Windmills and solar panels are useless for the same reason. - there is >>>>>> no storage able to meet the intermittency problem.

    I don't know why you are talking of that in this Linux group, but for >>>>> your information, we have an island that goes with renewable energy for >>>>> months, not touching the fueled generators.

    <https://www.endesa.com/es/proyectos/todos-los-proyectos/transicion- >>>>> energetica/renovables/el-hierro-renovable>
    <https://www.endesa.com/es/la-cara-e/energias-renovables/gorona-
    viento-renovable>

    But it still touches the fuelled generators.

    And its a very small island, and it uses pumped storage because it has >>>> hills,

    Try that in Holland...

    And it isn't as green as you think. Dig deeper into the actual statistics >>>>
    "The longest it’s powered up the whole island is 25 consecutive days, >>>> before the back-up diesel engine had to step in"

    That is not 'for months'.

    Just google deeper and you will find the months.

    No, I wont

    Yes, certainly there are occasions when it doesn't work, it is early days. >>> You just can not say that conclusively "it is impossible to do".

    You yourself have shown that it is impossible to do.

    Your example proves my case.

    No one has done it yet, nor its it likely they ever will, unless its a tiny >> island with lots of hydro power.

    It is impossible to do for most ordinary countries

    And the cost of that attempt was insane.



    I have proven that it is possible. Just do it, eventually. We have to do it to survive. I'm lucky to have no descendants.

    No you did not. As other pointed out. Please Carlos, you will not die in
    any climate catastrophe, do now that it is a control technique used by politicians to strip you of your critical thinking, tax money and freedom.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to John Ames on Tue Dec 10 09:59:54 2024
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ relevant refresher course...

    Probably not. I'd recommend you to return next tuesday and have a look. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 10:23:47 2024
    On Tue, 9 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 17:23:04 +0000, Andy Burns wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    The hexamine fuel used by camping stoves and model steam engines is now
    outlawed, the bad guys figured out how to make a well known military
    explosive from it

    That must be an European thing. Amazon still shows Coghlan's hexamine
    tablits for my Esbit stove. If I use Tor, which comes out of the rabbit
    hole in the Netherlands today it says they can't be delivered to my
    address.


    I think this could be due to the fact that the DHS has successfully fought
    all terrorists, so now the public can be trusted with model steam engines again! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 10:22:54 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 9 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:49:48 +0100, D wrote:

    But how is this solved in existing hydrogen cars? Hydrogen cars exist,
    so surely they must have some way to at least mitigate this problem?

    https://www.toyota.com/mirai/

    "How Safe Is Hydrogen?
    Mirai’s hydrogen fuel tanks have been rigorously tested and proven to meet Global Technical Regulation No. 13. * If the hydrogen sensors detect a
    leak or a collision, the hydrogen tank valves will automatically close to prevent more hydrogen from escaping while any hydrogen that is leaked will safely return to the atmosphere."

    That doesn't address the integrity of the composite fuel tanks.

    https://unece.org/sites/default/files/2023-07/ECE-TRANS-180-Add.13- Amend1e.pdf

    That's a definite tl;dr document but as far as I got it seemed to
    recommend controlled leakage before the tanks burst and tried to determine the number of cycles before problems occur. However one paragraph was a disclaimer saying they don't have enough real world data to be sure.

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    But every new system has its bugs and quirks. Just look at the car battery fires that have happened.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 10:26:21 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 21:49:25 +0100, D wrote:

    I think making gun powder is very simple. There's loads of youtube
    videos,
    and I imagine that a couple of pipe bombs would be far easier and more
    explosive than car battery bombs.

    When I was a kid I could walk down the street to the local pharmacy and
    buy potassium nitrate and flowers of sulfur. The pharmacist probably knew what I was up to but kids were expected to blow things up back then. I
    could also get iodine crystals for my nitrogen triiodide experiments. It's too unstable to be very useful but it does make a nifty purple cloud when
    it blows.

    Amen! Never dared to go back to my experiments with iodine crystals after
    one of my experiment spontaneously caught fire. But yes, blowing things up
    is a healthy youth activity, and effectively separates the wheat from the chaff. ;)

    I only remember one kid getting injured and that was from the low rent activity of stuffing match heads into a CO2 capsule. Darwinian selection
    at work.

    I did a few experiments with match heads to see if I could use them as
    primer in home made ammunition. Never completed my experiment, but at
    least the match head part worked beautifully. You could set it off by
    whacking a small pile with a spoon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 10:30:02 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 21:51:48 +0100, D wrote:

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with
    their ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they
    didn't see it coming.

    There is a lot of that going around. The French managed to get the RN and
    NFP on the same page while Trump has collected a menagerie of strange bedfellows.


    I guess it's the spirit of the age. Our elite politicians have lost touch
    with the people and have pissed them off too much. The people then,
    naturally, overreact. The rest of the chain of causation is left as an
    exercise for the reader. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 10:28:50 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:44:32 +0100, D wrote:

    On Mon, 8 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing
    natural gas rather than green alternative energy sources.


    Very interesting! Had no idea! I find it funny that this is somehow
    never meantioned by the green crowd.


    https://www.brightgreenlies.com/book

    'Bright Green Lies' by Derrik Jensen.

    Jensen is not a fossil fuels industry apologist by any means. He is one of the founders of Deep Green Resistance that is considered too radical by
    some environmentalists.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Green_Resistance

    The book gets somewhat redundant as he works his way through the various green technologies. For each he starts with the extractive industries that are required. Solar cells? There are two prevalent technologies for PV
    cells. One uses cadmium and tellurium and the other copper, gallium, and indium, plus silicon. What is the impact of producing these materials? How are they mined, transported, and processed? How much heavy equipment must
    be produced? How much energy is used during the smelting or other
    processing? What other materials are needed for completed PV panels?

    After the PV panels are produced, what is required for site preparation?
    What are the ecological impacts of huge solar projects? What is required
    to produce and install the distribution network?

    The same analysis is done for wind, hydro, and so forth. The 'renewable energy' technology is the tip of a huge iceberg of antecedent processes studiously ignored by the bright green environmentalists.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bright_green_environmentalism

    They parallel the cornucopians that believe there will always be a technological solution to allow our comfortable life style without taking
    any hard decisions.

    For another realistic perspective on climate change, I always recommend ex-green peace member (and founder in Denmark) Björn Lomborg.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUPBSRs067w https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RxCkQtE-P0

    He is generally hated by the eco-fascists, which is always a signal to me
    that here might be an interesting thought or two. One of his big ideas is
    that CO2 taxes are largely completely ineffective at making any change at
    all.

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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 11:16:27 2024
    rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 17:23:04 +0000, Andy Burns wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    The hexamine fuel used by camping stoves and model steam engines is now
    outlawed, the bad guys figured out how to make a well known military
    explosive from it

    That must be an European thing.

    Maybe even just a UK thing, retailers complaining nobody told them about
    it, Mamod claim it's the reason they went bust (could use meths, not ideal)

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  • From vallor@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 11:47:55 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:30:02 +0100, D wrote:

    I guess it's the spirit of the age. Our elite politicians have lost
    touch with the people and have pissed them off too much. The people
    then, naturally, overreact. The rest of the chain of causation is left
    as an exercise for the reader. ;)

    But not a reader here, because you and your ilks' political missives
    have fsck-all to do with Linux.

    On that note, fresh Linux:

    _[/home/scott]_(scott@lm)🐧_
    $ uname -a
    Linux lm 6.12.4 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Mon Dec 9 09:09:32 PST 2024 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

    real 375.52
    user 17582.03
    sys 3456.69

    Using NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-565.77.run for graphics drivers, and
    selecting the MIT/GPL licensed branch. This binary blob is
    a new, new-feature release.

    Also built vlc so I could test some features, and included projectM
    with it. Visualization goodness working, once I added a symlink
    for the font that the projectM module was looking for

    --
    -Scott System76 Thelio Mega v1.1 x86_64 NVIDIA RTX 3090 Ti
    OS: Linux 6.12.4 Release: Mint 21.3 Mem: 258G
    "Recovery program for excessive talkers: On-and-on-Anon."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 14:36:11 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb >>>> over regular gun powder plus a pipe?
    It's easier and legal to get a car battery.

    These gentlemen are not very scientific.
    Making gunpowder from chickenshit is quite complex.

    Did you know that acetone - a highly useful solvent used extensively by
    people who make glass fibre components, is also used by people who brew up >>> and purify various drugs. Beware ordering a gallon of it...
    The IRA used ammonium nitrate, because it was at that time a legal
    fertilizer. Today it is controlled and comes mixed with something that stops
    it going bang.

    We used to use sodium chlorate - a weedkiller that is now also banned

    Terrorist and criminals use what they can get their hands on

    Only the government gets to use the good stuff.

    I think making gun powder is very simple. There's loads of youtube videos, >> and I imagine that a couple of pipe bombs would be far easier and more
    explosive than car battery bombs.

    Perhaps then it is easier to cart the car battery bomb in somewhere
    that a large pipe with caps on both ends and a wire out one end would
    raise suspision?

    Maybe! Let's see if we have a terrorist as a member of the group who can
    tell us! ;)

    Fun fact... a swedish wanna be terrorist was caught because he went into a >> hardware store bought 20 car batteries and the store thought it was
    suspicious that a bearded gentleman from the middle east should suddenly
    buy 20 car batteries! =D

    Not the sharpest knife that was ever in the drawer.

    This is the truth. But I would expect the sharper tools to be the leaders
    who sent the less sharp tools to their death with crappy, home made bombs.
    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 14:34:59 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang". >>>> That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively >>>> combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    How did this happen? In sweden, there is an epidemic of bombings for the
    past couple of years, since crazy drug dealing arabians are waging some
    kind of war with hand grenades, and car battery bombs in the bigger
    cities.

    Would using scuba tanks be a cheaper way for them to bomb each other?

    Likely not as cheap as a car battery. I see a 2.3L mini scuba tank on
    Amazon for $299 (no idea how big a 2.3L mini tank really is). I can
    get a car battery for about $100 at the local auto-store.

    And the scuba tank will not also spray sulfuric acid over everyone when
    it goes "bang". And short of an armor peircing slug, it is probably
    more difficult to get a new scuba tank to go "bang" vs becoming a brief
    high speed rocket or spinner.

    Also, how does a car battery bomb work?

    Perhaps google would answer your question... Or perhaps google would
    report you to the authorities for even asking the question?

    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    So that's why I ask you knowledgeable guys, since to me, it seems there
    are _way_ better ways to cause mayhem than car battery bombs.

    I'ev seen videos of exploding lithium batteries, but that does not
    look as efficient to me as just producing good, old, gun powder at
    home and making your own.

    So with that in mind, what would be the advantage of a car battery bomb
    over regular gun powder plus a pipe?

    Lack of education maybe? They can buy the car battery at an auto parts
    store (no education required, just the local currency) and they likely
    have a "script" passed down that they have no idea how/why it works,
    but if the do x, y, and z, it does work.

    Making gunpower does require some knowledge and skill -- although
    presumably it too could be scripted. So perhaps the 'authorities' are watching the gunpowder precursor purchases, but not watching 'car
    battery' purchases?



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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 10 14:38:20 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff' :-)

    Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
    schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

    Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 14:32:28 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.


    Yes, I agree. Politics alone has the possibility of consuming that time
    span. There was talk about restarting 2 old reactors that were shut down
    by the left, but as a strange conincidence, the manager of the plant had basically thrown away all spare parts and documentation, and claimed
    therefore it was impossible. Naturally, it was never questioned or asked
    why he did it and the story was quickly forgotten in the media.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 16:05:23 2024
    On 09/12/2024 20:50, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new,
    working nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking
    exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put
    together scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some
    generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory
    produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim

    This is the government. No SMR:s in sight. They are thinking about
    "safe" traditional ones.

    If they get it done in 10 years, and if they dare to explore SMR:s, I
    will be happily proven wrong.

    Sweden is small enough to be reasonably governed by people who don't
    get too puffed with self importance.

    I think the salient points for Europe are:-

    - Net Zero is pie in the sky. It ain't gonna happen.
    - Renewable energy is pie in the sky, and massively expensive overall.
    It ain't gonna happen either.
    - further reliance on fossil fuels is fraught with danger since by and
    large Western Europe doesnt have any.
    - All the Nordic hydro is pretty much exploited as well as alpine and in
    the Iberian peninsula.
    - All that is left is nuclear, and the point of SMR is to reduce build
    time and hence cost.

    We have to use what fossil is left to bootsrtap the nuclear economy.

    Note I didn't use the phrase 'climate change' anywhere above. It is
    *supremely irrelevant.'

    The greater issue is the growing scarcity of fossil fuel

    --
    Labour - a bunch of rich people convincing poor people to vote for rich
    people by telling poor people that "other" rich people are the reason
    they are poor.

    Peter Thompson

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 16:11:41 2024
    On 09/12/2024 20:51, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels  we would be all nuclear by
    now...and be making synthetic diesel

    Is electricity the primary cost driver of synthetic diesel?

    I think it would be, yes.


    Lets say you can get to a 30% conversion ration of whatever energy
    drives the synthesis, to the final diesl.

    Diesel and natural gas is around (UK money) 50p a litre or 5p /kWh

    Expected renewable electricity is 3-4 times that
    Historic nuclear is a bit less - say 4p /kWh

    That puts synthetic diesel at a minimum of around 12p/kWh Which is what
    we pay at the pumps but that is all tax.

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with
    their ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they didn't see it coming. ;)

    The trouble with Germany is that the Greens got into coalition, and the
    price of that was Germany's energy policy.
    The problem seems to be that the broad political choice is between neo
    Marxists and pro Russian Neo Nazis.

    --
    WOKE is an acronym... Without Originality, Knowledge or Education.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 10 16:18:59 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang". >>>>> That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively >>>>> combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    How did this happen? In sweden, there is an epidemic of bombings for the >>> past couple of years, since crazy drug dealing arabians are waging some
    kind of war with hand grenades, and car battery bombs in the bigger
    cities.

    Would using scuba tanks be a cheaper way for them to bomb each other?

    Likely not as cheap as a car battery. I see a 2.3L mini scuba tank on
    Amazon for $299 (no idea how big a 2.3L mini tank really is). I can
    get a car battery for about $100 at the local auto-store.

    And the scuba tank will not also spray sulfuric acid over everyone when
    it goes "bang". And short of an armor peircing slug, it is probably
    more difficult to get a new scuba tank to go "bang" vs becoming a brief
    high speed rocket or spinner.

    Also, how does a car battery bomb work?

    Perhaps google would answer your question... Or perhaps google would
    report you to the authorities for even asking the question?

    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    So that's why I ask you knowledgeable guys, since to me, it seems there
    are _way_ better ways to cause mayhem than car battery bombs.

    Maybe try over on "alt.terrorists.r.us" :)

    Unless one of the lurkers is also playing in this field (and willing to
    speak up) you'll likely get "I dunno" as the answer from the rest of
    us. There's probably "some" reason, but you might have to infiltrate a
    cell to actually find out, and when you did, the "reason" may seem
    totally crazy in and of itself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Tue Dec 10 16:19:42 2024
    On 09/12/2024 21:34, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    have proven that it is possible. Just do it, eventually. We have to do
    it to survive. I'm lucky to have no descendants.

    It is also possible to fly an aeroplane using a steam engine powered by
    coal.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw6NFmcnW-8

    Oddly enough it never became a commercial success.

    When you do the sums,,. renewable energy comes out at something like $250-$400/MWh overall, Gas its around $50/MWh , coal is around
    $40-$50/MWh, as is old pre-existent nuclear., and traditional strangled
    'new' nuclear is up around $150/MWh.
    But new nuclear that evades the regulatory overburden looks set to be in
    the $50-$60/MWh

    If you want to have a competitive industry of any sort you need cheap
    reliable energy.
    Renewables are absolutely the worst way to achieve that.

    Fossil fuel prices are rising. Nuclear power done right should not. It
    is the energy of the future. If civilisation is to continue.

    Renewables belong in a museum.



    --
    "What do you think about Gay Marriage?"
    "I don't."
    "Don't what?"
    "Think about Gay Marriage."

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Carlos E.R. on Tue Dec 10 16:21:14 2024
    On 09/12/2024 21:35, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-12-09 17:52, Andy Burns wrote:
    "Carlos E.R." wrote:

    there are countries that sell more electric cars than IC, so it works
    for them.

    But neither .uk or .es have ~90% hydroelectric power

    Excuses.

    No. Its you who make excuses. Its all 'can be done, so must be done'
    with no mention of cost or benefit. And no alternatives explored


    Now, back to Linux?

    Losing the argument huh?


    --
    For in reason, all government without the consent of the governed is the
    very definition of slavery.

    Jonathan Swift

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 16:22:14 2024
    On 09/12/2024 21:35, D wrote:
    I could argue that solar is great in the sahara,
    but that does not make it feasible at scale, so bad example.

    Not at night.

    And, guess what, no one lives in the sahara. So what is the point?


    --
    For in reason, all government without the consent of the governed is the
    very definition of slavery.

    Jonathan Swift

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 16:27:56 2024
    On 09/12/2024 21:40, D wrote:
    We currently do not have the technology, so it would be refreshing if
    the EU socialist nobility could stop pissing away our money. But that's
    not likely to happen any time soon. I am happy that the UK left, and I
    do hope that after Starmer has failed, that the UK can work to become
    the financial power house of the world again.

    I read that Spain decided not to subsidise its windfarms as directed by
    the EU, as it was cheaper to pay the fine the EU imposed. Except they
    haven't paid that, either.
    I think some other country did the same.

    Germany has revoked Shengen. Not the EU. Finland and Sweden joined
    NATO. Not the EU.

    People are finding the EU is simply not as appropriate as individual
    nations behaving as if they were sovereign are letting the EU go fuck
    itself.

    Euratom is the agency in charge of preventing new nuclear plants being
    built.

    --
    Labour - a bunch of rich people convincing poor people to vote for rich
    people by telling poor people that "other" rich people are the reason
    they are poor.

    Peter Thompson

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to John Ames on Tue Dec 10 16:29:30 2024
    On 09/12/2024 21:58, John Ames wrote:
    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ relevant refresher course...

    Well just kill the whole thread. You dont have to read it.

    --
    "Nature does not give up the winter because people dislike the cold."

    ― Confucius

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 16:36:01 2024
    On 10/12/2024 01:02, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.

    Fortunately Sweden is not.

    There seem to be (compared with the UK and US) people who can count
    beyond ten with their socks on in government

    They are still singing the renewable hymn sheet but money is going into piloting nuclear power.

    IIRC the majority of many European countries are now in principle not
    opposed to nuclear if the price is right.

    And once one country goes nuclear, the rest will get lost in a crush to
    follow.



    --
    To ban Christmas, simply give turkeys the vote.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Tue Dec 10 16:47:16 2024
    On 10/12/2024 04:41, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-09, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Renewables aren't dead yet, but they are beginning to smell..

    I agree. Nuclear is the future. There will be smaller niche cases for
    solar and wind, in country side homes during the summer, or by using tax
    subsidies to get some extra solar into data centers, but as you say, once
    our nuclear knowledge has been rebuilt and regained, it should be
    possible, in theory, to build traditional nuclear in 3-5 years (I think
    south korea is doing it in 5 currently) and SMR:s will hopefully be even
    faster.

    It's going to be a hard sell, though. The peepul want nothing to do
    with that nook-yu-lur stuff. As one hayseed said, "We don't want
    no damn atoms around here."

    Ah well that's a different experience from Europe. We don't have
    hayseeds sadly, We have Greens and other useless idiots.

    --
    “Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.”

    H.L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 16:45:56 2024
    On 10/12/2024 01:05, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 12:55:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some
    generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory
    produced control system, and that's it.

    Where were you planning to build your concrete structures? Have you done a complete environmental analysis and responded to the lawsuits by environmentalists and groups that don't want a nuke in their particular
    back garden?

    Broadly speaking you do it where the old nuclear power stations were
    built, that still have gigawatt grid connections... But its no more
    intrusive than a gas powered station so any large industrial estate is suitable. 'Brown field' is the idea. Old coal and nuclear become new
    nuclear.

    The government drove a coach and horses through planning law with wind
    farm development. They can do the same for nuclear if the political will
    is there.

    Once the electorate are clamouring for it, it suddenly seems easy to do
    to get re-elected...

    People in the UK have had nukes in their back yards for 40 years or
    more. No one minds.

    I was walking on a beach and passed some people and got chatting 'do you
    know what that is?' they asked. 'That's Britain's biggest and newest
    nuclear power station'. 'oh..'..was all they said.

    The NIMBYs are not NIMBYs at all - they are carefully orchestrated,
    fully paid up, probably by Russia or other gas interests, climate and
    energy activists. Bussed in from big cities.


    --
    I would rather have questions that cannot be answered...
    ...than to have answers that cannot be questioned

    Richard Feynman

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 16:51:38 2024
    On 10/12/2024 04:46, Rich wrote:

    For a 'motor fuel' it is difficult to replace the benefits of liquids
    that do not need pressure vessels (beyond their own evaporation
    pressure, which is usually quite mild). We have an entire setup in
    place for transporting, storing, and dispensing liquids (gas/diesel
    pumps).

    +1

    But, to avoid more 'carbon' in the air, the liquids have to be
    synthesized somehow from carbon already in the air. And that we don't
    have on a scale large enough to be a source to replace our current
    liquid fuels.

    Well What we need to look at is how much carbon we can fix from the air
    using plants.
    Once you have cellulose and carbohydrates, you can make alcohols, and
    once you have alcohols you can make long chain hydrocarbons.

    Of course you need to remove all the solar farms first to grow the crops.

    And or use giant algal farms in marshes etc. Adding light to indoor
    plants would make them work as well. Its all about having enough cheap
    energy




    --
    “Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.”

    H.L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 16:52:58 2024
    On 10/12/2024 04:55, Rich wrote:
    Making gunpower does require some knowledge and skill -- although
    presumably it too could be scripted. So perhaps the 'authorities' are watching the gunpowder precursor purchases, but not watching 'car
    battery' purchases?

    IIRC gunpowder starts with bird shit, wood charcoal and sulfur.

    --
    Gun Control: The law that ensures that only criminals have guns.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 16:55:02 2024
    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.



    So that's why I ask you knowledgeable guys, since to me, it seems there
    are _way_ better ways to cause mayhem than car battery bombs.

    --
    Gun Control: The law that ensures that only criminals have guns.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 10 16:56:13 2024
    On 10/12/2024 06:11, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/9/24 11:46 PM, Rich wrote:
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    On 12/8/24 7:17 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your AI's
    number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself
    explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.  And
    that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

       I've seen that too - close up.  Blew out a reinforced CBC wall
       ......  sheer dumb luck nobody was in the filling room at the time >>>    or they'd have been Spam.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a
    'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    <shudder>


       High-pressure containers - esp ones that have to 'cycle' often -
       are a bomb waiting to go off.  Fatigue/corrosion take their awful
       toll - then BOOM !

       If the boom is a flammable gas ... far worse.

       Hydrogen CAN have its uses - but at "industrial" sites, not out in
       public.  You can feed it into expensive fuel cells, you can mix
       x-percent with natural gas.

       But as a general-purpose 'motor fuel' ...  NO !  Besides, no proper >>>    infrastructure for it.

    For a 'motor fuel' it is difficult to replace the benefits of liquids
    that do not need pressure vessels (beyond their own evaporation
    pressure, which is usually quite mild).  We have an entire setup in
    place for transporting, storing, and dispensing liquids (gas/diesel
    pumps).

    But, to avoid more 'carbon' in the air, the liquids have to be
    synthesized somehow from carbon already in the air.  And that we don't
    have on a scale large enough to be a source to replace our current
    liquid fuels.


      The catalyst people ARE getting better with grabbing
      CO2 and turning it into various 'fuel' hydrocarbons
      again. If there's hope for "CO2 Capture" it's with
      these scientists.

      They don't even HAVE to "break even" - just kinda
      sorta CLOSE. That'd be significant - "good enough"

      Again, as for 'motor fuel', I suggest isopropanol,
      and it has a decent 'octane rating' - around 112.

    I'd prefer a clean diesel..better fuel efficiency


    --
    Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people.
    But Marxism is the crack cocaine.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Tue Dec 10 20:06:27 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang". >>>>>> That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively >>>>>> combusting as part of the pressure release.

    I've seen the results of a 200-bar scuba tank letting go.
    And that's just a little 80-cubic foot tank filled with air.

    How did this happen? In sweden, there is an epidemic of bombings for the >>>> past couple of years, since crazy drug dealing arabians are waging some >>>> kind of war with hand grenades, and car battery bombs in the bigger
    cities.

    Would using scuba tanks be a cheaper way for them to bomb each other?

    Likely not as cheap as a car battery. I see a 2.3L mini scuba tank on
    Amazon for $299 (no idea how big a 2.3L mini tank really is). I can
    get a car battery for about $100 at the local auto-store.

    And the scuba tank will not also spray sulfuric acid over everyone when
    it goes "bang". And short of an armor peircing slug, it is probably
    more difficult to get a new scuba tank to go "bang" vs becoming a brief
    high speed rocket or spinner.

    Also, how does a car battery bomb work?

    Perhaps google would answer your question... Or perhaps google would
    report you to the authorities for even asking the question?

    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be
    lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    So that's why I ask you knowledgeable guys, since to me, it seems there
    are _way_ better ways to cause mayhem than car battery bombs.

    Maybe try over on "alt.terrorists.r.us" :)

    Unless one of the lurkers is also playing in this field (and willing to
    speak up) you'll likely get "I dunno" as the answer from the rest of
    us. There's probably "some" reason, but you might have to infiltrate a
    cell to actually find out, and when you did, the "reason" may seem
    totally crazy in and of itself.

    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 20:00:17 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:22:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    Yup... That will work until Suzie Suburban screws in the nozzle with a
    leaking i-ring, butt hanging from her lips.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:19:39 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:51, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels  we would be all nuclear by
    now...and be making synthetic diesel

    Is electricity the primary cost driver of synthetic diesel?

    I think it would be, yes.


    Lets say you can get to a 30% conversion ration of whatever energy drives the synthesis, to the final diesl.

    Diesel and natural gas is around (UK money) 50p a litre or 5p /kWh

    Expected renewable electricity is 3-4 times that
    Historic nuclear is a bit less - say 4p /kWh

    That puts synthetic diesel at a minimum of around 12p/kWh Which is what we pay at the pumps but that is all tax.

    Ahh, yet another thing we don't have to worry about then. =)

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with their
    ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they didn't
    see it coming. ;)

    The trouble with Germany is that the Greens got into coalition, and the price of that was Germany's energy policy.
    The problem seems to be that the broad political choice is between neo Marxists and pro Russian Neo Nazis.

    Yes!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:54:31 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 21:40, D wrote:
    We currently do not have the technology, so it would be refreshing if the
    EU socialist nobility could stop pissing away our money. But that's not
    likely to happen any time soon. I am happy that the UK left, and I do hope >> that after Starmer has failed, that the UK can work to become the financial >> power house of the world again.

    I read that Spain decided not to subsidise its windfarms as directed by the EU, as it was cheaper to pay the fine the EU imposed. Except they haven't paid that, either.
    I think some other country did the same.

    Germany has revoked Shengen. Not the EU. Finland and Sweden joined NATO.
    Not the EU.

    People are finding the EU is simply not as appropriate as individual nations behaving as if they were sovereign are letting the EU go fuck itself.

    Euratom is the agency in charge of preventing new nuclear plants being built.

    Yes, I think the EU will eventually collapse under its own weight. I'm
    just waiting for Orban or some other little dictator to break away,
    humiliating the EU even more.

    Draghis "innovation report" was hilarious! The EU is falling behind in innovation, what should we do? Surprise! The EU must invest billions in
    green tech!

    Oh my god. How do those guys ever reach those positions? =/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:17:04 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:50, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working >>>> nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking
    exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put together >>> scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some
    generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory
    produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim

    This is the government. No SMR:s in sight. They are thinking about "safe"
    traditional ones.

    If they get it done in 10 years, and if they dare to explore SMR:s, I will >> be happily proven wrong.

    Sweden is small enough to be reasonably governed by people who don't get too puffed with self importance.

    I think the salient points for Europe are:-

    - Net Zero is pie in the sky. It ain't gonna happen.
    - Renewable energy is pie in the sky, and massively expensive overall. It ain't gonna happen either.
    - further reliance on fossil fuels is fraught with danger since by and large Western Europe doesnt have any.
    - All the Nordic hydro is pretty much exploited as well as alpine and in the Iberian peninsula.
    - All that is left is nuclear, and the point of SMR is to reduce build time and hence cost.

    We have to use what fossil is left to bootsrtap the nuclear economy.

    Note I didn't use the phrase 'climate change' anywhere above. It is *supremely irrelevant.'

    The greater issue is the growing scarcity of fossil fuel

    Amen! But I don't think the fossil fuel scarcity is too much of a problem,
    and that there's enough left for at least a generation or two.

    But it won't be a big bang, plenty of technologies exist to bridge the
    gap.

    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I bought
    full, and would never have to refuel. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:57:36 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 01:02, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.

    Fortunately Sweden is not.

    There seem to be (compared with the UK and US) people who can count beyond ten with their socks on in government

    They are still singing the renewable hymn sheet but money is going into piloting nuclear power.

    Really? Not in sweden. What I have seen is that there is debate currently around the funding. The Green tech companies are furious of course,
    because they see the government teet being withdrawn.

    The government owner power company at first refused to consider nuclear,
    since it was not economically feasible. The CEO was switftly removed by
    the new government, or she was forcefully instructed behind closed doors
    (don't remember which actually) and all of a sudden they reluctantly
    agreed to consider it.

    The socialist/eco-fascist deep state surely runs deep in sweden. But it is
    a small country, so much easier to change and adapt than a big country.

    IIRC the majority of many European countries are now in principle not opposed to nuclear if the price is right.

    And once one country goes nuclear, the rest will get lost in a crush to follow.





    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:59:03 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be
    lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.

    This is the truth! I was just going by what I coud, at that time, easily acquire or make myself.

    So that's why I ask you knowledgeable guys, since to me, it seems there are >> _way_ better ways to cause mayhem than car battery bombs.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 10 22:07:32 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:22:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    Yup... That will work until Suzie Suburban screws in the nozzle with a leaking i-ring, butt hanging from her lips.


    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future? ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 21:21:22 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 21:35, D wrote:
    I could argue that solar is great in the sahara, but that does not make it >> feasible at scale, so bad example.

    Not at night.

    And, guess what, no one lives in the sahara. So what is the point?

    To illustrate that Carlos argument was bad. You got it! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 10 22:49:07 2024
    On 2024-12-10, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 01:02, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working
    nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.

    Fortunately Sweden is not.

    There seem to be (compared with the UK and US) people who can count
    beyond ten with their socks on in government

    I think that when it comes to politicians, the appropriate phrase is
    "can count to 21 with their fly zipped".

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 23:20:08 2024
    On 10/12/2024 20:17, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:50, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new,
    working nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking
    exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put
    together scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and
    some generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a
    factory produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim

    This is the government. No SMR:s in sight. They are thinking about
    "safe" traditional ones.

    If they get it done in 10 years, and if they dare to explore SMR:s, I
    will be happily proven wrong.

    Sweden is  small enough to be reasonably governed by people who don't
    get too puffed with self importance.

    I think the salient points for Europe are:-

    - Net Zero is pie in the sky. It ain't gonna happen.
    - Renewable energy is pie in the sky, and massively expensive overall.
    It ain't gonna happen either.
    - further reliance  on fossil fuels is fraught with danger since by
    and large Western Europe doesnt have any.
    - All the Nordic hydro is pretty much exploited as well as alpine and
    in the Iberian peninsula.
    - All that is left is nuclear, and the point of SMR is to reduce build
    time and hence cost.

    We have to use what fossil is left to bootsrtap the nuclear economy.

    Note I didn't use the phrase 'climate change' anywhere above. It is
    *supremely irrelevant.'

    The greater issue is the growing scarcity of fossil fuel

    Amen! But I don't think the fossil fuel scarcity is too much of a
    problem, and that there's enough left for at least a generation or two.

    I used to think so, but I think that the Arab states at least are very
    close to empty, and we don't want to buy Russian oil - the price is too
    high.

    But it won't be a big bang, plenty of technologies exist to bridge the gap.

    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I
    bought full, and would never have to refuel. ;)

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver
    than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a steam turbine, sadly.



    --
    When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over
    the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that
    authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.

    Frédéric Bastiat

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 23:24:18 2024
    On 10/12/2024 20:57, D wrote:
    The socialist/eco-fascist deep state surely runs deep in sweden. But it
    is a small country, so much easier to change and adapt than a big country.

    And that is the truth. One country will break first, everybody will
    watch and when all the companies and data centres start moving there to
    take advantage of cheap energy, the rest will follow like lemmings, and
    the EU will finally declare that nuclear energy is 'renewable' (let's
    face it the nuclear powered sun drives wind and solar) so it was always
    their intention etc blah blah blah.


    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Tue Dec 10 23:25:34 2024
    On 10/12/2024 22:49, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-10, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 01:02, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working >>>> nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    If Sweden is like the US it will still be in litigation in 10 years.

    Fortunately Sweden is not.

    There seem to be (compared with the UK and US) people who can count
    beyond ten with their socks on in government

    I think that when it comes to politicians, the appropriate phrase is
    "can count to 21 with their fly zipped".

    They have flies?


    --
    Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people.
    But Marxism is the crack cocaine.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 23:25:02 2024
    On 10/12/2024 21:07, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:22:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    Yup...  That will work until Suzie Suburban screws in the nozzle with a
    leaking i-ring, butt hanging from her lips.


    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future? ;)

    Green job creation.


    --
    Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people.
    But Marxism is the crack cocaine.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 01:59:11 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 22:07:32 +0100, D wrote:

    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future?

    There may be other states but Oregon is one where you can't pump your own
    gas. The exceptions are the counties in the very sparsely populated
    eastern part of the state.

    BREAKING NEWS:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2023/08/07/after-72-years-oregon- finally-legalizes-pumping-your-own-gas/

    I haven't been in Oregon for quite a while and don't plan any trips. Even
    when the law was in effect if you were on a bike the attendant would look
    the other way. There are laws then there is spilling gas on a Hells
    Angel's custom painted gas tank.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 02:14:34 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 21:57:36 +0100, D wrote:

    The government owner power company at first refused to consider nuclear, since it was not economically feasible. The CEO was switftly removed by
    the new government, or she was forcefully instructed behind closed doors (don't remember which actually) and all of a sudden they reluctantly
    agreed to consider it.

    That will be a hurdle in the US; quite a few nuclear plants were
    decommissioned because they proved to be economically unfeasible.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho_Seco_Nuclear_Generating_Station

    There was great weeping when Rancho Seco shut down and SMUD had to
    restructure their generation capacity. That was replaced by sighs of
    relief when SMUD realized they would have been destroyed by the energy deregulation fiasco.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 03:55:49 2024
    On 2024-12-10, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 21:07, D wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:22:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    Yup...  That will work until Suzie Suburban screws in the nozzle with a >>> leaking i-ring, butt hanging from her lips.

    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be
    allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future? ;)

    Green job creation.

    Or just job creation. The city next door to us has banned
    self-serve for years.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 04:20:37 2024
    On 2024-12-11, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 22:07:32 +0100, D wrote:

    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be
    allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future?

    There may be other states but Oregon is one where you can't pump your own gas. The exceptions are the counties in the very sparsely populated
    eastern part of the state.

    BREAKING NEWS:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2023/08/07/after-72-years-oregon- finally-legalizes-pumping-your-own-gas/

    I haven't been in Oregon for quite a while and don't plan any trips. Even when the law was in effect if you were on a bike the attendant would look
    the other way. There are laws then there is spilling gas on a Hells
    Angel's custom painted gas tank.

    As Forbes reports, Oregon now has legalized self-service gasoline
    pumping state-wide. FINALLY!!!!! I have not heard recently
    whether New Jersey might have also legalized it.

    Although I had pumped my own gas in a state other than Oregon for
    the first several years I could drive a car, after ~40 years of
    Oregon requiring me to let the pump jockey drizzle gasoline down
    the side of my vehicle, it still felt a little (but only a
    little) odd to be pumping my own gas again.

    IIUC, my wife chooses to let the station employee do the deed.

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 00:51:47 2024
    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else? >>>> Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ >>>> relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


    Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
    as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
    two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
    where to go from there ?

    Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
    'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
    of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 00:54:30 2024
    On 12/9/24 1:14 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 00:07:04 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    However to get good efficiency you couldn't burn the hydrogen - huge
    FUEL CELLS would be required.
    Even then, considerable loss.

    It has infrastructure problems but Toyota's fuel cell vehicle is feasible. Excluding catastrophic tank failure I don't think hydrogen would be more
    of a problem than propane.


    Look and calc again - BIG BIG problem.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 00:45:06 2024
    On 12/10/24 3:01 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    Fizzy !!! :-)

    There may be modern updates - not magnetic bubbles
    but some kinds of -ons or -ions. Functional equivs,
    flash fakes it, but isn't that robust - and the
    ferroelectrics are too low density.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to vallor on Wed Dec 11 01:02:14 2024
    On 12/10/24 6:47 AM, vallor wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:30:02 +0100, D wrote:

    I guess it's the spirit of the age. Our elite politicians have lost
    touch with the people and have pissed them off too much. The people
    then, naturally, overreact. The rest of the chain of causation is left
    as an exercise for the reader. ;)

    But not a reader here, because you and your ilks' political missives
    have fsck-all to do with Linux.

    I've mentioned this.

    The Bit-Slice topic was kinda an attempt to split
    from what's annoying you. Didn't work.

    Alas some of these 'other topics' ARE compelling
    to many. Comp/OS threads drift towards 'other' as
    if magnetically attracted.

    SOME has to do with the current US elections and
    world affairs. If that all calms down so will the
    threads. There's plenty to know/do with Linux/Unix
    so there OUGHT to be material.

    The only good thing ... some of these 'alternate'
    topics seem to have revealed unrealized common
    interests and compatibility between people who
    normally just sniped at each other over trivia.

    So, it's not ALL bad.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 11 06:05:59 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 00:45:06 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 3:01 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    Fizzy !!! :-)

    There may be modern updates - not magnetic bubbles but some kinds of
    -ons or -ions. Functional equivs,
    flash fakes it, but isn't that robust - and the ferroelectrics are
    too low density.

    Somehow bit slice abd bubble memories are cataloged side by side in my
    brain.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_PALM_processor

    There is another golden oldie. The 5120 was a strange beast, selectable
    for either BASIC or APL. It's successor, the System/23, had an 8085 rather
    than IBM's homebrew but had a similar look. Familiarity with the 8085 was
    one of the factors for using the 8088.

    What i never could figure out is the 5100, 5120, and 5120 were all the
    PALM, whue the System/23 went to 53xx. Then they went back to 5150 for the
    PC that had absolutely nothing in common with the 5120.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Computer Nerd Kev@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 17:13:59 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 07/12/2024 18:24, Rich wrote:
    Nighttime is the big one. Until the world's electric grids are
    sufficiently interconnected that power generated in the Saraha Desert
    at noon can be shipped to the other side of the world where it is dark
    to supply power to that location there*must* be some storage, somehow,
    to account for night/twilight/a run of 14+ overcast days/etc.

    When I did all these calculations years ago the answer that came up
    every time was 'nuclear is simply cheaper, more reliable, more self sufficient and in every way better'

    As it happens an Australian report with contradictory conclusions
    has been all over the local media: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-09/nuclear-power-plant-twice-as-costly-as-renewables/104691114
    https://www.csiro.au/en/research/technology-space/energy/GenCost

    More sunny here than most places, of course.

    And, even if the world's electric grid was interconnected sufficient to
    ship solar power from Africa to the other side of the globe, we measly
    humans would simply use those interconnnects to try to enforce
    geopolitical rules on other locations we don't like by attempting to
    deny them "night time power".

    Or the Russians would cut the cable anyway, just for kicks.

    There's a project to export solar power from Australia to Singapore
    through an undersea cable: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia-Asia_Power_Link https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41825-020-00032-z

    I wouldn't bet on it myself though.

    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 03:54:54 2024
    On 12/9/24 7:56 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 14:15:21 +0100, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    Desktop Linux works for many people including myself. However, Windows remains the dominant OS.

    Dominant because of manipulative sales tactics - NOT merit.

    Win is a MESS - a messy mess. At SOME point they're gonna
    have to do like Apple and just FLUSH it - make a seem-alike
    system on top of some kind of Unix.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 03:50:32 2024
    On 12/11/24 1:05 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 00:45:06 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 3:01 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    Fizzy !!! :-)

    There may be modern updates - not magnetic bubbles but some kinds of
    -ons or -ions. Functional equivs,
    flash fakes it, but isn't that robust - and the ferroelectrics are
    too low density.

    Somehow bit slice abd bubble memories are cataloged side by side in my
    brain.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_PALM_processor

    Well, historically parallel ...

    FOR THE TIME both bit-slice and bubble were
    pretty good.

    But what about The Future ?

    There is another golden oldie. The 5120 was a strange beast, selectable
    for either BASIC or APL. It's successor, the System/23, had an 8085 rather than IBM's homebrew but had a similar look. Familiarity with the 8085 was
    one of the factors for using the 8088.

    Umm ... 5120 came well after the 8088. Got yer
    numbers right ?

    The 8085 was a pretty fair predecessor for the 8088
    however. Not THAT much diff. However, for the time,
    the Z80 was maybe a tad better.

    Would still like to get my hands on a working S-100
    Z80 system .....


    What i never could figure out is the 5100, 5120, and 5120 were all the
    PALM, whue the System/23 went to 53xx. Then they went back to 5150 for the
    PC that had absolutely nothing in common with the 5120.

    Did some work with PALMs - not the worst platform
    for the time. Some 3rd-party stuff made 'em very
    versatile.

    The idea of CPUs with some higher-level lang in ROM
    is kinda interesting - and even in The Future.

    Wouldn't pick BASIC or APL these days however, probably
    Python. Integrate the interpreter well enough and they
    could be very fast and useful. I can see lots of
    'industrial'/control apps. The current Py3 is good
    enough for 20+ years fer sure.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 10:58:46 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 20:17, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:50, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 09:53, D wrote:
    Swedens government has now decided that sweden shall have new, working >>>>>> nuclear power in 10 years.

    I would bet several hundred euros against this being done on time.

    I'm not so sure.
    At the moment Rolls Royce is going through the red tape box ticking
    exercise on their reactors.
    They want to deploy the first ones by 2030.
    The Czech Republic is working with RR on this as well

    There is a huge potential market for the first companies to put together >>>>> scalable small modular reactors that are in mass production.

    Build your concrete structures, pop in a boiler and turbines and some >>>>> generators and ship a complete reactor in, and plug it in to a factory >>>>> produced control system, and that's it.

    5 years top's is the aim

    This is the government. No SMR:s in sight. They are thinking about "safe" >>>> traditional ones.

    If they get it done in 10 years, and if they dare to explore SMR:s, I
    will be happily proven wrong.

    Sweden is  small enough to be reasonably governed by people who don't get >>> too puffed with self importance.

    I think the salient points for Europe are:-

    - Net Zero is pie in the sky. It ain't gonna happen.
    - Renewable energy is pie in the sky, and massively expensive overall. It >>> ain't gonna happen either.
    - further reliance  on fossil fuels is fraught with danger since by and >>> large Western Europe doesnt have any.
    - All the Nordic hydro is pretty much exploited as well as alpine and in >>> the Iberian peninsula.
    - All that is left is nuclear, and the point of SMR is to reduce build
    time and hence cost.

    We have to use what fossil is left to bootsrtap the nuclear economy.

    Note I didn't use the phrase 'climate change' anywhere above. It is
    *supremely irrelevant.'

    The greater issue is the growing scarcity of fossil fuel

    Amen! But I don't think the fossil fuel scarcity is too much of a problem, >> and that there's enough left for at least a generation or two.

    I used to think so, but I think that the Arab states at least are very close to empty, and we don't want to buy Russian oil - the price is too high.

    But it won't be a big bang, plenty of technologies exist to bridge the gap. >>
    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I bought
    full, and would never have to refuel. ;)

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a steam turbine, sadly.

    Sigh... ok, a ship then! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 11:00:54 2024
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 20:57, D wrote:
    The socialist/eco-fascist deep state surely runs deep in sweden. But it is >> a small country, so much easier to change and adapt than a big country.

    And that is the truth. One country will break first, everybody will watch and when all the companies and data centres start moving there to take advantage of cheap energy, the rest will follow like lemmings, and the EU will finally declare that nuclear energy is 'renewable' (let's face it the nuclear powered sun drives wind and solar) so it was always their intention etc blah blah blah.

    Of course!

    If it is one thing I have learned, it's that reality and markets always
    trump politics. The sad thing is that it can take many decades until
    politics is forced to give up its dreams and return to reality, but
    reality always wins in the end.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 10:59:41 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 20:54, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 21:40, D wrote:
    We currently do not have the technology, so it would be refreshing if the >>>> EU socialist nobility could stop pissing away our money. But that's not >>>> likely to happen any time soon. I am happy that the UK left, and I do
    hope that after Starmer has failed, that the UK can work to become the >>>> financial power house of the world again.

    I read that Spain decided not to subsidise its windfarms as directed by
    the EU, as it was cheaper to pay the fine the EU imposed. Except they
    haven't paid that, either.
    I think some other country did the same.

    Germany has revoked Shengen.  Not the EU. Finland and Sweden joined NATO. >>> Not the EU.

    People  are finding the EU is simply not as appropriate as individual
    nations behaving as if they were sovereign are letting the EU go fuck
    itself.

    Euratom is the agency in charge of preventing new nuclear plants being
    built.

    Yes, I think the EU will eventually collapse under its own weight. I'm just >> waiting for Orban or some other little dictator to break away, humiliating >> the EU even more.

    Draghis "innovation report" was hilarious! The EU is falling behind in
    innovation, what should we do? Surprise! The EU must invest billions in
    green tech!

    Oh my god. How do those guys ever reach those positions? =/

    Bribery and corruption.

    Yes... it certainly isn't skill or brains.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 11:01:11 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 10/12/2024 21:07, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 10:22:54 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting! So safety then depends on excellent supply chain
    management and quality control, coupled with perhaps changing the
    containers early to avoid any possibility of leakage.

    Yup...  That will work until Suzie Suburban screws in the nozzle with a >>> leaking i-ring, butt hanging from her lips.


    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be
    allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future? ;)

    Green job creation.

    Touché!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 11:04:24 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 22:07:32 +0100, D wrote:

    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you would be
    allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future?

    There may be other states but Oregon is one where you can't pump your own gas. The exceptions are the counties in the very sparsely populated
    eastern part of the state.

    BREAKING NEWS:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2023/08/07/after-72-years-oregon- finally-legalizes-pumping-your-own-gas/

    I haven't been in Oregon for quite a while and don't plan any trips. Even when the law was in effect if you were on a bike the attendant would look
    the other way. There are laws then there is spilling gas on a Hells
    Angel's custom painted gas tank.


    Wow, had no idea!

    But I would be careful if I were you. Isn't oregon a democrat stronghold?
    It you go there and they find you out, you might not be able to leave. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 11:06:26 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 21:57:36 +0100, D wrote:

    The government owner power company at first refused to consider nuclear,
    since it was not economically feasible. The CEO was switftly removed by
    the new government, or she was forcefully instructed behind closed doors
    (don't remember which actually) and all of a sudden they reluctantly
    agreed to consider it.

    That will be a hurdle in the US; quite a few nuclear plants were decommissioned because they proved to be economically unfeasible.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho_Seco_Nuclear_Generating_Station

    There was great weeping when Rancho Seco shut down and SMUD had to restructure their generation capacity. That was replaced by sighs of
    relief when SMUD realized they would have been destroyed by the energy deregulation fiasco.


    Lo and behold... (or talking about the trolls, to imperfectly translate a swedish saying...) from todays mainstream news on the topic of swedish
    nuclear:

    "The planned new nuclear power reactors at Ringhals cannot be accommodated.
    In any case, not if the nature reserve on the Väröhalvön is to continue.

    Now Vattenfall is taking the unusual step of applying to cancel the reserve.

    Already when Vattenfall began sketching new reactors on the Värö
    Peninsula, it was clear that it would be difficult to manage without encroaching on the Biskopshagen nature reserve. Among other things, the
    reserve is set up for recreational areas for the public.

    - Those regulations, we see, will be difficult to fulfill. So therefore
    the procedure will be that we apply to cancel the entire nature reserve,
    says Desirée Comstedt, head of new nuclear power at Vattenfall.

    The impact is greatest during the construction period itself. Then the
    hope is that parts of the area can become a nature reserve again.

    - A small part of the nature reserve will also be a future industrial
    area. But the greater part of the encroachment on the nature reserve is
    during the construction phase, she says.

    Otherwise, the plans are progressing roughly as planned. The next step is
    to submit documents for the consultation that Vattenfall will have with
    local authorities and the public in late winter. In addition, the number
    of suppliers of the reactors themselves will be scaled down further in the "near future", according to Comstedt.

    Recently, an investigation put forward the risk-sharing model with the
    state that Vattenfall believes must be in place. It is now being fully evaluated, but management thinks it is largely good.

    - There we see that there are good conditions for that model to be able to provide a basis for an investment decision, says Desirée Comstedt.

    Vattenfall has also not put its foot down regarding the type of reactors
    to be built, conventional large, or smaller, so-called SMR.

    - For us, the technology decision is not the big thing, but it is more
    about the commercial offer that the various suppliers have, says Comstedt.

    Whether there will be time to sod before the end of the current
    government's term of office, as the government promised early on, is
    highly uncertain. Many pieces of the puzzle remain, including
    environmental permits, which often take time."

    So there apparently are tiny steps in the right direction.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 11 11:08:51 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly* >>>>> more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else? >>>>> Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ >>>>> relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


    Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
    as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
    two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
    where to go from there ?

    Quantum computing of course! Otherwise, we'll just continue to scale out I assume.

    Is there an established Moores end point?

    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus, the
    only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other technologies for
    niche use cases such as biological computing, quantum computing, optical
    etc.

    Could regular cpu:s get some extended life by a change of materials or
    some other tweaks to the current design?

    Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
    'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
    of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 11 11:10:46 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 7:56 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 14:15:21 +0100, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    Desktop Linux works for many people including myself. However, Windows
    remains the dominant OS.

    Dominant because of manipulative sales tactics - NOT merit.

    Win is a MESS - a messy mess. At SOME point they're gonna
    have to do like Apple and just FLUSH it - make a seem-alike
    system on top of some kind of Unix.

    Also note that due to Apple, chromebooks and linux, windows has been
    losing market share, although very, very slowly.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 10:35:59 2024
    On 11/12/2024 10:08, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly* >>>>>> more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything*
    else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more
    coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


     Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
     as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
     two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
     where to go from there ?

    Quantum computing of course! Otherwise, we'll just continue to scale out
    I assume.

    Is there an established Moores end point?
    Yes. The equation relates power consumption, clock speed, and number of transitors to technology size.

    Ass the fabrication limits dropped, the power use and to an extent the
    clock speed could go up and the number of transistors massively increase.

    But the technology is approaching atomic scales, and the clock speed
    cannot get much higher as propagation delays across the chip make the
    clock a different beats on different parts of the chip.

    How long have Intel been struggling with 7nm?



    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus, the
    only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other technologies
    for niche use cases such as biological computing, quantum computing,
    optical etc.

    For some years the only improvement has been on chip cache and multiple
    cores..

    Could regular cpu:s get some extended life by a change of materials or
    some other tweaks to the current design?

    Not really.

     Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
     'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
     of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.

    Well not peak computing, but a mature technology where chip types
    stabilise and do not evolve.

    Many of the early analogue ICs are still in production today, for example.
    We could still be using Z80s, as it only ceased production last year.



    --
    Those who want slavery should have the grace to name it by its proper
    name. They must face the full meaning of that which they are advocating
    or condoning; the full, exact, specific meaning of collectivism, of its
    logical implications, of the principles upon which it is based, and of
    the ultimate consequences to which these principles will lead. They must
    face it, then decide whether this is what they want or not.

    Ayn Rand.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 10:26:57 2024
    On 11/12/2024 10:06, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 21:57:36 +0100, D wrote:

    The government owner power company at first refused to consider nuclear, >>> since it was not economically feasible. The CEO was switftly removed by
    the new government, or she was forcefully instructed behind closed doors >>> (don't remember which actually) and all of a sudden they reluctantly
    agreed to consider it.

    That will be a hurdle in the US; quite a few nuclear plants were
    decommissioned because they proved to be economically unfeasible.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho_Seco_Nuclear_Generating_Station

    There was great weeping when Rancho Seco shut down and SMUD had to
    restructure their generation capacity. That was replaced by sighs of
    relief when SMUD realized they would have been destroyed by the energy
    deregulation fiasco.


    Lo and behold... (or talking about the trolls, to imperfectly translate
    a swedish saying...) from todays mainstream news on the topic of swedish nuclear:

    "The planned new nuclear power reactors at Ringhals cannot be
    accommodated. In any case, not if the nature reserve on the Väröhalvön
    is to continue.

    ...
    Sizewell nuclear power station is right next door to a major bird
    sanctuary (Minsmere)
    It's due to have another big reactor built alongside.

    You can cite that if you like... at any hearings.



    --
    Any fool can believe in principles - and most of them do!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 10:37:57 2024
    On 11/12/2024 09:58, D wrote:

    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I
    bought full, and would never have to refuel. 😉

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver
    than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a
    steam turbine, sadly.

    Sigh... ok, a ship then! 😉

    Not only possible, has been done and is almost certainly the global
    freight and possibly passenger transport of the future.



    --
    Microsoft : the best reason to go to Linux that ever existed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 12:48:21 2024
    On 2024-12-08, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Toyota never bought into BEVs and favored hybrids. The Mirai is impressive but it points out the problem at this time.

    https://www.hydrogeninsight.com/transport/toyota-sued-over-lack-of- hydrogen-availability-for-fuel-cell-cars-in-california/2-1-1676965

    "A class action lawsuit alleges false advertising and misrepresentation
    over promises that H2 refuelling stations would be widely available"

    Hydrogen will need a real PR campaign. A company I worked for had a
    contract to produce the glass tubes for strobe lights. It was a glass
    blowing operation to form the corkscrew shape. Soda glass can be worked
    with oxy-acetylene but quartz glass needs a oxy-hydrogen flame. We had to
    get a permit to have a hydrogen tube trailer spotted on the premises
    despite hydrogen being safer than acetylene. I could see the fire marshall thinking 'bomb' when we said 'hydrogen'.

    The tanks have improved. In the '70s the weight of hydrogen in a tube
    trailer was ridiculously small compared to the wieght of the trailer. New materials reduce the tank weights and the DOT has increased the allowable pressure but it's still a transportation problem.

    Then there is the problem that most hydrogen comes from processing natural gas rather than green alternative energy sources.

    I don't have the references handy, but IIRC, Toyota accepted a
    significant US (or CA?) government subsidy for the development of the
    Mirai with the proviso that a certain number of Hydrogen cars had to be
    sold by a certain date (10,000 by the end of 2023?) with a proportional
    penalty for any shortfall.

    As the deadline approached, they were far behind (8000 or so?) and
    offered a promotional deal where they essentially gave the cars away
    (pay $45,000 but get a lifetime free fuel card).

    I looked at it, but although there is a hydrogen fueling station
    within a mile of my house, Yelp reviews said it was frequently out of
    fuel for days at a time, and the second nearest is 60 miles away.
    Not really an option for a daily driver "round town".
    --
    Lars Poulsen

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 13:08:52 2024
    On 11/12/2024 09:58, D wrote:
    Sigh... ok, a ship then! 😉

    On 2024-12-11, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [Nuclear powered ships]
    Not only possible, has been done and is almost certainly the global
    freight and possibly passenger transport of the future.

    I fondly remember the NS Savannah visiting Copenhagen sometime around
    1964. I was 14 and traveled to visit it. Very impressive. But according
    to Wikipedia:

    Savannah was deactivated in 1971 and after several moves was moored
    at Pier 13 of the Canton Marine Terminal in Baltimore, Maryland in
    2008. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NS_Savannah)

    I highly recommend the Wikipedia article.

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 13:49:58 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be
    lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.

    True, and the precursor chemicals are likey on a 'watch for purchasers'
    list somewhere, like a lot of otherwise useful chemicals from the past
    are now. So if one starts buying up enough precursors, one likely ends
    up with a visit from men in dark suits, wearing dark sunglasses, and
    driving blackout windowed black SUV's.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to Rich on Wed Dec 11 13:24:05 2024
    On 2024-12-08, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:
    And once you create it, and pump it into the car's pressure tank
    (you'll need a pressure vessel unless the car has a cryo-cooler on
    board, and the energy expended by the cryo-cooler would dwarf the
    energy needed to propel the car), you are right back to the
    'embrittlement' problem again.

    And consider the explosive force stored in a 350-700 bar (your
    AI's number) pressure vessel that becomes brittle enough to go "bang".
    That's one hell of a bang, even without the hydrogen itself explosively combusting as part of the pressure release.

    Plus, the walls of the pressure vessel quite effectively become a 'fragmentation grenade' in the process of going bang.

    How are these issues addressed in the Toyota Mirai and its equivalents?

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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Robert Riches on Wed Dec 11 13:59:22 2024
    Robert Riches wrote:

    Oregon now has legalized self-service gasoline
    pumping state-wide. FINALLY!!!!! I have not heard recently
    whether New Jersey might have also legalized it.

    I only recently learned that it didn't allow it, so no.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 13:53:10 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 22:07:32 +0100, D wrote:

    Gas station attendant to the rescue! Did you actually think you
    would be allowed to refill your own vehicle in the future?

    There may be other states but Oregon is one where you can't pump your
    own gas. The exceptions are the counties in the very sparsely
    populated eastern part of the state.

    BREAKING NEWS:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2023/08/07/after-72-years-oregon- finally-legalizes-pumping-your-own-gas/

    I haven't been in Oregon for quite a while and don't plan any trips.
    Even when the law was in effect if you were on a bike the attendant
    would look the other way. There are laws then there is spilling gas
    on a Hells Angel's custom painted gas tank.

    Last I saw, New Jersey is another with the "no-self-serve" for gas
    pumps. But New Jersey also has a number of refineries too, so the "no-self-serve" may be the result of "oil money lobbying" rather than
    any logical saftey thought.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to John Ames on Wed Dec 11 14:02:07 2024
    On 2024-12-09, John Ames <commodorejohn@gmail.com> wrote:
    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/ relevant refresher course...

    Many of the more interesting subthreads here really belong in alt.folklore.computers

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 17:17:02 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 09:58, D wrote:

    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I bought >>>> full, and would never have to refuel. 😉

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver
    than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a steam
    turbine, sadly.

    Sigh... ok, a ship then! 😉

    Not only possible, has been done and is almost certainly the global freight and possibly passenger transport of the future.

    Yes! It would be a shame of subs and aircraft carriers would be the only
    ones to have this.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 17:15:36 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 10:06, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 21:57:36 +0100, D wrote:

    The government owner power company at first refused to consider nuclear, >>>> since it was not economically feasible. The CEO was switftly removed by >>>> the new government, or she was forcefully instructed behind closed doors >>>> (don't remember which actually) and all of a sudden they reluctantly
    agreed to consider it.

    That will be a hurdle in the US; quite a few nuclear plants were
    decommissioned because they proved to be economically unfeasible.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho_Seco_Nuclear_Generating_Station

    There was great weeping when Rancho Seco shut down and SMUD had to
    restructure their generation capacity. That was replaced by sighs of
    relief when SMUD realized they would have been destroyed by the energy
    deregulation fiasco.


    Lo and behold... (or talking about the trolls, to imperfectly translate a
    swedish saying...) from todays mainstream news on the topic of swedish
    nuclear:

    "The planned new nuclear power reactors at Ringhals cannot be accommodated. >> In any case, not if the nature reserve on the Väröhalvön is to continue. >>
    ...
    Sizewell nuclear power station is right next door to a major bird sanctuary (Minsmere)
    It's due to have another big reactor built alongside.

    You can cite that if you like... at any hearings.

    I don't live in the country since many years, so not a problem of mine. I
    do follow current events though.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 16:43:39 2024
    On 11/12/2024 16:17, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 09:58, D wrote:
    steam turbine, sadly.

    Sigh... ok, a ship then! 😉

    Not only possible, has been done and is almost certainly the global
    freight and possibly passenger transport of the future.

    Yes! It would be a shame of subs and aircraft carriers would be the only
    ones to have this.

    There is an international group of shipping people looking into what
    stands in the way. Regulations mostly...

    The economics are somewhat unclear. The rising cost of bunker oil has
    made cruising at lower speeds the optimal balance. With nuclear, uranium
    costs are negligible so full speed at whatever the weather will allow
    may be optimal leading to less ships being needed overall.

    Probably a large container or cruise ship could top out at 50mph (80kph)
    or so. So something like a 3 day transatlantic crossing time.

    I think that is very acceptable as part of a holiday package.


    --
    Labour - a bunch of rich people convincing poor people to vote for rich
    people by telling poor people that "other" rich people are the reason
    they are poor.

    Peter Thompson

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Wed Dec 11 17:20:37 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be
    lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.

    True, and the precursor chemicals are likey on a 'watch for purchasers'
    list somewhere, like a lot of otherwise useful chemicals from the past
    are now. So if one starts buying up enough precursors, one likely ends
    up with a visit from men in dark suits, wearing dark sunglasses, and
    driving blackout windowed black SUV's.

    This is the truth, but the chemicals for those are more difficult for me
    to acquire. Coal is easy, I think I extracted sulfur from some kind of pesticide (don't remember exactly), and potassium nitrate can be bought en masse in the form of stump remover (?). Easy as pie!

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change til
    next time.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 16:44:44 2024
    On 11/12/2024 16:20, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be >>>> lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.

    True, and the precursor chemicals are likey on a 'watch for purchasers'
    list somewhere, like a lot of otherwise useful chemicals from the past
    are now.  So if one starts buying up enough precursors, one likely ends
    up with a visit from men in dark suits, wearing dark sunglasses, and
    driving blackout windowed black SUV's.

    This is the truth, but the chemicals for those are more difficult for me
    to acquire. Coal is easy,

    Charcoal is even easier

    I think I extracted sulfur from some kind of
    pesticide (don't remember exactly), and potassium nitrate can be bought
    en masse in the form of stump remover (?). Easy as pie!

    Oh ho. Can it?

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change
    til next time.

    --
    If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
    eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such
    time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
    and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
    important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for
    the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
    truth is the greatest enemy of the State.

    Joseph Goebbels

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to John Ames on Wed Dec 11 16:51:13 2024
    On 11/12/2024 16:43, John Ames wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 00:51:47 -0500
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see 'peak computing'
    when it's become clear we need thousands of times that for the Really
    Cool Stuff.

    I've long been of the opinion that things're gonna get Real Interesting
    when Moore's Law finally his the wall and "throw a beefier rig at it!"
    is no longer a viable pitch for any "your X isn't delivering Y fast
    enough for project Z!" problems.

    We have already hit it.

    Hence the proliferation of multiple cores.

    Which works for multi-user and multi-threaded operations, but not
    necessarily for linear single thread code.

    --
    “People believe certain stories because everyone important tells them,
    and people tell those stories because everyone important believes them.
    Indeed, when a conventional wisdom is at its fullest strength, one’s agreement with that conventional wisdom becomes almost a litmus test of
    one’s suitability to be taken seriously.”

    Paul Krugman

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 20:54:21 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 00:07:04 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    However to get good efficiency you couldn't burn the hydrogen - huge
    FUEL CELLS would be required.
    Even then, considerable loss.

    It has infrastructure problems but Toyota's fuel cell vehicle is feasible. Excluding catastrophic tank failure I don't think hydrogen would be more
    of a problem than propane.

    Typical propane tank pressure: 100-200psi [1]

    Typical hydrogen tank pressure (for cars): 350 - 700bar which is 5,000
    - 10,000 psi [2]

    A 5k to 10k psi tank rupture will impart much more kinetic energy into
    the shrapnel thrown off than a 100-200 psi tank rupture will impart.
    And that ignores the impact of the pressure wave created by the
    decompression of the stored gas itself.

    [1] https://www.ferrellgas.com/tank-talk/blog-articles/how-much-pressure-is-in-a-propane-tank/

    [2] https://www.energy.gov/eere/fuelcells/physical-hydrogen-storage

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 21:56:38 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 16:17, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 09:58, D wrote:
    steam turbine, sadly.

    Sigh... ok, a ship then! 😉

    Not only possible, has been done and is almost certainly the global
    freight and possibly passenger transport of the future.

    Yes! It would be a shame of subs and aircraft carriers would be the only
    ones to have this.

    There is an international group of shipping people looking into what stands in the way. Regulations mostly...

    The economics are somewhat unclear. The rising cost of bunker oil has made cruising at lower speeds the optimal balance. With nuclear, uranium costs are negligible so full speed at whatever the weather will allow may be optimal leading to less ships being needed overall.

    Probably a large container or cruise ship could top out at 50mph (80kph) or so. So something like a 3 day transatlantic crossing time.

    I think that is very acceptable as part of a holiday package.

    It is fascinating how ancient these ideas really are. By pure chance, I
    once found an old family history in my fathers apartment typed up by my grandmother.

    Apparently, together with those papers, where some old notes from her job.
    She used to be the secretary to some scientist at swedens first nuclear research program around 1954.

    In those notes, I read speculations about nuclear powered ships and I
    think they mentioned aircraft, but ships for sure.

    Here is an image of the "cave" where they had their research reactor:

    https://www.kth.se/polopoly_fs/1.1300045.1701333137!/image/Reaktorhallen419.jpg

    about 25 meter under the city campus of the royal institute of technology.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 21:59:20 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/12/2024 16:20, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 13:34, D wrote:
    I did, and my conclusion was that a pipe bombs with gun powder would be >>>>> lighter, cheaper and more dangerous.

    A bit, but gunpowder is by no means the best explosive.

    Ammonium nitrate is way better.

    As is nitroglyerine - although that is notoriuously unstable.

    True, and the precursor chemicals are likey on a 'watch for purchasers'
    list somewhere, like a lot of otherwise useful chemicals from the past
    are now.  So if one starts buying up enough precursors, one likely ends >>> up with a visit from men in dark suits, wearing dark sunglasses, and
    driving blackout windowed black SUV's.

    This is the truth, but the chemicals for those are more difficult for me to >> acquire. Coal is easy,

    Charcoal is even easier

    Really?

    I think I extracted sulfur from some kind of
    pesticide (don't remember exactly), and potassium nitrate can be bought en >> masse in the form of stump remover (?). Easy as pie!

    Oh ho. Can it?

    Yes! Have a look at this:

    https://weibulls.com/weibulls-stubborttagare-1-25kg-6st-krt-stubb-x

    1.25 kg of potassium nitrate for about 30 EUR.

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change til
    next time.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Fritz Wuehler@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 21:49:20 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <...@invalid.invalid> [TNP]:

    Bribery and corruption.

    ... and the occasional kneepads (as a recent anti-Kamala meme claimed)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 01:32:54 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 10:35:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    How long have Intel been struggling with 7nm?

    It would be wonderful if '7nm' referred to some real dimension.

    https://www.anandtech.com/show/16823/intel-accelerated-offensive-process- roadmap-updates-to-10nm-7nm-4nm-3nm-20a-18a-packaging-foundry-emib-foveros

    "It is no secret that having "Intel 10nm" being equivalent to "TSMC 7nm",
    even though the numbers actually have nothing to do with the physical implementation, has ground at Intel for a while. A lot of the industry,
    for whatever reason, hasn’t learned that these numbers aren’t actually a physical measurement. They used to be, but when we moved from 2D planar transistors to 3D FinFET transistors, the numbers became nothing more than
    a marketing tool. Despite this, every time there’s an article about the technology, people get confused. We’ve been talking about it for half a decade, but the confusion still remains."

    The full article is worth reading.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 01:58:52 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 03:50:32 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    There is another golden oldie. The 5120 was a strange beast, selectable
    for either BASIC or APL. It's successor, the System/23, had an 8085
    rather than IBM's homebrew but had a similar look. Familiarity with the
    8085 was one of the factors for using the 8088.

    Umm ... 5120 came well after the 8088. Got yer numbers right ?

    The 8085 was a pretty fair predecessor for the 8088 however. Not THAT
    much diff. However, for the time,
    the Z80 was maybe a tad better.

    Would still like to get my hands on a working S-100 Z80 system .....

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_5120

    Technically the 8088 processor was released in '79 while the 5120 was
    released in Feb '80. The System/23 with the 8085 was released in July
    '81. The 5150 PC was released in August 1981 more than a year after the
    5120. The 5100 itself was released in '75, and the 5110 in '78. Same PALM processor throughout. The 5110 had more I/O like floppy interfaces, while
    the 5120 had a larger screen and 2 built in 8" floppies.

    The company I worked for bought the 5120 and I created an inventory
    control system on it but my personal machine at the time was an Osborne 1
    CP/M 'portable' that I bought in April '81. I don't remember when I got
    around to buying a PC clone, maybe '84? It was one of the brand x mystery
    boxes with the turbo switch.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 02:17:04 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 11:04:24 +0100, D wrote:

    But I would be careful if I were you. Isn't oregon a democrat
    stronghold?
    It you go there and they find you out, you might not be able to leave.

    It depends... There is an invisible line running down the Cascade range;
    west of it brains turn to mush. There is a fairly serious movement for the
    area east of the range to secede and join Idaho.

    https://www.greateridaho.org/

    A better representation from the recent election:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ 2024_United_States_presidential_election_in_Oregon

    Like the rest of the US the large urban centers are Democratic. Go global warming. Say a 30' rise in the sea level and the people of Portland,
    Seattle, NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, LA, and so forth will be too busy
    swimming to vote.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 02:25:29 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 10:26:57 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Sizewell nuclear power station is right next door to a major bird
    sanctuary (Minsmere)
    It's due to have another big reactor built alongside.

    The Seabrook nuclear plant's initial design projects a need for 850,000
    gpm of cooling water, which would be pumped from the Atlantic, run through
    the heat exchangers, and discharged back into the ocean. Both the intake
    and discharge ports would be a mile offshore.

    PSNH replied to concerns about the discharged heat 'The lobsters will love
    it!'

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 02:45:01 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 21:59:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes! Have a look at this:

    https://weibulls.com/weibulls-stubborttagare-1-25kg-6st-krt-stubb-x

    1.25 kg of potassium nitrate for about 30 EUR.

    Amazon has 5 pounds for USD 27.98, free delivery. Speaking from experience
    it sucks as a stump remover. You're supposed to drill holes, pour the
    solution in, wait a few weeks, and set fire to the stump. Good luck with
    that.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 02:38:41 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 17:20:37 +0100, D wrote:

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change
    til next time.

    Sourcing the potassium nitrate and sulfur was no problem in the '50s but
    trying to grind down charcoal was a miserable task. During one of the
    times in grade school chemistry class when I wasn't daydreaming I learned
    the formula for sucrose was C12H22O11. Hmmm, that looks like a lot of
    carbon and stuff that should turn into water vapor. Rocket candy was born!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_candy

    It was many years later I found out about it. It wasn't much of an
    explosive but back then dry gas came in about a 12 ounce can with a
    conical top that necked down to a screw cap. Filling one of those and
    lighting it lead to a very satisfactory fountain of flame. I never thought
    to try launching a rocket with it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 12 03:08:21 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 20:54:21 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    Excluding catastrophic tank failure I don't think hydrogen would be
    more of a problem than propane.

    Typical propane tank pressure: 100-200psi [1]

    Typical hydrogen tank pressure (for cars): 350 - 700bar which is 5,000 - 10,000 psi [2]

    A 5k to 10k psi tank rupture will impart much more kinetic energy into
    the shrapnel thrown off than a 100-200 psi tank rupture will impart. And
    that ignores the impact of the pressure wave created by the
    decompression of the stored gas itself.

    'Excluding catastrophic failure' includes rupturing. By that I meant
    hydrogen leaks will be more likely to disperse rather than a heavier than
    air gas that is prone to pooling.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 23:03:29 2024
    On 12/11/24 5:08 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly* >>>>>> more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything*
    else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more
    coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


     Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
     as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
     two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
     where to go from there ?

    Quantum computing of course! Otherwise, we'll just continue to scale out
    I assume.

    "Quantum" has NOT been going well. People are finding
    ways to REDUCE the error rate, but it's still too much.
    Cyro is also kinda required.

    Is there an established Moores end point?

    I'm gonna say it's "at the few atoms" zone. However
    you still need to make room for the connecting leads.
    Gotta be able to FAB such things too ... and you're
    well into the X-ray zone there.

    So ... I think we're approaching A Problem here.

    The kind/meaning of 'computing' has kinda shifted
    recently due to 'AI' - Nvidia rules there - but
    the chips are faster at "AI" sorts of stuff, not
    general/all-purpose.


    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus, the
    only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other technologies
    for niche use cases such as biological computing, quantum computing,
    optical etc.

    Bio is gonna be too SLOW. Quantum, we've discussed that.

    Pure photonic - including some rough analog of photonic
    transistors ... MAYbe. I keep hearing bits of news which
    suggest those MIGHT be practical someday. Still, don't
    see them being THAT much faster - the S-o-L in crystals
    and fiber and such is a limiting factor. Who'd have ever
    imagined the S-o-L would be TOO SLOW eh ? Indeed it's
    already a communications pain in the ass.

    Photonic switching elements don't switch instantly
    either ... MAYbe some different def/tech that's not
    really so much 'switching' per-se ? Interference
    patterns ?

    Now something that will properly support, say, deca-state
    logic ... ? Transistors don't do that well, but smart
    photonic design, perhaps. A lot more 'getting it done'
    per gigahertz :-)


    Could regular cpu:s get some extended life by a change of materials or
    some other tweaks to the current design?

    Could ... but instead they'll make new chips.

    Oh, news today ... if you have an AMD box DO look into
    the "BadRAM" exploit - a sneaky back-door way for Vlad
    to spy on your 'protected' data.

     Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
     'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
     of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 04:06:10 2024
    On 2024-12-12, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 11:04:24 +0100, D wrote:

    But I would be careful if I were you. Isn't oregon a democrat
    stronghold?
    It you go there and they find you out, you might not be able to leave.

    It depends... There is an invisible line running down the Cascade range; west of it brains turn to mush. There is a fairly serious movement for the area east of the range to secede and join Idaho.

    Suggested edit: "west of it many/most brains turn to mush."
    There are a few right-minded thinkers west of the Cascades.

    https://www.greateridaho.org/

    A better representation from the recent election:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ 2024_United_States_presidential_election_in_Oregon

    Like the rest of the US the large urban centers are Democratic. Go global warming. Say a 30' rise in the sea level and the people of Portland,
    Seattle, NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, LA, and so forth will be too busy swimming to vote.

    Not sure 30 vertical feet would flood all of Portland. It is
    somewhere in the vicinity of 60 miles inland. Elevations vary,
    but a lot of it is > 100' up. Extent of flooding would depend on
    the balance between rivers bringing in water from points higher
    vs. the river taking water to the ocean.

    https://en-us.topographic-map.com/map-dw257/Portland-Downtown/?center=45.54749%2C-122.69533&zoom=16&popup=45.54892%2C-122.70218

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 11 22:26:29 2024
    On 12/11/24 8:58 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 03:50:32 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    There is another golden oldie. The 5120 was a strange beast, selectable
    for either BASIC or APL. It's successor, the System/23, had an 8085
    rather than IBM's homebrew but had a similar look. Familiarity with the
    8085 was one of the factors for using the 8088.

    Umm ... 5120 came well after the 8088. Got yer numbers right ?

    The 8085 was a pretty fair predecessor for the 8088 however. Not THAT
    much diff. However, for the time,
    the Z80 was maybe a tad better.

    Would still like to get my hands on a working S-100 Z80 system .....

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_5120

    Technically the 8088 processor was released in '79 while the 5120 was released in Feb '80. The System/23 with the 8085 was released in July
    '81. The 5150 PC was released in August 1981 more than a year after the
    5120. The 5100 itself was released in '75, and the 5110 in '78. Same PALM processor throughout. The 5110 had more I/O like floppy interfaces, while
    the 5120 had a larger screen and 2 built in 8" floppies.

    Ah - you were referring to a pc model number, not
    a chip number ! :-)

    Didn't the 5120s have like a REALLY dinky monitor ?

    And they wonder why nerds wear thick glasses :-)

    The company I worked for bought the 5120 and I created an inventory
    control system on it but my personal machine at the time was an Osborne 1 CP/M 'portable' that I bought in April '81. I don't remember when I got around to buying a PC clone, maybe '84? It was one of the brand x mystery boxes with the turbo switch.

    I've used an Osbourne and the competing Kaypro. For
    the era, they really weren't bad. The 8088 more
    smoothly accessed larger RAM space however, so it
    became the worthy successor. 64/128k became obsolete
    REAL quick.

    As for Z80 :

    https://z80kits.com/shop/rc2014-classic-ii/

    http://cpuville.com/Kits/Z80-kits-home.html

    https://feertech.com/microbeast/

    https://www.budgetronics.eu/en/building-kits/z80-retrocomputer-building-kit/a-24691-20

    You can STILL get 'em - it's one those chips that
    refuse to die ... "good enough" for a lot of practical
    uses and will run CP/M

    I've got a ZX81 around somewhere, but those were 'toys'.

    Still, always wanted my own S-100 box, but could never
    afford one while they were still in use. I think they
    were still made even for the 68000, maybe 68020, but
    the buss wasn't meant for the higher clocks that soon
    became prevalent and it became so easy to put the
    periphs into ONE CHIP that there really wasn't the
    need for 8/10/12 slot computers anymore.

    Wonder how fast, with modern techniques, you could
    REALLY make a Z80 ? Could prob fit a bunch on a
    single die ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 11 23:14:18 2024
    On 12/11/24 11:51 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 11/12/2024 16:43, John Ames wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 00:51:47 -0500
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see 'peak computing'
    when it's become clear we need thousands of times that for the Really
    Cool Stuff.

    I've long been of the opinion that things're gonna get Real Interesting
    when Moore's Law finally his the wall and "throw a beefier rig at it!"
    is no longer a viable pitch for any "your X isn't delivering Y fast
    enough for project Z!" problems.

    We have already hit it.

    Hence the proliferation of multiple cores.

    Which works for multi-user and multi-threaded operations, but not
    necessarily for linear single thread code.

    Very correct.

    In some respects it's a "how do we DEFINE computing ?"
    sort of thing. A bunch of Nvidia chips doing "AI" is
    one way of looking at it. The peta+ FLOPS you may want
    to solve a supernova implosion or horrific math equation
    is another. In short 'performance' now has to take a cue
    from "What We WANT done" rather than the olde-tyme
    benchmarks.

    Not everything can be 'parallelized' either ... some
    jobs just require vast instructions-per ...

    As said elsewhere, 'pure photonic' tech MAY provide
    the ultimate - 10x to 100x what we're seeing with
    the low-nanometer transistor designs. But, in this
    universe, that's kinda IT.

    We need a new universe.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 11 23:43:44 2024
    On 12/11/24 5:10 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 7:56 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 14:15:21 +0100, Carlos E.R. wrote:

    I still do not know why you are talking this and not Linux in a Linux
    group, but for your info, there are countries that sell more electric
    cars than IC, so it works for them.

    Desktop Linux works for many people including myself. However, Windows
    remains the dominant OS.

     Dominant because of manipulative sales tactics - NOT merit.

     Win is a MESS - a messy mess. At SOME point they're gonna
     have to do like Apple and just FLUSH it - make a seem-alike
     system on top of some kind of Unix.

    Also note that due to Apple, chromebooks and linux, windows has been
    losing market share, although very, very slowly.


    Hey, Apple has an impressive sales strategy - go
    for the elite snobs and wannabes. Coordinated
    designer PCs/Phones/Etc. It WORKS.

    If you don't have "i-Everything" then you're just
    trailer trash ! :-)

    Declines in Linux/Unix ... I suspect it relates to
    a pair of things - ignorant i-Everything owning
    pointy-haired bosses AND a dip in the number of
    real systems/programming people. Complicated stuff ?
    Hey, Apple/M$/Chat have an online solution for you,
    so why bother to solve it yourself ???

    Ever tried to grow a turnip or little patch of corn ?
    Butchered a pig yourself ? Fewer and fewer have a
    CLUE about such stuff. Food comes from the MARKET
    after all, Harry Potter waves his wand. It's all
    total dependence on the tech/infrastructure pyramid.

    Vlad and Xi have PLANS for all that .....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 03:42:31 2024
    On 12/10/24 3:19 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:51, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels  we would be all nuclear by
    now...and be making synthetic diesel

    Is electricity the primary cost driver of synthetic diesel?

    I think it would be, yes.


    Lets say you can get to a 30% conversion ration of whatever energy
    drives the synthesis, to the final diesl.

    Diesel and natural gas is around (UK money) 50p a litre or 5p /kWh

    Expected renewable electricity is 3-4 times that
    Historic nuclear is a bit less - say 4p /kWh

    That puts synthetic diesel at a minimum of around 12p/kWh Which is
    what we pay at the pumps but that is all tax.

    Ahh, yet another thing we don't have to worry about then. =)

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with
    their ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised
    they didn't see it coming. ;)

    The trouble with Germany is that the Greens got into coalition, and
    the price of that was Germany's energy policy.
    The problem seems to be that the broad political choice is between neo
    Marxists and pro Russian  Neo Nazis.

    Yes!

    Germany seems SCREWED - all ideology, no common sense.

    Alas it's a HUGE economy .....

    For now.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Robert Riches on Thu Dec 12 08:50:38 2024
    On 12 Dec 2024 04:06:10 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    Suggested edit: "west of it many/most brains turn to mush."
    There are a few right-minded thinkers west of the Cascades.

    Sure. My ex is somewhat to the right of me and lives in New York City.
    It's a lonely life and she has alienated more than one 'friend'.

    There was a far right author who wrote a few novels about a Northwest Territorial Imperative. He realized that a landlocked area of Montana,
    Idaho, Nevada, and a few other states wasn't feasible and worked in ways
    to capture the seaboard. They all seemed very optimistic.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 08:43:19 2024
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 22:26:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Didn't the 5120s have like a REALLY dinky monitor ?

    The 5100 and 5110 did. They were meant to be 'portable'. The 5120 bumped
    it up to a magnificent 9". It was bigger than the Osborne 1 monitor. Like
    a laptop if I was at home I plugged it into an external monitor. I sent it
    back to the factory for the 100 column upgrade and the massive storage of double sided, double density floppies. It paid for itself many times over.
    I even build a EPROM programmer using the parallel port. It had just
    enough lines to put out the data and toggle the necessary lines.

    I've used an Osbourne and the competing Kaypro. For the era, they
    really weren't bad. The 8088 more smoothly accessed larger RAM space
    however, so it became the worthy successor. 64/128k became obsolete
    REAL quick.

    You could already get more memory for a Z80 using bank switching. iirc the bottom 2K was reserved to do the switch. The 8088 just formalized it on
    the chip. The best part was the five different libraries for the tiny,
    small, medium, large, and huge memory schemes or whatever they were
    called.

    I've got a ZX81 around somewhere, but those were 'toys'.

    I had a ZX80 that I bought in the kit form. I was already using the Z80
    for embedded stuff and was curious what $100, iirc, would buy.

    Still, always wanted my own S-100 box, but could never afford one
    while they were still in use. I think they were still made even for
    the 68000, maybe 68020, but the buss wasn't meant for the higher
    clocks that soon became prevalent and it became so easy to put the
    periphs into ONE CHIP that there really wasn't the need for 8/10/12
    slot computers anymore.

    I never had a S-100 but I designed a set of cards and a proprietary
    backplane for a client with a real case of NIH. There were a bunch of them
    in the industrial field including the STD Bus, which was anything but
    standard. Everybody rolled their own.

    The rumor was the S-100 came about when someone got a hell of a deal on
    milsurp edge connectors.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 10:23:53 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 11:04:24 +0100, D wrote:

    But I would be careful if I were you. Isn't oregon a democrat
    stronghold?
    It you go there and they find you out, you might not be able to leave.

    It depends... There is an invisible line running down the Cascade range; west of it brains turn to mush. There is a fairly serious movement for the area east of the range to secede and join Idaho.

    https://www.greateridaho.org/

    A better representation from the recent election:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ 2024_United_States_presidential_election_in_Oregon

    Like the rest of the US the large urban centers are Democratic. Go global warming. Say a 30' rise in the sea level and the people of Portland,
    Seattle, NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, LA, and so forth will be too busy swimming to vote.


    Wow, that's quite a different between the easter and western parts. Yes!
    A potential benefit of "global warming" all democrats will be washed away.
    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 04:20:04 2024
    On 12/12/24 3:43 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 22:26:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Didn't the 5120s have like a REALLY dinky monitor ?

    The 5100 and 5110 did. They were meant to be 'portable'. The 5120 bumped
    it up to a magnificent 9". It was bigger than the Osborne 1 monitor. Like
    a laptop if I was at home I plugged it into an external monitor. I sent it back to the factory for the 100 column upgrade and the massive storage of double sided, double density floppies. It paid for itself many times over.
    I even build a EPROM programmer using the parallel port. It had just
    enough lines to put out the data and toggle the necessary lines.

    Try the IBM "portable" PC ... if you don't throw out
    yer back lifting it :-) DID use one - but did most of
    the software on a 286 box.

    I've used an Osbourne and the competing Kaypro. For the era, they
    really weren't bad. The 8088 more smoothly accessed larger RAM space
    however, so it became the worthy successor. 64/128k became obsolete
    REAL quick.

    You could already get more memory for a Z80 using bank switching. iirc the bottom 2K was reserved to do the switch. The 8088 just formalized it on
    the chip. The best part was the five different libraries for the tiny,
    small, medium, large, and huge memory schemes or whatever they were
    called.


    I think the "formalized" bit - plus the IBM name - kinda
    sealed it for the Z80s. Bank-switching on Z80's was kinda
    too clunky - and all the banks were 64k.

    Anyway, won't really diss the 8088 ... had it's good
    time and place and uses and paved the way to Better.

    EVER see an actual 8086 system ? I never did. Kinda
    had to wait for the 286/386 era to see the promised
    perks. I think Compaq had an 8086.


    I've got a ZX81 around somewhere, but those were 'toys'.

    I had a ZX80 that I bought in the kit form. I was already using the Z80
    for embedded stuff and was curious what $100, iirc, would buy.

    They made a ZX-80 *kit* ??? Never ever saw one
    in the USA. Besides, the 80 keys were TOO tiny,
    the '81 really was better and had more peripherials.

    Still, always wanted my own S-100 box, but could never afford one
    while they were still in use. I think they were still made even for
    the 68000, maybe 68020, but the buss wasn't meant for the higher
    clocks that soon became prevalent and it became so easy to put the
    periphs into ONE CHIP that there really wasn't the need for 8/10/12
    slot computers anymore.

    I never had a S-100 but I designed a set of cards and a proprietary
    backplane for a client with a real case of NIH. There were a bunch of them
    in the industrial field including the STD Bus, which was anything but standard. Everybody rolled their own.

    Yep, the 'proprietary' era ... still, a lot of good ideas ....

    The rumor was the S-100 came about when someone got a hell of a deal on milsurp edge connectors.

    MIGHT be true !!!

    Anyway, it WORKED, well, for a long time. Alas it really
    was a product of its time-slot ... lower clocks and the
    need for really large complex peripherial cards.

    Anyway, now, having 95% of all that on ONE chip is
    kinda nice - and FAST. However there's still a
    certain 'nostalgia' for S-100 ... wouldn't mind
    owning a '33 Packard either even though a Subaru
    is technologically superior ......

    Ah :

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cromemco

    I was right about the 68020's !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 10:27:58 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 17:20:37 +0100, D wrote:

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change
    til next time.

    Sourcing the potassium nitrate and sulfur was no problem in the '50s but trying to grind down charcoal was a miserable task. During one of the
    times in grade school chemistry class when I wasn't daydreaming I learned
    the formula for sucrose was C12H22O11. Hmmm, that looks like a lot of
    carbon and stuff that should turn into water vapor. Rocket candy was born!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_candy

    It was many years later I found out about it. It wasn't much of an
    explosive but back then dry gas came in about a 12 ounce can with a
    conical top that necked down to a screw cap. Filling one of those and lighting it lead to a very satisfactory fountain of flame. I never thought
    to try launching a rocket with it.

    Ah... childhood memories! This was the easiest thing in the world to
    produce! Once I managed to stop a subway line with it. I think I was
    around 12 or 13, and we were playing with this stuff under a bridge that
    had a subway line.

    The subway came, created a draft that sucked all the smoke into the
    tunnel, and they thought there was a fire and stopped the subway. 10
    minutes later the police arrived, discovered us (we didn't run) and said
    "boys will be boys" and let us go.

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 04:34:51 2024
    Ah, what was that show, "Red Dwarf", where the spaceship
    computer lamented that he'd tried to date a Zed-X 80 but
    she just didn't get him :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 10:32:11 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 21:59:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes! Have a look at this:

    https://weibulls.com/weibulls-stubborttagare-1-25kg-6st-krt-stubb-x

    1.25 kg of potassium nitrate for about 30 EUR.

    Amazon has 5 pounds for USD 27.98, free delivery. Speaking from experience
    it sucks as a stump remover. You're supposed to drill holes, pour the solution in, wait a few weeks, and set fire to the stump. Good luck with that.


    I wonder if anyone ever uses it as stump removed or if everyone who buys
    just uses it for pyrotechnics? ;)

    Sulfur is a bit more difficult to get though. I think it is on some kind
    of "watch list" where you need a license or a specific reason to buy it.
    =(

    This I can buy without problems though:

    https://www.blomsterlandet.se/produkter/tillbehor/vaxtskydd/bekampningsmedel/kumulus-nelson-garden-2700/

    And contains 80% sulphur. So I had to mix it with water, and then wait for
    the sulphur to sink to the bottom, pour off the other stuff that formed on
    top, and then it could be used. I do have my doubts about the quality, but
    it did work in the classic gun powder mix, although it was very slow
    burning but I suspect that

    1. Adding high quality coal and
    2. Purifying it with alcohol

    would increase the speed at which it burns. Maybe I'll try it again this summer! =) It is a fun hobby!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 10:35:26 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/11/24 5:08 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly* >>>>>>> more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* >>>>>>> else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more
    coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


     Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
     as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
     two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
     where to go from there ?

    Quantum computing of course! Otherwise, we'll just continue to scale out I >> assume.

    "Quantum" has NOT been going well. People are finding
    ways to REDUCE the error rate, but it's still too much.
    Cyro is also kinda required.

    The thing that puts me off quantum is that media loves to hype it. That to
    me, is a sign that it is nowhere near being ready for anything productive.
    But I am not a physicist! But based on this group it does seem I am more
    right than wrong.

    Is there an established Moores end point?

    I'm gonna say it's "at the few atoms" zone. However
    you still need to make room for the connecting leads.
    Gotta be able to FAB such things too ... and you're
    well into the X-ray zone there.

    So ... I think we're approaching A Problem here.

    The kind/meaning of 'computing' has kinda shifted
    recently due to 'AI' - Nvidia rules there - but
    the chips are faster at "AI" sorts of stuff, not
    general/all-purpose.


    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus, the
    only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other technologies for
    niche use cases such as biological computing, quantum computing, optical
    etc.

    Bio is gonna be too SLOW. Quantum, we've discussed that.

    Isn't the idea behind bio massiev parallelism? So yes, the computation
    might be slow, but if you have millions of molecules performing it in
    parallel you do get fantastic results if the problem you are trying to
    solve fits the nature of bio computing?

    Pure photonic - including some rough analog of photonic
    transistors ... MAYbe. I keep hearing bits of news which
    suggest those MIGHT be practical someday. Still, don't
    see them being THAT much faster - the S-o-L in crystals
    and fiber and such is a limiting factor. Who'd have ever
    imagined the S-o-L would be TOO SLOW eh ? Indeed it's
    already a communications pain in the ass.

    Photonic switching elements don't switch instantly
    either ... MAYbe some different def/tech that's not
    really so much 'switching' per-se ? Interference
    patterns ?

    Now something that will properly support, say, deca-state
    logic ... ? Transistors don't do that well, but smart
    photonic design, perhaps. A lot more 'getting it done'
    per gigahertz :-)

    Seems like photonic is the winner for the moment.


    Could regular cpu:s get some extended life by a change of materials or some >> other tweaks to the current design?

    Could ... but instead they'll make new chips.

    Oh, news today ... if you have an AMD box DO look into
    the "BadRAM" exploit - a sneaky back-door way for Vlad
    to spy on your 'protected' data.

     Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
     'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
     of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.




    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 10:52:17 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 3:19 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 09/12/2024 20:51, D wrote:


    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    If they had simply taxed carbon fuels  we would be all nuclear by
    now...and be making synthetic diesel

    Is electricity the primary cost driver of synthetic diesel?

    I think it would be, yes.


    Lets say you can get to a 30% conversion ration of whatever energy drives >>> the synthesis, to the final diesl.

    Diesel and natural gas is around (UK money) 50p a litre or 5p /kWh

    Expected renewable electricity is 3-4 times that
    Historic nuclear is a bit less - say 4p /kWh

    That puts synthetic diesel at a minimum of around 12p/kWh Which is what we >>> pay at the pumps but that is all tax.

    Ahh, yet another thing we don't have to worry about then. =)

    Germany managed to help the extreme left and the extreme right with their >>>> ridiculous nuclear policy. Given their history, I'm surprised they didn't >>>> see it coming. ;)

    The trouble with Germany is that the Greens got into coalition, and the
    price of that was Germany's energy policy.
    The problem seems to be that the broad political choice is between neo
    Marxists and pro Russian  Neo Nazis.

    Yes!

    Germany seems SCREWED - all ideology, no common sense.

    Alas it's a HUGE economy .....

    For now.

    Massive organizations can do a lot wrong, and still survive a long time.
    My fear is that they are repeating the errors that led up to ww2. They are crushing the middle class with taxes and eco-fascist policies and
    inflation.

    A far-right agitator will popup (hello AfD!) and say, vote for me and all
    will be well. Since there's literally no other alternative, the middle
    class will do it, and then it could become dangerous.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 10:53:56 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On 12 Dec 2024 04:06:10 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    Suggested edit: "west of it many/most brains turn to mush."
    There are a few right-minded thinkers west of the Cascades.

    Sure. My ex is somewhat to the right of me and lives in New York City.
    It's a lonely life and she has alienated more than one 'friend'.

    Oh well, then they weren't friends in the first place. A friend can
    tolerate differences of opinion. If they cannot, they are not worth having around.

    I have a friend who is socialist. Yes, the discussion can be heated at
    times (but less often than you would think) and we are perfectly fineto
    agree to disagree and change the topic.

    There was a far right author who wrote a few novels about a Northwest Territorial Imperative. He realized that a landlocked area of Montana,
    Idaho, Nevada, and a few other states wasn't feasible and worked in ways
    to capture the seaboard. They all seemed very optimistic.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 10:51:47 2024
    On 12/12/2024 01:32, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 10:35:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    How long have Intel been struggling with 7nm?

    It would be wonderful if '7nm' referred to some real dimension.

    https://www.anandtech.com/show/16823/intel-accelerated-offensive-process- roadmap-updates-to-10nm-7nm-4nm-3nm-20a-18a-packaging-foundry-emib-foveros

    "It is no secret that having "Intel 10nm" being equivalent to "TSMC 7nm", even though the numbers actually have nothing to do with the physical implementation, has ground at Intel for a while. A lot of the industry,
    for whatever reason, hasn’t learned that these numbers aren’t actually a physical measurement. They used to be, but when we moved from 2D planar transistors to 3D FinFET transistors, the numbers became nothing more than
    a marketing tool. Despite this, every time there’s an article about the technology, people get confused. We’ve been talking about it for half a decade, but the confusion still remains."

    The full article is worth reading.

    True, but in the end it is no secret that the need for the best
    power/speed drives the technology to reduce in size to the level where
    the graininess of the atomic structure and quantum effects start to
    impact on its performance...

    Which is why the tendency today is to stick to around 3-4GHz clocks but
    add more cores and local cache RAM , and security risk style predictive branches.

    What may happen is that some new way of coding that demands a massively parallel architecture, rather than the existing one optimised for 'C' - emerges.

    So E.g. when searching a data structure, every core gets a little slice
    of it and gets an overall reduction in search times.

    --
    "If you don’t read the news paper, you are un-informed. If you read the
    news paper, you are mis-informed."

    Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 11:12:32 2024
    On 12/12/2024 02:17, rbowman wrote:
    Like the rest of the US the large urban centers are Democratic. Go global warming. Say a 30' rise in the sea level and the people of Portland,
    Seattle, NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, LA, and so forth will be too busy swimming to vote.

    Sadly it ain't gonna happen.

    Sea level rise is steady and constant and shows no acceleration

    --
    Any fool can believe in principles - and most of them do!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 10:33:06 2024
    On 11/12/2024 20:56, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    There is an international group of shipping people looking into what
    stands in the way. Regulations mostly...

    The economics are somewhat unclear.  The rising cost of bunker oil has
    made cruising at lower speeds the optimal balance. With nuclear,
    uranium costs are negligible so full speed at whatever the weather
    will allow may be optimal leading to less ships being needed overall.

    Probably a large container or cruise ship could top out at 50mph
    (80kph) or so. So something like a 3 day  transatlantic crossing time.

    I think that is very acceptable as part of a holiday package.

    It is fascinating how ancient these ideas really are. By pure chance, I
    once found an old family history in my fathers apartment typed up by my grandmother.

    Apparently, together with those papers, where some old notes from her
    job. She used to be the secretary to some scientist at swedens first
    nuclear research program around 1954.

    In those notes, I read speculations about nuclear powered ships and I
    think they mentioned aircraft, but ships for sure.

    Yes. Back in the day scientists had some sway and engineers post WWII
    were gods.

    But then Nuclear power wasn't needed, and fossil fuel companies had huge
    and deep pockets.

    And Russia was attempting with remarkable success to finance any and
    every organisation that made nuclear power (as well as nuclear war) more
    scary than it was.

    Nuclear ships were in fact tried, but the economics and regulations made
    them not cost effective. At the time. The rather larger number of
    expensive 'nuclear engineers' required was a dominant factor.

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking
    would probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine
    issues on the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power
    plant builder to tell them what to do if anything went outside
    operational norms


    --
    Labour - a bunch of rich people convincing poor people to vote for rich
    people by telling poor people that "other" rich people are the reason
    they are poor.

    Peter Thompson

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 11:19:18 2024
    On 12/12/2024 09:52, D wrote:
    Massive organizations can do a lot wrong, and still survive a long time.
    My fear is that they are repeating the errors that led up to ww2. They
    are crushing the middle class with taxes and eco-fascist policies and inflation.

    There is an aphorism that a large company only has to get one chance in
    twenty right to survive, but a small company cannot afford to get more
    than one in twenty chances wrong or it goes under.


    A far-right agitator will popup (hello AfD!) and say, vote for me and
    all will be well. Since there's literally no other alternative, the
    middle class will do it, and then it could become dangerous.

    Yes. It's alarming to think that at the time Adolf was seen as the best
    of a bad lot.

    But once they let him in, they were stuck with him.



    --
    How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think.

    Adolf Hitler

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 16:14:48 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 12/12/2024 09:52, D wrote:
    Massive organizations can do a lot wrong, and still survive a long time. My >> fear is that they are repeating the errors that led up to ww2. They are
    crushing the middle class with taxes and eco-fascist policies and
    inflation.

    There is an aphorism that a large company only has to get one chance in twenty right to survive, but a small company cannot afford to get more than one in twenty chances wrong or it goes under.

    As a small business owner, I say... this is the truth! It is absolutely incredible the shit big companies can do, and still survive and thrive!

    A far-right agitator will popup (hello AfD!) and say, vote for me and all
    will be well. Since there's literally no other alternative, the middle
    class will do it, and then it could become dangerous.

    Yes. It's alarming to think that at the time Adolf was seen as the best of a bad lot.

    But once they let him in, they were stuck with him.

    True.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 16:13:09 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking would probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine issues on the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power plant builder to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire lifetime until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 15:59:28 2024
    On 12/12/2024 15:13, D wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range
    networking would probably result in just a couple of people to manage
    any routine issues on the power plant and satellite comms back to the
    nuclear power plant builder to tell them what to do if anything went
    outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire lifetime until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    They could use a multitude of things and probably will.

    Currently what you suggest is probably what they would have - a sealed
    PWR with a throttle on the side and two pipes for primary circuit water.

    And an OBDC port :-)

    Currently big ships would expect to use 50-70MW. That isn't big, but
    it's not small either.


    --
    "In our post-modern world, climate science is not powerful because it is
    true: it is true because it is powerful."

    Lucas Bergkamp

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 12 19:20:34 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 17:20:37 +0100, D wrote:

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I
    also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change
    til next time.

    Sourcing the potassium nitrate and sulfur was no problem in the '50s but
    trying to grind down charcoal was a miserable task. During one of the
    times in grade school chemistry class when I wasn't daydreaming I learned
    the formula for sucrose was C12H22O11. Hmmm, that looks like a lot of
    carbon and stuff that should turn into water vapor. Rocket candy was born! >>
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_candy

    It was many years later I found out about it. It wasn't much of an
    explosive but back then dry gas came in about a 12 ounce can with a
    conical top that necked down to a screw cap. Filling one of those and
    lighting it lead to a very satisfactory fountain of flame. I never thought >> to try launching a rocket with it.

    Ah... childhood memories! This was the easiest thing in the world to
    produce! Once I managed to stop a subway line with it. I think I was
    around 12 or 13, and we were playing with this stuff under a bridge that
    had a subway line.

    The subway came, created a draft that sucked all the smoke into the
    tunnel, and they thought there was a fire and stopped the subway. 10
    minutes later the police arrived, discovered us (we didn't run) and said "boys will be boys" and let us go.

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    Yes indeed. Today some kids doing the identical activity would pull in
    the local police, the FBI, the TSA, and likely several other three-letter-agencies and the kids would be put on several terrorist in
    the making watchlists and be haunted by that label for the rest of
    their lives.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 20:19:30 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:53:56 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On 12 Dec 2024 04:06:10 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    Suggested edit: "west of it many/most brains turn to mush."
    There are a few right-minded thinkers west of the Cascades.

    Sure. My ex is somewhat to the right of me and lives in New York City.
    It's a lonely life and she has alienated more than one 'friend'.

    Oh well, then they weren't friends in the first place. A friend can
    tolerate differences of opinion. If they cannot, they are not worth
    having around.

    She is a Christian of some sort and I tread carefully when she veers in
    that direction. Considering I've known her for about 60 years I know the pitfalls.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 20:22:17 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:51:47 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Which is why the tendency today is to stick to around 3-4GHz clocks but
    add more cores and local cache RAM , and security risk style predictive branches.

    That gets a little spooky. When I was doing Z80 stuff at 4 to 6 MHz you
    could get away with a lot.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 21:28:48 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 12/12/2024 15:13, D wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking
    would probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine
    issues on the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power
    plant builder to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational >>> norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A
    reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire lifetime >> until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    They could use a multitude of things and probably will.

    Currently what you suggest is probably what they would have - a sealed PWR with a throttle on the side and two pipes for primary circuit water.

    And an OBDC port :-)

    Currently big ships would expect to use 50-70MW. That isn't big, but it's not small either.

    Yes. Freight boats are probably the ideal platform.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 12 21:29:34 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 17:20:37 +0100, D wrote:

    What I did not test was to buy some alcohol to purify the gun powder. I >>>> also had bad quality coal as well, so that's something I would change
    til next time.

    Sourcing the potassium nitrate and sulfur was no problem in the '50s but >>> trying to grind down charcoal was a miserable task. During one of the
    times in grade school chemistry class when I wasn't daydreaming I learned >>> the formula for sucrose was C12H22O11. Hmmm, that looks like a lot of
    carbon and stuff that should turn into water vapor. Rocket candy was born! >>>
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_candy

    It was many years later I found out about it. It wasn't much of an
    explosive but back then dry gas came in about a 12 ounce can with a
    conical top that necked down to a screw cap. Filling one of those and
    lighting it lead to a very satisfactory fountain of flame. I never thought >>> to try launching a rocket with it.

    Ah... childhood memories! This was the easiest thing in the world to
    produce! Once I managed to stop a subway line with it. I think I was
    around 12 or 13, and we were playing with this stuff under a bridge that
    had a subway line.

    The subway came, created a draft that sucked all the smoke into the
    tunnel, and they thought there was a fire and stopped the subway. 10
    minutes later the police arrived, discovered us (we didn't run) and said
    "boys will be boys" and let us go.

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    Yes indeed. Today some kids doing the identical activity would pull in
    the local police, the FBI, the TSA, and likely several other three-letter-agencies and the kids would be put on several terrorist in
    the making watchlists and be haunted by that label for the rest of
    their lives.

    Sadly I believe you are correct. =( And that attitude is killing freedom
    and society.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 21:34:04 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:53:56 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On 12 Dec 2024 04:06:10 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    Suggested edit: "west of it many/most brains turn to mush."
    There are a few right-minded thinkers west of the Cascades.

    Sure. My ex is somewhat to the right of me and lives in New York City.
    It's a lonely life and she has alienated more than one 'friend'.

    Oh well, then they weren't friends in the first place. A friend can
    tolerate differences of opinion. If they cannot, they are not worth
    having around.

    She is a Christian of some sort and I tread carefully when she veers in
    that direction. Considering I've known her for about 60 years I know the pitfalls.

    True. My jokes about feminism and the unequality of men and women
    sometimes lands me in dangerous territory with my wife. She is a lawyer!
    =O

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 20:37:32 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 04:20:04 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I think the "formalized" bit - plus the IBM name - kinda sealed it
    for the Z80s. Bank-switching on Z80's was kinda too clunky - and all
    the banks were 64k.

    The IBM seal of approval did a lot. It killed the Z8000 entirely and set
    back the 68000 designs.

    Anyway, won't really diss the 8088 ... had it's good time and place
    and uses and paved the way to Better.

    It was a smart decision. All the 8-bit peripherals were cheap by then and
    could be used.

    EVER see an actual 8086 system ? I never did. Kinda had to wait for
    the 286/386 era to see the promised perks. I think Compaq had an
    8086.

    The early PS/2s used the 8086. I've seen them but never worked on one. I
    did a project for GE Ft. Wayne that bracketed it. The interfaces to the environmental test chambers was handled by 12 PC/Xts, while the
    supervisory role and data collection was a PC/At. The PS/2 was sort of
    between the two. The 8086 models weren't appreciably better than the XT
    and the later 286s weren't as good as an AT.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 20:44:29 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 16:14:48 +0100, D wrote:

    As a small business owner, I say... this is the truth! It is absolutely incredible the shit big companies can do, and still survive and thrive!

    That's a discussion I had with the company president several times. One of
    the VPs was always chasing the big sales. My argument was a company like Lockheed Martin could win the bid, fuck it up completely, get sued, and
    shrug it off; we couldn't.

    That came to realization when Lockheed won the bid for an emergency
    dispatch system for the City of London. They failed to deliver, were sued
    for breach of contract and non-performance, and went on to their next
    scam.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 20:46:35 2024
    On 2024-12-12, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    Wonder how fast, with modern techniques, you could
    REALLY make a Z80 ? Could prob fit a bunch on a
    single die ....

    There must be a bunch of people that have written a Z80 for an FPGA.
    Though I think it is more common to do an 8086 as a debug/configuration
    tool for an FPGA based special purpose data mangler.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Computer Nerd Kev@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Fri Dec 13 06:42:28 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking would
    probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine issues on >> the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power plant builder >> to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut.

    Yes, and the reactor model for ships is basically the model for SMR
    start-ups, except with the vague idea that they're suddenly going
    to be much cheaper somehow (I'll believe it when they "hit the
    shelves").

    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 20:53:45 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:27:58 +0100, D wrote:

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    It didn't come to fruition but I hatched a plan to brew up a batch of
    thermite and weld a draw bridge closed. I doubt anyone would have found it funny.

    Being the '60s there was a radiation monitor on the roof od the high
    school. The scheme was to somehow acquire some radioactive material from
    the college lab and seed it. We got as far as acquiring the keys necessary
    for roof access but grabbing a hot sample didn't work out.

    It was only three stories but there was an elevator with keyed access for
    the faculty and handicapped students. The idea was to get the key, hit the emergency stop at a location when we could manually open the door and
    slither out from the partial opening. That one worked.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Computer Nerd Kev@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 13 06:59:19 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 20:17, D wrote:
    But it won't be a big bang, plenty of technologies exist to bridge the gap. >>
    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I
    bought full, and would never have to refuel. ;)

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver
    than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a steam turbine, sadly.

    The Helion fusion reactor design for directly generating
    electricity from the electromagnetic pulse generated by colliding
    plasma in a tube is interesting. I think you'd still need the lead,
    but maybe not the water. Call it a "plasma piston". Of course it's
    less than clear if it'll ever work at their current power-station
    scale let alone scaled down. Bigger always seems to be better with
    fusion research.

    https://www.helionenergy.com/

    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 20:57:43 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:32:11 +0100, D wrote:

    Sulfur is a bit more difficult to get though. I think it is on some kind
    of "watch list" where you need a license or a specific reason to buy it.
    =(

    Amazon to the rescue, at least in the US. 5 pounds for USD 25.65. However
    if I use the Tor exit point in the Netherlands it says it can't be shipped
    to my address.

    Europeans can't have any fun at all, can they?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 21:05:10 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:23:53 +0100, D wrote:


    Wow, that's quite a different between the easter and western parts. Yes!
    A potential benefit of "global warming" all democrats will be washed
    away.

    Quite typical for the US. Many in upstate New York wish that Sodom on the Hudson would break off and float out to sea and western Massachusetts
    feels the same about Boston.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 12 21:01:39 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:33:06 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Nuclear ships were in fact tried, but the economics and regulations made
    them not cost effective. At the time. The rather larger number of
    expensive 'nuclear engineers' required was a dominant factor.

    Nuclear subs had advantages and war toys aren't subject to economics. A
    friend served on a nuke. His comment on the experience was Holy Loch,
    Scotland was the only place in the world that could make being submerged
    for up to three months look good.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 21:19:09 2024
    On 2024-12-12, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Try the IBM "portable" PC ... if you don't throw out
    yer back lifting it :-) DID use one - but did most of
    the software on a 286 box.

    I did a lot of work on an Olivetti M18, their luggable answer
    to the IBM PC. To fit between the expansion slots, the handle
    had to be mounted at 90 degrees to a comfortable carrying angle.
    I once took it to a customer site and had to park several blocks
    away - I think one arm is longer than the other now due to this.

    EVER see an actual 8086 system ? I never did. Kinda
    had to wait for the 286/386 era to see the promised
    perks. I think Compaq had an 8086.

    I used one once. It had a pair of 8-inch floppies mounted
    to the right of the (full-sized) screen.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 12 21:31:38 2024
    On 2024-12-12, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire lifetime until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    That is sort of the model used on the submarines ... and on the NS
    Savannah in the early 1960s. From what I have read, it could be
    commercially viable today (with the improvements in relevant technology
    in the last 60 years).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 12 23:10:59 2024
    On 2024-12-12, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    Ah, what was that show, "Red Dwarf", where the spaceship
    computer lamented that he'd tried to date a Zed-X 80 but
    she just didn't get him :-)

    Holly was one of my favourite characters. One of my favourite
    quotes was when they broke lightspeed and he couldn't see
    where they were going. See my .sig.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Even with an IQ of 6000 it's
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | still brown trousers time.
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | -- Holly (ship's computer
    / \ if you read it the right way. | on Red Dwarf)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to John Ames on Fri Dec 13 02:03:30 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 12:54:28 -0800, John Ames wrote:


    Some of the later Tandy 1000 series did as well, before they eventually pivoted from being a vastly improved PCjr to being Yet Another VGA 386.

    That was a strange interlude. I'm from the generation where you went to
    Tandy Leather to get the materials for your hand tooled wallet Boy Scout project. Then when they wanted to distance themselves from the Trash-80
    they jumped from handicrafts to 'serious' computers.

    There's a joke about the BATF that 'Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms' should
    be the name of a convenience store. There was a store in a small Maine
    town that did all that and more, adding Tandy computers to the mix. They
    also had general hardware and some food. One stop shopping. A friend moonlighted setting up Tandy systems for local government, schools, and
    small businesses.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 02:08:50 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 21:34:04 +0100, D wrote:

    True. My jokes about feminism and the unequality of men and women
    sometimes lands me in dangerous territory with my wife. She is a lawyer!

    My wife became more religious after the divorce. About 20 years after the
    fact she said if she'd followed Paul's advice for women to sit down, shut
    up, and follow their husband's lead it might have worked out better. I
    didn't pursue the thought.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 12 23:24:00 2024
    On 12/12/24 4:35 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/11/24 5:08 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 11 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/10/24 8:38 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even
    *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like,
    *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more
    coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.


     Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
     Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'  :-)

     Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
     schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

     Houston, we have a problem .............


    Your thread was perhaps not interesting enough? Try again! ;)


     Awwww .... OUGHT to be an interesting topic, especially
     as we're bumping up against Moore's end-point. One or
     two more gens and we're literally at the atomic scale ;
     where to go from there ?

    Quantum computing of course! Otherwise, we'll just continue to scale
    out I assume.

     "Quantum" has NOT been going well. People are finding
     ways to REDUCE the error rate, but it's still too much.
     Cyro is also kinda required.

    The thing that puts me off quantum is that media loves to hype it. That
    to me, is a sign that it is nowhere near being ready for anything
    productive. But I am not a physicist! But based on this group it does
    seem I am more right than wrong.

    Google just blew its horn today about it's new quantum
    chip - solved some 1000x-age-of-the-universe math
    problem in about five minutes.

    https://blog.google/technology/research/google-willow-quantum-chip/

    BUT, that particular problem was especially easy
    to address with quantum methods ....

    Is there an established Moores end point?

     I'm gonna say it's "at the few atoms" zone. However
     you still need to make room for the connecting leads.
     Gotta be able to FAB such things too ... and you're
     well into the X-ray zone there.

     So ... I think we're approaching A Problem here.

     The kind/meaning of 'computing' has kinda shifted
     recently due to 'AI' - Nvidia rules there - but
     the chips are faster at "AI" sorts of stuff, not
     general/all-purpose.


    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus,
    the only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other
    technologies for niche use cases such as biological computing,
    quantum computing, optical etc.

     Bio is gonna be too SLOW. Quantum, we've discussed that.

    Isn't the idea behind bio massiev parallelism? So yes, the computation
    might be slow, but if you have millions of molecules performing it in parallel you do get fantastic results if the problem you are trying to
    solve fits the nature of bio computing?


    But again ... NOT all problems are especially well
    solved with massive parallelism any more than all
    problems can be Q-computed worth a damn.

    So we're back to the more modern question of what
    "computing" MEANS. All was clear with UNIVAC, but
    since then ...


     Pure photonic - including some rough analog of photonic
     transistors ... MAYbe. I keep hearing bits of news which
     suggest those MIGHT be practical someday. Still, don't
     see them being THAT much faster - the S-o-L in crystals
     and fiber and such is a limiting factor. Who'd have ever
     imagined the S-o-L would be TOO SLOW eh ? Indeed it's
     already a communications pain in the ass.

     Photonic switching elements don't switch instantly
     either ... MAYbe some different def/tech that's not
     really so much 'switching' per-se ? Interference
     patterns ?

     Now something that will properly support, say, deca-state
     logic ... ? Transistors don't do that well, but smart
     photonic design, perhaps. A lot more 'getting it done'
     per gigahertz  :-)

    Seems like photonic is the winner for the moment.

    Don't see any other direction. We're already kinda
    bumping-up against Moore even now with conventional
    electronics. For anything needing linear calx, I think
    we MIGHT get a 10x improvement and that's IT forever
    with transistor-like electronics.

    USED to take "Photonics Spectra", aka "Photonics"
    mag back in the day. MANY promises - but VERY VERY
    slow realization. Is still published :
    https://www.photonics.com/

    Useful photonic 'circuits' are NOT easy to realize.
    Some of the new "AI" stuff MIGHT make some of that
    easier by looking at a zillion solutions/variants
    a second and finding exploitable patterns.

    Again, 'circuits' as we think of them may not be
    the best way to use photonic tech - still have
    this weird vision of using interference patterns
    rather then ph "transistors". Light has some odd
    properties that are easier to get at than by
    using electrons.




    Could regular cpu:s get some extended life by a change of materials
    or some other tweaks to the current design?

     Could ... but instead they'll make new chips.

     Oh, news today ... if you have an AMD box DO look into
     the "BadRAM" exploit - a sneaky back-door way for Vlad
     to spy on your 'protected' data.

     Better innovate SOMETHING, otherwise we're gonna see
     'peak computing' when it's become clear we need thousands
     of times that for the Really Cool Stuff.




    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 23:29:16 2024
    On 12/12/24 3:44 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 16:14:48 +0100, D wrote:

    As a small business owner, I say... this is the truth! It is absolutely
    incredible the shit big companies can do, and still survive and thrive!

    That's a discussion I had with the company president several times. One of the VPs was always chasing the big sales. My argument was a company like Lockheed Martin could win the bid, fuck it up completely, get sued, and
    shrug it off; we couldn't.

    That came to realization when Lockheed won the bid for an emergency
    dispatch system for the City of London. They failed to deliver, were sued
    for breach of contract and non-performance, and went on to their next
    scam.


    Gotta GREASE THE POLITICIANS/REGULATORS.

    Remember the anti-trust stuff against M$ back in
    the day ? It was because Bill forgot to grease
    his politicians. As soon as he learned that all
    the legal problems went away .....

    Having a diverse-enough finance base also helps.
    This means that even if you DO fuck it up, DO
    get sued, you can still borrow lots more money
    to continue.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 04:37:50 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    What I recall was all the hype about how bubble memory was going to
    surpass everything else and the shift was "just around the corner".

    Thirty years later and few even remember "bubble memoriess" were ever a
    thing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 23:37:20 2024
    On 12/12/24 4:01 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:33:06 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Nuclear ships were in fact tried, but the economics and regulations made
    them not cost effective. At the time. The rather larger number of
    expensive 'nuclear engineers' required was a dominant factor.

    Nuclear subs had advantages and war toys aren't subject to economics. A friend served on a nuke. His comment on the experience was Holy Loch, Scotland was the only place in the world that could make being submerged
    for up to three months look good.

    Armies have almost unlimited budgets/resources. If
    they want nuke ships/subs they can GET 'em.

    But COMMERCIAL operations - nope.

    Good, large, diesel/oil engines are still the
    solution for large commercial carriers.

    Saw an engine on some TV show ... it had a
    people-sized door at the base of each cylinder
    so you could climb in there and check/fix stuff.
    I *think* individual cylinders could be detached
    from the crank so, in theory, you could work on
    one while the engine kept running. That sounds
    very unpleasant though ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 12 23:42:41 2024
    On 12/12/24 4:05 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:23:53 +0100, D wrote:


    Wow, that's quite a different between the easter and western parts. Yes!
    A potential benefit of "global warming" all democrats will be washed
    away.

    Quite typical for the US. Many in upstate New York wish that Sodom on the Hudson would break off and float out to sea and western Massachusetts
    feels the same about Boston.

    Note the large uptick in seismic activity, esp along
    the Pacific rim, the past couple of years. More and
    more, and stronger and stronger, quakes. It is NOT
    impossible to get a giant tsunami that washes away
    the US west coast ... the geologists have seem signs
    of those happening before.

    NYC ... I think they're all gonna wind up killing
    each other. Whatever's left, well, John Carpenter
    had it pretty much right ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 13 08:46:33 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 23:42:41 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Note the large uptick in seismic activity, esp along the Pacific rim,
    the past couple of years. More and more, and stronger and stronger,
    quakes. It is NOT impossible to get a giant tsunami that washes away
    the US west coast ... the geologists have seem signs of those
    happening before.

    The last real tsunami a photographer went out on the sandbar at the mouth
    of the Klamath River to get a really impressive shot. I forget if they
    ever found him. Go lemmings, go!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Fri Dec 13 08:43:36 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 04:37:50 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    What I recall was all the hype about how bubble memory was going to
    surpass everything else and the shift was "just around the corner".

    Thirty years later and few even remember "bubble memoriess" were ever a thing.

    The memory hole is deep and dark. I think I still have the preliminary datasheets for the iAPX 432 that was going to be Intel's real 32 bit
    processor. The iAPX 86 was a stop gap until they got the bugs worked out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 11:04:49 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:27:58 +0100, D wrote:

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    It didn't come to fruition but I hatched a plan to brew up a batch of thermite and weld a draw bridge closed. I doubt anyone would have found it funny.

    Boys will be boys! ;)

    Being the '60s there was a radiation monitor on the roof od the high
    school. The scheme was to somehow acquire some radioactive material from
    the college lab and seed it. We got as far as acquiring the keys necessary for roof access but grabbing a hot sample didn't work out.

    And you didn't try chewing Wrigleys chewing gum and breathing on the
    detector? Rumours say it will have the same effect as a radioactive
    sample. (or maybe not!) ;)

    It was only three stories but there was an elevator with keyed access for
    the faculty and handicapped students. The idea was to get the key, hit the emergency stop at a location when we could manually open the door and
    slither out from the partial opening. That one worked.

    I see how you might have ended up in the military special forces! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mike Scott@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 13 09:37:29 2024
    On 13/12/2024 04:42, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
      Note the large uptick in seismic activity, esp along
      the Pacific rim, the past couple of years. More and
      more, and stronger and stronger, quakes. It is NOT
      impossible to get a giant tsunami that washes away
      the US west coast ... the geologists have seem signs
      of those happening before.

    Something else to ascribe to man-made-climate-change :-}

    Or rather is something in the core changing and driving climate change?
    IIRC there's a growing magnetic anomaly in the Atlantic.


    But what's this do with bit-slice chips or c.o.l.m.?


    --
    Mike Scott
    Harlow, England

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Computer Nerd Kev on Fri Dec 13 11:00:28 2024
    On Thu, 13 Dec 2024, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking would
    probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine issues on >>> the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power plant builder >>> to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut.

    Yes, and the reactor model for ships is basically the model for SMR start-ups, except with the vague idea that they're suddenly going
    to be much cheaper somehow (I'll believe it when they "hit the
    shelves").

    Ahhhhh! The pieces of the puzzle are starting to come together! I had no
    idea. Thank you for highlighting this. =) Makes perfect sense.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 11:02:47 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 16:14:48 +0100, D wrote:

    As a small business owner, I say... this is the truth! It is absolutely
    incredible the shit big companies can do, and still survive and thrive!

    That's a discussion I had with the company president several times. One of the VPs was always chasing the big sales. My argument was a company like Lockheed Martin could win the bid, fuck it up completely, get sued, and
    shrug it off; we couldn't.

    That came to realization when Lockheed won the bid for an emergency
    dispatch system for the City of London. They failed to deliver, were sued
    for breach of contract and non-performance, and went on to their next
    scam.

    Oh... the many storage companies that promised (and sold) the wonders of compression and deduplication, and thanks to them, a tiny little
    installation would suffice. A few months on, and the customer had to
    expand the system massively because the estimate figures did not hold.
    Storage company happy, rich, and the customer continuing to commit the
    same mistakes again and again and again. ;)

    So you know the company president? You must indeed be a powerful man! Or
    the president must be a special president who actually talks to employees?
    Or a bit of both perhaps!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 11:08:39 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:23:53 +0100, D wrote:


    Wow, that's quite a different between the easter and western parts. Yes!
    A potential benefit of "global warming" all democrats will be washed
    away.

    Quite typical for the US. Many in upstate New York wish that Sodom on the Hudson would break off and float out to sea and western Massachusetts
    feels the same about Boston.


    Ahh... and I have heard that many are waiting for california to detach and float out to sea as well! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 11:06:04 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:32:11 +0100, D wrote:

    Sulfur is a bit more difficult to get though. I think it is on some kind
    of "watch list" where you need a license or a specific reason to buy it.
    =(

    Amazon to the rescue, at least in the US. 5 pounds for USD 25.65. However
    if I use the Tor exit point in the Netherlands it says it can't be shipped
    to my address.

    Europeans can't have any fun at all, can they?


    Nope! Europe is too busy turning into the next soviet union to allow its citizens any form of fun, or to have opinions which deviate from what the politicians say.

    Thankfully there is usenet which lives on, completely forgotten by the
    secret police. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Fri Dec 13 11:09:55 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-12, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire lifetime >> until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    That is sort of the model used on the submarines ... and on the NS
    Savannah in the early 1960s. From what I have read, it could be
    commercially viable today (with the improvements in relevant technology
    in the last 60 years).


    Thank you. Let's see... there is much interest in the SMR. Let's see who
    will be the first to take the step among the EU members.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 11:25:26 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 21:34:04 +0100, D wrote:

    True. My jokes about feminism and the unequality of men and women
    sometimes lands me in dangerous territory with my wife. She is a lawyer!

    My wife became more religious after the divorce. About 20 years after the

    Strange! This is not the first time I have heard this. An acquaintance separated and after that, his ex became religious as well. Very strange.

    fact she said if she'd followed Paul's advice for women to sit down, shut
    up, and follow their husband's lead it might have worked out better. I
    didn't pursue the thought.

    This is why women in sweden, the most "equal" and militantly feminist
    country on the planet, are so unhappy. No man wants to be married with a competing male, and the swedish women are doing their best to turn into
    little males.

    That is why I went to eastern europe, to find a woman, who actually wants
    to be a woman and appreciates femininity.

    It is an interesting trend. Out of my male friends, who all tend to be university educated, white men, 90% are married to women from either south american, southern or eastern europe, or asia.

    Only 10% are married to swedish women, and I expect them to separate
    within 5-15 years. I think one already has, but not quite sure. Usually a classic breaking point is when the children reach the age of 15-18 or so,
    since they reason that they have to "do it for the children" and life
    about 15 years of miserable lives, with occasional cheating, and then
    finally separate once the children as old enough to "take it".

    Some days I am not sure at all if having a child is a good thing or not.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 13 11:31:07 2024
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/12/24 4:01 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:33:06 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Nuclear ships were in fact tried, but the economics and regulations made >>> them not cost effective. At the time. The rather larger number of
    expensive 'nuclear engineers' required was a dominant factor.

    Nuclear subs had advantages and war toys aren't subject to economics. A
    friend served on a nuke. His comment on the experience was Holy Loch,
    Scotland was the only place in the world that could make being submerged
    for up to three months look good.

    Armies have almost unlimited budgets/resources. If
    they want nuke ships/subs they can GET 'em.

    But COMMERCIAL operations - nope.

    Good, large, diesel/oil engines are still the
    solution for large commercial carriers.

    Subtract taxes, and compare only the raw cost, and the economics look even better! On gasoline at least 50% is tax, so remove that, and we can
    happily continue for at least a generation or two. =)

    Saw an engine on some TV show ... it had a
    people-sized door at the base of each cylinder
    so you could climb in there and check/fix stuff.
    I *think* individual cylinders could be detached
    from the crank so, in theory, you could work on
    one while the engine kept running. That sounds
    very unpleasant though ....


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 13 11:29:51 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The thing that puts me off quantum is that media loves to hype it. That to >> me, is a sign that it is nowhere near being ready for anything productive. >> But I am not a physicist! But based on this group it does seem I am more
    right than wrong.

    Google just blew its horn today about it's new quantum
    chip - solved some 1000x-age-of-the-universe math
    problem in about five minutes.

    https://blog.google/technology/research/google-willow-quantum-chip/

    BUT, that particular problem was especially easy
    to address with quantum methods ....

    Well, my measure of doing anything productive with it is... is anyone paying google to solve that problem? If not, it is just intellectual masturbation and of very little value.

    I would imagine once we hit that end point in terms of regular cpus, the >>>> only direction left would be purpose built cpus on other technologies for >>>> niche use cases such as biological computing, quantum computing, optical >>>> etc.

     Bio is gonna be too SLOW. Quantum, we've discussed that.

    Isn't the idea behind bio massiev parallelism? So yes, the computation
    might be slow, but if you have millions of molecules performing it in
    parallel you do get fantastic results if the problem you are trying to
    solve fits the nature of bio computing?


    But again ... NOT all problems are especially well
    solved with massive parallelism any more than all
    problems can be Q-computed worth a damn.

    Well, that is why I said "niche use cases" in my original text. I agree, not all
    use cases are suited for that, and my thesis was that when we hit a limit on general cpu:s, bio, photonics, quantum, will be developed for niche cases, that fit those technologies. Not, that those technologies will help with our every day cases.

    So we're back to the more modern question of what
    "computing" MEANS. All was clear with UNIVAC, but
    since then ...

    Seems like photonic is the winner for the moment.

    Don't see any other direction. We're already kinda
    bumping-up against Moore even now with conventional
    electronics. For anything needing linear calx, I think
    we MIGHT get a 10x improvement and that's IT forever
    with transistor-like electronics.

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Fri Dec 13 11:31:52 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    What I recall was all the hype about how bubble memory was going to
    surpass everything else and the shift was "just around the corner".

    Thirty years later and few even remember "bubble memoriess" were ever a thing.


    Reminds me of HP:s "the machine" that imploded spectacularly! An amazing example of what marketing can do, when disconnected from engineering! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Computer Nerd Kev on Fri Dec 13 10:58:52 2024
    On 12/12/2024 20:42, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel
    prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking would
    probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine issues on >>> the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power plant builder >>> to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut.

    Yes, and the reactor model for ships is basically the model for SMR start-ups, except with the vague idea that they're suddenly going
    to be much cheaper somehow (I'll believe it when they "hit the
    shelves").


    Its not a vague idea, its a completely sound business model

    Over 85% of the cots of a new conventional reactor is in getting it
    certified to be safe at every single stage of the construction. Capital
    lies idle ad does the workforce in half finished constructions waiting
    to be signed off fort the next stage, and woe betide you if some trivial
    aspect of it isn't to the specification - you need to re-certify it all
    over again.
    SMRs cut the Gordian knot, By making the reactors in a factory to
    identical specifications and having them small enough to trailer them to
    the site, 90% of the certification is only done once. For as many units
    as you care to make.

    Also, below a certain size, the scale effect swings towards you: the
    reactor does not need active cooling to dissipate the decay heat after a
    SCRAM shutdown. So no Fukushima or 3MI accident is possible. Convection
    is enough to do the job.

    The only downside to SMRs is that at smaller sizes they need more highly enriched uranium (or Plutonium/Uranium mixes) to get to critical. The
    supply chain for that is not yet established at scale.

    Most of the designs that seem likely to reach production first are
    simply scaled down pressurised water reactors, as used in nuclear
    submarines etc. with probably extra shelding and safety to meet
    commercial safety standards.


    --
    "What do you think about Gay Marriage?"
    "I don't."
    "Don't what?"
    "Think about Gay Marriage."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 11:01:13 2024
    On 13/12/2024 10:06, D wrote:
    Nope! Europe is too busy turning into the next soviet union to allow its citizens any form of fun, or to have opinions which deviate from what
    the politicians say.

    +1
    Thankfully there is usenet which lives on, completely forgotten by the
    secret police. 😉

    Sssh..

    --
    The lifetime of any political organisation is about three years before
    its been subverted by the people it tried to warn you about.

    Anon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Computer Nerd Kev on Fri Dec 13 11:03:48 2024
    On 12/12/2024 20:59, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 10/12/2024 20:17, D wrote:
    But it won't be a big bang, plenty of technologies exist to bridge the gap. >>>
    Would be cool if I could finally have a nuclear powered car that I
    bought full, and would never have to refuel. ;)

    Its almost possible. The problem is all that lead makes it even heaver
    than a BEV and you have to stop to fill up the water just as often.
    There is no device that turns heat into electricity better than a steam
    turbine, sadly.

    The Helion fusion reactor design for directly generating
    electricity from the electromagnetic pulse generated by colliding
    plasma in a tube is interesting. I think you'd still need the lead,
    but maybe not the water. Call it a "plasma piston". Of course it's
    less than clear if it'll ever work at their current power-station
    scale let alone scaled down. Bigger always seems to be better with
    fusion research.

    https://www.helionenergy.com/

    I've always wondered if a nuclear fusion reciprocating engine would cut
    the mustard.
    Intake stroke accepts high pressure deuterium, compression stroke gets
    it to to insane pressure levels and a laser pulse fires it.


    --
    The lifetime of any political organisation is about three years before
    its been subverted by the people it tried to warn you about.

    Anon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 11:11:13 2024
    On 13/12/2024 10:31, D wrote:

     Good, large, diesel/oil engines are still the
     solution for large commercial carriers.

    Subtract taxes, and compare only the raw cost, and the economics look
    even better! On gasoline at least 50% is tax, so remove that, and we can happily continue for at least a generation or two. =)

    The point is that the economics of small modular reactors plunked into a
    ship and monitored more or less remotely by satellite link, with lots
    of smart RCMs (reactor control modules) scattered around them now fall
    in favour of nuclear.

    Once everybody accepts the idea.
    That is why a consortium of ship operators is looking very closely at it.

    https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/articles/new-study-considers-nuclear-powered-bulk-carriers

    https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/articles/regulatory-assessment-of-nuclear-powered-cargo-shi

    and many more... https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/search?search=Ships

    Now these bulk carriers have commercial clout. Enough to buy many many politicians and dictators.

    Nuclear ships will happen.



    --
    “People believe certain stories because everyone important tells them,
    and people tell those stories because everyone important believes them.
    Indeed, when a conventional wisdom is at its fullest strength, one’s agreement with that conventional wisdom becomes almost a litmus test of
    one’s suitability to be taken seriously.”

    Paul Krugman

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 11:13:58 2024
    On 13/12/2024 10:08, D wrote:


    Are there any techniques to resupply a sub completely under water? Would
    be fascinating if it could be managed and resupplied kind of like a
    space station with rotating crews and all, being sent in smaller
    submarines docking at the big one.

    Iyts technically totally feasible, but I cannot actually see what the
    point would be.

    On the other hand, there's probably no use for that capability, but its
    an interesting thought experiment to see if it could then remain
    submerged for years at a time.

    What is the current record?

    "The Royal Navy's HMS Vengeance holds the record for the longest
    deployment of a "doomsday" submarine, spending 201 days underwater. This
    broke the previous record of 195 days set by HMS Vigilant."

    The USA shuts its mouth...who knows?

    --
    The lifetime of any political organisation is about three years before
    its been subverted by the people it tried to warn you about.

    Anon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 11:25:20 2024
    On 13/12/2024 10:09, D wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-12, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships?
    A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire
    lifetime
    until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    That is sort of the model used on the submarines ... and on the NS
    Savannah in the early 1960s. From what I have read, it could be
    commercially viable today (with the improvements in relevant technology
    in the last 60 years).


    Thank you. Let's see... there is much interest in the SMR. Let's see who
    will be the first to take the step among the EU members.

    Well UK isn't EU, but it is likely that RR who built reactors for
    Britains nuclear submarines, will have something in production by 2030
    or thereabouts. There is considerable interest from several EU nations-
    the Czechs are in there too, as are the Poles, and Dutch.

    France is solid EDF big scale and Germany is in a total mess at the
    moment as their green policy collapses.

    I think by 2030 at least three possibly four reactor designs will be
    out there working commercially across Europe and SE aAsia and probably
    Africa too.

    --
    “it should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism
    (or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans,
    about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and
    the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a
    'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,'
    a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for
    rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet
    things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that
    you live neither in Joseph Stalin’s Communist era, nor in the Orwellian utopia of 1984.”

    Vaclav Klaus

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Mike Scott on Fri Dec 13 11:18:59 2024
    On 13/12/2024 09:37, Mike Scott wrote:
    On 13/12/2024 04:42, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
       Note the large uptick in seismic activity, esp along
       the Pacific rim, the past couple of years. More and
       more, and stronger and stronger, quakes. It is NOT
       impossible to get a giant tsunami that washes away
       the US west coast ... the geologists have seem signs
       of those happening before.

    Something else to ascribe to man-made-climate-change :-}

    Or rather is something in the core changing and driving climate change?
    IIRC there's a growing magnetic anomaly in the Atlantic.


    But what's this do with bit-slice chips or c.o.l.m.?


    How else are you going to produce alarming climate models?

    --
    “it should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism
    (or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans,
    about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and
    the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a
    'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,'
    a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for
    rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet
    things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that
    you live neither in Joseph Stalin’s Communist era, nor in the Orwellian utopia of 1984.”

    Vaclav Klaus

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 13 11:18:02 2024
    On 13/12/2024 04:42, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Note the large uptick in seismic activity, esp along
      the Pacific rim, the past couple of years. More and
      more, and stronger and stronger, quakes. It is NOT
      impossible to get a giant tsunami that washes away
      the US west coast ... the geologists have seem signs
      of those happening before.

    It might be a lot worse. Previous eruptions have been massive tsunami
    and climate changing events.

    I read one paper with a massive but subtle error.

    They calculated the effect that all that dust, aerosols and CO2 would
    have on the climate *without positive feedback* and it matched the data,
    so they then used that *with* positive feedback to predict alarmist
    climate change!



    --
    The lifetime of any political organisation is about three years before
    its been subverted by the people it tried to warn you about.

    Anon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Fri Dec 13 13:54:22 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    Ah... childhood memories! This was the easiest thing in the world to
    produce! Once I managed to stop a subway line with it. I think I was
    around 12 or 13, and we were playing with this stuff under a bridge that >>> had a subway line.

    The subway came, created a draft that sucked all the smoke into the
    tunnel, and they thought there was a fire and stopped the subway. 10
    minutes later the police arrived, discovered us (we didn't run) and said >>> "boys will be boys" and let us go.

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of
    their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this).

    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    Yes indeed. Today some kids doing the identical activity would pull in
    the local police, the FBI, the TSA, and likely several other
    three-letter-agencies and the kids would be put on several terrorist in
    the making watchlists and be haunted by that label for the rest of
    their lives.

    Sadly I believe you are correct. =( And that attitude is killing freedom
    and society.

    Also forgot: And their respective parents would be charged with child
    abuse, child endangerment, and whatever else the local DA wanted to
    throw in, for allowing "Jonny" to roam free and play with such
    "dangerous materials".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to John Ames on Fri Dec 13 16:34:56 2024
    On 13/12/2024 16:32, John Ames wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?*

    A grown up will come along to tell you that you cant always get what you want...
    --
    There’s a mighty big difference between good, sound reasons and reasons
    that sound good.

    Burton Hillis (William Vaughn, American columnist)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 20:13:16 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 04:20:04 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    EVER see an actual 8086 system ? I never did. Kinda had to wait
    for the 286/386 era to see the promised perks. I think Compaq
    had an 8086.

    The early PS/2s used the 8086. I've seen them but never worked on one.

    The AT&T PC clone (itself a rebranded Olivetti machine) was an 8086.
    That was my first exposure to the IBM PC compatible world, an AT&T PC
    clone running the 8086. While one /could/ measure the performance
    difference in benchmarks, in real world usage it was not markedly
    'faster' than an 8088 based system (i.e., the 20MB hard disk was the
    same performance for both, and its sluggishness was what one spent most
    of one's time waiting upon).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 19:44:20 2024
    On 2024-12-13, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    The memory hole is deep and dark. I think I still have the preliminary datasheets for the iAPX 432 that was going to be Intel's real 32 bit processor. The iAPX 86 was a stop gap until they got the bugs worked out.

    "It's a good thing the iAPX432 failed. Otherwise a truly horrible
    Intel architecture might have taken over the world." -- unknown

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 20:16:21 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 04:37:50 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 10 Dec 2024 01:54:05 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff'

    How about that bubble memory?

    What I recall was all the hype about how bubble memory was going to
    surpass everything else and the shift was "just around the corner".

    Thirty years later and few even remember "bubble memoriess" were ever a
    thing.

    The memory hole is deep and dark. I think I still have the preliminary datasheets for the iAPX 432 that was going to be Intel's real 32 bit processor. The iAPX 86 was a stop gap until they got the bugs worked out.

    Yup, and then IBM picked the 8088 variant for their new IBM-PC in 1982,
    and that moved the "profit" equation to favor the iAPX 86 line from
    then onward.

    However, I don't have any of the datasheets for the 432.....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 21:00:57 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:25:26 +0100, D wrote:



    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 21:34:04 +0100, D wrote:

    True. My jokes about feminism and the unequality of men and women
    sometimes lands me in dangerous territory with my wife. She is a
    lawyer!

    My wife became more religious after the divorce. About 20 years after
    the

    Strange! This is not the first time I have heard this. An acquaintance separated and after that, his ex became religious as well. Very strange.

    She was raised as a Methodist but wasn't serious about it. It was a search
    for something missing. Like many Protestants her church shopping was more
    about emotion than doctrine. For a while she attended a Congregational
    church that leaned toward pentacostalism. The people were nice enough had provided support. I went to a couple of their services. I was raised
    Catholic and the Mass did not include spontaneous outbursts or 'Praise
    Jesus!' and the like. I think she's into the rapture thing too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 13 21:09:40 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 19:44:20 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-13, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    The memory hole is deep and dark. I think I still have the preliminary
    datasheets for the iAPX 432 that was going to be Intel's real 32 bit
    processor. The iAPX 86 was a stop gap until they got the bugs worked
    out.

    "It's a good thing the iAPX432 failed. Otherwise a truly horrible Intel architecture might have taken over the world." -- unknown

    It did seem to incorporate every fad of the day. When Intel goes off the
    rails they don't mess around. I hope they survive the foundry blues.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 21:45:16 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:08:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Are there any techniques to resupply a sub completely under water? Would
    be fascinating if it could be managed and resupplied kind of like a
    space station with rotating crews and all, being sent in smaller
    submarines docking at the big one.

    https://www.sandboxx.us/news/how-do-americas-nuclear-submarines-get- resupplied-at-sea/

    https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/resupply-navy-nuclear-submarine

    If there is some way to resupply while submerged they aren't talking about
    it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 13 21:24:18 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:02:47 +0100, D wrote:


    So you know the company president? You must indeed be a powerful man! Or
    the president must be a special president who actually talks to
    employees?
    Or a bit of both perhaps!

    Small company, titles are cheap. When he retired my brother was a VP of
    Morton Thiokol. He would point out that it was no big thing. Government
    types like to think they're dealing with someone important so they made
    him a VP.

    I've always worked for small companies or for myself so there was never
    the formal hierarchy. You tend to invent titles that fit the expectations
    of whom you're dealing with. When asked what I do my answer is usually 'programmer'. Not very regal, particularly for those who remember when 'programmer' was the entry level position for people trying to work their
    way up to the exalted 'programmer analyst' position.

    He really was a good boss. I had a lot of latitude for skunk work projects
    and he shielded his people from most of the political bullshit going on in
    the front office.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Computer Nerd Kev@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 07:51:19 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 12/12/2024 20:42, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    But by the mid 1970s they had become competitive with the rise in fuel >>>> prices, and today's level of computer systems and long range networking would
    probably result in just a couple of people to manage any routine issues on >>>> the power plant and satellite comms back to the nuclear power plant builder
    to tell them what to do if anything went outside operational norms

    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut.

    Yes, and the reactor model for ships is basically the model for SMR
    start-ups, except with the vague idea that they're suddenly going
    to be much cheaper somehow (I'll believe it when they "hit the
    shelves").


    Its not a vague idea, its a completely sound business model

    Over 85% of the cots of a new conventional reactor is in getting it
    certified to be safe at every single stage of the construction. Capital
    lies idle ad does the workforce in half finished constructions waiting
    to be signed off fort the next stage, and woe betide you if some trivial aspect of it isn't to the specification - you need to re-certify it all
    over again.
    SMRs cut the Gordian knot, By making the reactors in a factory to
    identical specifications and having them small enough to trailer them to
    the site, 90% of the certification is only done once. For as many units
    as you care to make.

    Hmm, but then earlier small reactor designs should have taken over
    from large nuclear power plants already years ago. Unless there's
    some new way to make them more cheaply now and therefore make the
    cost per MW more competitive, which doesn't look to have been
    proven.

    Also, below a certain size, the scale effect swings towards you: the
    reactor does not need active cooling to dissipate the decay heat after a SCRAM shutdown. So no Fukushima or 3MI accident is possible. Convection
    is enough to do the job.

    Well the SL-1 reactor explosion happened to one of the USA's small transportable nuclear power plant designs, before they were
    rebranded SMRs. Granted that was probably due to operator error in
    a way that a better design might have made impossible - withdrawing
    a control rod too far causing power levels to instantly surge. On
    the other hand it highlights that you do have to get as far as the
    SCRAM shutdown state - SL-1 and Chernobyl blew up before that.

    If fluid cooling is used during reactor operation then you still
    have the potential for leaks, which has been a well documented
    obstacle in old small reactor designs (eg. the Lenin Icebreaker,
    and some of the US military's other portable reactor projects).

    The only downside to SMRs is that at smaller sizes they need more highly enriched uranium (or Plutonium/Uranium mixes) to get to critical. The
    supply chain for that is not yet established at scale.

    Most of the designs that seem likely to reach production first are
    simply scaled down pressurised water reactors, as used in nuclear
    submarines etc. with probably extra shelding and safety to meet
    commercial safety standards.

    Like the Americans already did in the 60s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_Nuclear_Power_Program

    The Russians even put them in a vehicle and made nuclear power
    plants you could drive down the road! https://sovietologist.blogspot.com/2008/08/pamir-nuclear-power-goes-on-road.html
    https://ofis-7sandotherthings.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-tes-3-nuclear-tank.html

    So I have zero doubt that SMRs are possible. My question is how
    they've suddenly jumped from having military grade price tags to
    something that makes commercial sense. Until companies are actually
    selling the things profitably, or explain exactly how they intend
    to make them cheaply, I'm skeptical. There are about as many
    companies promising to make commercial fusion reactors by around
    2030 or earlier. Cheap SMR designs seem to be in the same category
    of crossed-fingers investment. But still, I'm glad someone's
    trying, even if I wouldn't bet on their success myself.

    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 23:17:36 2024
    On 2024-12-13, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    I've always worked for small companies or for myself so there was never
    the formal hierarchy. You tend to invent titles that fit the expectations
    of whom you're dealing with. When asked what I do my answer is usually 'programmer'. Not very regal, particularly for those who remember when 'programmer' was the entry level position for people trying to work their
    way up to the exalted 'programmer analyst' position.

    At a PPOE my job description was "programmer-analyst". However, the payroll system's job description field was 15 characters long (and all upper case,
    of course), so it would print out as PROGRAMMER-ANAL. I always thought that was appropriate.

    He really was a good boss. I had a lot of latitude for skunk work projects and he shielded his people from most of the political bullshit going on in the front office.

    I once had a boss like that. When dealing with users' unreasonable requests, his vocabulary contained a word that is not often found: "No." He drove a
    VW Beetle, rather than the obligatory management-style luxury car, which
    raised him several notches in my estimation.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 13 23:56:44 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 23:17:36 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    I once had a boss like that. When dealing with users' unreasonable
    requests,
    his vocabulary contained a word that is not often found: "No." He drove
    a VW Beetle, rather than the obligatory management-style luxury car,
    which raised him several notches in my estimation.

    In the first company I worked for the owner/president drove a Lincoln. The rumor was the VP would have dearly loved a Cadillac but carefully stayed
    one step downscale.

    At a start up the president drove a Camaro. The first few years were lean
    but when we finally started making money he bought a Cadillac Cimmarron,
    which was their attempt to compete with the more compact European luxury sedans. It had problems but the final straw was when his secretary bought
    a Pontiac. It was pretty much the same J-body car GM used throughout its product line.

    Next up was a Mercedes, I forget which flavor. Keeping with the times it
    was a diesel. For someone used to a Camaro the snail like acceleration
    didn't cut it. He wasn't happy and when his son tried to fill it up with gasoline that was it for the Merc.

    Finally he bought a Lincoln Town Car. In his words, 'If I'm going to be
    nigger rich I'm going to do it right!' That one was a keeper.

    The owner of the company I currently work for drives some sort of
    nondescript older Toyota SUV with rear quarter panel damage patched
    together by the maintenance guy with duct tape.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Sat Dec 14 00:38:38 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 20:16:21 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    However, I don't have any of the datasheets for the 432.....

    Digging into the bottom shelf behind the 3 1/4" floppies I don't either. I vaguely remembered a bunch of data books but they're all National Semiconductor. Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out. This ain't the Internet Archives.

    I did have Intel data books and remembered the pages for the 432 with a 'Preliminary' stamp.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Sat Dec 14 00:25:20 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 20:13:16 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    The AT&T PC clone (itself a rebranded Olivetti machine) was an 8086.
    That was my first exposure to the IBM PC compatible world, an AT&T PC
    clone running the 8086. While one /could/ measure the performance
    difference in benchmarks, in real world usage it was not markedly
    'faster' than an 8088 based system (i.e., the 20MB hard disk was the
    same performance for both, and its sluggishness was what one spent most
    of one's time waiting upon).

    Then there was the best of both worlds NEC V20.

    https://hackaday.com/2020/07/10/an-nec-v20-for-two-processors-in-one-sbc/

    That one must have really chafed Intel's butt, a pin compatible drop in a little faster that the 8088 and, wait for it, we had a few transistors
    left over so it emulates the 8080 too. No wonder Intel sued.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 13 22:40:23 2024
    On 12/13/24 7:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 20:13:16 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    The AT&T PC clone (itself a rebranded Olivetti machine) was an 8086.
    That was my first exposure to the IBM PC compatible world, an AT&T PC
    clone running the 8086. While one /could/ measure the performance
    difference in benchmarks, in real world usage it was not markedly
    'faster' than an 8088 based system (i.e., the 20MB hard disk was the
    same performance for both, and its sluggishness was what one spent most
    of one's time waiting upon).

    Then there was the best of both worlds NEC V20.

    https://hackaday.com/2020/07/10/an-nec-v20-for-two-processors-in-one-sbc/

    That one must have really chafed Intel's butt, a pin compatible drop in a little faster that the 8088 and, wait for it, we had a few transistors
    left over so it emulates the 8080 too. No wonder Intel sued.

    Put a V20 into an IBM Portable Computer once. It
    was a *little bit* faster - but as soon as you
    had to access anything on the floppy, well ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 13 22:20:45 2024
    On 12/13/24 11:34 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 13/12/2024 16:32, John Ames wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?*

    A grown up will come along to tell you that you cant always get what you want...

    NOOOOOO !!! WAAAAAHH !!!

    https://scitechdaily.com/light-speed-ai-mits-ultrafast-photonic-processor-delivers-extreme-efficiency/

    Sounds great but I think it's just a lab-bench project
    at this point, NOT a big powerful 'chip'.

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna
    fly on a plane structurally calculated with 92%
    accuracy ?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 14 05:10:28 2024
    On 2024-12-14, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    On 12/13/24 11:34 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 16:32, John Ames wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?* >>>
    A grown up will come along to tell you that you cant always get what you
    want...

    But if you try sometime... you get what you need...

    NOOOOOO !!! WAAAAAHH !!!

    https://scitechdaily.com/light-speed-ai-mits-ultrafast-photonic-processor-delivers-extreme-efficiency/

    Sounds great but I think it's just a lab-bench project
    at this point, NOT a big powerful 'chip'.

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna
    fly on a plane structurally calculated with 92%
    accuracy ?

    *cough*Boeing*cough*

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 05:10:27 2024
    On 2024-12-14, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 20:16:21 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    However, I don't have any of the datasheets for the 432.....

    Digging into the bottom shelf behind the 3 1/4" floppies I don't either.

    3 1/4? Is that somewhere between 3 1/2 and 5 1/4? Or was there another
    format that didn't make it? I know there were a few.

    I vaguely remembered a bunch of data books but they're all National Semiconductor. Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out.
    This ain't the Internet Archives.

    Make sure it's there first. If not, scan it and upload it to Bitsavers.
    I saw some National Semiconductors stuff there, but maybe you have
    something they could use.

    I did have Intel data books and remembered the pages for the 432 with a 'Preliminary' stamp.

    Definitely sounds like Bitsavers material. I didn't find any 432 stuff.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 14 06:14:51 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 22:20:45 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna fly on a plane
    structurally calculated with 92%
    accuracy ?

    Considering neural networks tend to be stochastic they should work well together :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 14 06:20:27 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 05:10:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-14, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    On 12/13/24 11:34 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 16:32, John Ames wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100 D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x
    *more...?*

    A grown up will come along to tell you that you cant always get what
    you want...

    But if you try sometime... you get what you need...

    NOOOOOO !!! WAAAAAHH !!!

    https://scitechdaily.com/light-speed-ai-mits-ultrafast-photonic- processor-delivers-extreme-efficiency/

    Sounds great but I think it's just a lab-bench project at this
    point, NOT a big powerful 'chip'.

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna fly on a plane
    structurally calculated with 92% accuracy ?

    *cough*Boeing*cough*

    That would be like my college statistics course. QA costs money. What
    amount of QA you can do where the costs of handling defective products is
    less expensive than more extensive testing?

    Of course, replacing defective dishwashers is a little different than
    buying your way out of a crashed 737.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 14 06:28:54 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 05:10:27 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    3 1/4? Is that somewhere between 3 1/2 and 5 1/4? Or was there another format that didn't make it? I know there were a few.

    Okay, okay, 3 1/2. It's been a while. I may have some 5 1/4s around here
    too. We found some 8" while cleaning up at work but I think they were
    thrown out.

    If I dig long enough I think I can scare up a QIC-80 drive, as well as
    both an internal and external Iomega ZIP-100 drive. I'm not sure about
    media for either.

    Like I said, I really need to make a few trips to the dumpster.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 11:31:41 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 10:06, D wrote:
    Nope! Europe is too busy turning into the next soviet union to allow its
    citizens any form of fun, or to have opinions which deviate from what the
    politicians say.

    +1
    Thankfully there is usenet which lives on, completely forgotten by the
    secret police. 😉

    Sssh..

    Yes, I'm almost hesitant to mention this gem to fellow technologists out
    of fear the secret will coem out. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 11:33:26 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 10:31, D wrote:

     Good, large, diesel/oil engines are still the
     solution for large commercial carriers.

    Subtract taxes, and compare only the raw cost, and the economics look even >> better! On gasoline at least 50% is tax, so remove that, and we can happily >> continue for at least a generation or two. =)

    The point is that the economics of small modular reactors plunked into a ship and monitored more or less remotely by satellite link, with lots of smart RCMs (reactor control modules) scattered around them now fall in favour of nuclear.

    Once everybody accepts the idea.
    That is why a consortium of ship operators is looking very closely at it.

    https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/articles/new-study-considers-nuclear-powered-bulk-carriers

    https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/articles/regulatory-assessment-of-nuclear-powered-cargo-shi

    and many more... https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/search?search=Ships

    Now these bulk carriers have commercial clout. Enough to buy many many politicians and dictators.

    Nuclear ships will happen.

    That's good news! A small step forward for mankind. And maybe there will
    be some nice additional effects in that the public might lose its
    unreasonable fear of nuclear? Or maybe that will happen automatically once
    the politicians change their minds. After all, then the media will have to change their minds as well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 11:36:30 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 10:09, D wrote:


    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-12, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I wonder if they could use the model from some SMR startup for ships? A >>>> reactor
    that is preloaded and welded shut. Then it operates for its entire
    lifetime
    until the fuel is used up, and then you change to a new reactor.

    That is sort of the model used on the submarines ... and on the NS
    Savannah in the early 1960s. From what I have read, it could be
    commercially viable today (with the improvements in relevant technology
    in the last 60 years).


    Thank you. Let's see... there is much interest in the SMR. Let's see who
    will be the first to take the step among the EU members.

    Well UK isn't EU, but it is likely that RR who built reactors for Britains nuclear submarines, will have something in production by 2030 or thereabouts. There is considerable interest from several EU nations- the Czechs are in there too, as are the Poles, and Dutch.

    France is solid EDF big scale and Germany is in a total mess at the moment as their green policy collapses.

    I think by 2030 at least three possibly four reactor designs will be out there working commercially across Europe and SE aAsia and probably Africa too.

    Would be excellent! As long as someone takes the first step, usually the
    rest will follow. =)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Sat Dec 14 11:43:56 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    Ah... childhood memories! This was the easiest thing in the world to
    produce! Once I managed to stop a subway line with it. I think I was
    around 12 or 13, and we were playing with this stuff under a bridge that >>>> had a subway line.

    The subway came, created a draft that sucked all the smoke into the
    tunnel, and they thought there was a fire and stopped the subway. 10
    minutes later the police arrived, discovered us (we didn't run) and said >>>> "boys will be boys" and let us go.

    I thought the police actually thought it was funny and were reminded of >>>> their own childhood (although of course they didn't show any of this). >>>>
    Ahh, those were better, more innocent times!

    Yes indeed. Today some kids doing the identical activity would pull in
    the local police, the FBI, the TSA, and likely several other
    three-letter-agencies and the kids would be put on several terrorist in
    the making watchlists and be haunted by that label for the rest of
    their lives.

    Sadly I believe you are correct. =( And that attitude is killing freedom
    and society.

    Also forgot: And their respective parents would be charged with child
    abuse, child endangerment, and whatever else the local DA wanted to
    throw in, for allowing "Jonny" to roam free and play with such
    "dangerous materials".

    Ahh... so they can take the children away and bring them up as perfects servants of the state. Make sense. =(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to John Ames on Sat Dec 14 11:45:48 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, John Ames wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?*

    Let's cross that bridge when we get to it. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 12:03:18 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:25:26 +0100, D wrote:



    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 21:34:04 +0100, D wrote:

    True. My jokes about feminism and the unequality of men and women
    sometimes lands me in dangerous territory with my wife. She is a
    lawyer!

    My wife became more religious after the divorce. About 20 years after
    the

    Strange! This is not the first time I have heard this. An acquaintance
    separated and after that, his ex became religious as well. Very strange.

    She was raised as a Methodist but wasn't serious about it. It was a search for something missing. Like many Protestants her church shopping was more about emotion than doctrine. For a while she attended a Congregational
    church that leaned toward pentacostalism. The people were nice enough had provided support. I went to a couple of their services. I was raised
    Catholic and the Mass did not include spontaneous outbursts or 'Praise Jesus!' and the like. I think she's into the rapture thing too.

    I'm not a christian, but those spontaneous outbursts are very funny! If
    someone would force me to a service, I think I would enjoy my outbursts!
    I've been to a few catholic services throughout my life, but I don't think
    it was anything to write home about. In one, I think it was the wedding
    of my wifes friend, the priest wanted everyone to kneel, but I don't do
    that. So my wife was very angry with me when I remained sitting. Kind of reminds me of during corona, when I was the only one walking around a
    shopping center without a mask. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 12:14:11 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:02:47 +0100, D wrote:


    So you know the company president? You must indeed be a powerful man! Or
    the president must be a special president who actually talks to
    employees?
    Or a bit of both perhaps!

    Small company, titles are cheap. When he retired my brother was a VP of Morton Thiokol. He would point out that it was no big thing. Government
    types like to think they're dealing with someone important so they made
    him a VP.

    I've always worked for small companies or for myself so there was never
    the formal hierarchy. You tend to invent titles that fit the expectations
    of whom you're dealing with. When asked what I do my answer is usually 'programmer'. Not very regal, particularly for those who remember when 'programmer' was the entry level position for people trying to work their
    way up to the exalted 'programmer analyst' position.

    Yes, this is the truth. In my company I don't even have a title, except of course, in the government documents where I'm the CEO by law requirement.
    But in my emails I don't have a title. Ultimate flexibility! ;)

    He really was a good boss. I had a lot of latitude for skunk work projects and he shielded his people from most of the political bullshit going on in the front office.

    This is the truth! When I have the opportunity I always try to do the
    same. I think little skunkworks projects are very good for your creativity
    and to keep you happy at work. When I quit my consulting gig building up a support department, the first things the owners of the company did was to
    cut all the skunkworks projects, and then they turned it from a customer service focused department to a technology department. The companys
    revenue have been flat or declining ever since. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 12:20:58 2024
    On Sat, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 23:17:36 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    I once had a boss like that. When dealing with users' unreasonable
    requests,
    his vocabulary contained a word that is not often found: "No." He drove
    a VW Beetle, rather than the obligatory management-style luxury car,
    which raised him several notches in my estimation.

    In the first company I worked for the owner/president drove a Lincoln. The rumor was the VP would have dearly loved a Cadillac but carefully stayed
    one step downscale.

    At a start up the president drove a Camaro. The first few years were lean
    but when we finally started making money he bought a Cadillac Cimmarron, which was their attempt to compete with the more compact European luxury sedans. It had problems but the final straw was when his secretary bought
    a Pontiac. It was pretty much the same J-body car GM used throughout its product line.

    Next up was a Mercedes, I forget which flavor. Keeping with the times it
    was a diesel. For someone used to a Camaro the snail like acceleration
    didn't cut it. He wasn't happy and when his son tried to fill it up with gasoline that was it for the Merc.

    Finally he bought a Lincoln Town Car. In his words, 'If I'm going to be nigger rich I'm going to do it right!' That one was a keeper.

    The owner of the company I currently work for drives some sort of
    nondescript older Toyota SUV with rear quarter panel damage patched
    together by the maintenance guy with duct tape.

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 14 12:19:38 2024
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-13, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    I've always worked for small companies or for myself so there was never
    the formal hierarchy. You tend to invent titles that fit the expectations
    of whom you're dealing with. When asked what I do my answer is usually
    'programmer'. Not very regal, particularly for those who remember when
    'programmer' was the entry level position for people trying to work their
    way up to the exalted 'programmer analyst' position.

    At a PPOE my job description was "programmer-analyst". However, the payroll system's job description field was 15 characters long (and all upper case,
    of course), so it would print out as PROGRAMMER-ANAL. I always thought that was appropriate.

    He really was a good boss. I had a lot of latitude for skunk work projects >> and he shielded his people from most of the political bullshit going on in >> the front office.

    I once had a boss like that. When dealing with users' unreasonable requests, his vocabulary contained a word that is not often found: "No." He drove a
    VW Beetle, rather than the obligatory management-style luxury car, which raised him several notches in my estimation.

    Being independent is positive, however, being independent, knowing the
    word no, and not being like everyone else can hamper progress towards the
    upper echelons of management. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Pancho@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 11:37:22 2024
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power station in
    Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-nuclear- power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen Atomics,
    that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten salt
    reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap energy, which
    a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up. Secondly he
    discusses non electrical energy use, which many renewable discussions
    also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech problems,
    corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission products.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 14 12:24:30 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-14, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    On 12/13/24 11:34 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 13/12/2024 16:32, John Ames wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?* >>>>
    A grown up will come along to tell you that you cant always get what you >>> want...

    But if you try sometime... you get what you need...

    NOOOOOO !!! WAAAAAHH !!!

    https://scitechdaily.com/light-speed-ai-mits-ultrafast-photonic-processor-delivers-extreme-efficiency/

    Sounds great but I think it's just a lab-bench project
    at this point, NOT a big powerful 'chip'.

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna
    fly on a plane structurally calculated with 92%
    accuracy ?

    *cough*Boeing*cough*

    They do seem to have a lot of problems. Maybe someone in this group, like Rambo, will be called out of retirement to save Boeing?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 12:46:41 2024
    rbowman wrote:

    Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out. This
    ain't the Internet Archives.

    Still I hate doing it ... I did get rid of all my HP related manuals
    when I decided the 9000/800-F10 didn't deserve houseroom, but I still
    have grey and orange walls in the loft.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 13:18:06 2024
    On 14/12/2024 00:25, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 20:13:16 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    The AT&T PC clone (itself a rebranded Olivetti machine) was an 8086.
    That was my first exposure to the IBM PC compatible world, an AT&T PC
    clone running the 8086. While one /could/ measure the performance
    difference in benchmarks, in real world usage it was not markedly
    'faster' than an 8088 based system (i.e., the 20MB hard disk was the
    same performance for both, and its sluggishness was what one spent most
    of one's time waiting upon).

    Then there was the best of both worlds NEC V20.

    https://hackaday.com/2020/07/10/an-nec-v20-for-two-processors-in-one-sbc/

    That one must have really chafed Intel's butt, a pin compatible drop in a little faster that the 8088 and, wait for it, we had a few transistors
    left over so it emulates the 8080 too. No wonder Intel sued.

    My first PC had a V20. Clean clone. Did much work on that.


    --
    Socialism is the philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance and the
    gospel of envy.

    Its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.

    Winston Churchill

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 13:32:58 2024
    On 14/12/2024 10:36, D wrote:


    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    I think by 2030 at least three  possibly four reactor designs will be
    out there working commercially across Europe and SE aAsia and probably
    Africa too.

    Would be excellent! As long as someone takes the first step, usually the
    rest will follow. =)

    About 12 years ago I wrote a paper detailing why I thought renewable
    energy would never work except as an add on. Because in every case the
    nuclear power option was cheaper *overall* and less environmentally destructive.

    It had nothing to say about climate change. I was merely looking at a
    future beyond fossil fuels...

    But the moment I put it on line, using a name I had never used before in
    the Internet, and put a link to it, I discovered that I was already 'a
    well known climate denier' ...'in the pay of big Oil'!!

    At that point I started to look closer into climate change to see why an independent retired engineer writing about energy should arouse such a
    false response.



    --
    If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
    eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such
    time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
    and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
    important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for
    the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
    truth is the greatest enemy of the State.

    Joseph Goebbels

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Pancho on Sat Dec 14 13:55:05 2024
    On 14/12/2024 11:37, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power station
    in Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-nuclear-
    power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen Atomics,
    that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten salt reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap energy, which
    a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up. Secondly he
    discusses non electrical energy use, which many renewable discussions
    also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech problems, corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission products.

    No fission reactor is perfect. It's engineering, not religion.

    Currently the best bet are modern straightforward PWR designs that are
    well understood, shrunk to a size that makes mass factory production
    possible.

    Once we have avoided the renewable energy catastrophe, *then* its time
    to look at thorium.


    --
    In todays liberal progressive conflict-free education system, everyone
    gets full Marx.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Sat Dec 14 16:22:47 2024
    On 2024-12-14, Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:

    rbowman wrote:

    Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out. This
    ain't the Internet Archives.

    Still I hate doing it ... I did get rid of all my HP related manuals
    when I decided the 9000/800-F10 didn't deserve houseroom, but I still
    have grey and orange walls in the loft.

    I bought a sheed-fed scanner (Brother ADS-2700W) and got rid of my
    black Univac wall a while ago. It's all on Bitsavers now.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Pancho on Sat Dec 14 19:03:03 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Pancho wrote:

    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power station in
    Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-nuclear-
    power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen Atomics, that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten salt reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap energy, which a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up. Secondly he discusses non electrical energy use, which many renewable discussions also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech problems, corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission products.


    Thank you very much!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 19:11:30 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 14/12/2024 10:36, D wrote:


    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    I think by 2030 at least three  possibly four reactor designs will be out >>> there working commercially across Europe and SE aAsia and probably Africa >>> too.

    Would be excellent! As long as someone takes the first step, usually the
    rest will follow. =)

    About 12 years ago I wrote a paper detailing why I thought renewable energy would never work except as an add on. Because in every case the nuclear power option was cheaper *overall* and less environmentally destructive.

    It had nothing to say about climate change. I was merely looking at a future beyond fossil fuels...

    But the moment I put it on line, using a name I had never used before in the Internet, and put a link to it, I discovered that I was already 'a well known climate denier' ...'in the pay of big Oil'!!

    At that point I started to look closer into climate change to see why an independent retired engineer writing about energy should arouse such a false response.

    Really? How come you were already known as a "climate denier"? Was that
    without your knowledge? Have you written a lot of articles or published academical papers?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 18:56:27 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that
    business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and found the business part very tedious.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 19:13:47 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 11:43:56 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... so they can take the children away and bring them up as perfects servants of the state. Make sense. =(

    They may sometimes do beneficial work but Child Protective Services
    strikes fear in many parents. A couple of weeks ago there was an article
    about parents being charged because the 10 year old decided to walk to
    town. At that age nobody thought anything of me hiking down to the hobby
    store to see if they had any new models.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 19:02:22 2024
    On 14/12/2024 18:11, D wrote:


    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:



    About 12 years ago I wrote a paper detailing why I thought renewable
    energy would never work except as an add on. Because in every case the
    nuclear power option was cheaper *overall* and less environmentally
    destructive.

    It had nothing to say about climate change. I was merely looking at a
    future beyond fossil fuels...

    But the moment I put it on line, using a name I had never used before
    in the Internet, and put a link to it, I discovered that I was already
    'a well known climate denier' ...'in the pay of big Oil'!!

    At that point I started to look closer into climate change to see why
    an independent retired engineer writing about energy should arouse
    such a false response.

    Really? How come you were already known as a "climate denier"?

    The fact was that I wasn't known at all, but my paper against renewable
    energy was seen by some zealot as contrary to the One True Message of
    Good People.

    So he dissed me by calling me out as a climate denier, which at that
    time I absolutely was not.

    But the fact that my paper scared him enough to do that raised deep
    suspicions that if that is the only way to propagate climate alarmism,
    there was something very dubious about it altogether.

    James Delingpole - a art student but with a brain, came to the same
    conclusion for the same reasons. He called them, watermelons. Green on
    the outside and red on the inside.

    Look at the wikipedia article on him which is a near identical piece of 'cancellation' by a green Marxist author.


    Political ideologues, not scientists or neutral commentators.


    Everybody who expressed even the slightest doubt that 'Climate Science'
    and 'renewable energy' was 100% right was a 'climate denier' and
    shouldn't be listened to and should be cancelled.

    Was that without your knowledge?

    Yup.

    Have you written a lot of articles or published
    academical papers?

    Nope. I wrote that as a way to encapsulate a process of discovery about renewable energy. That I thought might be helpful for others to read. It
    was the very first thing that had my real name on it on the internet.

    I didn't even publicise it as my own, as I always post under 'noms de
    blog' on the Internet. I referred to it as 'something that might be of interest'.

    Instantly the GreenTrolls were in there making sure that the Faithful
    needn't read it as I was this 'well known climate denier'. And IIRC 'in
    the pay of Big Oil' ...If only ....


    But the general message of 'if you want to decarbonise electricity,
    then its cheaper and more effective to build nukes and forget windmills
    and solar panels, and here is why' hit some nerve.

    I recognised it all from people I knew in the 1960s and 1970s who were communists. The same technique of social isolation and calling out
    people who disagreed with the message they wanted to have put over.
    AgitProp and emotional arguments. No pragmatism. All idealism.



    --
    There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale
    returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact.

    Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 19:09:17 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:14:56 +0100, D wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:08:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Are there any techniques to resupply a sub completely under water?
    Would be fascinating if it could be managed and resupplied kind of
    like a space station with rotating crews and all, being sent in
    smaller submarines docking at the big one.

    https://www.sandboxx.us/news/how-do-americas-nuclear-submarines-get-
    resupplied-at-sea/

    https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/resupply-navy-nuclear-submarine

    If there is some way to resupply while submerged they aren't talking
    about it.


    Probably top secret!

    Without a doubt. My friend who served on a nuke didn't talk much about the mission. While they frequently wound up in Holy Loch they also went into
    other ports like Norfolk. You can't really keep a u-boat coming into port
    a secret but they certainly didn't want anyone setting their watch by the return of the USS Baitfish every three months.

    At least we owe GPS to the nukes to some extent. If you're going to launch
    a ballistic missile you have to know where you are. Some things you can't
    keep secret:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VLF_Transmitter_Cutler

    We sailed past about 2 miles off shore and the rumble of what I assume
    were the generators sounded like you were going to be run over by a
    lobster boat any moment. (lobstermen favor very large engines with minimal exhaust systems). Of course it's on the nautical charts as a prominent landmark.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 14 19:16:48 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 16:22:47 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    rbowman wrote:

    Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out. This ain't the
    Internet Archives.

    Still I hate doing it ... I did get rid of all my HP related manuals
    when I decided the 9000/800-F10 didn't deserve houseroom, but I still
    have grey and orange walls in the loft.

    I bought a sheed-fed scanner (Brother ADS-2700W) and got rid of my black Univac wall a while ago. It's all on Bitsavers now.

    What do you do? Saw the spine off the manuals?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 14 19:47:23 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:03:18 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm not a christian, but those spontaneous outbursts are very funny! If someone would force me to a service, I think I would enjoy my outbursts!
    I've been to a few catholic services throughout my life, but I don't
    think it was anything to write home about. In one, I think it was the
    wedding of my wifes friend, the priest wanted everyone to kneel, but I
    don't do that. So my wife was very angry with me when I remained
    sitting. Kind of reminds me of during corona, when I was the only one
    walking around a shopping center without a mask.

    I drifted away around the time of Vatican II so I don't know much about
    the current situation. Events like weddings and funerals are a little
    different but in my day the Mass was said in Latin. Many had missals so
    they could follow along but it was scripted and the same worldwide. There
    were a few responses but you didn't freelance. High Masses were more
    ornate but the usual Mass did not incorporate singing. Even for the high
    Mass the choir sang and singing along was not encouraged.

    The doctrine was just as tight. The Cathechism of the Catholic Church says 'this we believe, this we don't believe, and for this you can make up your
    own mind' with footnotes and references.

    I didn't prepare me for the chaos of Protestantism, particularly the touchy-feely personal lord and savior stuff. Also the Protestants take a Taliban like approach to art and most of their churches look like bus
    stations.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 20:01:16 2024
    On 14/12/2024 18:56, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and found the business part very tedious.

    Yes and no. I quite enjoyed doing cost benefit analysis. I hated dealing
    with people.
    I only ever managed to fire one person after all his colleagues begged
    me to do it.


    --
    "Women actually are capable of being far more than the feminists will
    let them."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 20:21:33 2024
    On 14/12/2024 19:13, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 11:43:56 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... so they can take the children away and bring them up as perfects
    servants of the state. Make sense. =(

    They may sometimes do beneficial work but Child Protective Services
    strikes fear in many parents. A couple of weeks ago there was an article about parents being charged because the 10 year old decided to walk to
    town. At that age nobody thought anything of me hiking down to the hobby store to see if they had any new models.

    In the UK we have two incidents.

    And attempt was made to remove a child from a Romanian family by social services. The community rioted to stop them.

    In another case a Pakistani girl was beaten to death by her father while
    her family stood by and watched. Social services knew what was going on,
    but forbore to 'increase racial tension' by imposing western standards
    of behaviour on a deeply traditional Pakistani family.


    --
    “I know that most men, including those at ease with problems of the greatest complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest and most
    obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues, which
    they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives.”

    ― Leo Tolstoy

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 20:24:14 2024
    On 14/12/2024 19:47, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:03:18 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm not a christian, but those spontaneous outbursts are very funny! If
    someone would force me to a service, I think I would enjoy my outbursts!
    I've been to a few catholic services throughout my life, but I don't
    think it was anything to write home about. In one, I think it was the
    wedding of my wifes friend, the priest wanted everyone to kneel, but I
    don't do that. So my wife was very angry with me when I remained
    sitting. Kind of reminds me of during corona, when I was the only one
    walking around a shopping center without a mask.

    I drifted away around the time of Vatican II so I don't know much about
    the current situation. Events like weddings and funerals are a little different but in my day the Mass was said in Latin. Many had missals so
    they could follow along but it was scripted and the same worldwide. There were a few responses but you didn't freelance. High Masses were more
    ornate but the usual Mass did not incorporate singing. Even for the high
    Mass the choir sang and singing along was not encouraged.

    The doctrine was just as tight. The Cathechism of the Catholic Church says 'this we believe, this we don't believe, and for this you can make up your own mind' with footnotes and references.

    I didn't prepare me for the chaos of Protestantism, particularly the touchy-feely personal lord and savior stuff. Also the Protestants take a Taliban like approach to art and most of their churches look like bus stations.

    Its not good to see protestantism stripped of its mysticism and turned
    into a kindergarten morality play.

    The point about the Christian story is not that it is real, but that we profoundly might wish it had been, and if we pretend that it was, then
    the world becomes at some levels a better place.




    --
    There is nothing a fleet of dispatchable nuclear power plants cannot do
    that cannot be done worse and more expensively and with higher carbon
    emissions and more adverse environmental impact by adding intermittent renewable energy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 21:50:24 2024
    On 2024-12-14, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 16:22:47 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    rbowman wrote:

    Note to self: you really need to throw that crap out. This ain't the
    Internet Archives.

    Still I hate doing it ... I did get rid of all my HP related manuals
    when I decided the 9000/800-F10 didn't deserve houseroom, but I still
    have grey and orange walls in the loft.

    I bought a sheed-fed scanner (Brother ADS-2700W) and got rid of my black
    Univac wall a while ago. It's all on Bitsavers now.

    What do you do? Saw the spine off the manuals?

    Most of them were in big 3-ring binders. There weren't that many
    perfect-bound books and I had them guillotined at the local Staples.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 21:26:43 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:
    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    On 2024-12-14, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and found the business part very tedious.

    As I young engineer, I was puzzled at how little interest the "hot" code
    writer had in the slightly bigger picture. They would be happy to fix
    bugs, but refused to participate in the ECO procedures to release the
    product updates. I spent some time in customer support, and got an
    appreciation for what customers needed, distinct from what the
    programmers would like to tweak. I connected with some of the people
    running the ERP systems and learning their report generator programs, so
    that I could do a roll-up of the BOMs affected by a changed part, and of
    the recent ECOs that affected an assembly that came in for repair.

    Later, when my former boss and I started a company, he took on
    marketing, while I did book-keeping. We were both engineers: He was an
    RF guy, while I was a systems programmer, but in a small business, each
    job is 3-4 part-time jobs adding up to full time. And it makes for a
    diversity within the jobs that I find is good for me.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 23:07:43 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and found the business part very tedious.


    This is a very powerful mindset I've had my entire working life. I think
    more people who are employed, should think of themselves as one man entrepreurs, as you say, you are the one with value, and shop around as
    you would if you ran your own business.

    As for having my own business, yes, the accounting is tedious, but I pay
    about 400 EUR per month to get that done for me.

    This is also something I tell everyone who wants to start their own
    business. For the love of god, outsource all accounting as quickly as
    possible.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 23:15:52 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 14/12/2024 18:11, D wrote:


    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:



    About 12 years ago I wrote a paper detailing why I thought renewable
    energy would never work except as an add on. Because in every case the
    nuclear power option was cheaper *overall* and less environmentally
    destructive.

    It had nothing to say about climate change. I was merely looking at a
    future beyond fossil fuels...

    But the moment I put it on line, using a name I had never used before in >>> the Internet, and put a link to it, I discovered that I was already 'a
    well known climate denier' ...'in the pay of big Oil'!!

    At that point I started to look closer into climate change to see why an >>> independent retired engineer writing about energy should arouse such a
    false response.

    Really? How come you were already known as a "climate denier"?

    The fact was that I wasn't known at all, but my paper against renewable energy was seen by some zealot as contrary to the One True Message of Good People.

    So he dissed me by calling me out as a climate denier, which at that time I absolutely was not.

    I always find it interesting, that the cheap rhetorical device of
    connecting someone with holocaust deniers, passes unnoticed through even
    the most major and established media houses.

    I tried to complain to my mainstream swedish newspaper, and usually they
    say that they only "quote", but they feel the label is justified due to
    the seriousness of the situation. Needless to say, I completely disagree.

    As for global warming, to me it seems pretty obvious that it has been a
    scam all along. Just look at the business, the millionaires, how it is
    using to control people, and decrease freedoms, and of course, the
    cancelations and silence of opposition.

    Kind of like then christianity was going strong. Same mechanisms, just a
    new religion.

    And then there's of course the angle... even _if_ it is true, it is way
    cheaper and more efficient, to adapt, build nuclear powerplants, use AC or radiators etc. than to believe that we can change the global weather
    system.

    The human race has adapted since forever, and with todays technology, we
    are better equipped than ever to do that.

    Does anyone talk about it? No. The only thing we hear is taxes and giving
    up freedom.

    That's why it stinks so bad, since no one is interested in easy and
    efficient solutions.

    But the fact that my paper scared him enough to do that raised deep suspicions that if that is the only way to propagate climate alarmism, there was something very dubious about it altogether.

    James Delingpole - a art student but with a brain, came to the same conclusion for the same reasons. He called them, watermelons. Green on the outside and red on the inside.

    Ahh... so that's where it comse from. I've heard the quote in swedish, now
    I know where it came from.

    Look at the wikipedia article on him which is a near identical piece of 'cancellation' by a green Marxist author.


    Political ideologues, not scientists or neutral commentators.


    Everybody who expressed even the slightest doubt that 'Climate Science' and 'renewable energy' was 100% right was a 'climate denier' and shouldn't be listened to and should be cancelled.

    Was that without your knowledge?

    Yup.

    Have you written a lot of articles or published academical papers?

    Nope. I wrote that as a way to encapsulate a process of discovery about renewable energy. That I thought might be helpful for others to read. It was the very first thing that had my real name on it on the internet.

    You're a brave man! I would never dare to speak openly about some things
    in sweden. That would have disastrous consequences, and depending on what
    I say, not only will there be cancellation and negative business effects,
    I could even get fines or prison.

    I didn't even publicise it as my own, as I always post under 'noms de blog' on the Internet. I referred to it as 'something that might be of interest'.

    Instantly the GreenTrolls were in there making sure that the Faithful needn't read it as I was this 'well known climate denier'. And IIRC 'in the pay of Big Oil' ...If only ....


    But the general message of 'if you want to decarbonise electricity, then its cheaper and more effective to build nukes and forget windmills and solar panels, and here is why' hit some nerve.

    It is amazing to me that this should be news. That has been my opinion all
    my life, and no arguments have managed to shift my opinion for many
    decades.

    My favourite thought experiment is how cheap nuclear would become if you removed all taxes, and deregulated it. I think it would make quite a difference.

    I recognised it all from people I knew in the 1960s and 1970s who were communists. The same technique of social isolation and calling out people who disagreed with the message they wanted to have put over. AgitProp and emotional arguments. No pragmatism. All idealism.





    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 23:18:36 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 11:43:56 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... so they can take the children away and bring them up as perfects
    servants of the state. Make sense. =(

    They may sometimes do beneficial work but Child Protective Services
    strikes fear in many parents. A couple of weeks ago there was an article about parents being charged because the 10 year old decided to walk to
    town. At that age nobody thought anything of me hiking down to the hobby store to see if they had any new models.


    The world is strange. At that age, I did go to school myself. Either
    walking, 15 minutes, or the bus, 5 minutes. Sometimes, accompanied by my
    father if I started early, otherwise not.

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire
    generation. There are always exceptions, those are what give me hope, but
    the vast majority are quite sad.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 23:16:57 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:14:56 +0100, D wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:08:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Are there any techniques to resupply a sub completely under water?
    Would be fascinating if it could be managed and resupplied kind of
    like a space station with rotating crews and all, being sent in
    smaller submarines docking at the big one.

    https://www.sandboxx.us/news/how-do-americas-nuclear-submarines-get-
    resupplied-at-sea/

    https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/resupply-navy-nuclear-submarine

    If there is some way to resupply while submerged they aren't talking
    about it.


    Probably top secret!

    Without a doubt. My friend who served on a nuke didn't talk much about the mission. While they frequently wound up in Holy Loch they also went into other ports like Norfolk. You can't really keep a u-boat coming into port
    a secret but they certainly didn't want anyone setting their watch by the return of the USS Baitfish every three months.

    At least we owe GPS to the nukes to some extent. If you're going to launch
    a ballistic missile you have to know where you are. Some things you can't keep secret:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VLF_Transmitter_Cutler

    We sailed past about 2 miles off shore and the rumble of what I assume
    were the generators sounded like you were going to be run over by a
    lobster boat any moment. (lobstermen favor very large engines with minimal exhaust systems). Of course it's on the nautical charts as a prominent landmark.

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 23:21:30 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:03:18 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm not a christian, but those spontaneous outbursts are very funny! If
    someone would force me to a service, I think I would enjoy my outbursts!
    I've been to a few catholic services throughout my life, but I don't
    think it was anything to write home about. In one, I think it was the
    wedding of my wifes friend, the priest wanted everyone to kneel, but I
    don't do that. So my wife was very angry with me when I remained
    sitting. Kind of reminds me of during corona, when I was the only one
    walking around a shopping center without a mask.

    I drifted away around the time of Vatican II so I don't know much about
    the current situation. Events like weddings and funerals are a little different but in my day the Mass was said in Latin. Many had missals so
    they could follow along but it was scripted and the same worldwide. There were a few responses but you didn't freelance. High Masses were more
    ornate but the usual Mass did not incorporate singing. Even for the high
    Mass the choir sang and singing along was not encouraged.

    The doctrine was just as tight. The Cathechism of the Catholic Church says 'this we believe, this we don't believe, and for this you can make up your own mind' with footnotes and references.

    In the few protestant services I remember from my childhood (my mother was religious, my father not) there was plenty of singing. Afterwars, there
    would sometimes be coffee and cake.

    I didn't prepare me for the chaos of Protestantism, particularly the touchy-feely personal lord and savior stuff. Also the Protestants take a Taliban like approach to art and most of their churches look like bus stations.

    Touché! Turning sweden into a protestant country was a great way for the
    king to loot all the churches. He was quite pragmatic, the old king. ;)

    But the idea is to direct you to the inner kingdom of heaven, and not to
    trap you in decorations and external things. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 23:27:13 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 14/12/2024 18:56, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a
    worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that
    business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and >> found the business part very tedious.

    Yes and no. I quite enjoyed doing cost benefit analysis. I hated dealing with people.
    I only ever managed to fire one person after all his colleagues begged me to do it.

    That's the golden combination I have in my own business. I sell, and my partners do the work. They get to focus on technology, and not on selling,
    and I do the talking, and enviously look at the great technical work they
    are doing, dreaming of when I was 20 years younger and doing that myself.
    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 23:29:14 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 14/12/2024 19:13, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 11:43:56 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... so they can take the children away and bring them up as perfects
    servants of the state. Make sense. =(

    They may sometimes do beneficial work but Child Protective Services
    strikes fear in many parents. A couple of weeks ago there was an article
    about parents being charged because the 10 year old decided to walk to
    town. At that age nobody thought anything of me hiking down to the hobby
    store to see if they had any new models.

    In the UK we have two incidents.

    And attempt was made to remove a child from a Romanian family by social services. The community rioted to stop them.

    In another case a Pakistani girl was beaten to death by her father while her family stood by and watched. Social services knew what was going on, but forbore to 'increase racial tension' by imposing western standards of behaviour on a deeply traditional Pakistani family.

    Ahh... that reminds me... there was an arabian meme going around some
    months ago about swedish social services abducting arabian children from families who enjoy beating children.

    Naturally there was a lot of flag burning in arabian, and some cars where burned in swedish ghettos, and the government quickly denied any wrong
    doing.

    Regardless of if it was true or false, I always find it hilarious that the
    well integrated arabians of ghetto sweden start burning cars as soon as
    they see something they don't like about swedish society.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sat Dec 14 23:31:28 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:
    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    On 2024-12-14, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a
    worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that
    business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and >> found the business part very tedious.

    As I young engineer, I was puzzled at how little interest the "hot" code writer had in the slightly bigger picture. They would be happy to fix
    bugs, but refused to participate in the ECO procedures to release the
    product updates. I spent some time in customer support, and got an appreciation for what customers needed, distinct from what the
    programmers would like to tweak. I connected with some of the people
    running the ERP systems and learning their report generator programs, so
    that I could do a roll-up of the BOMs affected by a changed part, and of
    the recent ECOs that affected an assembly that came in for repair.

    Later, when my former boss and I started a company, he took on
    marketing, while I did book-keeping. We were both engineers: He was an
    RF guy, while I was a systems programmer, but in a small business, each
    job is 3-4 part-time jobs adding up to full time. And it makes for a diversity within the jobs that I find is good for me.


    Did you grow it into a big business? How did the experience change from
    the start to where you are now?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 14 23:30:23 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 14/12/2024 19:47, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:03:18 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm not a christian, but those spontaneous outbursts are very funny! If
    someone would force me to a service, I think I would enjoy my outbursts! >>> I've been to a few catholic services throughout my life, but I don't
    think it was anything to write home about. In one, I think it was the
    wedding of my wifes friend, the priest wanted everyone to kneel, but I
    don't do that. So my wife was very angry with me when I remained
    sitting. Kind of reminds me of during corona, when I was the only one
    walking around a shopping center without a mask.

    I drifted away around the time of Vatican II so I don't know much about
    the current situation. Events like weddings and funerals are a little
    different but in my day the Mass was said in Latin. Many had missals so
    they could follow along but it was scripted and the same worldwide. There
    were a few responses but you didn't freelance. High Masses were more
    ornate but the usual Mass did not incorporate singing. Even for the high
    Mass the choir sang and singing along was not encouraged.

    The doctrine was just as tight. The Cathechism of the Catholic Church says >> 'this we believe, this we don't believe, and for this you can make up your >> own mind' with footnotes and references.

    I didn't prepare me for the chaos of Protestantism, particularly the
    touchy-feely personal lord and savior stuff. Also the Protestants take a
    Taliban like approach to art and most of their churches look like bus
    stations.

    Its not good to see protestantism stripped of its mysticism and turned into a kindergarten morality play.

    The point about the Christian story is not that it is real, but that we profoundly might wish it had been, and if we pretend that it was, then the world becomes at some levels a better place.

    William James and pragmatism for the win! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 01:46:15 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:18:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire generation. There are always exceptions, those are what give me hope,
    but the vast majority are quite sad.

    I feel sorry when I see them being loaded into the backseat of a car in
    their escape pods. My preferred location was standing on the passenger
    side floor with my hands on the solid steel dash of the '51 Chevy so I
    could see where we were going. The gray paint of the dash had two hand
    prints where it had been worn down to the red primer. Probably red lead,
    come to think of it.

    If bicycle helmets existed I never saw one. Some kids didn't survive for
    one reason or the other but life went on.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 01:37:36 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:21:30 +0100, D wrote:

    In the few protestant services I remember from my childhood (my mother
    was religious, my father not) there was plenty of singing. Afterwars,
    there would sometimes be coffee and cake.

    I don't recall ever going to church with my mother. The whole thing was
    sprung on me at a late date. During Boy Scout Week they made a big deal
    about going to church with your family and I asked the fatal question
    'What's church?'

    To complicate matters my mother had been divorced so my father
    theoretically was excommunicated for marrying her. So they enrolled me in
    the Catholic First Communion class and my father dutifully took me to
    Mass. I would have thought it a raw deal to be dragged out of bed Sunday morning while my mother read the papers so she started going to the Dutch Reformed church. The communion class did not go well when the nun asked
    me to recite on of the Ten Commandments and realized I didn't even know
    there were Ten Commandments let alone knowing a specific one. 'You're a
    little heathen!' She didn't know how right she was.

    One summer they sent me to the Reformed summer bible school to keep me out
    of trouble. That wasn't so bad since the Methodists had a beach and picnic
    area that other churches could use.

    The real difference was the Reformed were Calvinists and not much on fun.
    They would have bake sales to raise money. Meanwhile on the other end of
    town the Catholics were running Las Vegas Nights and Bingo. The priest was
    into horses so there was an annual horse show that attracted many people
    on the horse show circuit. The church also had a stable and a horse, Ace
    of Spades.

    In my extended family some were Catholics, some were Protestants, and the
    kids tended to be baptized Catholic j.i.c. they might need to produce a certificate later in life for a marriage etc. Those who were really
    religious were treated gently, like a nice, but dim-witted cousin.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 02:06:54 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking.
    Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees
    communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering-
    trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-on- radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 02:18:39 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:27:13 +0100, D wrote:

    That's the golden combination I have in my own business. I sell, and my partners do the work. They get to focus on technology, and not on
    selling,
    and I do the talking, and enviously look at the great technical work
    they are doing, dreaming of when I was 20 years younger and doing that myself.

    That's my downfall; I'm too unfiltered to be good at selling.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 02:24:13 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:07:43 +0100, D wrote:

    This is also something I tell everyone who wants to start their own
    business. For the love of god, outsource all accounting as quickly as possible.

    The nice thing about software is accounting is streamlined. Tracking
    inventory, appreciation of materials on hand, maintaining a payroll, and
    all that stuff is best left to someone with a pocket protector.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 02:16:19 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:15:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always find it interesting, that the cheap rhetorical device of
    connecting someone with holocaust deniers, passes unnoticed through even
    the most major and established media houses.

    All I will say about that is it took a while to develop the campaign.

    The teacher introduced us to linoleum block printing in the 'art' class in
    the late '50s. Swastikas were a popular motif among the male members.
    Today we would all be marched off to re-education camp. Japs weren't
    popular but the Germans had a certain mystique.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 14 23:57:52 2024
    On 12/14/24 1:14 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 22:20:45 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    There's also something about 92% accuracy. Eh ?
    We want 100% accuracy 100% of the time. Wanna fly on a plane
    structurally calculated with 92%
    accuracy ?

    Considering neural networks tend to be stochastic they should work well together :)


    "Stochastic" basically means "guessing".

    Using such methods, a few times, might be OK for
    "getting close".

    But there ARE applications where "seems close enough"
    is NOT good enough. Planes, spacecraft, bridges, huge
    buildings, medical implants - GOTTA refine with the
    hard-core/hard-math tools.

    I'd suggest a TV series entitled "Engineering Disasters".
    Sometimes it's the stupidest mis-calc or oversight that
    leads to big flaming news stories ...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 00:17:48 2024
    On 12/14/24 9:06 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking. Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering- trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-on- radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    I think ELF/SLF/ULF frequencies are still reserved by
    the US govt, almost entirely for military use. There
    is little else that can penetrate deep ocean. Alas
    the DATA RATE is horrific. Also can't have a lot of
    people using those bands.

    Another submarine technique appears the release of
    a cabled radio buoy that can receive at satcom freqs.
    Alas if you TRANSMIT from it then an enemy can
    easily pinpoint your location. Sub/base comms are
    thus almost always one way - orders/codes/status
    kinds of stuff.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 15 06:46:09 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:57:52 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    "Stochastic" basically means "guessing".

    Pretty much. For example if you're building a classifier you split your
    labeled data into two chunks, one for training and one for testing. Rinse
    and repeat until the output is good enough. If your image classified
    mistakes a black for a gorilla there will be hell to pay.

    In the training process some randomness is often introduced on purpose.
    The problem is local maxima (or minima depending on how you prefer to
    thing). If you picture a three dimensional surface with mountains and
    valleys gradient descent tends to get stuck,

    For example, assume you're hiking in mountainous terrain and you algorithm
    is to always head uphill. Sooner or later you'll find yourself at a place where all choices are downhill, but it isn't the highest hill around. You
    need to roll the dice to get off it.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simulated_annealing

    There's a nice little animation if you scroll down a bit.

    After training you really hope that the result will be deterministic. You
    don't want the cat to be alive on one run and dead on the next. Or a dog.

    Differentiating cats and dogs is one of the 'hello world' projects in ML. Sometimes the results aren't what you hoped for. In one sample set the
    dogs tended to be photographed outdoors and the cats indoors. Whatever
    magic went on in training the result was the 'intelligence' was really
    good at sorting outdoor images from indoor ones. It didn't know jack about
    dogs and cats.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Pancho@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 10:07:25 2024
    On 12/14/24 13:55, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 14/12/2024 11:37, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power station
    in Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-
    nuclear- power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen Atomics,
    that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten salt
    reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of
    the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap energy,
    which a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up. Secondly he
    discusses non electrical energy use, which many renewable discussions
    also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech problems,
    corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission products.

    No fission reactor is perfect. It's engineering, not religion.


    But, if we are to adopt nuclear for the bulk of our global energy it is
    clear that fuel price/availability will be affected, and hence breeder
    reactors with their massively improved fuel efficiency will be more significant.

    Currently the best bet are modern straightforward PWR designs that are
    well understood, shrunk to a size that makes mass factory production possible.


    If we understand the design we might just as well build big ones. Small
    mass production is more to get around research and regulation problems
    of new systems.

    Once we have avoided the renewable energy catastrophe, *then* its time
    to look at thorium.


    We should do both. People are scared of building big reactors with long
    payback times because it seems likely cheaper systems will be developed
    to undercut them. However, I think energy security should be viewed like military security, the government should pay to give us that security,
    just in case.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:33:39 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:21:30 +0100, D wrote:

    In the few protestant services I remember from my childhood (my mother
    was religious, my father not) there was plenty of singing. Afterwars,
    there would sometimes be coffee and cake.

    I don't recall ever going to church with my mother. The whole thing was sprung on me at a late date. During Boy Scout Week they made a big deal
    about going to church with your family and I asked the fatal question
    'What's church?'

    We each have our crosses to carry! ;) I remember that my mother thought it
    was very important that I should become confirmed at around age 15 or so.
    I was against it, but after a lot of poking and prodding and begging in
    order to please my grand parents who were religious as well, I finally
    agreed to attend. So basically it was like a discussion club with
    philosophical themes with a bit of jesus snuck in here and there.

    I still remember strongly when we were discussing marriage, and the priest asked me who I wanted to marry? I said Bill Gates, because he is a
    billionaire, and I'd be set for life!

    The priest was silent for a few seconds, coughed, and moved on to the next student.

    This was in the happy and innocent pre-woke days. Todays priests wouldn't
    even blink, and the swedish church I think allow gay weddings, in
    contradiction to their own book, and generally there are some priests who
    don't even believe in god, but they like the job and the "philosophy" so
    there we are.

    Talk about diluting their tradition completely. I have very little respect
    for the swedish church. I _do_ respect religions, who stand by their
    ancient books and fairytales in stroke woke winds. At least they have some self-respect. ;)


    To complicate matters my mother had been divorced so my father
    theoretically was excommunicated for marrying her. So they enrolled me in
    the Catholic First Communion class and my father dutifully took me to
    Mass. I would have thought it a raw deal to be dragged out of bed Sunday morning while my mother read the papers so she started going to the Dutch Reformed church. The communion class did not go well when the nun asked
    me to recite on of the Ten Commandments and realized I didn't even know
    there were Ten Commandments let alone knowing a specific one. 'You're a little heathen!' She didn't know how right she was.

    One summer they sent me to the Reformed summer bible school to keep me out
    of trouble. That wasn't so bad since the Methodists had a beach and picnic area that other churches could use.

    The real difference was the Reformed were Calvinists and not much on fun. They would have bake sales to raise money. Meanwhile on the other end of
    town the Catholics were running Las Vegas Nights and Bingo. The priest was into horses so there was an annual horse show that attracted many people
    on the horse show circuit. The church also had a stable and a horse, Ace
    of Spades.

    In my extended family some were Catholics, some were Protestants, and the kids tended to be baptized Catholic j.i.c. they might need to produce a certificate later in life for a marriage etc. Those who were really
    religious were treated gently, like a nice, but dim-witted cousin.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:40:04 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking. Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering- trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-on- radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    Shouldn't it be quite easy to prove? I mean EMF:s can be measured and
    plants can be measured and analyzed?

    I've been thinking about if online surveillance and government control
    might not force us back to some kind of fidonet-like architecture, run on cellphone modems, lora radios or over ham-radio bridges.

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and
    for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:36:27 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:18:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire
    generation. There are always exceptions, those are what give me hope,
    but the vast majority are quite sad.

    I feel sorry when I see them being loaded into the backseat of a car in
    their escape pods. My preferred location was standing on the passenger
    side floor with my hands on the solid steel dash of the '51 Chevy so I
    could see where we were going. The gray paint of the dash had two hand
    prints where it had been worn down to the red primer. Probably red lead,
    come to think of it.

    If bicycle helmets existed I never saw one. Some kids didn't survive for
    one reason or the other but life went on.


    Yes... bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood as
    well. For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now illegal in
    sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's inside, running
    around on the streets of central stockholm without supervision, smoke
    bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from where discrete and hidden
    small shops.

    Being young today sounds so extremely boring in comparison! I do hope (but
    do not know) that all of these things still happen, unknown to me, but something tells me this is not quite the case.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:42:21 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:15:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always find it interesting, that the cheap rhetorical device of
    connecting someone with holocaust deniers, passes unnoticed through even
    the most major and established media houses.

    All I will say about that is it took a while to develop the campaign.

    The teacher introduced us to linoleum block printing in the 'art' class in the late '50s. Swastikas were a popular motif among the male members.
    Today we would all be marched off to re-education camp. Japs weren't
    popular but the Germans had a certain mystique.


    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few politicians
    here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked out for having
    nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on camera.

    Then I remember when I was young, I met one guy who was into collecting
    Nazi mementos. I wonder how long he would have survived growing up in
    todays world. ;)

    I also sometimes wonder if he today is a computer security consultant.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:44:21 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:27:13 +0100, D wrote:

    That's the golden combination I have in my own business. I sell, and my
    partners do the work. They get to focus on technology, and not on
    selling,
    and I do the talking, and enviously look at the great technical work
    they are doing, dreaming of when I was 20 years younger and doing that
    myself.

    That's my downfall; I'm too unfiltered to be good at selling.


    Haha... well, in that case, it's all about finding _the right_ customer.
    Some people appreciate the unfiltered communication. =) I have an
    acquaintance and we've done business together for close to 10 years, and
    there are very little filters there.

    The great surprise to us both, was when we found out that we were both on
    the right side of the corona wars, so we supported each other a lot
    through those times.

    So finding quality customers, in my opinion, is much much better than
    quantity of customers.

    On the other hand, I'm not a billionaire, and perhaps that is the reason
    for it. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 11:46:08 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:07:43 +0100, D wrote:

    This is also something I tell everyone who wants to start their own
    business. For the love of god, outsource all accounting as quickly as
    possible.

    The nice thing about software is accounting is streamlined. Tracking inventory, appreciation of materials on hand, maintaining a payroll, and
    all that stuff is best left to someone with a pocket protector.

    Yes! And add to that, all the reporting to the tax authorities, the social security department, and then there's some kind of new EU law that
    stipulates I have to send statistics to some government department, I
    don't even know which one. That is also handled by the accountant. I feel
    that if I were to do that myself, it would take 10-15 hours per month, so
    I'll happily (well not happily, but it is worth it) pay 400 EUR to save me 10-15 hours of boring and useless work.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 15 10:51:23 2024
    On 15/12/2024 04:57, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    "seems close enough"
      is NOT good enough. Planes, spacecraft, bridges, huge
      buildings, medical implants - GOTTA refine with the
      hard-core/hard-math tools.

    I think you would be aghast at how "seems good enough" guides most
    engineering design.

    No-one accurately measures every single component that goes into a design.

    At best they do a full test on the final product.

    There is always room for the black swan unit where all the tolerances
    were exactly the wrong way.

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into
    the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    The development algorithm of the racing Cosworth V8 was "remove metal
    till it breaks, then put that bit back again".

    And we can only calculate what we thought of. Some failure modes are
    completely unexpected.

    Some of the most durable civil engineering was done by Victorian
    engineers who were not able to do the calculations. Their conservative over-enginering resulted in structures that stand good even to day.

    Admittedly their failures are long gone :-( (Tay bridge, any one?)

    --
    "The great thing about Glasgow is that if there's a nuclear attack it'll
    look exactly the same afterwards."

    Billy Connolly

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Pancho on Sun Dec 15 11:14:29 2024
    On 15/12/2024 10:07, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 13:55, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 14/12/2024 11:37, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power station
    in Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-
    nuclear- power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen
    Atomics, that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten
    salt reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of
    the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap energy,
    which a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up. Secondly he
    discusses non electrical energy use, which many renewable discussions
    also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech problems,
    corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission products.

    No fission reactor is perfect. It's engineering, not religion.


    But, if we are to adopt nuclear for the bulk of our global energy it is
    clear that fuel price/availability will be affected, and hence breeder reactors with their massively improved fuel efficiency will be more significant.


    Again that is a qualitative, not a quantitative comment, and is not as
    true as you think it is.

    Foe example, the cost of the actual raw uranium mined ore in a reactor
    (before its been turned into fuel rods) is something like a tenth of a
    cent per kWh.

    Uranium ore is around $50/lb last time I looked.

    Now the Japanese, who prefer not to have to import stuff, did a study on extracting Uranium from seawater, There are 4 billion tonnes of the
    stuff in the sea.

    They estimated $200/lb. So worst case £0.004 increase on the final kWh.

    Hardly earth shattering.

    The uranium cost is to all intents and purpose *completely irrelevant*.

    The cost of nuclear electricity is completely dominated by the up front
    cost to build the reactor and the interest paid on the money to do that.
    High interest rates killed Britain's nuclear construction. And the rise
    of anti-nuclear regulations quadrupled the cost and time to build a reactor.

    Fast breeders cost even more. They simply are not in the current
    climate, cost effective returns on investment


    Which is why we are all talking 'SMR' designed to circumvent the
    regulations with type approval, so that buoild times and hence capital
    costs, go back to where they used to be.

    About 1/4 of what they are now.

    Currently the best bet are modern straightforward PWR designs that are
    well understood, shrunk to a size that makes mass factory production
    possible.


    If we understand the design we might just as well build big ones. Small
    mass production is more to get around research and regulation problems
    of new systems.

    Well exactly. Samll reactors are safer and cheaper to install if they
    have type approval. No one is trying to optimise uranium efficiency.
    Just to get some reactors built is all, before the Greens wreck the country.

    And there are other benefits of small reactors. You can build more of
    them near to where the energy is needed reducing the cost of high power transmission lines...yoir grid becomes what it used to be - a
    lightweight *balancing* system, not intended for massive power flows.


    Once we have avoided the renewable energy catastrophe, *then* its time
    to look at thorium.


    We should do both. People are scared of building big reactors with long payback times because it seems likely cheaper systems will be developed
    to undercut them. However, I think energy security should be viewed like military security, the government should pay to give us that security,
    just in case.

    Then you think wrong. Look deeper. People will of course develop all
    sorts of reactor tech including thorium - India especially - but there
    is simply no shortage of fuel whatsoever in the world at large, In fact
    there is enough fore 10,000 years of today's populations all having a
    Western lifestyle.

    There is no point in diverting any money we might save on renewable
    energy cancellation into yet more ego projects of different technologies.

    If we don't build out what we can do right now, there wont BE any money
    for vanity projects.

    Stevenson didn't wait for a steam turbine to get the railways started,
    he just modified a two cylinder pumping engine, stuck it on wheels and
    was the first-to-market.

    It didn't matter how inefficient it was, there was plenty of cheap coal
    and no competition.


    --
    “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.”
    ― Groucho Marx

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 12:45:06 2024
    On 15/12/2024 10:40, D wrote:
    've been thinking about if online surveillance and government control
    might not force us back to some kind of fidonet-like architecture, run
    on cellphone modems, lora radios or over ham-radio bridges.

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and
    for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    Someone will shove some unbreakable encryption on git hub and everyone
    will use it.

    You avoid meta- analysis by posting an arbitrary number of bytes every
    day to the same 'bulletin boards'. Your message is simply padded with
    nonsense.

    Fellow conspirators can read it, to everyone else its spam..and goes in
    their killfile :-)

    But the real reason we are not bothered here, is we are simply too small
    to be worth noticing. We directly influence no one.

    And yet, ideas that are seeded in recondite corners of the internet, do
    not always die.

    Sometimes you find your thesis reappearing months later in the mainstream.


    --
    The biggest threat to humanity comes from socialism, which has utterly
    diverted our attention away from what really matters to our existential survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations
    into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with
    what it actually is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 12:56:08 2024
    On 15/12/2024 10:42, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:15:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always find it interesting, that the cheap rhetorical device of
    connecting someone with holocaust deniers, passes unnoticed through even >>> the most major and established media houses.

    All I will say about that is it took a while to develop the campaign.

    The teacher introduced us to linoleum block printing in the 'art'
    class in
    the late '50s. Swastikas were a popular motif among the male members.
    Today we would all be marched off to re-education camp. Japs weren't
    popular but the Germans had a certain mystique.


    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british
    royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked
    out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on
    camera.

    Then I remember when I was young, I met one guy who was into collecting
    Nazi mementos. I wonder how long he would have survived growing up in
    todays world. ;)

    I once bought a book.
    It purported to be the memoirs of a SS captain IIRC, who fought in
    France and Germany, and then joined the French foreign legion to fight
    in French Indo-China (Vietnam). He professed to loathe communism and communists. His tactics were brutal, But effective.

    I think I paid a couple of bucks for it in a second-hand book store in Johannesburg.

    I lent it to someone who didn't give it back, so I looked to see if it
    was still for sale.
    It was, For *hundreds of pounds*, on ebay.

    That prompted me to look for other examples of Nazi themed items. This
    shit goes for unbelievable sums. People with a lot of money love the
    whole Nazi meme. It is and was great theatre. Great logo. Fantastic
    marketing. Let's all be supermen and kick the shit out of the [insert
    social group you despise most]...who secretly doesn't want to do that?


    (I found the book in the bookcase of the person I lent it to, she simply
    forgot it, so I took it back)

    I also sometimes wonder if he today is a computer security consultant.

    Far more likely he runs an advertising company.

    --
    "Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have
    forgotten your aim."

    George Santayana

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 15 14:08:24 2024
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    As I young engineer, I was puzzled at how little interest the "hot" code
    writer had in the slightly bigger picture. They would be happy to fix
    bugs, but refused to participate in the ECO procedures to release the
    product updates. I spent some time in customer support, and got an
    appreciation for what customers needed, distinct from what the
    programmers would like to tweak. I connected with some of the people
    running the ERP systems and learning their report generator programs, so
    that I could do a roll-up of the BOMs affected by a changed part, and of
    the recent ECOs that affected an assembly that came in for repair.

    Later, when my former boss and I started a company, he took on
    marketing, while I did book-keeping. We were both engineers: He was an
    RF guy, while I was a systems programmer, but in a small business, each
    job is 3-4 part-time jobs adding up to full time. And it makes for a
    diversity within the jobs that I find is good for me.

    On 2024-12-14, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Did you grow it into a big business? How did the experience change from
    the start to where you are now?

    Growing big was never a goal.

    My business partner and a friend had left a small company that made
    sonar systems for the navy and started a radio company when spread
    spectrum became a thing. They built it into a 30-people comapny and then
    sold off the half that was least interesting to a utility meter company,
    and the friend went with it. They did not like the managing part of
    business and hired a CEO to do that, tasking him to find another
    company to buy the remaining part so they could cash out. Meanwhile that remaining part grew back to about 35 people. The CEO managed to find a
    buyer, but the deal closed right as the dot-com bubble of 2000 burst,
    and in the end, we found that they had given the company away. The deal
    stated that "essential staff" were kept on as a design center,
    guaranteed for at least 2 years, and on the second anniversary of the
    closing, they fired us all, stating that because engineering salaries in California were so much higher than in Calgary, Alberta, it was
    unsustainable to maintain a development group in California. Never mind
    that the product we had brought in, was the only thing thye ever could
    build at a profit. Six months later, they changed their focus from radio manufacturing to patent litigation, and moved to Toronto.

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group
    and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be
    willing to join him in a startup.

    From the beginning, the goal was to do something that would fill our
    days and feed our families. We have mostly stayed at a headcount of 4.
    My tagline is "4 guys in a garage".

    5 years ago or so, we looked at the feasibility of "cashing out", but
    realized that the value of the company is the knowledge base of the two
    of us, so we are stuck with each other until we wind it up, which we he
    started to do. We have offered a "last time buy" to our major customers,
    and expect to be done in two years or so.

    --
    Lars Poulsen

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 15 14:15:10 2024
    On 2024-12-14, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Did you grow it into a big business? How did the experience change from
    the start to where you are now?

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    Growing big was never a goal.

    [...]

    From the beginning, the goal was to do something that would fill our
    days and feed our families. We have mostly stayed at a headcount of 4.
    My tagline is "4 guys in a garage".

    5 years ago or so, we looked at the feasibility of "cashing out", but realized that the value of the company is the knowledge base of the two
    of us, so we are stuck with each other until we wind it up, which we he started to do. We have offered a "last time buy" to our major customers,
    and expect to be done in two years or so.

    In retrospect, my company is very much like one of my first jobs in
    Copenhagen. Two sales engineers had started a boutique shop for custom interfacing. Importing some lab equipment and building custom interfaces
    for PDP-8 and PDP-11 systems. 4 people in a 3rd-floor apartment in the
    City.

    I have worked for companies of varying sizes, but always been more
    satisfied in small groups.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Pancho@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 16:12:09 2024
    On 12/15/24 11:14, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 15/12/2024 10:07, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 13:55, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 14/12/2024 11:37, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power
    station in Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-
    nuclear- power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen
    Atomics, that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten
    salt reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most of
    the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap
    energy, which a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up.
    Secondly he discusses non electrical energy use, which many
    renewable discussions also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech
    problems, corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted fission
    products.

    No fission reactor is perfect. It's engineering, not religion.


    But, if we are to adopt nuclear for the bulk of our global energy it
    is clear that fuel price/availability will be affected, and hence
    breeder reactors with their massively improved fuel efficiency will be
    more significant.


    Again that is a qualitative, not a quantitative comment, and is not as
    true as you think it is.

    Foe example, the cost of the actual raw uranium mined ore in a reactor (before its been turned into fuel rods) is something like a tenth of a
    cent per kWh.

    Uranium ore is around $50/lb last time I looked.

    Now the Japanese, who prefer not to have to import stuff, did a study on extracting  Uranium from seawater, There are 4 billion tonnes of the
    stuff in the sea.

    They estimated $200/lb.  So worst case £0.004 increase on the final kWh.


    This is not an established technology. It needs to be demonstrated to
    work in volume and scale up before we can rely on it.

    AIUI, there are doubts about it.

    Hardly earth shattering.

    The uranium cost is to all intents and purpose *completely irrelevant*.

    The cost of nuclear electricity is completely dominated by the up front
    cost to build the reactor and the interest paid on the money to do that.
    High interest rates killed Britain's nuclear construction. And the rise
    of anti-nuclear regulations quadrupled the cost and time to build a
    reactor.

    Fast breeders cost even more. They simply are not in the current
    climate, cost effective returns on investment


    I understand the current cost of Uranium is low, but for a zero carbon
    solution we need a massive global expansion. That will put a very rapid
    squeeze on fuel availability, Until things like sea water extraction
    have been proven. Fuel availability, i.e. cost is an issue.

    Like sea water extraction, breeder reactors are also a solution.

    Which is why we are all talking 'SMR' designed to circumvent the
    regulations with type approval, so that buoild times and hence capital
    costs, go back to where they used to be.

    About 1/4 of what they are now.

    Currently the best bet are modern straightforward PWR designs that
    are well understood, shrunk to a size that makes mass factory
    production possible.


    If we understand the design we might just as well build big ones.
    Small mass production is more to get around research and regulation
    problems of new systems.

    Well exactly. Samll reactors are safer and cheaper to install if they
    have type approval. No one is trying to optimise uranium efficiency.
    Just to get some reactors built is all, before the Greens wreck the
    country.


    And there are other benefits of small reactors. You can build more of
    them near to where the energy is needed reducing the cost of high power transmission lines...yoir grid becomes what it used to be - a
    lightweight *balancing* system, not intended for massive power flows.


    I don't know what near means, 200km isn't that far. In the past we had
    at least 3 reactors that close to London. Sizewell is still running.


    Once we have avoided the renewable energy catastrophe, *then* its
    time to look at thorium.


    We should do both. People are scared of building big reactors with
    long payback times because it seems likely cheaper systems will be
    developed to undercut them. However, I think energy security should be
    viewed like military security, the government should pay to give us
    that security, just in case.

    Then you think wrong.

    I think you misunderstood my intended meaning. I was talking about
    building big reactors, existing designs, Hinkley Point C, Sizewell C,
    etc. The government should just get on with it. SMRs are just another
    excuse for politicians to delay.

    Look deeper. People will of course develop all
    sorts of reactor tech including thorium - India especially - but there
    is simply no shortage of fuel whatsoever in the world at large, In fact
    there is enough fore 10,000 years of today's populations all having a
    Western lifestyle.


    I understand thorium/molten salt is research, not a current solution,
    but, if we hadn't stopped work on breeders 40 years ago...


    There is no point in diverting any money we might save on renewable
    energy cancellation into yet more ego projects of different technologies.

    If we don't build out what we can do right now,


    Yes, I agree, Sizewell C. If Rolls-Royce can knock out SMRs in the near
    future, great, but we shouldn't wait. That's what I mean about needing
    to invest in energy security, rather than delay for something which
    might be better/cheaper. It was a mistake to reduce energy to pure
    economics, while ignoring security of supply.

    there wont BE any money
    for vanity projects.

    Stevenson didn't wait for a steam turbine to get the railways started,
    he just modified a two cylinder pumping engine, stuck it on wheels and
    was the first-to-market.

    It didn't matter how inefficient it was, there was plenty of cheap coal
    and no competition.


    I understand uranium is plentiful now, I'm not entirely convinced it
    will be plentiful if the entire world transitions to nuclear in the next
    30 years. The strongest green, zero carbon strategy, is to make nuclear cheaper. Which I think is possible.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 17:57:25 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 10:40, D wrote:
    've been thinking about if online surveillance and government control might >> not force us back to some kind of fidonet-like architecture, run on
    cellphone modems, lora radios or over ham-radio bridges.

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and
    for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    Someone will shove some unbreakable encryption on git hub and everyone will use it.

    Oh, that would be great. In my dystopian world, cryptography is outlawed,
    and ISP:s are only allowed to route requests to white listed sites,
    approved by the government (think amazon, your bank etc). All other sites
    are prevented from using encryption or blocked.

    That leaves steganography, but if I can read it, and you can read it, so
    can the government. It will become a game of whack-a-mole.

    That's why I always thought a worst case scenario might take us back to alternative transport means such as modems, lora or ham radio.

    You avoid meta- analysis by posting an arbitrary number of bytes every day to the same 'bulletin boards'. Your message is simply padded with nonsense.

    Fellow conspirators can read it, to everyone else its spam..and goes in their killfile :-)

    But the real reason we are not bothered here, is we are simply too small to be worth noticing. We directly influence no one.

    And yet, ideas that are seeded in recondite corners of the internet, do not always die.

    Sometimes you find your thesis reappearing months later in the mainstream.

    There's much mental gold to be found in the remains of usenet and
    mailinglists. And yes, sometimes some of it bubbles up to the "real
    world". ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 17:59:15 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 10:42, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:15:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always find it interesting, that the cheap rhetorical device of
    connecting someone with holocaust deniers, passes unnoticed through even >>>> the most major and established media houses.

    All I will say about that is it took a while to develop the campaign.

    The teacher introduced us to linoleum block printing in the 'art' class in >>> the late '50s. Swastikas were a popular motif among the male members.
    Today we would all be marched off to re-education camp. Japs weren't
    popular but the Germans had a certain mystique.


    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british royal >> house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few politicians
    here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked out for having
    nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on camera.

    Then I remember when I was young, I met one guy who was into collecting
    Nazi mementos. I wonder how long he would have survived growing up in
    todays world. ;)

    I once bought a book.
    It purported to be the memoirs of a SS captain IIRC, who fought in France and Germany, and then joined the French foreign legion to fight in French Indo-China (Vietnam). He professed to loathe communism and communists. His tactics were brutal, But effective.

    I think I paid a couple of bucks for it in a second-hand book store in Johannesburg.

    I lent it to someone who didn't give it back, so I looked to see if it was still for sale.
    It was, For *hundreds of pounds*, on ebay.

    That prompted me to look for other examples of Nazi themed items. This shit goes for unbelievable sums. People with a lot of money love the whole Nazi meme. It is and was great theatre. Great logo. Fantastic marketing. Let's all be supermen and kick the shit out of the [insert social group you despise most]...who secretly doesn't want to do that?


    (I found the book in the bookcase of the person I lent it to, she simply forgot it, so I took it back)

    I am not surprised. I have some downloaded movies that are no longer
    available online. I also have some used books which I think might command
    way higher prices than when I bought them, since no new books on those
    themes have been released.

    I also sometimes wonder if he today is a computer security consultant.

    Far more likely he runs an advertising company.

    Maybe.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 15 18:02:51 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    As I young engineer, I was puzzled at how little interest the "hot" code >>> writer had in the slightly bigger picture. They would be happy to fix
    bugs, but refused to participate in the ECO procedures to release the
    product updates. I spent some time in customer support, and got an
    appreciation for what customers needed, distinct from what the
    programmers would like to tweak. I connected with some of the people
    running the ERP systems and learning their report generator programs, so >>> that I could do a roll-up of the BOMs affected by a changed part, and of >>> the recent ECOs that affected an assembly that came in for repair.

    Later, when my former boss and I started a company, he took on
    marketing, while I did book-keeping. We were both engineers: He was an
    RF guy, while I was a systems programmer, but in a small business, each
    job is 3-4 part-time jobs adding up to full time. And it makes for a
    diversity within the jobs that I find is good for me.

    On 2024-12-14, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Did you grow it into a big business? How did the experience change from
    the start to where you are now?

    Growing big was never a goal.

    My business partner and a friend had left a small company that made
    sonar systems for the navy and started a radio company when spread
    spectrum became a thing. They built it into a 30-people comapny and then
    sold off the half that was least interesting to a utility meter company,
    and the friend went with it. They did not like the managing part of
    business and hired a CEO to do that, tasking him to find another
    company to buy the remaining part so they could cash out. Meanwhile that remaining part grew back to about 35 people. The CEO managed to find a
    buyer, but the deal closed right as the dot-com bubble of 2000 burst,
    and in the end, we found that they had given the company away. The deal stated that "essential staff" were kept on as a design center,
    guaranteed for at least 2 years, and on the second anniversary of the closing, they fired us all, stating that because engineering salaries in California were so much higher than in Calgary, Alberta, it was
    unsustainable to maintain a development group in California. Never mind
    that the product we had brought in, was the only thing thye ever could
    build at a profit. Six months later, they changed their focus from radio manufacturing to patent litigation, and moved to Toronto.

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group
    and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be willing to join him in a startup.

    From the beginning, the goal was to do something that would fill our
    days and feed our families. We have mostly stayed at a headcount of 4.
    My tagline is "4 guys in a garage".

    5 years ago or so, we looked at the feasibility of "cashing out", but realized that the value of the company is the knowledge base of the two
    of us, so we are stuck with each other until we wind it up, which we he started to do. We have offered a "last time buy" to our major customers,
    and expect to be done in two years or so.


    Wow, quite a story! But staying that size, and focusing on what you enjoy
    doing is a powerful thing!

    I always wonder if my company has any value, and if anyone would ever be interested in acquiring it, but since it is 80% consulting I suspect at
    most, it would be some kind of acqui-hire thing, and my colleagues (and I) would not be interested in having to hang around for 2-3 years just to get money in the end.

    Well, let's see what happen. For the moment we are just enjoying what we
    do, so there's no need. Let's see what the future holds. =)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 15 18:05:03 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-14, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Did you grow it into a big business? How did the experience change from
    the start to where you are now?

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    Growing big was never a goal.

    [...]

    From the beginning, the goal was to do something that would fill our
    days and feed our families. We have mostly stayed at a headcount of 4.
    My tagline is "4 guys in a garage".

    5 years ago or so, we looked at the feasibility of "cashing out", but
    realized that the value of the company is the knowledge base of the two
    of us, so we are stuck with each other until we wind it up, which we he
    started to do. We have offered a "last time buy" to our major customers,
    and expect to be done in two years or so.

    In retrospect, my company is very much like one of my first jobs in Copenhagen. Two sales engineers had started a boutique shop for custom interfacing. Importing some lab equipment and building custom interfaces
    for PDP-8 and PDP-11 systems. 4 people in a 3rd-floor apartment in the
    City.

    I have worked for companies of varying sizes, but always been more
    satisfied in small groups.


    I wonder, given the draconian laws within IT today, if it would be
    possible to start a company that builds its own hardware interfaces to something?

    A small part of my business is actually a home delivered "software
    interface" to an extremely bad government web site, that is essential to
    some of my customers. So instead of them having to spend several hours per month on that horrible site, they use our software to do their task in
    about 3 minutes instead. Everyone happy!

    The fun part is that actually the government did think about the option to
    do what we did, but their experts came to the conclusion that it was impossible.

    So we make the impossible possible! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Pancho on Sun Dec 15 16:29:13 2024
    On 15/12/2024 16:12, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/15/24 11:14, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 15/12/2024 10:07, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 13:55, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 14/12/2024 11:37, Pancho wrote:
    On 12/14/24 10:31, D wrote:

    Just saw this:

    "China to build first-ever thorium molten salt nuclear power
    station in Gobi Desert"

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-06/china-building-thorium-
    nuclear- power-station-gobi/104304468

    Will be interesting to see if they will succeed!

    If you are interested, there is a thorium startup, Copenhagen
    Atomics, that have put out a couple of good promo videos.

    The first describes the worlds general energy problem:

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVue7cgmM00>

    The second details Copenhagen Atomics "Onion Core" thorium molten
    salt reactor.

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqxvBAJn_vc>

    Obviously it is typical startup hype, but the guy touches on most
    of the issues. In particular he addresses the fact we need cheap
    energy, which a lot of the renewable discussions try to cover up.
    Secondly he discusses non electrical energy use, which many
    renewable discussions also skip over.

    As I understand it, molten salt reactors have two main tech
    problems, corrosion and continuously separating out unwanted
    fission products.

    No fission reactor is perfect. It's engineering, not religion.


    But, if we are to adopt nuclear for the bulk of our global energy it
    is clear that fuel price/availability will be affected, and hence
    breeder reactors with their massively improved fuel efficiency will
    be more significant.


    Again that is a qualitative, not a quantitative comment, and is not as
    true as you think it is.

    Foe example, the cost of the actual raw uranium mined ore in a reactor
    (before its been turned into fuel rods) is something like a tenth of a
    cent per kWh.

    Uranium ore is around $50/lb last time I looked.

    Now the Japanese, who prefer not to have to import stuff, did a study
    on extracting  Uranium from seawater, There are 4 billion tonnes of
    the stuff in the sea.

    They estimated $200/lb.  So worst case £0.004 increase on the final kWh. >>

    This is not an established technology. It needs to be demonstrated to
    work in volume and scale up before we can rely on it.

    AIUI, there are doubts about it.

    Of course. It was an estimate. But the point is that the price of
    nuclear electricity is not sensitive to the price of uranium AT ALL



    Hardly earth shattering.

    The uranium cost is to all intents and purpose *completely irrelevant*.

    The cost of nuclear electricity is completely dominated by the up
    front cost to build the reactor and the interest paid on the money to
    do that. High interest rates killed Britain's nuclear construction.
    And the rise of anti-nuclear regulations quadrupled the cost and time
    to build a reactor.

    Fast breeders cost even more. They simply are not in the current
    climate, cost effective returns on investment


    I understand the current cost of Uranium is low, but for a zero carbon solution we need a massive global expansion. That will put a very rapid squeeze on fuel availability, Until things like sea water extraction
    have been proven. Fuel availability, i.e. cost is an issue.

    I can assure you that mines are capable of upping production if te price
    is rifght.



    Like sea water extraction, breeder reactors are also a solution.

    But a far far far more expoensive solution.

    The first thing you do is start recycling used fuel rods and using MOX.

    FAR cheaper than breeders and uses uop similar amounts of waste. All
    reactors breed plutonium anyway



    Which is why we are all talking 'SMR' designed to circumvent the
    regulations with type approval, so that buoild times and hence capital
    costs, go back to where they used to be.

    About 1/4 of what they are now.

    Currently the best bet are modern straightforward PWR designs that
    are well understood, shrunk to a size that makes mass factory
    production possible.


    If we understand the design we might just as well build big ones.
    Small mass production is more to get around research and regulation
    problems of new systems.

    Well exactly. Samll reactors are safer and cheaper to install if they
    have type approval. No one is trying to optimise uranium efficiency.
    Just to get some reactors built is all, before the Greens wreck the
    country.


    And there are other benefits of small reactors. You can build more of
    them near to where the energy is needed reducing the cost of high
    power transmission lines...yoir grid becomes what it used to be - a
    lightweight *balancing* system, not intended for massive power flows.


    I don't know what near means, 200km isn't that far. In the past we had
    at least 3 reactors that close to London. Sizewell is still running.

    Near means in an industrial park on the outside edge of town like 10km away

    Try costing 100km of 5GW cable...



    Once we have avoided the renewable energy catastrophe, *then* its
    time to look at thorium.


    We should do both. People are scared of building big reactors with
    long payback times because it seems likely cheaper systems will be
    developed to undercut them. However, I think energy security should
    be viewed like military security, the government should pay to give
    us that security, just in case.

    Then you think wrong.

    I think you misunderstood my intended meaning. I was talking about
    building big reactors, existing designs, Hinkley Point C, Sizewell C,
    etc. The government should just get on with it. SMRs are just another
    excuse for politicians to delay.

    I have told you why that wont work,. Regulations have been designed to
    not allow it.



    Look deeper. People will of course develop all sorts of reactor tech
    including thorium - India especially - but there is simply no shortage
    of fuel whatsoever in the world at large, In fact there is enough fore
    10,000 years of today's populations all having a Western lifestyle.


    I understand thorium/molten salt is research, not a current solution,
    but, if we hadn't stopped work on breeders 40 years ago...


    Thorium reactors worked once and so did breeders. They were both
    abandoned because PWRs and BWRs were easy and cheap to build and mage
    weapons grade plutonium if run for that purpose.


    There is no point in diverting any money we might save on renewable
    energy cancellation into yet more ego projects of different technologies.

    If we don't build out what we can do right now,


    Yes, I agree, Sizewell C. If Rolls-Royce can knock out SMRs in the near future, great, but we shouldn't wait. That's what I mean about needing
    to invest in energy security, rather than delay for something which
    might be better/cheaper. It was a mistake to reduce energy to pure
    economics, while ignoring security of supply.


    Sizewell C will come our at something over £15bn/GW

    RR should be able to do the same for £6bn
    And sooner than Sizewell C too


    there wont BE any money for vanity projects.

    Stevenson didn't wait for a steam turbine to get the railways started,
    he just modified a two cylinder pumping engine, stuck it on wheels and
    was the first-to-market.

    It didn't matter how inefficient it was, there was plenty of cheap
    coal and no competition.


    I understand uranium is plentiful now, I'm not entirely convinced it
    will be plentiful if the entire world transitions to nuclear in the next
    30 years. The strongest green, zero carbon strategy, is to make nuclear cheaper. Which I think is possible.


    With SMRs.

    There is 10,000 years of uranium in this earth and in the oceans, Most
    of which is accessible at sane costs

    Someone did a costing for UK mined uranium. It wasn't impossibly expensive

    OK its not economic now, versus canadian or australian ores, but its
    viable at a pinch

    The problem isn't that big reactors are inherently expensive, its that
    the regulations are written to MAKE them expensive. Possibly by design.

    The globalists want expensive energy that they control absolutely and
    the plebs shivering in the dark
    ]


    --
    "If you don’t read the news paper, you are un-informed. If you read the
    news paper, you are mis-informed."

    Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 18:41:51 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british
    royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked
    out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on
    camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The Norwegians executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell everyone
    was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone although some rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so it was difficult to 'colloborate'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 18:53:11 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:36:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood as
    well. For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now illegal in sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's inside, running around on the streets of central stockholm without supervision, smoke
    bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from where discrete and hidden small shops.

    Most fireworks were illegal where I grew up but we had them anyway. Much
    later I brought some back from a trip to the south and wound up arrested
    for possession of explosives and deadly weapons in my home town by a cop I
    went to school with. My future brother in law was a silver tongued devil
    that could turn any situation to shit. Years later he was killed by
    lightning so he may have pissed the Gods off too.

    I was a big kid and the liquor stores weren't too particular. As a joke
    one year I bought one of those nip bottles of gin for a Mothers Day gift.
    That led to an interrogation of where I got it.

    One problem of being a kid in a town of about 2000 is everybody knows everybody. Pill something really outrageous and the news would get home
    before you did.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 19:05:11 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:40:04 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking.
    Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea
    of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees
    communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering-
    trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-
    on-
    radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    Shouldn't it be quite easy to prove? I mean EMF:s can be measured and
    plants can be measured and analyzed?

    Prove? Urban legends are not susceptible to proof.

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and
    for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    Years ago I played around with amateur packet radio. 9600 was possible
    with more sophisticated hardware but the local club never made it past
    1200. It was usable. Part of my introduction to Linux was it supported AX.
    25.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AX.25

    I still have the TNC but interest in it dropped off rapidly. For that
    matter many people who used 2 meter handitalkies left when cheap
    cellphones came along. There still is some interest in HF digital modes
    but the ham population is aging out. There still is a lot of ham support
    for Linux.

    https://sourceforge.net/projects/kb1oiq-andysham/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 19:08:29 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 10:51:23 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into
    the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    As I have mentioned my engineering statistics course devoted a lot of time
    to determining that point. QA is expensive.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 19:43:06 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:46:08 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes! And add to that, all the reporting to the tax authorities, the
    social security department, and then there's some kind of new EU law
    that stipulates I have to send statistics to some government department,
    I don't even know which one. That is also handled by the accountant. I
    feel that if I were to do that myself, it would take 10-15 hours per
    month, so I'll happily (well not happily, but it is worth it) pay 400
    EUR to save me 10-15 hours of boring and useless work.

    If you're self employed in the US you have to file quarterly. I suppose
    that helps to keep you from getting too far afield. For employees the
    Social Security payroll tax is 6.2% and the employer also pays 6.2%. Self emplyed you eat the whole 12.4%.

    Sometimes there is friction between direct employees and contractors when
    the direct people figure the contractors are raking in the big bucks. They
    fail to consider the double dip on SS, the lack of health insurance, and
    stable employment. That comes as a surprise if they decide to go out on
    their own. I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance plan
    may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 15 19:47:45 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group
    and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 15 21:18:15 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:18:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire
    generation. There are always exceptions, those are what give me
    hope, but the vast majority are quite sad.

    I feel sorry when I see them being loaded into the backseat of a car
    in their escape pods. My preferred location was standing on the
    passenger side floor with my hands on the solid steel dash of the
    '51 Chevy so I could see where we were going. The gray paint of the
    dash had two hand prints where it had been worn down to the red
    primer. Probably red lead, come to think of it.

    If bicycle helmets existed I never saw one. Some kids didn't
    survive for one reason or the other but life went on.


    Yes... bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood
    as well. For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now
    illegal in sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's
    inside, running around on the streets of central stockholm without supervision, smoke bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from
    where discrete and hidden small shops.

    Being young today sounds so extremely boring in comparison!

    Since "they" don't have a basis for comparison, "they" won't know just
    how boring their childhood presently is.

    On the other hand, is it any wonder why 'doom scrolling' on social
    media is the entertainment for much of the children growing up. When
    all the other 'fun' stuff is removed in the name of safety, doom
    scrolling on social media is about all (besides reading a book) that is
    left for them to entertain themselves with.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:01:26 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british
    royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few
    politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked
    out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on
    camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The Norwegians executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell everyone was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone although some rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so it was difficult to 'colloborate'.


    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to start
    if you ever meet any swedes! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:04:03 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:36:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood as
    well. For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now illegal in
    sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's inside, running
    around on the streets of central stockholm without supervision, smoke
    bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from where discrete and hidden
    small shops.

    Most fireworks were illegal where I grew up but we had them anyway. Much later I brought some back from a trip to the south and wound up arrested
    for possession of explosives and deadly weapons in my home town by a cop I went to school with. My future brother in law was a silver tongued devil

    Really!? Sounds like quite an asshole! =(

    that could turn any situation to shit. Years later he was killed by
    lightning so he may have pissed the Gods off too.

    This does tend to happen sometimes. Perhaps a proof of gods existence? On
    the other hand, Putin is still alive and kicking. Gods ways are
    mysterious!

    I was a big kid and the liquor stores weren't too particular. As a joke
    one year I bought one of those nip bottles of gin for a Mothers Day gift. That led to an interrogation of where I got it.

    One problem of being a kid in a town of about 2000 is everybody knows everybody. Pill something really outrageous and the news would get home before you did.

    My mother grew up in a town of less than 1000 and it was not so fun being
    a teenager. She moved to Stockholm when she was 18 and was very happy with
    her choice.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:09:13 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:46:08 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes! And add to that, all the reporting to the tax authorities, the
    social security department, and then there's some kind of new EU law
    that stipulates I have to send statistics to some government department,
    I don't even know which one. That is also handled by the accountant. I
    feel that if I were to do that myself, it would take 10-15 hours per
    month, so I'll happily (well not happily, but it is worth it) pay 400
    EUR to save me 10-15 hours of boring and useless work.

    If you're self employed in the US you have to file quarterly. I suppose
    that helps to keep you from getting too far afield. For employees the
    Social Security payroll tax is 6.2% and the employer also pays 6.2%. Self emplyed you eat the whole 12.4%.

    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am
    now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund your
    own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    Sometimes there is friction between direct employees and contractors when
    the direct people figure the contractors are raking in the big bucks. They fail to consider the double dip on SS, the lack of health insurance, and stable employment. That comes as a surprise if they decide to go out on
    their own. I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance plan may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    This is the truth and the reason why I do not have employees, only
    contractors. It would be _waaaaaay_ too expensive to have employees. I
    actually offered one of my guys a job once, but he turned it down. Then he stabbed me in the back and stole one of my customers, but that's a
    different story! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:10:05 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group
    and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be
    willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the government
    look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    A complete mystery to me that they are still around.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:06:44 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:40:04 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking.
    Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea
    of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees
    communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering-
    trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-
    on-
    radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    Shouldn't it be quite easy to prove? I mean EMF:s can be measured and
    plants can be measured and analyzed?

    Prove? Urban legends are not susceptible to proof.

    True! Why let proof get in the way of a nice conspiracy! ;)

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and
    for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    Years ago I played around with amateur packet radio. 9600 was possible
    with more sophisticated hardware but the local club never made it past
    1200. It was usable. Part of my introduction to Linux was it supported AX. 25.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AX.25

    I still have the TNC but interest in it dropped off rapidly. For that
    matter many people who used 2 meter handitalkies left when cheap
    cellphones came along. There still is some interest in HF digital modes
    but the ham population is aging out. There still is a lot of ham support
    for Linux.

    https://sourceforge.net/projects/kb1oiq-andysham/

    This is sad. I've heard that cheap chinese radios (Baofeng?) are popular.
    I also feel as if this field is perhaps regulated to death? I think in
    some countries there are free bands, but I'm not sure.

    Personally, if it was unregulated, I'd at least be curious! But now, with tests, and loads of stuff to study, I'd never do it only to scratch a mild itch.

    Same for me with guns. If they would be unregulated, I'd definitely buy a
    gun! Now with all the licenses, testing, competition requirements, safe
    storage laws etc. I can't really be bothered. =(

    Only way is to 3d print or build something myself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Sun Dec 15 23:12:03 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:18:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire
    generation. There are always exceptions, those are what give me
    hope, but the vast majority are quite sad.

    I feel sorry when I see them being loaded into the backseat of a car
    in their escape pods. My preferred location was standing on the
    passenger side floor with my hands on the solid steel dash of the
    '51 Chevy so I could see where we were going. The gray paint of the
    dash had two hand prints where it had been worn down to the red
    primer. Probably red lead, come to think of it.

    If bicycle helmets existed I never saw one. Some kids didn't
    survive for one reason or the other but life went on.


    Yes... bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood
    as well. For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now
    illegal in sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's
    inside, running around on the streets of central stockholm without
    supervision, smoke bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from
    where discrete and hidden small shops.

    Being young today sounds so extremely boring in comparison!

    Since "they" don't have a basis for comparison, "they" won't know just
    how boring their childhood presently is.

    This is incorrect. "They" can talk with older people, look at old movies, tv-clips, etc. Plenty of basis for comparison. It is anecdotal, but I did
    so myself, when a teenager and came to the conclusion that there was
    waaaay more fun to be had 10-20 years earlier than when I was young.

    On the other hand, is it any wonder why 'doom scrolling' on social
    media is the entertainment for much of the children growing up. When
    all the other 'fun' stuff is removed in the name of safety, doom
    scrolling on social media is about all (besides reading a book) that is
    left for them to entertain themselves with.

    This is a very good point! I read today that a 21 day ban on smartphones
    in UK schools resulted in better psychological health/well being, and
    better sleep, and a 3% memory improvement.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 03:10:47 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:12:03 +0100, D wrote:

    This is incorrect. "They" can talk with older people, look at old
    movies,
    tv-clips, etc. Plenty of basis for comparison. It is anecdotal, but I
    did so myself, when a teenager and came to the conclusion that there was waaaay more fun to be had 10-20 years earlier than when I was young.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Paul_Smith

    I read 'Where Did You Go? Out. What Did You Do? Nothing.' and 'How to Do Nothing With Nobody All Alone By Yourself' as a kid. He compared the '50s
    with the '20s bit I didn't feel underprivileged.

    https://tinhouse.com/how-to-do-nothing-with-nobody-all-alone-by-yourself- an-excerpt/

    That's a short excerpt. I did build both the spool tank and the button
    buzz saw. There were also things to do with horse chestnuts. There were
    also other projects that Smith left out.

    https://www.instructables.com/Mini-Matchstick-Gun-The-Clothespin-Pocket- Pistol/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 03:31:59 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am
    now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised frequently. It
    was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at the end
    of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the majority of
    the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS benefits but
    this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out. Then if
    you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required minimum distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Between the assorted taxes it isn't as bad as Sweden but they're working
    on it. Somebody has to buy tanks for the Ukraine.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 03:18:35 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:04:03 +0100, D wrote:

    My mother grew up in a town of less than 1000 and it was not so fun
    being a teenager. She moved to Stockholm when she was 18 and was very
    happy with her choice.

    It could be claustrophobic I guess but I enjoyed having plenty of open
    space to ramble. The town had an elementary school but was too small for a
    high school so we had to go to the either the public or Catholic high
    school in the city. That was, er, educational.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 03:52:27 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:06:44 +0100, D wrote:


    This is sad. I've heard that cheap chinese radios (Baofeng?) are
    popular. I also feel as if this field is perhaps regulated to death? I
    think in some countries there are free bands, but I'm not sure.

    I've heard they're a good value for the price.

    Personally, if it was unregulated, I'd at least be curious! But now,
    with tests, and loads of stuff to study, I'd never do it only to scratch
    a mild itch.

    Same for me with guns. If they would be unregulated, I'd definitely buy
    a gun! Now with all the licenses, testing, competition requirements,
    safe storage laws etc. I can't really be bothered. =(

    Only way is to 3d print or build something myself. I've got an Icom dash
    mount and a Yaesu handheld that I bought years ago. Sometimes I'll see if anything is happening but generally there isn't much on 2M. I renewed my license this year so I'm good for another 10 years. That's for the amateur bands. The citizens band is still unregulated but I think the thrill of
    that wore off a couple of decades ago. There us an unlicensed Family Radio Service but the radios have an effective range of a mile or two and can't
    use repeaters.

    In this state you fill out a 4473, the form Hunter Biden lied on, they
    phone the transaction into NICS, and you are good to go in about 10
    minutes. No other paperwork is required.

    I was surprised a couple of weeks ago to find that instead of a paper form
    they hand you a tablet to enter the data. There are 20 questions. The
    answer to the first, are you an American citizen, is yes, all the rest are
    no. The one that tripped up Biden is a trap in this state. I don't use it
    but marijuana is legal in this state but illegal on a Federal basis. I
    assume a little bit of lying goes on.

    There is a permit for concealed carry but a couple of years ago it was
    made legal without any permit. Even then it was 'shall issue' meaning
    unless there was some disqualification you paid your $50 and got a permit.
    In states like California unless you're Nancy Pelosi you're not going to
    get a permit.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 15 22:52:51 2024
    On 12/14/24 5:45 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024, John Ames wrote:

    On Fri, 13 Dec 2024 11:29:51 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    10x over todays figures? Nothing to scoff at, but I guess the
    question is, how long will it take us to get those 10x?

    The bigger question - what happens when we decide we need 10x *more...?*

    Let's cross that bridge when we get to it. ;)

    That's gonna be just a few years ....

    Demand for more and more and more computing power
    is going straight up the chart.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 03:57:48 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:26 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot
    of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to
    start if you ever meet any swedes!

    I think it was a novel by Larrson, Åsa, not that other one, that worked in some not-quite-rehabilitated people.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 04:10:57 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Oh, and the swedish socialist party was very much into eugenics. Also something that they are working hard to bury in some distant, dusty
    corridor of history.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_v._Bell

    "Three generations of imbeciles are enough"

    https://womanisrational.uchicago.edu/2022/09/21/margaret-sanger-the- duality-of-a-ambitious-feminist-and-racist-eugenicist/

    There are facets of Margaret Sanger, the patron saint of Planned
    parenthood, that the left would rather forget.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/feb/06/race.usa

    It's a Guardian review of Black's book but I've read the same in other
    sources. Besides the eugenics programs of the '20s and '30s US immigration
    law heavily favored northern Europeans. They threw that out in '65 so here
    we are now.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 00:04:19 2024
    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group
    and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be
    willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the government
    look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking.
    Don't be a bigot now :-)

    A complete mystery to me that they are still around.

    Because they still have something to offer.

    Erlang is still around and used - readily had for
    Linux. An unusual paradigm, but you CAN do stuff.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 15 23:47:25 2024
    On 12/15/24 1:46 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:57:52 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    "Stochastic" basically means "guessing".

    Pretty much. For example if you're building a classifier you split your labeled data into two chunks, one for training and one for testing. Rinse
    and repeat until the output is good enough. If your image classified
    mistakes a black for a gorilla there will be hell to pay.

    In the training process some randomness is often introduced on purpose.
    The problem is local maxima (or minima depending on how you prefer to
    thing). If you picture a three dimensional surface with mountains and valleys gradient descent tends to get stuck,

    For example, assume you're hiking in mountainous terrain and you algorithm
    is to always head uphill. Sooner or later you'll find yourself at a place where all choices are downhill, but it isn't the highest hill around. You need to roll the dice to get off it.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simulated_annealing

    There's a nice little animation if you scroll down a bit.

    After training you really hope that the result will be deterministic. You don't want the cat to be alive on one run and dead on the next. Or a dog.

    Differentiating cats and dogs is one of the 'hello world' projects in ML. Sometimes the results aren't what you hoped for. In one sample set the
    dogs tended to be photographed outdoors and the cats indoors. Whatever
    magic went on in training the result was the 'intelligence' was really
    good at sorting outdoor images from indoor ones. It didn't know jack about dogs and cats.


    Indeed, it's NOT always "easy". Ridiculously simplistic
    goal defs lead to ridiculous results.

    Yet, even a bug or lizard or chipmunk can figure it all
    out almost instantly .......

    We're doing something wrong.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 15 23:34:24 2024
    On 12/15/24 5:51 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 15/12/2024 04:57, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    "seems close enough"
       is NOT good enough. Planes, spacecraft, bridges, huge
       buildings, medical implants - GOTTA refine with the
       hard-core/hard-math tools.

    I think you would be aghast at how "seems good enough" guides most engineering design.

    No-one accurately measures every single component that goes into a design.

    At best they do a full test on the final product.


    This is kind of in line with what I've both known and heard.

    But it SUCKS when applied to 'critical structures'.

    Alas, I guess profit/loss comes into the picture ...


    There is always room for the black swan unit where all the tolerances
    were exactly the wrong way.

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into
    the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    The development algorithm of the racing Cosworth V8 was "remove metal
    till it breaks, then put that bit back again".

    And we can only calculate what we thought of. Some failure modes are completely unexpected.

    Some of the most durable civil engineering was done by Victorian
    engineers who were not able to do the calculations. Their conservative over-enginering resulted in structures that stand good even to day.

    Admittedly their failures are long gone :-( (Tay bridge, any one?)

    Very true that they "over-built" in the 1800s. Fails
    were usually due to some unrealized design fault, not
    the overall-average strength of the structure. Building
    on old swamp-land was a common error.

    PRE-1800s they also over-built ... but relied too much
    on gravity to hold structures together. Most of those
    old castles are now piles of rubble. ROMAN stuff - those
    tended to be rather good engineering and materials and
    a surprising amount - not destroyed intentionally -
    still survives.

    Note - Incan and some "Cyclopean" Euro constructions were
    exceptionally well-engineered - and largely quake resistant.
    The TV program idiots claim 'alien' design, which is a huge
    insult to our predecessors. When you see them collapsed it
    is almost always due to military action, not natural forces.

    "When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said
    I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in
    all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp.
    So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I
    built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank
    into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. And that's
    what you're going to get, Lad, the strongest castle
    in all of England."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 00:17:27 2024
    On 12/15/24 5:06 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:40:04 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking. >>>> Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea >>>> of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees
    communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering-
    trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/

    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall-
    on-
    radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    Shouldn't it be quite easy to prove? I mean EMF:s can be measured and
    plants can be measured and analyzed?

    Prove? Urban legends are not susceptible to proof.

    True! Why let proof get in the way of a nice conspiracy! ;)

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and >>> for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of
    data would be painful though.

    Years ago I played around with amateur packet radio. 9600 was possible
    with more sophisticated hardware but the local club never made it past
    1200. It was usable. Part of my introduction to Linux was it supported
    AX.
    25.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AX.25

    I still have the TNC but interest in it dropped off rapidly. For that
    matter many people who used 2 meter handitalkies left when cheap
    cellphones came along.  There still is some interest in HF digital modes
    but the ham population is aging out.  There still is a lot of ham support >> for Linux.

    https://sourceforge.net/projects/kb1oiq-andysham/

    This is sad. I've heard that cheap chinese radios (Baofeng?) are
    popular. I also feel as if this field is perhaps regulated to death? I
    think in some countries there are free bands, but I'm not sure.

    Personally, if it was unregulated, I'd at least be curious! But now,
    with tests, and loads of stuff to study, I'd never do it only to scratch
    a mild itch.

    Same for me with guns. If they would be unregulated, I'd definitely buy
    a gun! Now with all the licenses, testing, competition requirements,
    safe storage laws etc. I can't really be bothered. =(

    Only way is to 3d print or build something myself.


    Move to the USA :-)

    We have guns out the ass - most people have
    several. You can have an arsenal out of a
    'Terminator' movie. Yep, there IS some abuse,
    but - pop corrected - doesn't seem THAT much
    worse than the UK. Almost all abuse is from
    GANGS, not Joe Citizens. Any downsides are
    compensated by personal rights/autonomy/defense
    issues.

    But then the UK/EU isn't INTERESTED in individual
    and citizen rights/power/safety any more, is it ?
    Power to THE STATE - and NOBODY else .......

    "But it was all right, everything was all right, the
    struggle was finished. He had won the victory over
    himself. He loved Big Brother.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 00:54:07 2024
    On 12/15/24 5:12 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:18:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Children today are over protected, and this is destroying an entire
    generation.  There are always exceptions, those are what give me
    hope, but the vast majority are quite sad.

    I feel sorry when I see them being loaded into the backseat of a car
    in their escape pods.  My preferred location was standing on the
    passenger side floor with my hands on the solid steel dash of the
    '51 Chevy so I could see where we were going.  The gray paint of the
    dash had two hand prints where it had been worn down to the red
    primer.  Probably red lead, come to think of it.

    If bicycle helmets existed I never saw one.  Some kids didn't
    survive for one reason or the other but life went on.


    Yes...  bicycle helmets where completely unknown during my childhood
    as well.  For entertainment we had fireworks, firecrackers (now
    illegal in sweden), dismantling old electronic waste to see what's
    inside, running around on the streets of central stockholm without
    supervision, smoke bombs, the occasional beer sold to minors from
    where discrete and hidden small shops.

    Being young today sounds so extremely boring in comparison!

    Since "they" don't have a basis for comparison, "they" won't know just
    how boring their childhood presently is.

    This is incorrect. "They" can talk with older people, look at old
    movies, tv-clips, etc. Plenty of basis for comparison. It is anecdotal,
    but I did so myself, when a teenager and came to the conclusion that
    there was waaaay more fun to be had 10-20 years earlier than when I was young.

    On the other hand, is it any wonder why 'doom scrolling' on social
    media is the entertainment for much of the children growing up.  When
    all the other 'fun' stuff is removed in the name of safety, doom
    scrolling on social media is about all (besides reading a book) that is
    left for them to entertain themselves with.

    This is a very good point! I read today that a 21 day ban on smartphones
    in UK schools resulted in better psychological health/well being, and
    better sleep, and a 3% memory improvement.


    Today's kiddies are plagued by 'social' and political
    BS which constantly tries to twist their brains into
    knots. For SM it means PROFIT ... for political interests
    it's produced a gen of near-psychotics which can be
    twisted around the proverbial finger.

    No "good will" here at all.

    Hey ... if you can find it ... try a movie entitled
    "I Saw The TV Glow" (US title). Fair take on the
    new hyper-unstable gen - largely un-rooted in ANY
    sort of 'reality'.

    Long long back I kinda coined the term "Dali-Ocracy".
    That means a faux 'democracy' where it has become
    impossible to know what's real ... and thus the
    info needed to WORK a democracy is absent. All
    is surreal. Conclusions without solid axioms.
    Squishy-soft 'reality'.

    We're HERE .....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 01:52:06 2024
    On 12/15/24 5:33 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:21:30 +0100, D wrote:

    In the few protestant services I remember from my childhood (my mother
    was religious, my father not) there was plenty of singing. Afterwars,
    there would sometimes be coffee and cake.

    I don't recall ever going to church with my mother. The whole thing was
    sprung on me at a late date. During Boy Scout Week they made a big deal
    about going to church with your family and I asked the fatal question
    'What's church?'

    We each have our crosses to carry! ;) I remember that my mother thought
    it was very important that I should become confirmed at around age 15 or
    so. I was against it, but after a lot of poking and prodding and begging
    in order to please my grand parents who were religious as well, I
    finally agreed to attend. So basically it was like a discussion club
    with philosophical themes with a bit of jesus snuck in here and there.


    Heh ... my mother was a Lutheran. They 'babtised' me
    without my permission before age one.

    Somewhere around age 8 I was sitting in a church pew,
    listening to the preacher, and had one of those 'epiphany'
    things .... "Fairy-Tales For Grown-Ups" - all the swirling
    bits parted for a moment and all was clear. Still remember
    exactly where I was sitting .....

    No, don't hate religious people ... it's a common enough
    delusion. I'm not one of THOSE unbelievers. I think it's
    just best to lead by example - not by the sword.

    Oh, the Boy Scouts wouldn't let me in because I was
    an unbeliever ... but I kinda understood that. They
    had their agenda.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:30:45 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:04:03 +0100, D wrote:

    My mother grew up in a town of less than 1000 and it was not so fun
    being a teenager. She moved to Stockholm when she was 18 and was very
    happy with her choice.

    It could be claustrophobic I guess but I enjoyed having plenty of open
    space to ramble. The town had an elementary school but was too small for a high school so we had to go to the either the public or Catholic high
    school in the city. That was, er, educational.


    She was never much into nature, and also, one of the things she did not
    like was that you had 24/7 surveillance. What ever your did, everyone knew about it. This was not so interested for a young woman at the time.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:29:36 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:12:03 +0100, D wrote:

    This is incorrect. "They" can talk with older people, look at old
    movies,
    tv-clips, etc. Plenty of basis for comparison. It is anecdotal, but I
    did so myself, when a teenager and came to the conclusion that there was
    waaaay more fun to be had 10-20 years earlier than when I was young.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Paul_Smith

    I read 'Where Did You Go? Out. What Did You Do? Nothing.' and 'How to Do Nothing With Nobody All Alone By Yourself' as a kid. He compared the '50s with the '20s bit I didn't feel underprivileged.

    https://tinhouse.com/how-to-do-nothing-with-nobody-all-alone-by-yourself- an-excerpt/

    That's a short excerpt. I did build both the spool tank and the button
    buzz saw. There were also things to do with horse chestnuts. There were
    also other projects that Smith left out.

    https://www.instructables.com/Mini-Matchstick-Gun-The-Clothespin-Pocket- Pistol/

    But you must remember, that I am younger than you. Maybe there is a point
    at around 70:ish, where the previous youth was more boring? For me, my
    father had way more freedom and opportunities than I did, and I have way
    more freedom than todays youth.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:35:04 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am
    now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised frequently. It was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at the end
    of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the majority of
    the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    Jesus! I thought it was only in sweden. Well, as you say it's 168k, so I imagine that the majority of people in the US never hit the cap.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS benefits but
    this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out. Then if you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required minimum distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Of course it is taxed! ;) And your private retirement savings are taxed as well, so a nice double tax. First the salary, and then you save it, and it
    is of course taxed again at withdrawal.

    Between the assorted taxes it isn't as bad as Sweden but they're working
    on it. Somebody has to buy tanks for the Ukraine.

    It's a jungle. 10 years ago, the then CEO of telia (big telco in sweden) discovered that if he moved to portugal he could get his retirement tax
    free. He did! There was much gnashing of teeth, and the loop hole was
    closed.

    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, you
    can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat
    tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow.
    And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is
    not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers this.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:37:27 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:06:44 +0100, D wrote:


    This is sad. I've heard that cheap chinese radios (Baofeng?) are
    popular. I also feel as if this field is perhaps regulated to death? I
    think in some countries there are free bands, but I'm not sure.

    I've heard they're a good value for the price.

    Personally, if it was unregulated, I'd at least be curious! But now,
    with tests, and loads of stuff to study, I'd never do it only to scratch
    a mild itch.

    Same for me with guns. If they would be unregulated, I'd definitely buy
    a gun! Now with all the licenses, testing, competition requirements,
    safe storage laws etc. I can't really be bothered. =(

    Only way is to 3d print or build something myself. I've got an Icom dash
    mount and a Yaesu handheld that I bought years ago. Sometimes I'll see if anything is happening but generally there isn't much on 2M. I renewed my license this year so I'm good for another 10 years. That's for the amateur bands. The citizens band is still unregulated but I think the thrill of
    that wore off a couple of decades ago. There us an unlicensed Family Radio Service but the radios have an effective range of a mile or two and can't
    use repeaters.

    In this state you fill out a 4473, the form Hunter Biden lied on, they
    phone the transaction into NICS, and you are good to go in about 10
    minutes. No other paperwork is required.

    I was surprised a couple of weeks ago to find that instead of a paper form they hand you a tablet to enter the data. There are 20 questions. The
    answer to the first, are you an American citizen, is yes, all the rest are no. The one that tripped up Biden is a trap in this state. I don't use it
    but marijuana is legal in this state but illegal on a Federal basis. I
    assume a little bit of lying goes on.

    There is a permit for concealed carry but a couple of years ago it was
    made legal without any permit. Even then it was 'shall issue' meaning
    unless there was some disqualification you paid your $50 and got a permit.
    In states like California unless you're Nancy Pelosi you're not going to
    get a permit.

    Ahhh... the land of the free! We'll see if the long term plans work out.
    If so, when I retire, I'm coming! Sadly a lot can happen between now and
    then, but that's part of the charm. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:41:17 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Oh, and the swedish socialist party was very much into eugenics. Also
    something that they are working hard to bury in some distant, dusty
    corridor of history.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_v._Bell

    "Three generations of imbeciles are enough"

    https://womanisrational.uchicago.edu/2022/09/21/margaret-sanger-the- duality-of-a-ambitious-feminist-and-racist-eugenicist/

    There are facets of Margaret Sanger, the patron saint of Planned
    parenthood, that the left would rather forget.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/feb/06/race.usa

    It's a Guardian review of Black's book but I've read the same in other sources. Besides the eugenics programs of the '20s and '30s US immigration law heavily favored northern Europeans. They threw that out in '65 so here
    we are now.

    Ahh, the left is so cute. They can do no wrong, and when inconvenient
    facts are pointed out, you are cancelled, or the facts are "fake news". ;)

    Had no idea! Sad that you swerved from the northern europe policy. I thin
    the US would have a lot less problems today if you would have remained a
    bit more selective with the immigration.

    On the other hand, the master of chaotic and detrimental immigration is
    of course sweden!

    This is a classic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOGe02pjE-g .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 10:38:58 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:26 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of
    neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot
    of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to
    start if you ever meet any swedes!

    I think it was a novel by Larrson, Åsa, not that other one, that worked in some not-quite-rehabilitated people.


    Hm, doesn't ring a bell. A quick search only got me finnish books for some reason.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 10:44:41 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet group >>>> and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I would be >>>> willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the government
    look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking.
    Don't be a bigot now :-)

    A complete mystery to me that they are still around.

    Because they still have something to offer.

    Erlang is still around and used - readily had for
    Linux. An unusual paradigm, but you CAN do stuff.

    Didn't they get rid of Erlang? I thought Armstrong purchased or acquired
    it from Ericsson and became a very wealthy man. He actually gave a guest lecture at my university. I still remember him.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 10:51:16 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:06 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:40:04 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 23:16:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    I never saw one but there were also ELF transmitters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency

    I think some of the frequencies are still in use but nobody is talking. >>>>> Imagine what it would be like if humans could directly perceive the sea >>>>> of electromagnetic radiation we live in.

    One project I turned down was a botanist with a theory that trees
    communicated via electromagnetic waves. The idea hasn't gone away.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-whispering-
    trees-180968084/

    There is evidence that EMFs do affect trees though.

    https://ehtrust.org/electromagnetic-fields-impact-tree-plant-growth/ >>>>>
    Sometimes for the better?

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14519600-500-forest-grows-tall- >>> on-
    radio-waves/

    It reminds me of when RF heat sealers were introduced. The folklore
    suggested that women working around them either became sterile or
    amazingly fecund. Humans love their stories.

    Shouldn't it be quite easy to prove? I mean EMF:s can be measured and
    plants can be measured and analyzed?

    Prove? Urban legends are not susceptible to proof.

    True! Why let proof get in the way of a nice conspiracy! ;)

    Latency would be huge, but that never stopped me with my 9600 modem, and >>>> for talking like this, is not a problem. Downloading massive amounts of >>>> data would be painful though.

    Years ago I played around with amateur packet radio. 9600 was possible
    with more sophisticated hardware but the local club never made it past
    1200. It was usable. Part of my introduction to Linux was it supported AX. >>> 25.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AX.25

    I still have the TNC but interest in it dropped off rapidly. For that
    matter many people who used 2 meter handitalkies left when cheap
    cellphones came along.  There still is some interest in HF digital modes >>> but the ham population is aging out.  There still is a lot of ham support >>> for Linux.

    https://sourceforge.net/projects/kb1oiq-andysham/

    This is sad. I've heard that cheap chinese radios (Baofeng?) are popular. I >> also feel as if this field is perhaps regulated to death? I think in some
    countries there are free bands, but I'm not sure.

    Personally, if it was unregulated, I'd at least be curious! But now, with
    tests, and loads of stuff to study, I'd never do it only to scratch a mild >> itch.

    Same for me with guns. If they would be unregulated, I'd definitely buy a
    gun! Now with all the licenses, testing, competition requirements, safe
    storage laws etc. I can't really be bothered. =(

    Only way is to 3d print or build something myself.


    Move to the USA :-)

    You can bet your sweet little ass that this is my long term plan. I do
    have family commitments which keep me in europe though. My father I think
    would not be interested in moving to the US at his age. But once he
    passes, I and the wife are finally free to move.

    We have guns out the ass - most people have
    several. You can have an arsenal out of a
    'Terminator' movie. Yep, there IS some abuse,
    but - pop corrected - doesn't seem THAT much
    worse than the UK. Almost all abuse is from
    GANGS, not Joe Citizens. Any downsides are
    compensated by personal rights/autonomy/defense
    issues.

    Nothing that bothers me. If you delve down into the statistics, and look
    at who shoots who, and where they enjoy shooting each other, you quickly realize that there's about as big a chance in the US of experiencing gun violence as in europe, unless you insist on going straight to the ghetto
    and provoking the first drug dealer you find, in which case it's your own fault.

    But then the UK/EU isn't INTERESTED in individual
    and citizen rights/power/safety any more, is it ?
    Power to THE STATE - and NOBODY else .......

    This is correct. The EU is hellbent on becoming a new socialist
    federation. Once the EU gets full taxation powers, it's game over. The EU politicians have set themselves up as a new nobility. They get lifetime pensions after 1 or 2 terms in office, they get a huge part of their
    salaries tax free, they get free business travel, taxi, free apartments,
    and of course, legal immunity. I cannot for the life of me imagine how
    come the public hasn't rebelled at the revolting life styles and benefits
    they have awarded themselves. And they then have the stomach to complain
    and call entrepreneurs "greedy".

    "But it was all right, everything was all right, the
    struggle was finished. He had won the victory over
    himself. He loved Big Brother.”

    I'm a long term optimist, so I guess the saying goes "over my dead
    body". ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 10:58:52 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    We each have our crosses to carry! ;) I remember that my mother thought it >> was very important that I should become confirmed at around age 15 or so. I >> was against it, but after a lot of poking and prodding and begging in order >> to please my grand parents who were religious as well, I finally agreed to >> attend. So basically it was like a discussion club with philosophical
    themes with a bit of jesus snuck in here and there.


    Heh ... my mother was a Lutheran. They 'babtised' me
    without my permission before age one.

    Same here. Never thought about it really until I got my first job and discovered
    that my church membership cost me an additional 0.2% tax, and immediately left church.

    Somewhere around age 8 I was sitting in a church pew,
    listening to the preacher, and had one of those 'epiphany'
    things .... "Fairy-Tales For Grown-Ups" - all the swirling
    bits parted for a moment and all was clear. Still remember
    exactly where I was sitting .....

    No, don't hate religious people ... it's a common enough
    delusion. I'm not one of THOSE unbelievers. I think it's
    just best to lead by example - not by the sword.

    I like religious people as long as they don't try to push their fantasies on me,
    or stop me from living the way I like. I also do not like moslems, because I do not consider it a religion, just a barbaric mind control tool that has no place on this planet and should be eradicated. Perhaps the sufis can stay... maybe.

    Oh, the Boy Scouts wouldn't let me in because I was
    an unbeliever ... but I kinda understood that. They
    had their agenda.

    What!? Aren't they about nature and stuff? Or are they a religious organization in the US?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 10:56:15 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    This is a very good point! I read today that a 21 day ban on smartphones in >> UK schools resulted in better psychological health/well being, and better
    sleep, and a 3% memory improvement.

    Today's kiddies are plagued by 'social' and political
    BS which constantly tries to twist their brains into
    knots. For SM it means PROFIT ... for political interests
    it's produced a gen of near-psychotics which can be
    twisted around the proverbial finger.

    This is the truth. I see it in the class room every single day. If the exam is hard, they would never dream of working harder or study more. Instead they complain to the school that the teacher is evil, and refuse to take the exam until it is made easier.

    This makes me sick!

    I think back to my own university days where some exams were legendary. 90% failed, and if people complained, the school _and_ the teacher would shrug their
    shoulders and say, you're not forced to be here, you can leave any time you want.

    No "good will" here at all.

    Hey ... if you can find it ... try a movie entitled
    "I Saw The TV Glow" (US title). Fair take on the
    new hyper-unstable gen - largely un-rooted in ANY
    sort of 'reality'.

    Will have a look! Another favorite dystopian extrapolation from the present to the future,
    I like, is Idiocracy.

    Long long back I kinda coined the term "Dali-Ocracy".
    That means a faux 'democracy' where it has become
    impossible to know what's real ... and thus the
    info needed to WORK a democracy is absent. All
    is surreal. Conclusions without solid axioms.
    Squishy-soft 'reality'.

    We're HERE .....

    True. I'm fighting it by upping my efforts to teach my students critical thinking, and trying to teach them grit and to bite down and work harder.

    It is a tough job when you have the entire system, including the school itself, against you! The only mitigating factor is that I'm private, so at least for me and my business partners, there's good money in it. The drawback is that of course, eventually a point will be reached when the schools find it easier to hire teachers that don't give a sh*t about the students and just pass them regardless of what they know, so that the schools will get their profit.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 11:40:28 2024
    On 15/12/2024 19:43, rbowman wrote:
    I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance
    which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance plan may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    Sheesh. I must have cost the taxcpayers upwards of £100,000 in free NHS hospital shit.

    But I gave the taxman £400,000 one year when I sold my company. So they
    are still in credit


    --
    "An intellectual is a person knowledgeable in one field who speaks out
    only in others...”

    Tom Wolfe

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 11:46:06 2024
    On 16/12/2024 03:31, rbowman wrote:
    Somebody has to buy tanks for the Ukraine.

    They have been found to be almost completely useless on the drone
    infested battlefield.
    In fact the money is going to build new useless tanks for America while
    the obsolete ones are being sent to Ukraine to be scrapped by the
    Russians at a profit to the USA which will one day get paid for them
    instead of having to pay someone to cut them up for scrap.

    90% of so called 'military aid' consist in paying American companies to
    make more weapons for US use whilst older scrap shit gets shipped to
    Ukraine to see how well it works, Or not. As long as it is not used to
    attack Russia of course.



    --
    Microsoft : the best reason to go to Linux that ever existed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 11:51:27 2024
    On 16/12/2024 05:54, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Long long back I kinda coined the term "Dali-Ocracy".
      That means a faux 'democracy' where it has become
      impossible to know what's real ... and thus the
      info needed to WORK a democracy is absent. All
      is surreal. Conclusions without solid axioms.
      Squishy-soft 'reality'.

      We're HERE .....

    Yes.

    And worst of all, our Glorious Leaders are no better, They too have lost
    touch with Reality.

    So a 3 day 'special military operation' turned onto a 3 year war of
    attrition that has effectively destroyed Russia and much of Ukraine too. Although people will help rebuild Ukraine.

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks
    men can have a vagina.



    --
    How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think.

    Adolf Hitler

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 11:38:18 2024
    On 15/12/2024 19:08, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 10:51:23 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into
    the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    As I have mentioned my engineering statistics course devoted a lot of time
    to determining that point. QA is expensive.

    Yup. I bought a US Robotics modem for domestic use. Lifetime guarantee.
    My telephone line got a *direct strike*.

    USR replaced it.

    At some level it is not worth arguing over.

    I bought 6 highball glasses off Amazon. They sent lager glasses. I
    complained, they sent 6 highball glasses and said 'keep the lager glasses'.


    The admin work involved in processing returns is often greater than the
    cost of a replacement products and the cost of QA is ultimately
    exorbitant. In the end a statistical approach is used.

    I know. I used to design Mil Spec hardware where we had a giant chest
    freezer to take all the kit down to -25°C to ensure it still worked.



    --
    Canada is all right really, though not for the whole weekend.

    "Saki"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 11:56:59 2024
    On 15/12/2024 22:01, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british
    royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few
    politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked
    out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on
    camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The Norwegians
    executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell
    everyone
    was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European
    countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone although
    some
    rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so it
    was
    difficult to 'colloborate'.


    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot
    of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to
    start if you ever meet any swedes! ;)

    Somewhere there is an interesting account by John le Carré of
    experiences in British intelligence post WWII. They simply left the
    Nazis in place in government to get their pensions eventually.

    The Pigeon Tunnel. Good read.

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?



    --
    A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on
    its shoes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 12:00:23 2024
    On 16/12/2024 04:34, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    PRE-1800s they also over-built ... but relied too much
      on gravity to hold structures together. Most of those
      old castles are now piles of rubble. ROMAN stuff - those
      tended to be rather good engineering and materials and
      a surprising amount - not destroyed intentionally -
      still survives.

    People nicked building materials from those old castles once they fell
    out of use.
    The monasteries were deliberately destroyed.

    Many old building survive more or less intact where they have been left
    alone


    --
    Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's
    too dark to read.

    Groucho Marx

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 14:24:53 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 19:08, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 10:51:23 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into >>> the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    As I have mentioned my engineering statistics course devoted a lot of time >> to determining that point. QA is expensive.

    Yup. I bought a US Robotics modem for domestic use. Lifetime guarantee. My telephone line got a *direct strike*.

    USR replaced it.

    At some level it is not worth arguing over.

    I bought 6 highball glasses off Amazon. They sent lager glasses. I complained, they sent 6 highball glasses and said 'keep the lager glasses'.


    The admin work involved in processing returns is often greater than the cost of a replacement products and the cost of QA is ultimately exorbitant. In the end a statistical approach is used.

    I know. I used to design Mil Spec hardware where we had a giant chest freezer to take all the kit down to -25°C to ensure it still worked.

    This doesn't happen often, but I thought a package from a used bookstore
    got lost in the mail. I wrote them, and they said, we're sorry, here, have another one!

    Sadly, I then discovered that it was the post office that forgot to notify
    me of the package, so it had been sitting there unclaimed for 4 weeks and
    I got it 2 days before it was going back.

    I wrote the book store and apologized and asked if I should return the
    books or pay for them (I could always use them as gifts) and they said,
    don't worry, it's on us!

    Needless to say, I _will_ buy books from them in the future! =)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 14:25:58 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 19:43, rbowman wrote:
    I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance
    which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance plan >> may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    Sheesh. I must have cost the taxcpayers upwards of £100,000 in free NHS hospital shit.

    But I gave the taxman £400,000 one year when I sold my company. So they are still in credit

    How did you initiate the sale? I have currently no intention of selling
    mine, but I am curious about how much it would be valued at in the market.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 14:28:24 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 03:31, rbowman wrote:
    Somebody has to buy tanks for the Ukraine.

    They have been found to be almost completely useless on the drone infested battlefield.
    In fact the money is going to build new useless tanks for America while the obsolete ones are being sent to Ukraine to be scrapped by the Russians at a profit to the USA which will one day get paid for them instead of having to pay someone to cut them up for scrap.

    90% of so called 'military aid' consist in paying American companies to make more weapons for US use whilst older scrap shit gets shipped to Ukraine to see how well it works, Or not. As long as it is not used to attack Russia of course.

    I read a story in the swedish mainstream press that ukrainian soldiers
    were very happy with the tanks and armoured vehicles donated by sweden. Apparently they can take an indirect hit and survive. They said in the
    article that they started to attach some artificial "net" or fabric
    structures to the tanks and vehicles with the purpose of making the drones exploned a tiny bit further away from the tank, than right on top. Have no
    idea if it makes sense, but that's what they said in the article.

    They also said that the quality was much better than old russian crap they
    have before getting the new vehicles, but that spare parts were a problem.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 14:29:31 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 05:54, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Long long back I kinda coined the term "Dali-Ocracy".
      That means a faux 'democracy' where it has become
      impossible to know what's real ... and thus the
      info needed to WORK a democracy is absent. All
      is surreal. Conclusions without solid axioms.
      Squishy-soft 'reality'.

      We're HERE .....

    Yes.

    And worst of all, our Glorious Leaders are no better, They too have lost touch with Reality.

    So a 3 day 'special military operation' turned onto a 3 year war of attrition that has effectively destroyed Russia and much of Ukraine too. Although people will help rebuild Ukraine.

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks men can have a vagina.

    Ahh... so Starmer is part of that religion? Doesn't look good for the UK,
    but hopefully the new tory woman and Nigel can "crush it" in 3.5 years or
    so.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 14:31:09 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 22:01, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british
    royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few
    politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked
    out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on
    camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The Norwegians >>> executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell everyone >>> was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European
    countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone although some >>> rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so it was >>> difficult to 'colloborate'.


    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of
    neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot of >> swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to start >> if you ever meet any swedes! ;)

    Somewhere there is an interesting account by John le Carré of experiences in British intelligence post WWII. They simply left the Nazis in place in government to get their pensions eventually.

    The Pigeon Tunnel. Good read.

    I really like le Carré, especially his earlier books, but haven't heard
    about this one. Must have a look!

    I think they also managed to convert the Nightmanager and the little
    drummer girls to quite good TV-shows as well!

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?





    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 14:01:24 2024
    On 16/12/2024 13:25, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 19:43, rbowman wrote:
      I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance
    which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance
    plan
    may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    Sheesh. I must have cost the taxcpayers upwards of £100,000 in free
    NHS hospital  shit.

    But I gave the taxman £400,000 one year when I sold my company. So
    they are still in credit

    How did you initiate the sale? I have currently no intention of selling
    mine, but I am curious about how much it would be valued at in the market.

    We were chased by a listed company wanting to make a story for the stock market.
    As my business partner's wife seemed determined to wreck the company, we decided a sale would be the optimal strategy.

    You can enlist agents to do this shit


    --
    You can get much farther with a kind word and a gun than you can with a
    kind word alone.

    Al Capone

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 14:05:32 2024
    On 16/12/2024 13:29, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 05:54, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Long long back I kinda coined the term "Dali-Ocracy".
       That means a faux 'democracy' where it has become
       impossible to know what's real ... and thus the
       info needed to WORK a democracy is absent. All
       is surreal. Conclusions without solid axioms.
       Squishy-soft 'reality'.

       We're HERE .....

    Yes.

    And worst of all, our Glorious Leaders are no better, They too have
    lost touch with Reality.

    So a 3 day 'special military operation' turned onto a 3 year war of
    attrition that has effectively destroyed Russia and much of Ukraine
    too. Although people will help rebuild Ukraine.

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks
    men can have a vagina.

    Ahh... so Starmer is part of that religion? Doesn't look good for the
    UK, but hopefully the new tory woman and Nigel can "crush it" in 3.5
    years or so.

    Early days. Neither can competently run a country, but they may attract
    those that can. Reform are gathering momentum, and with chummy Trump in
    the white house, and Elon on the donation list, may do better.

    A lot of people with big dosh are sensing that Reform may be a bet at
    least worth a hedge if not full support.

    Always corrupt your politicians *before* they get into power. ...
    --
    The New Left are the people they warned you about.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 14:07:23 2024
    On 16/12/2024 13:31, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 22:01, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british >>>>> royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few
    politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked >>>>> out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on >>>>> camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The
    Norwegians
    executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell
    everyone
    was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European >>>> countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone
    although some
    rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so
    it was
    difficult to 'colloborate'.


    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag
    of neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved
    a lot of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun
    topic to start if you ever meet any swedes! ;)

    Somewhere there is an interesting account by John le Carré of
    experiences in British intelligence post WWII. They simply left the
    Nazis in place in government to get their pensions eventually.

    The Pigeon Tunnel. Good read.

    I really like le Carré, especially his earlier books, but haven't heard about this one. Must have a look!

    I think they also managed to convert the Nightmanager and the little
    drummer girls to quite good TV-shows as well!

    Little drummer girls was appalling. Gave up after first episode.

    I've got em downloaded if you want.

    Best TV was tinker tailor and smileys people - epic shows.


    --
    “The fundamental cause of the trouble in the modern world today is that
    the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt."

    - Bertrand Russell

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to John Ames on Mon Dec 16 17:35:59 2024
    On 16/12/2024 16:42, John Ames wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 14:01:24 +0000
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    We were chased by a listed company wanting to make a story for the
    stock market.

    Just make sure you aren't too attached to what you've built. My employer
    was acquired by one of those "97 MBAs and a dozen vulture capitalists" outfits when the founder wanted to retire, and ever since it's been a constant struggle for management on our end to stave off the attempts
    of a bunch of know-nothing suits to run us into the ground with full-on
    FYPM policies towards pricing, licensing, and customer service...

    As my business partner's wife seemed determined to wreck the company,
    we decided a sale would be the optimal strategy.

    ...but then, in your case it sounds like a lateral move at worst ;)


    I spent 9 years in two companies tripling turnover every yearand I was
    utterly exhausted.

    I built a house, instead. Much more fun

    --
    "Nature does not give up the winter because people dislike the cold."

    ― Confucius

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 19:41:03 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 13:25, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 19:43, rbowman wrote:
      I carried a high deductible ($5000) medical disaster insurance
    which was relatively inexpensive back then. Today a company insurance
    plan
    may be a major attraction, particularly for people with families.

    Sheesh. I must have cost the taxcpayers upwards of £100,000 in free NHS >>> hospital  shit.

    But I gave the taxman £400,000 one year when I sold my company. So they >>> are still in credit

    How did you initiate the sale? I have currently no intention of selling
    mine, but I am curious about how much it would be valued at in the market.

    We were chased by a listed company wanting to make a story for the stock market.
    As my business partner's wife seemed determined to wreck the company, we decided a sale would be the optimal strategy.

    Ahh, so it seems like it was just a nice coincidence and good timing!

    You can enlist agents to do this shit

    Yes, I have heard many stories from an acquaintance who is a senior
    partner in a big lawfirm and it does not sound like a very pleasant
    process if we're talking about serious money.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 19:43:10 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 13:31, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 15/12/2024 22:01, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 11:42:21 +0100, D wrote:

    It still happens from time to time. Didn't one member of the british >>>>>> royal house dress as a nazi at a masquerade? I also know that a few >>>>>> politicians here and there from the sweden democrats have been kicked >>>>>> out for having nazi tattoos that at one time or other were caught on >>>>>> camera.

    There is a lot of history that some would like to forget. The Norwegians >>>>> executed Quisling as their sacrificial lamb and to hear them tell
    everyone
    was in the resistance. France, Sweden, Finland and most other European >>>>> countries developed amnesia without the need to shoot anyone although >>>>> some
    rehabilitation might have been necessary. The US wasn't occupied so it >>>>> was
    difficult to 'colloborate'.


    This is the truth! Sweden most definitely collaborated under the flag of >>>> neutrality. Not a very honorable way, but I am convinced it saved a lot >>>> of swedes, at the cost of a lot of other people. This is a fun topic to >>>> start if you ever meet any swedes! ;)

    Somewhere there is an interesting account by John le Carré of experiences >>> in British intelligence post WWII. They simply left the Nazis in place in >>> government to get their pensions eventually.

    The Pigeon Tunnel. Good read.

    I really like le Carré, especially his earlier books, but haven't heard
    about this one. Must have a look!

    I think they also managed to convert the Nightmanager and the little
    drummer girls to quite good TV-shows as well!

    Little drummer girls was appalling. Gave up after first episode.

    Horses for courses. ;) I liked the night manager a lot, the dummer girl
    was good, but not as good as the night manager.

    I've got em downloaded if you want.

    Thank you. Already have them tucked away on the NAS.

    Best TV was tinker tailor and smileys people - epic shows.

    YES! Much better than the night manager. More cerebral, and always nice to
    see Obi-Wan Kenobi without his robe. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to John Ames on Mon Dec 16 19:45:03 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, John Ames wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 14:01:24 +0000
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    We were chased by a listed company wanting to make a story for the
    stock market.

    Just make sure you aren't too attached to what you've built. My employer
    was acquired by one of those "97 MBAs and a dozen vulture capitalists" outfits when the founder wanted to retire, and ever since it's been a constant struggle for management on our end to stave off the attempts
    of a bunch of know-nothing suits to run us into the ground with full-on
    FYPM policies towards pricing, licensing, and customer service...

    Sounds like the clowns who acquired SUSE linux. Absolute disaster. It is
    very strange that those types of people are earning the amount of money
    they do.

    Surely it must only be about finding the greater fool, and nothing about actually creating value.

    As my business partner's wife seemed determined to wreck the company,
    we decided a sale would be the optimal strategy.

    ...but then, in your case it sounds like a lateral move at worst ;)



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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 20:28:35 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans they were in as
    weak a position as the US explaining to von Braun's crew why blacks were completely segregated in Alabama.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 20:39:58 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:37:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahhh... the land of the free! We'll see if the long term plans work out.
    If so, when I retire, I'm coming! Sadly a lot can happen between now and then, but that's part of the charm.

    Choose carefully. Some parts of the land of the free aren't very free.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 20:36:40 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:38:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Hm, doesn't ring a bell. A quick search only got me finnish books for
    some reason.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%85sa_Larsson

    I see most of them are now in English translations. Germans love their Schwedenkrimi so there's often a German translation first that is
    available on Kindle. It keeps my German familiarity from vanishing
    completely.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 20:44:18 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:51:27 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks
    men can have a vagina.

    Scholz got his vote of no confidence. It will be interesting to see how
    that plays out. Apparently the CDU head isn't a EU fan.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 20:50:26 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 01:52:06 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Oh, the Boy Scouts wouldn't let me in because I was an unbeliever ...
    but I kinda understood that. They had their agenda.

    I don't remember any vetting for the Boy Scouts. When I claimed no
    denomination in boot camp the DI said 'I'm a Catholic. You're now
    Catholic.' It wasn't about religious belief per se. A time slot was
    scheduled on Sunday for services and everyone had to be accounted for. I
    don't think there were any Jews or they would have found themselves
    Christian too. As far as Muslims, the .45 ACP 1911 pistol came to be
    because Muslims were too hard to kill with a .38.

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 20:50:56 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:
    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am
    now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised frequently. It was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at the end of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the majority of the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Jesus! I thought it was only in sweden. Well, as you say it's 168k, so I imagine that the majority of people in the US never hit the cap.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS benefits but this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out. Then if you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required minimum distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Of course it is taxed! ;) And your private retirement savings are taxed as well, so a nice double tax. First the salary, and then you save it, and it
    is of course taxed again at withdrawal.

    The salary that goes into the retirement account is NOT taxed (the
    contribution is tax deductible in the year it is earned) but when you
    take money out later, the withdrawals are taxable income. Not so
    unfair.

    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, you can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat
    tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow.
    And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is
    not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary
    savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is
    tax-free? Sweden special!

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 20:55:42 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:58:52 +0100, D wrote:

    What!? Aren't they about nature and stuff? Or are they a religious organization in the US?

    A little bit but the troop I was in didn't take it seriously. We met in
    the basement of the Dutch Reformed church but that didn't mean anything
    other than it was a more suitable meeting space than the Catholic church
    had.

    Many years later the LDS became very active in scouting locally and
    sponsored a couple of troops, Some of my neighbors wouldn't let their kids
    join from fear that they would come home converted. I'm not sure what the
    LDS is doing now that the Boy Scouts became coed. I know they didn't buy
    into the idea. Maybe they have their own fork.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 21:07:54 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:41:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Had no idea! Sad that you swerved from the northern europe policy. I
    thin the US would have a lot less problems today if you would have
    remained a bit more selective with the immigration.

    Hell, yes.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_and_Nationality_Act_of_1965

    Emmanuel Celler and his shabbas goy, Hart got it passed. The ADL was
    pushing it. Handlin ghost wrote Kennedy's pamphlet.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Handlin

    Johnson was in panic mode as the blacks burned down US cities. Parasites
    prefer the host weakened but not dead.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 20:58:03 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:17:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    We have guns out the ass - most people have several. You can have an
    arsenal out of a 'Terminator' movie. Yep, there IS some abuse, but -
    pop corrected - doesn't seem THAT much worse than the UK. Almost all
    abuse is from GANGS, not Joe Citizens. Any downsides are compensated
    by personal rights/autonomy/defense issues.

    The claim is 65% of the households in this state have at least one
    firearm. Even some of the libs are armed.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 21:14:47 2024
    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:34:24 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Very true that they "over-built" in the 1800s. Fails were usually due
    to some unrealized design fault, not the overall-average strength of
    the structure. Building on old swamp-land was a common error.

    One of the first things we were exposed to in the engineering curriculum
    was the Tacoma Narrows bridge as how not to do things.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacoma_Narrows_Bridge_(1940)

    Moisseiff was a product of the Baltic Polytechnic Institute and Columbia University, not RPI, fortunately.

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Mon Dec 16 21:11:11 2024
    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    The EU
    politicians have set themselves up as a new nobility. They get lifetime pensions after 1 or 2 terms in office, they get a huge part of their
    salaries tax free, they get free business travel, taxi, free apartments,
    and of course, legal immunity. I cannot for the life of me imagine how
    come the public hasn't rebelled at the revolting life styles and benefits they have awarded themselves. And they then have the stomach to complain
    and call entrepreneurs "greedy".

    US politicians also get a pension after a term in office (although I
    think it is quite modest if they serve only one term).

    Lots of people that work outside of their official country of residence
    get some benefits tax free.

    Travel mandated by the employer (so-called business travel) is usually
    paid by the employer.

    There may be some exploitation, but most of the things you mention do
    not seem outrageous to me.

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 16 21:20:02 2024
    On 2024-12-16, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I used to design Mil Spec hardware where we had a giant chest
    freezer to take all the kit down to -25°C to ensure it still worked.

    I could have sworn it was required to run at -40 degrees (C or F, same
    thing). My little company of "4 guys in a garage" has a chamber where we
    can test from -40 to +70 C. (Got it for free. A friend at a large
    defense contractor company nearby alerted us when they got a new one and
    put their old one out in the parking lot for the trash collector to pick
    up.)

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 16 21:18:06 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:04:19 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet
    group and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I
    would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the
    government look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking. Don't be a bigot now :-)

    Hey, Nordic Semiconductor does fine work -- but they're Norwegians, not
    Swedes.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 21:14:13 2024
    On 12/16/24 4:18 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:04:19 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet
    group and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I >>>>> would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the
    government look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking. Don't be a bigot now :-)

    Hey, Nordic Semiconductor does fine work -- but they're Norwegians, not Swedes.


    FYI ... Norway, Sweden, Finland and often Denmark are
    generically referred to as "The Nordics". There is
    enough shared culture & history to kinda make them a
    distinctive cultural group.

    As for the BUSINESS SENSIBILITY of Ericsson, well ...

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 21:21:40 2024
    On 12/16/24 3:58 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:17:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    We have guns out the ass - most people have several. You can have an
    arsenal out of a 'Terminator' movie. Yep, there IS some abuse, but -
    pop corrected - doesn't seem THAT much worse than the UK. Almost all
    abuse is from GANGS, not Joe Citizens. Any downsides are compensated
    by personal rights/autonomy/defense issues.

    The claim is 65% of the households in this state have at least one
    firearm. Even some of the libs are armed.


    A *lot* of the libs are armed - and tend to buy the
    top-dollar stuff like AR-15s.

    As for percentages ... I think many, perhaps wisely,
    don't admit to being armed. The real figure is surely
    about 85%

    But don't get too close to armed libbies - they're
    likely to shoot you while trying to figure out where
    the safety lever is :-)

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 21:38:03 2024
    On 12/16/24 4:41 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Oh, and the swedish socialist party was very much into eugenics. Also
    something that they are working hard to bury in some distant, dusty
    corridor of history.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_v._Bell

    "Three generations of imbeciles are enough"

    https://womanisrational.uchicago.edu/2022/09/21/margaret-sanger-the-
    duality-of-a-ambitious-feminist-and-racist-eugenicist/

    There are facets of Margaret Sanger, the patron saint of Planned
    parenthood, that the left would rather forget.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/feb/06/race.usa

    It's a Guardian review of Black's book but I've read the same in other
    sources. Besides the eugenics programs of the '20s and '30s US
    immigration
    law heavily favored northern Europeans. They threw that out in '65 so
    here
    we are now.

    Ahh, the left is so cute. They can do no wrong, and when inconvenient
    facts are pointed out, you are cancelled, or the facts are "fake news". ;)

    Had no idea! Sad that you swerved from the northern europe policy. I
    thin the US would have a lot less problems today if you would have
    remained a bit more selective with the immigration.

    On the other hand, the master of chaotic and detrimental immigration is
    of course sweden!

    This is a classic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOGe02pjE-g .


    A CIA advisory now lists Sweden as kinda dangerous.
    Islamist thugs and gangs now routinely prey on the
    weak. Women are more reluctant to go out on the
    streets at night.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 16 21:46:46 2024
    On 12/16/24 3:50 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 01:52:06 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Oh, the Boy Scouts wouldn't let me in because I was an unbeliever ...
    but I kinda understood that. They had their agenda.

    I don't remember any vetting for the Boy Scouts. When I claimed no denomination in boot camp the DI said 'I'm a Catholic. You're now
    Catholic.' It wasn't about religious belief per se. A time slot was scheduled on Sunday for services and everyone had to be accounted for. I don't think there were any Jews or they would have found themselves
    Christian too. As far as Muslims, the .45 ACP 1911 pistol came to be
    because Muslims were too hard to kill with a .38.


    "No Denomination" is different from 'unbeliever'.
    To the BSA it suggests that you are 'religious',
    probably Xian.

    As for the .45 ... "Moro" tribesmen - fanatical
    Islamists/Nationalists - would use drugs and
    tie rope around the body to delay any shock
    response to being shot. The USA had switched
    from the old 'cowboy Colt' to .38 because the
    latter was smaller/cheaper. Alas, NOT what was
    needed for the Moro.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 03:03:33 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:21:40 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    But don't get too close to armed libbies - they're likely to shoot
    you while trying to figure out where the safety lever is

    That's why they like Glocks -- point and shoot.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 03:07:54 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:38:03 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    A CIA advisory now lists Sweden as kinda dangerous.
    Islamist thugs and gangs now routinely prey on the weak. Women are
    more reluctant to go out on the streets at night.

    The Danes got their revenge. Their immigration policy is 'The bridge is
    that way. Keep moving.'

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 17 03:14:50 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:50:56 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    The salary that goes into the retirement account is NOT taxed (the contribution is tax deductible in the year it is earned) but when you
    take money out later, the withdrawals are taxable income. Not so
    unfair.

    True, but you are forced to take money out. The assumption is at 73 you
    will have a lower rate than during your working years. Unfortunately for
    me I was still gainfully employed. My billable hours are down this year so
    I'll see how that plays out.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 03:26:02 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:46:46 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    "No Denomination" is different from 'unbeliever'.
    To the BSA it suggests that you are 'religious', probably Xian.

    The BSA has a number of religious emblems that you can work for like 'Ad
    Altare Dei' for Catholics. I floated out the Sangha idea but it didn't
    fly.

    https://www.scouting.org/awards/religious-awards/chart/

    I guess they haven't gotten around to a Wicca or Asatru emblem yet.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 04:07:27 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:14:13 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    FYI ... Norway, Sweden, Finland and often Denmark are generically
    referred to as "The Nordics". There is enough shared culture &
    history to kinda make them a distinctive cultural group.

    Sort of. Finland was conquered during the Northern Crusades but the
    Russians grabbed the area during the Finnish War. At that point
    nationalists revived Finnish which isn't an Indo-European language.
    Tolkien loved Finnish and the Kaleval because it virgin territory compared
    to the heavily mined Volsunga saga, Nibelungenlied, and so forth.

    And then there is Denmark.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqgRC5sfCaQ

    When filing 'The Bridge (Bron/Broen, not the US remake) the cast had both
    Danes and Swedes and had its moments too.

    According to 23andMe, I would fit right in.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_I-M253

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  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 04:14:01 2024
    On 2024-12-16, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:58:52 +0100, D wrote:

    What!? Aren't they about nature and stuff? Or are they a religious
    organization in the US?

    A little bit but the troop I was in didn't take it seriously. We met in
    the basement of the Dutch Reformed church but that didn't mean anything
    other than it was a more suitable meeting space than the Catholic church
    had.

    Many years later the LDS became very active in scouting locally and
    sponsored a couple of troops, Some of my neighbors wouldn't let their kids join from fear that they would come home converted. I'm not sure what the
    LDS is doing now that the Boy Scouts became coed. I know they didn't buy
    into the idea. Maybe they have their own fork.

    Discontinued sponsoring [Boy] Scout troops a few years ago.

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

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  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 17 04:34:14 2024
    On 2024-12-15, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 15/12/2024 04:57, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    "seems close enough"
      is NOT good enough. Planes, spacecraft, bridges, huge
      buildings, medical implants - GOTTA refine with the
      hard-core/hard-math tools.

    I think you would be aghast at how "seems good enough" guides most engineering design.

    No-one accurately measures every single component that goes into a design.

    At best they do a full test on the final product.

    There is always room for the black swan unit where all the tolerances
    were exactly the wrong way.

    In general it is cheaper to simply scrap that one, or if it escapes into
    the wild, give the customer a replacement.

    The development algorithm of the racing Cosworth V8 was "remove metal
    till it breaks, then put that bit back again".

    And we can only calculate what we thought of. Some failure modes are completely unexpected.

    Some of the most durable civil engineering was done by Victorian
    engineers who were not able to do the calculations. Their conservative over-enginering resulted in structures that stand good even to day.

    Admittedly their failures are long gone :-( (Tay bridge, any one?)

    Don't have chapter and verse on a source, but I understand some
    sources say the reason Roman civil engineering created such
    durable structures was because the engineer who designed each
    arch was required to stand underneath it while the scaffolding
    was removed. The engineers who didn't over-engineer their arches
    didn't design many of them.

    The thought of doing long division in Roman numerals fills me
    with dread--let along manually doing finite element analysis.

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 17 04:39:39 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    This is a very good point! I read today that a 21 day ban on smartphones in >>> UK schools resulted in better psychological health/well being, and better >>> sleep, and a 3% memory improvement.

    Today's kiddies are plagued by 'social' and political
    BS which constantly tries to twist their brains into
    knots. For SM it means PROFIT ... for political interests
    it's produced a gen of near-psychotics which can be
    twisted around the proverbial finger.

    This is the truth. I see it in the class room every single day. If the exam is
    hard, they would never dream of working harder or study more. Instead they complain to the school that the teacher is evil, and refuse to take the exam until it is made easier.

    I wonder how some of these pansies would have responded to the digital
    logic design exams I had long ago in university. The prof. told
    everyone the rules up front: open book, open notes, and the kicker: an
    exam suitable for a 70min period, but we had 50min to take it.

    After the first one, I worked out why the "70min in 50min time slot".
    The digital logic design problems that were suitable for a pencil and
    paper exam had a hard complexity knee at about the 4-5 bits point. 4-5
    bits or less and one could solve the Karnaugh maps on paper by hand.
    And even 5 bits was 'pushing it', paper complexity wise. Anything
    beyond was in the realm of "you now need a computer solver for this".
    So all the problems on the exams ended up being /easy enough/
    (relatively speaking) that 50min of problems in 50min of exam time
    meant that nearly the entire class would score 95+ (out of 100). So to separate out those who truly understood from those just getting by
    required "too many problems" to solve in time. The good students had
    no problem finishing a 70min exam in 50 minutes and scoring 95+ on them
    (myself and another classmate named Scott proved that fact). The "ok"
    students would get most of the exam done, and score in the 75-90 range.
    And the actual mediocre students would be the ones scoring the sub 75
    scores because they cracked open the book (and if you needed to crack
    open the book, it meant you were not going to score well on the exam,
    making the whole "open book, open note" rule moot).

    There was bitching and moaning on the part of the mediocre students
    after each exam, but nothing changed because of their bitching and
    moaning.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Robert Riches on Tue Dec 17 06:43:34 2024
    On 17 Dec 2024 04:34:14 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    The thought of doing long division in Roman numerals fills me with
    dread--let along manually doing finite element analysis.

    I wonder how many little tricks they had? I've worked with carpenters who didn't know squat about the Pythagorean theorem or Euclidean geometry but
    they certainly knew about 3-4-5 triangles and such.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:21:15 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans they were in as
    weak a position as the US explaining to von Braun's crew why blacks were completely segregated in Alabama.

    Don't say that he's hypocritical
    Say rather that he's apolitical
    "Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down?
    That's not my department!" says Wernher von Braun. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to John Ames on Tue Dec 17 10:20:02 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, John Ames wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 19:45:03 +0100
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    Sounds like the clowns who acquired SUSE linux. Absolute disaster. It
    is very strange that those types of people are earning the amount of
    money they do.

    Surely it must only be about finding the greater fool, and nothing
    about actually creating value.

    It absolutely is, where "finding the greater fool" is defined as
    "juicing the numbers just long enough to pull off an IPO, and scampering
    off before the resulting twisted steroid mutant collapses into flaming
    ruin."

    This is why I never participate in IPO:s. Much better to wait for the
    small initial uptick, and then potentially buy once the lipstick comes off
    the pig.

    Unfortunately, this model is absolutely *epidemic* these days (in the
    US, at least.) Ed Zitron - https://www.wheresyoured.at/ - has written
    quite a bit in the last few years about the deleterious effects this
    has had on the tech industry.

    This is not so good. This abuse of capitalism is what gives life to the
    left.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:22:36 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:38:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Hm, doesn't ring a bell. A quick search only got me finnish books for
    some reason.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%85sa_Larsson

    I see most of them are now in English translations. Germans love their Schwedenkrimi so there's often a German translation first that is
    available on Kindle. It keeps my German familiarity from vanishing completely.


    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've seen an
    episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really enjoys
    criminal shows.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:30:39 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 01:52:06 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Oh, the Boy Scouts wouldn't let me in because I was an unbeliever ...
    but I kinda understood that. They had their agenda.

    I don't remember any vetting for the Boy Scouts. When I claimed no denomination in boot camp the DI said 'I'm a Catholic. You're now
    Catholic.' It wasn't about religious belief per se. A time slot was scheduled on Sunday for services and everyone had to be accounted for. I don't think there were any Jews or they would have found themselves
    Christian too. As far as Muslims, the .45 ACP 1911 pistol came to be
    because Muslims were too hard to kill with a .38.

    Really?! Why was that? Did they have too thick skulls? ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:23:54 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:37:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahhh... the land of the free! We'll see if the long term plans work out.
    If so, when I retire, I'm coming! Sadly a lot can happen between now and
    then, but that's part of the charm.

    Choose carefully. Some parts of the land of the free aren't very free.


    Oh yes... I'm starting to realize. There's a prison called California, I
    have heard very sinister things about it!

    No... rural, red and bible tumping generally seems to be the recipe when
    it comes to finding the more free areas of the home of the brave and land
    of the free.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:26:37 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:51:27 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks
    men can have a vagina.

    Scholz got his vote of no confidence. It will be interesting to see how
    that plays out. Apparently the CDU head isn't a EU fan.


    A colleague at one of my current consulting gigs was very happy to see the coalition bust, and joined the green party the next day.

    My prediction is a destruction of the socialists, enormous leaps forward
    for the greens, the extreme left and right, and I suspect they will end up
    with a christian democrat minority government.

    I doubt, but would be positively surprised, if they would end up with the swedish model of a center government with support from the
    nationalist/extreme right.

    I think germany is still too scared of the right to do something like
    that, although it was worked fairly ok in the swedish government
    constellation, with a good "give and take" between the center and the nationalist right.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 17 10:34:34 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:
    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised frequently. It
    was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at the end of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the majority of the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Jesus! I thought it was only in sweden. Well, as you say it's 168k, so I
    imagine that the majority of people in the US never hit the cap.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS benefits but this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out. Then if
    you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required minimum distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Of course it is taxed! ;) And your private retirement savings are taxed as >> well, so a nice double tax. First the salary, and then you save it, and it >> is of course taxed again at withdrawal.

    The salary that goes into the retirement account is NOT taxed (the contribution is tax deductible in the year it is earned) but when you
    take money out later, the withdrawals are taxable income. Not so
    unfair.

    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, you >> can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat
    tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow.
    And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is
    not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is
    tax-free? Sweden special!

    The difference is that in an ordinary savings account, you put in taxed
    money. In this type of account, your company can put in gross earnings,
    have the capital gains being taxed at only 0.3% (ish) flat fee per year,
    and then when you, the employee, withdraw it, it's taxed as retirement
    income.

    If you put in your taxed savings into a "kapitalfrskring" you can
    withdraw the money tax free, but the flat tax is higher, it's currently
    0,888% for 2025.

    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was
    very beautiful.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:36:04 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:58:52 +0100, D wrote:

    What!? Aren't they about nature and stuff? Or are they a religious
    organization in the US?

    A little bit but the troop I was in didn't take it seriously. We met in
    the basement of the Dutch Reformed church but that didn't mean anything
    other than it was a more suitable meeting space than the Catholic church
    had.

    Many years later the LDS became very active in scouting locally and
    sponsored a couple of troops, Some of my neighbors wouldn't let their kids join from fear that they would come home converted. I'm not sure what the
    LDS is doing now that the Boy Scouts became coed. I know they didn't buy
    into the idea. Maybe they have their own fork.


    Yes, I would imagine they have their own. I like the idea of still having activities for only men and women. I think those types of spaces are
    severely lacking in todays society, and i think they are extremely
    beneficial for the development of young men and women.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:38:15 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:41:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Had no idea! Sad that you swerved from the northern europe policy. I
    thin the US would have a lot less problems today if you would have
    remained a bit more selective with the immigration.

    Hell, yes.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_and_Nationality_Act_of_1965

    Emmanuel Celler and his shabbas goy, Hart got it passed. The ADL was
    pushing it. Handlin ghost wrote Kennedy's pamphlet.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Handlin

    Johnson was in panic mode as the blacks burned down US cities. Parasites prefer the host weakened but not dead.

    Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:47:01 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:04:19 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet
    group and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I >>>>> would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun
    while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the
    government look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking. Don't be a bigot now :-)

    Hey, Nordic Semiconductor does fine work -- but they're Norwegians, not Swedes.


    Ok, if you push me, let me give you some examples of companies I
    like... Hmm... ok, I'd say Concentric is a swedish company that does good
    work. And possibly, for the consumer/SMB space, Fortnox. Most, if not all,
    the brands we all know and love, peaked many decades ago.

    There are two neobanks, Avanza and Nordnet who are just about to take
    their first stumbling steps outside of the swedish market. They are quite alright as well.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 17 10:42:43 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    The EU
    politicians have set themselves up as a new nobility. They get lifetime
    pensions after 1 or 2 terms in office, they get a huge part of their
    salaries tax free, they get free business travel, taxi, free apartments,
    and of course, legal immunity. I cannot for the life of me imagine how
    come the public hasn't rebelled at the revolting life styles and benefits
    they have awarded themselves. And they then have the stomach to complain
    and call entrepreneurs "greedy".

    US politicians also get a pension after a term in office (although I
    think it is quite modest if they serve only one term).

    This is "what aboutism" and is irrelevant to the question. Equally wrong
    if you ask me.

    Lots of people that work outside of their official country of residence
    get some benefits tax free.

    The norm is that you get cover for additional expenses. Not a life of
    luxury at the tax payer expense and the opportunity to become
    independently wealthy on tax money.

    Travel mandated by the employer (so-called business travel) is usually
    paid by the employer.

    Yep... economy is fine. No need for private jets and business class.

    There may be some exploitation, but most of the things you mention do
    not seem outrageous to me.

    _Some_? Are you insane? I think you have lived too long in the US and are
    not aware of the revolting excesses of the new EU nobility. Either that,
    or you're 100% danish. ;)

    I find the level of their salaries, the fact, that after one term (or
    possibly two) they are set for life _on tax payer money_ completely
    revolting.

    This creates an incentive to get only politicians who care about money,
    and no politician who cares about anything else.

    The politicians should by law not earn any more than the average citizen
    of the country the represent. They should not have immunity and should be judged accordsing to the same laws as the citizens. This is just basic democracy.

    Only socialists seem to want to avoid this, but since socialists are an authoritarian breed in sheeps clothing, it is understandable.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 10:49:05 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/16/24 4:18 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:04:19 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs
    available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet
    group and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I >>>>>> would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun >>>>> while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the
    government look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

    Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking. Don't be a bigot now :-) >>
    Hey, Nordic Semiconductor does fine work -- but they're Norwegians, not
    Swedes.


    FYI ... Norway, Sweden, Finland and often Denmark are
    generically referred to as "The Nordics". There is
    enough shared culture & history to kinda make them a
    distinctive cultural group.

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden
    once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it again!
    As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are the most
    lazy people on the planet.

    As for the BUSINESS SENSIBILITY of Ericsson, well ...

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 17 10:53:31 2024
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/16/24 4:41 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:01:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Oh, and the swedish socialist party was very much into eugenics. Also
    something that they are working hard to bury in some distant, dusty
    corridor of history.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_v._Bell

    "Three generations of imbeciles are enough"

    https://womanisrational.uchicago.edu/2022/09/21/margaret-sanger-the-
    duality-of-a-ambitious-feminist-and-racist-eugenicist/

    There are facets of Margaret Sanger, the patron saint of Planned
    parenthood, that the left would rather forget.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/feb/06/race.usa

    It's a Guardian review of Black's book but I've read the same in other
    sources. Besides the eugenics programs of the '20s and '30s US immigration >>> law heavily favored northern Europeans. They threw that out in '65 so here >>> we are now.

    Ahh, the left is so cute. They can do no wrong, and when inconvenient facts >> are pointed out, you are cancelled, or the facts are "fake news". ;)

    Had no idea! Sad that you swerved from the northern europe policy. I thin
    the US would have a lot less problems today if you would have remained a
    bit more selective with the immigration.

    On the other hand, the master of chaotic and detrimental immigration is of >> course sweden!

    This is a classic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOGe02pjE-g .


    A CIA advisory now lists Sweden as kinda dangerous.
    Islamist thugs and gangs now routinely prey on the
    weak. Women are more reluctant to go out on the
    streets at night.

    This is the truth. You won't of course find any mention of it in the
    mainstream media, but if you talk to the commoners this is the mainstream opinion in the cities among the lower and middle classes.

    If you ever go to Stockholm, stay within the city center, and only walk on
    the well lit mainstreets at night.

    I've have several friends who got mugged or assaulted at night in the city center by the arabian gangs.

    As a short sighted way to combat this, the current center/nationalist government is working hard to create a surveillance state of chinese proportions to combat this.

    It is legal for the police to tap any phone or computer now, and I think
    as of 1/1 2025 anonymous witnesses are allowed, and the police can also
    declare an area a "high risk" area, and then have the right to search you without suspicion.

    They will also remove a lot of barriers to camera surveillance in 2025.
    Boy am I glad I no longer live in sweden! =D

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:55:30 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:38:03 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    A CIA advisory now lists Sweden as kinda dangerous.
    Islamist thugs and gangs now routinely prey on the weak. Women are
    more reluctant to go out on the streets at night.

    The Danes got their revenge. Their immigration policy is 'The bridge is
    that way. Keep moving.'

    Hahaha... 100% true! I remember several years ago, it was found out that
    danish politicians actually paid for train tickets for arabians and sent
    them along to sweden. Absolutely hilarious! I'm telling you, never trust
    the danish! ;)

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 10:13:37 2024
    On 16/12/2024 20:28, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans

    We dont have subhumans

    they were in as
    weak a position as the US explaining to von Braun's crew why blacks were completely segregated in Alabama.


    --
    Microsoft : the best reason to go to Linux that ever existed.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 17 10:17:18 2024
    On 16/12/2024 21:20, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    On 2024-12-16, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I used to design Mil Spec hardware where we had a giant chest
    freezer to take all the kit down to -25°C to ensure it still worked.

    I could have sworn it was required to run at -40 degrees (C or F, same thing). My little company of "4 guys in a garage" has a chamber where we
    can test from -40 to +70 C. (Got it for free. A friend at a large
    defense contractor company nearby alerted us when they got a new one and
    put their old one out in the parking lot for the trash collector to pick
    up.)

    My bad. - it was -40°C to *+125°C*

    It was a long time ago. More than 50 years now. FFS.

    --
    Truth welcomes investigation because truth knows investigation will lead
    to converts. It is deception that uses all the other techniques.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 10:21:15 2024
    On 17/12/2024 09:23, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:37:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahhh... the land of the free! We'll see if the long term plans work out. >>> If so, when I retire, I'm coming! Sadly a lot can happen between now and >>> then, but that's part of the charm.

    Choose carefully. Some parts of the land of the free aren't very free.


    Oh yes... I'm starting to realize. There's a prison called California, I
    have heard very sinister things about it!

    No... rural, red and bible tumping generally seems to be the recipe when
    it comes to finding the more free areas of the home of the brave and
    land of the free.

    Yep. I am not religious, but I'd rather live in Utah or Montana that California, these days.


    --
    Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 10:25:19 2024
    On 17/12/2024 09:26, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:51:27 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks
    men can have a vagina.

    Scholz got his vote of no confidence. It will be interesting to see how
    that plays out. Apparently the CDU head isn't a EU fan.


    A colleague at one of my current consulting gigs was very happy to see
    the coalition bust, and joined the green party the next day.

    Yes. a staggering amount of people vote green despite the fact that they
    cant run a pissup at a brewery.


    My prediction is a destruction of the socialists, enormous leaps forward
    for the greens, the extreme left and right, and I suspect they will end
    up with a christian democrat minority government.


    There will always be a few Neonazis and communists (not much difference)
    and Green is the new communist anyway.

    The dividing line is actually between ideological politics and pragmatic politics.

    AS living standard fall people have less time for ideology and moral
    arguments: they want heating in their homes and food on the table.

    I doubt, but would be positively surprised, if they would end up with
    the swedish model of a center government with support from the nationalist/extreme right.

    Not a bad mix IMHO
    I think germany is still too scared of the right to do something like
    that, although it was worked fairly ok in the swedish government constellation, with a good "give and take" between the center and the nationalist right.

    --
    Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 10:28:01 2024
    On 17/12/2024 09:49, D wrote:
    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are
    the most lazy people on the planet.

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed
    on its head at birth
    "This way up" :-)


    Much prefer swedes

    --
    In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
    In practice, there is.
    -- Yogi Berra

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 20:21:58 2024
    On 2024-12-17, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, you can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow. And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is
    not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is tax-free? Sweden special!

    The difference is that in an ordinary savings account, you put in taxed money. In this type of account, your company can put in gross earnings,
    have the capital gains being taxed at only 0.3% (ish) flat fee per year,
    and then when you, the employee, withdraw it, it's taxed as retirement income.

    If you put in your taxed savings into a "kapitalförsäkring" you can withdraw the money tax free, but the flat tax is higher, it's currently 0,888% for 2025.

    What is taxed a 0.3%/year: The capital GAIN (interest) for the year, or
    the accumulated capital value?

    And does "retirement income" have a lower tax rate than "long term
    capital gains"?

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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 20:28:02 2024
    D wrote:

    How did you do the rb/D quoting?

    Its often a sign of messages that have been gatewayed via FidoNet

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Tue Dec 17 20:17:15 2024
    On 2024-12-17, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was
    very beautiful.

    Hand editing in "vi" - my newsreader is "slrn".

    For a while I was using Thunderbird as my newsreader, but since I use a
    variety of computers, it was a nuisance that each device had its own
    "newsrc" file.

    With "slrn", I can "ssh" into one Fedora box, with minimal bandwidth consumption and delay. TigerVNC is not so friendly for that.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 20:36:07 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:36:04 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, I would imagine they have their own. I like the idea of still
    having activities for only men and women. I think those types of spaces
    are severely lacking in todays society, and i think they are extremely beneficial for the development of young men and women.

    Consider some of the stunts we pulled off as Boy Scouts I shudder to think
    of adding girls to the mix. It might improve those winter camping trips
    though.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 20:34:33 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:55:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Hahaha... 100% true! I remember several years ago, it was found out that danish politicians actually paid for train tickets for arabians and sent
    them along to sweden. Absolutely hilarious! I'm telling you, never trust
    the danish!

    You've got to get your kicks in when you can. Denmark has a way of losing territory when it goes to war so subtlety is required.

    I didn't realize there is a 4th season on Netflix but I enjoyed 'Borgen'. Sausage making is so much more fun when you have 9 or 10 parties.

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  • From Computer Nerd Kev@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 06:42:41 2024
    186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    On 12/9/24 8:25 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 9 Dec 2024 13:58:47 -0800, John Ames wrote:

    Any chance of this conversation returning to anything even *slightly*
    more relevant to *nix, computers in general, or, like, *anything* else?
    Maybe I should dig up some old Francis E. Dec rant for a more coherent/
    relevant refresher course...

    Feel free to start a thread.

    Ummmmm ... I just TRIED with the "Bit-Slice" topic.
    Jumped IMMEDIATELY back to 'non-OS/Computer stuff' :-)

    Was HOPING for discussion/insight into 'alternative'
    schemes for 'CPU's and such derived from older solutions.

    For which there are far more relevant newsgroups than
    comp.os.linux.misc to discuss that in too.

    Houston, we have a problem .............

    That an off-topic discussion went further off-topic doesn't
    surprise me much. But I do find it ironic that I lurk in
    groups which are relevant to some of the non-computer
    discussion here, and they've been dead as a doornail for
    years now.

    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 20:56:00 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:30:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Really?! Why was that? Did they have too thick skulls?

    They may have had some really good drugs.

    https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/the-45-acp-history-performance/

    There is a theory that the Norse berserkers where getting into the
    psychedelics too. A little warrior enhancement is ever popular.

    https://theconversation.com/what-is-the-drug-captagon-and-how-is-it- linked-to-syrias-fallen-assad-regime-245935

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 21:01:55 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:42:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Yep... economy is fine. No need for private jets and business class.

    But business class is so nice! Some of the 747s had the upper deck
    outfitted as a lounge.

    https://www.executivetraveller.com/boeing-747-bars-lounges

    The last time I flew on company business I was in the last row on a flying cattle car. The cramped seating was bad enough but when we hit a little turbulence the passenger next to me stopped playing with his tablet and starting searching for a barf bag. Good times!

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 17 21:03:28 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:13:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 20:28, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans

    We dont have subhumans

    Only pakis, wogs, and other endearing terms.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 21:14:08 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:23:54 +0100, D wrote:

    No... rural, red and bible tumping generally seems to be the recipe when
    it comes to finding the more free areas of the home of the brave and
    land of the free.

    I'm live and let live but the bible-thumping in some areas can get
    intense. I had a contract in Indiana. Many of the businesses proudly
    announced they were good Christian businesses - as they tried to screw
    you.

    It's an odd state. The KKK is usually associated with the deep south but
    in the '20s the Klan ran the state.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Klan

    It was toned down when I was there in the '80s but you didn't have to look
    too hard to find remnants.

    There are a lot of churches in Montana and several of my friends are
    active but you don't get the same feeling. Roman Catholics are the largest denomination but that's a little misleading as there are about 10,000 protestant denominations that aren't lumped together.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 21:28:26 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:53:31 +0100, D wrote:

    If you ever go to Stockholm, stay within the city center, and only walk
    on the well lit mainstreets at night.

    I've have several friends who got mugged or assaulted at night in the
    city center by the arabian gangs.

    That applies to many large US cities but so far Arabs aren't the real
    problem. Even high profile events like the Boston Marathon bombing, while Islamist, was carried out by Chechens.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 21:23:06 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:22:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for
    the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've seen
    an episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really enjoys criminal shows.

    I didn't know it had become a TV series. Amazon has it for $18 for the
    first year. I'll have to try it when I finish the 'Leverage' series.

    'Leverage' is sort of apropos. It's a team of grifters and thieves that
    take down people like corrupt insurance CEOs. They don't shoot them but
    expose them and clean out their accounts to reimburse those that they
    screwed.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 21:38:03 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:49:05 +0100, D wrote:

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are
    the most lazy people on the planet.

    I read an article a while back that many young Swedes went to Norway when
    they couldn't find work at home. They found employment peeling bananas.

    https://www.ateriet.com/banos-spreadable-banana-taste-test/

    I've been known to mash a banana on bread but this seems a bit extreme.

    I wonder what Norway will do when the North Sea oil fields dry up?

    I did find it amusing that Norway housed some of its immigrants in an off season resort -- somewhere north of the Arctic Circle. Welcome to sunny
    Norway!

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 17 21:41:15 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:28:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed
    on its head at birth "This way up"

    The Danes improved the British gene pool.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danelaw

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 22:31:15 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:47:01 +0100, D wrote:


    There are two neobanks, Avanza and Nordnet who are just about to take
    their first stumbling steps outside of the swedish market. They are
    quite alright as well.

    Probably the best known sort-of Swedish companies in the US are IKEA and
    Volvo. I guess IKEA moved to the Netherlands. I'm not sure about Volvo
    these days. Then there was Saab... I had a girlfriend who drove a 96, one
    of the early ones that left a cloud behind it like a chainsaw.

    Then there were the art house movies like 'I Am Curious Yellow' and
    Bergman's stuff. When she was 12 my wife's parents took her to see 'The
    Virgin Spring' under the misconception that it was some sort of Disney
    nature film. I do like that one the best. So much for turn the other
    cheek.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMJ58Q5fx_4

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  • From Chris Ahlstrom@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 17 18:41:18 2024
    Lars Poulsen wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    On 2024-12-17, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was
    very beautiful.

    Hand editing in "vi" - my newsreader is "slrn".

    For a while I was using Thunderbird as my newsreader, but since I use a variety of computers, it was a nuisance that each device had its own
    "newsrc" file.

    With "slrn", I can "ssh" into one Fedora box, with minimal bandwidth consumption and delay. TigerVNC is not so friendly for that.

    That's what I'm doing now.

    --
    Earth Tones:
    A youthful subgroup interested in vegetarianism, tie-dyed
    outfits, mild recreational drugs, and good stereo equipment. Earnest, frequently lacking in humor.
    -- Douglas Coupland, "Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated
    Culture"

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 00:31:05 2024
    On 2024-12-17, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:36:04 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, I would imagine they have their own. I like the idea of still
    having activities for only men and women. I think those types of spaces
    are severely lacking in todays society, and i think they are extremely
    beneficial for the development of young men and women.

    Consider some of the stunts we pulled off as Boy Scouts I shudder to think
    of adding girls to the mix. It might improve those winter camping trips though.

    (to the tune of "The Battle of New Orleans")

    We're the boys from Camp Cucamonga
    Our mothers sent us here to study nature's ways
    We learned to make sparks by running stick together
    And if we find the girls' camp we'll set the woods ablaze

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 17 23:40:53 2024
    On 12/17/24 1:43 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On 17 Dec 2024 04:34:14 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    The thought of doing long division in Roman numerals fills me with
    dread--let along manually doing finite element analysis.

    I wonder how many little tricks they had? I've worked with carpenters who didn't know squat about the Pythagorean theorem or Euclidean geometry but they certainly knew about 3-4-5 triangles and such.

    I used to play with using Roman numerals for lots
    of things. Fun - but let's say I don't rec it for
    any purpose. The Babylonian base-60 system is yet
    another one to avoid ... even though old Greek
    scientists converted their terrible math system
    to Babylonian to do real calx, and then back to
    the crap system for 'publications'.

    The Roman system isn't illogical ... but it's really
    meant for smaller/simpler numbers.

    As for 'tricks' ... builders especially had many,
    usually based on geometry.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 23:56:26 2024
    On 12/17/24 4:49 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/16/24 4:18 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 00:04:19 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/15/24 5:10 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 14:08:24 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My boss and I looked out and saw that there were no engineer jobs >>>>>>> available in town; LM Ericsson had just closed their US Internet >>>>>>> group and put 300 Internet engineers on the street. So he asked if I >>>>>>> would be willing to join him in a startup.

    A friend got caught in the Marconi to Ericcson transition. It was fun >>>>>> while it lasted.


    Ahh Ericsson... the only company on the planet that makes the
    government look and feel like a startup with hipsters!

        Hey - Nordic - a different way of thinking. Don't be a bigot
    now  :-)

    Hey, Nordic Semiconductor does fine work -- but they're Norwegians, not
    Swedes.


     FYI ... Norway, Sweden, Finland and often Denmark are
     generically referred to as "The Nordics". There is
     enough shared culture & history to kinda make them a
     distinctive cultural group.

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are
    the most lazy people on the planet.

    Hey, I'm 50% Dane ... probably more since they did so
    much ravishing in England.

    Norway, well, not much to DO there ... hard to get
    very motivated. Just watch the tide come in and out
    in the fiords ... :-)

    Now, are you interested in a slightly used fishing
    trawler ... excellent condition I promise ......


     As for the BUSINESS SENSIBILITY of Ericsson, well ...


    Oh, listening to the Bloomberg financial channel today,
    Denmark has RUN OUT OF LABOR. Orders for products have
    had to be delayed/cut. It's kinda at an economic peak
    unless they outsource or, horrors, import hordes of
    barbarians. Most of the 1st-world is like this now ...
    success spawned the idea that you don't NEED to make
    ten kiddies - so now many make NONE. Extinctions can
    take many forms.

    And Novo Nordisk is like 60% of the economy ... one
    little glitch there and .......

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 00:05:27 2024
    On 12/17/24 4:41 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:28:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed
    on its head at birth "This way up"

    The Danes improved the British gene pool.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danelaw


    Agreed there ... the old Brits were an ugly lot :-)

    Actually, hard to tell what a "Brit" actually IS.
    It's one of those countries occupied/invaded by
    SO many entities over the ages that nobody really
    has a claim.

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil
    named 'Cheddar Man' - turned out to be a 'black'
    African who apparently sailed up the Spanish and
    finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
    as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Oldest living lines ... probably somewhere in Wales.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 00:16:46 2024
    On 12/14/24 5:07 PM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book
    from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a
    worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that
    business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that,
    and
    found the business part very tedious.


    This is a very powerful mindset I've had my entire working life. I think
    more people who are employed, should think of themselves as one man entrepreurs, as you say, you are the one with value, and shop around as
    you would if you ran your own business.

    As for having my own business, yes, the accounting is tedious, but I pay about 400 EUR per month to get that done for me.

    This is also something I tell everyone who wants to start their own
    business. For the love of god, outsource all accounting as quickly as possible.

    This is a productive philosophy - assuming you have
    the Right People. (Almost) independent agents can be
    highly productive and inventive. It takes only a light
    hand to kinda infuse them with 'the mission'.

    Alas most managers, knowing they're crap, go for the
    heavy dictatorial hand as psychological compensation ...

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 07:09:33 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar
    Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up
    the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just as
    the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 10:00:31 2024
    On 18/12/2024 05:05, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/17/24 4:41 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:28:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed
    on its head at birth "This way up"

    The Danes improved the British gene pool.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danelaw


      Agreed there ... the old Brits were an ugly lot  :-)

      Actually, hard to tell what a "Brit" actually IS.
      It's one of those countries occupied/invaded by
      SO many entities over the ages that nobody really
      has a claim.

      The first known human on the island - a cave fossil
      named 'Cheddar Man' - turned out to be a 'black'
      African who apparently sailed up the Spanish and
      finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
      as the ice age was starting to thaw.

      Oldest living lines ... probably somewhere in Wales.

    I think the red woman is the oldest - pre ice age.

    1." Dating to around 480,000 years ago during the Middle Pleistocene,
    the Boxgrove fossils are the oldest human remains discovered in the UK
    and were identified as most likely belonging to the ancient human
    species Homo heidelbergensis."

    But not homo sap.

    2." Our own species is a relative newcomer to Britain. The earliest
    direct evidence is a jaw fragment found in Kent's Cavern, Devon.
    Scientific analysis estimated it to be at least 40,000 years old."

    No mention of skin colours or ethnicity is made and none are available.
    Fair skin and blue eyes are simply adaptation to low levels of sunlight.



    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain remained
    brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about 12,000 years
    ago.
    --
    A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on
    its shoes.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 10:01:12 2024
    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar
    Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up
    the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just as
    the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    --
    A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on
    its shoes.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 09:53:31 2024
    On 17/12/2024 21:03, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:13:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 20:28, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans

    We dont have subhumans

    Only pakis, wogs, and other endearing terms.

    No Brit ever uses those terms, not since about 1960
    And even then they weren't an indication of inferiority, just difference

    Especially paki, which these days is pretty much as friendly as an
    Australian saying 'bugger'

    As in 'he's a good bugger..'

    Only in the isolated USA whose contact with the rest of the world was deliberately curtailed in 1783, has the idea of racial superiority,
    rather than racial or ethnic or really *cultural* difference, survived.




    --
    The New Left are the people they warned you about.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Wed Dec 18 19:48:25 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    This is a very good point! I read today that a 21 day ban on smartphones in
    UK schools resulted in better psychological health/well being, and better >>>> sleep, and a 3% memory improvement.

    Today's kiddies are plagued by 'social' and political
    BS which constantly tries to twist their brains into
    knots. For SM it means PROFIT ... for political interests
    it's produced a gen of near-psychotics which can be
    twisted around the proverbial finger.

    This is the truth. I see it in the class room every single day. If the exam is
    hard, they would never dream of working harder or study more. Instead they >> complain to the school that the teacher is evil, and refuse to take the exam >> until it is made easier.

    I wonder how some of these pansies would have responded to the digital
    logic design exams I had long ago in university. The prof. told
    everyone the rules up front: open book, open notes, and the kicker: an
    exam suitable for a 70min period, but we had 50min to take it.

    Haha, they would have died. ;)

    I vaguely remember my digital electronics exam. You had to design some
    kind of memory I think, by hand, drawing all the gates and stuff. Good
    times! The analog electronics exam though, was horrible! ;)

    After the first one, I worked out why the "70min in 50min time slot".
    The digital logic design problems that were suitable for a pencil and
    paper exam had a hard complexity knee at about the 4-5 bits point. 4-5
    bits or less and one could solve the Karnaugh maps on paper by hand.
    And even 5 bits was 'pushing it', paper complexity wise. Anything
    beyond was in the realm of "you now need a computer solver for this".
    So all the problems on the exams ended up being /easy enough/
    (relatively speaking) that 50min of problems in 50min of exam time
    meant that nearly the entire class would score 95+ (out of 100). So to separate out those who truly understood from those just getting by
    required "too many problems" to solve in time. The good students had
    no problem finishing a 70min exam in 50 minutes and scoring 95+ on them (myself and another classmate named Scott proved that fact). The "ok" students would get most of the exam done, and score in the 75-90 range.
    And the actual mediocre students would be the ones scoring the sub 75
    scores because they cracked open the book (and if you needed to crack
    open the book, it meant you were not going to score well on the exam,
    making the whole "open book, open note" rule moot).

    There was bitching and moaning on the part of the mediocre students
    after each exam, but nothing changed because of their bitching and
    moaning.

    I do this in another course. 45 questions in 60 minutes. If you need to
    google stuff, you won't have time to finish the exam.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 19:51:53 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 17/12/2024 09:23, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 10:37:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahhh... the land of the free! We'll see if the long term plans work out. >>>> If so, when I retire, I'm coming! Sadly a lot can happen between now and >>>> then, but that's part of the charm.

    Choose carefully. Some parts of the land of the free aren't very free.


    Oh yes... I'm starting to realize. There's a prison called California, I
    have heard very sinister things about it!

    No... rural, red and bible tumping generally seems to be the recipe when it >> comes to finding the more free areas of the home of the brave and land of
    the free.

    Yep. I am not religious, but I'd rather live in Utah or Montana that California, these days.

    This is the truth! I have nothing against the mormons I meet. I think
    perhaps they are more afraid to discuss philosophy with me, than I am of
    them! ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 19:54:30 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 17/12/2024 09:26, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:51:27 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    In Europe the EU is completely clueless and even the UK which had re
    temerity to leave it is now being led back into it my a man who thinks >>>> men can have a vagina.

    Scholz got his vote of no confidence. It will be interesting to see how
    that plays out. Apparently the CDU head isn't a EU fan.


    A colleague at one of my current consulting gigs was very happy to see the >> coalition bust, and joined the green party the next day.

    Yes. a staggering amount of people vote green despite the fact that they cant run a pissup at a brewery.

    This is the truth! Fun fact, in sweden, the green party was briefly
    infiltrated by an moslem extremist sect.

    My prediction is a destruction of the socialists, enormous leaps forward
    for the greens, the extreme left and right, and I suspect they will end up >> with a christian democrat minority government.


    There will always be a few Neonazis and communists (not much difference) and Green is the new communist anyway.

    The dividing line is actually between ideological politics and pragmatic politics.

    AS living standard fall people have less time for ideology and moral arguments: they want heating in their homes and food on the table.

    Yes, this is the important truth that all mainstream politicians of today
    have completely forgotten. The first mainstream politician to rediscover
    this fact, will probably be a successful mainstream politician.

    I doubt, but would be positively surprised, if they would end up with the
    swedish model of a center government with support from the
    nationalist/extreme right.

    Not a bad mix IMHO

    It works alright in sweden at the moment. Stricter immigration, the
    start of a new nuclear project and slightly lower taxes. Otherwise,
    nothing big has been done the past 2 years.

    I think germany is still too scared of the right to do something like that, >> although it was worked fairly ok in the swedish government constellation,
    with a good "give and take" between the center and the nationalist right.



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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 19:56:26 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 17/12/2024 09:49, D wrote:
    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden
    once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it again!
    As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are the most >> lazy people on the planet.

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed on its head at birth
    "This way up" :-)

    Haha, sounds just like the danish! ;) The best thing with the danish is
    their humour (much more politically incorrect than swedish humour).

    Much prefer swedes

    Same here!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Wed Dec 18 19:58:57 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-17, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was
    very beautiful.

    Hand editing in "vi" - my newsreader is "slrn".

    Ahh... gods own editor! I understand.

    For a while I was using Thunderbird as my newsreader, but since I use a variety of computers, it was a nuisance that each device had its own
    "newsrc" file.

    With "slrn", I can "ssh" into one Fedora box, with minimal bandwidth consumption and delay. TigerVNC is not so friendly for that.

    This is the truth. You are a wise man!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Wed Dec 18 20:03:04 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-17, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, you can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow. And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is tax-free? Sweden special!

    The difference is that in an ordinary savings account, you put in taxed
    money. In this type of account, your company can put in gross earnings,
    have the capital gains being taxed at only 0.3% (ish) flat fee per year,
    and then when you, the employee, withdraw it, it's taxed as retirement
    income.

    If you put in your taxed savings into a "kapitalförsäkring" you can
    withdraw the money tax free, but the flat tax is higher, it's currently
    0,888% for 2025.

    What is taxed a 0.3%/year: The capital GAIN (interest) for the year, or
    the accumulated capital value?

    Sorry for being unclear. The accumulated capital value is taxed at a flat
    rate per year.

    And does "retirement income" have a lower tax rate than "long term
    capital gains"?

    No. Retirement income is taxed as salary. Long term capital gains are
    taxed at either 30% (gains after sale, old system) or around 0.3%
    (foundation) or 0.8% insurance. Insurance you can take out the money
    without tax, and I think when you withdraw from a foundation, it is taxed
    as income.

    If you move abroad, you can get a flat 25% retirement income tax. There
    are also I think double taxation agreements that can be used to lower the
    tax on retirement income as well but I do not have details here.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:04:20 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:55:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Hahaha... 100% true! I remember several years ago, it was found out that
    danish politicians actually paid for train tickets for arabians and sent
    them along to sweden. Absolutely hilarious! I'm telling you, never trust
    the danish!

    You've got to get your kicks in when you can. Denmark has a way of losing territory when it goes to war so subtlety is required.

    True! ;)

    I didn't realize there is a 4th season on Netflix but I enjoyed 'Borgen'. Sausage making is so much more fun when you have 9 or 10 parties.

    Hmm, never seen. Maybe I should have a look?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Wed Dec 18 20:03:33 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, Andy Burns wrote:

    D wrote:

    How did you do the rb/D quoting?

    Its often a sign of messages that have been gatewayed via FidoNet


    Hmm, does Fidonet have a different built in quoting system?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:05:20 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:36:04 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, I would imagine they have their own. I like the idea of still
    having activities for only men and women. I think those types of spaces
    are severely lacking in todays society, and i think they are extremely
    beneficial for the development of young men and women.

    Consider some of the stunts we pulled off as Boy Scouts I shudder to think
    of adding girls to the mix. It might improve those winter camping trips though.


    True. The only way to survive cold, arctic nights without any fire or
    heating, is passionate, loving sex. When practicing that, the argument is strong for mixed scout troops!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:09:00 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:30:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Really?! Why was that? Did they have too thick skulls?

    They may have had some really good drugs.

    https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/the-45-acp-history-performance/

    There is a theory that the Norse berserkers where getting into the psychedelics too. A little warrior enhancement is ever popular.

    https://theconversation.com/what-is-the-drug-captagon-and-how-is-it- linked-to-syrias-fallen-assad-regime-245935

    Interesting! I thought the secret behind the norse berserkers, were their militantly feminist wives. Once they managed to go on a roadtrip (or boat
    trip) they could finally release all their bottled up anger! ;)

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 19:11:53 2024
    On 18/12/2024 19:09, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:30:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Really?! Why was that? Did they have too thick skulls?

    They may have had some really good drugs.

    https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/the-45-acp-history-performance/

    There is a theory that the Norse berserkers where getting into the
    psychedelics too. A little warrior enhancement is ever popular.

    https://theconversation.com/what-is-the-drug-captagon-and-how-is-it-
    linked-to-syrias-fallen-assad-regime-245935

    Interesting! I thought the secret behind the norse berserkers, were
    their militantly feminist wives. Once they managed to go on a roadtrip
    (or boat trip) they could finally release all their bottled up anger! ;)

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Relief from nagging Nordic nannies sounds about right tho.


    --
    Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 19:11:32 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar
    Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up
    the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
    as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-briton- cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    The rest of the article is pay walled but if you read other sources there
    is waffling on the skin color although 'black' generates better headlines.
    Even Wikipedia is more balanced.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hunter-gatherer#Physical_appearance

    When you're looking for specific alleles of SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in ancient
    DNA there is room for interpretation.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-ancient-ape-trkiye-story-human.html

    Chris Stringer's Just So stories may become yesterday's news. Wolpoff and Caspari challenged that theory about 30 years ago, partially because
    Stringer's time line wasn't realistic.

    Perhaps they will revisit the M haplogroup which has long been an anomaly.
    The Just So story says L3 left Africa and mutated to M subclades of which
    are common in Asia, including the Indian subcontinent. Except M1, which
    is found in North Africa. Did some M people on their way to Japan get
    homesick and go back to Africa?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:12:49 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:42:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Yep... economy is fine. No need for private jets and business class.

    But business class is so nice! Some of the 747s had the upper deck
    outfitted as a lounge.

    https://www.executivetraveller.com/boeing-747-bars-lounges

    The last time I flew on company business I was in the last row on a flying cattle car. The cramped seating was bad enough but when we hit a little turbulence the passenger next to me stopped playing with his tablet and starting searching for a barf bag. Good times!

    My father worked all his life in the airline business, so from time to
    time I've travelled on the upper deck, and for some reason, don't ask me
    why, I've been upgraded randomly as well. Last time I travelled business
    was to japan, but I paid for it myself, since I refuse to fly longer than
    6-8 hours unless I can lie down and sleep. My wife forced me to go to
    japan, so I forced us to travel business. Yes, I basically punished
    myself, since I had to pay for her in the end. ;)

    What is fun being an IT guy, is that apparently I do not look like I
    belong in business class. So on that tedious flight to japan, I had to go
    on a walk to stretch my legs. So 2-3 times I walk the length of the plane.
    I went to the back, then went to the front, and the flight attendant
    stopped me, and said I had to go back to economy class and that this was
    for business only.

    I proved to her that I belonged, and this wonderful japanese little flight attendant basically melted through the floor in shame. Then I didn't see
    he for the rest of the flight. =D

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:19:05 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:22:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for
    the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've seen
    an episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really enjoys
    criminal shows.

    I didn't know it had become a TV series. Amazon has it for $18 for the
    first year. I'll have to try it when I finish the 'Leverage' series.

    'Leverage' is sort of apropos. It's a team of grifters and thieves that
    take down people like corrupt insurance CEOs. They don't shoot them but expose them and clean out their accounts to reimburse those that they screwed.

    I'm currently watching Pantheon. It is animated, but I find it quite well researched when it comes to the transhumanist theme of mind uploading. I suspect the second season will not be as good as the first, and towards
    the end the quality dropped. But it has a good start!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:15:23 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:13:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 16/12/2024 20:28, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 11:56:59 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    What else could they do? Kill 30% of the nation for having cheered
    Hitler on? For believing in German racial supremacy and the subhuman
    nature of Romanians Jews Poles and other Bolsheviks?

    Considering Brits have their own opinions on subhumans

    We dont have subhumans

    Only pakis, wogs, and other endearing terms.


    Enjoy this classic from the office!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlQM4U3qUDI

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8LjOJZGiW8 .

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:17:49 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:23:54 +0100, D wrote:

    No... rural, red and bible tumping generally seems to be the recipe when
    it comes to finding the more free areas of the home of the brave and
    land of the free.

    I'm live and let live but the bible-thumping in some areas can get
    intense. I had a contract in Indiana. Many of the businesses proudly announced they were good Christian businesses - as they tried to screw
    you.

    Brings back good memories of debating abortion with good, honest, god
    fearing republicans when I was studying one year in Chicago.

    It's an odd state. The KKK is usually associated with the deep south but
    in the '20s the Klan ran the state.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Klan

    It was toned down when I was there in the '80s but you didn't have to look too hard to find remnants.

    Again, comp.os.linux.misc is the best place to learn history! =)

    There are a lot of churches in Montana and several of my friends are
    active but you don't get the same feeling. Roman Catholics are the largest denomination but that's a little misleading as there are about 10,000 protestant denominations that aren't lumped together.

    Divide and conquer! Do you not fear the the protestants will unite?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:20:41 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:53:31 +0100, D wrote:

    If you ever go to Stockholm, stay within the city center, and only walk
    on the well lit mainstreets at night.

    I've have several friends who got mugged or assaulted at night in the
    city center by the arabian gangs.

    That applies to many large US cities but so far Arabs aren't the real problem. Even high profile events like the Boston Marathon bombing, while Islamist, was carried out by Chechens.


    Interesting! Very few chechens in sweden. I wonder how on earth sweden
    managed to avoid those? I saw in the news the other day that a mosque in Gothenburg hand't out scarfs to arabian children with terrorist propaganda against israel.

    When confronted by the media, they explained that the guy who did that
    just visited, and no one knew him and he was not a member. Yeah right....!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:28:59 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:47:01 +0100, D wrote:


    There are two neobanks, Avanza and Nordnet who are just about to take
    their first stumbling steps outside of the swedish market. They are
    quite alright as well.

    Probably the best known sort-of Swedish companies in the US are IKEA and Volvo. I guess IKEA moved to the Netherlands. I'm not sure about Volvo

    No, no, no... way too simple! Some parts of ikea are owned by a dutch foundation, that foundation, somehow is controlled by a foundation in Liechtenstein. Could be that there's a branch of it in switzerland. One of those foundations owns the Ikea brand, and they charge the local companies
    that run the stores massive amounts for the right to use their own brand,
    and thereby collect profits in holland and liechtenstein where they are no taxed. Kamprad was a brilliant man! Sadly I do not have the billions
    required for such a solution to work.

    But...

    The Wallenberg family, one of the richest families in the world, also make heavy use of a family foundation to reduce taxes. This is an inheritance
    from when sweden was super socialist, so the only way they could protect
    the family fortune, and avoid splitting it up due to inheritance laws, was
    to make a non-profit foundation, and make sure it is staffed by family
    members. They've been at it for 6 generations now.

    these days. Then there was Saab... I had a girlfriend who drove a 96, one
    of the early ones that left a cloud behind it like a chainsaw.

    Then there were the art house movies like 'I Am Curious Yellow' and
    Bergman's stuff. When she was 12 my wife's parents took her to see 'The Virgin Spring' under the misconception that it was some sort of Disney
    nature film. I do like that one the best. So much for turn the other
    cheek.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMJ58Q5fx_4

    My favourite Bergman is Fanny och Alexander. Det sjunde inseglet is quite alright as well.

    The danish has Lars von Trier, the ultra-troll och ultra-troll! I love his humor and mastery of trolling at a global level! Amazing!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:24:44 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:49:05 +0100, D wrote:

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden
    once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are
    the most lazy people on the planet.

    I read an article a while back that many young Swedes went to Norway when they couldn't find work at home. They found employment peeling bananas.

    https://www.ateriet.com/banos-spreadable-banana-taste-test/

    This is the truth! Well, I don't know about the banana business, but many
    low paying service jobs in norway, that the norwegians don't want to do
    are filled with swedish youth, who in comparison, are seen as diligent and
    hart working!

    Also swedish nurses double their salaries when moving to norway, and
    sweden backfills with arabians who hardly speak the language. There have
    been many examples of old people not understanding what their arabian
    doctor or nurse are saying.

    The good thing is that the current center/nationalist government I think
    made it possible for old people to demand to have a doctor they can
    understand. Under the previous socialist government, this was seen as
    racist and possibly punished.

    I've been known to mash a banana on bread but this seems a bit extreme.

    I wonder what Norway will do when the North Sea oil fields dry up?

    The country will collapse back into a being a small fishing village. ;)
    Once norway proposed to trade part of its oil fields for shares in Volvo. Sweden, at the height of its modern power, laughed and refused. It makes
    me very sad. =(

    I did find it amusing that Norway housed some of its immigrants in an off season resort -- somewhere north of the Arctic Circle. Welcome to sunny Norway!

    Sounds just like norway! Another norwegian classic... in order to fight congestion, you can only drive in the fast lane if you're 2 people or more during rush hour. The crafty norwegians love their au paires, and took
    them with them to work, so they can save time, and then sent them home
    with the car, and again to pick them up at work, so they can drive two in
    the car in the fast lane!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 20:31:16 2024
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    take many forms.

    And Novo Nordisk is like 60% of the economy ... one
    little glitch there and .......


    This is the truth! Novo nordisk, maers and tuborg/carlsberg. Remove those, and you have removed all of denmarks economy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 20:34:20 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/17/24 4:41 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:28:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed
    on its head at birth "This way up"

    The Danes improved the British gene pool.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danelaw


    Agreed there ... the old Brits were an ugly lot :-)

    Actually, hard to tell what a "Brit" actually IS.
    It's one of those countries occupied/invaded by
    SO many entities over the ages that nobody really
    has a claim.

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil
    named 'Cheddar Man' - turned out to be a 'black'
    African who apparently sailed up the Spanish and
    finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
    as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Oldest living lines ... probably somewhere in Wales.


    It is very fascinating. I have had a lot of colleagues from the UK over
    the years, and it is a diverse collection. Once I had a colleague from
    northern scotland, and over a bad IP-phone line it was impossible to
    understand him. He has something in his mouth I suspect.

    Then I had a colleague who was ginger, and it was acceptable and expected
    to make fun of him. Of course I heartily joined!

    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they are horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    Is this true?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 18 20:36:39 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/14/24 5:07 PM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 14 Dec 2024 12:20:58 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like a good man! You should keep him!

    I don't think it was 'What Color is your Parachute' but there was a book >>> from the '70s that had a punchline like 'How to hire an employer.' It's a >>> worthwhile way to think. They're not hiring you, you're finding
    corporation that will provide a sales force, accountants, and all that
    business cruft while you happily write code.

    Many people dream of having their own business. Been there, done that, and >>> found the business part very tedious.


    This is a very powerful mindset I've had my entire working life. I think
    more people who are employed, should think of themselves as one man
    entrepreurs, as you say, you are the one with value, and shop around as you >> would if you ran your own business.

    As for having my own business, yes, the accounting is tedious, but I pay
    about 400 EUR per month to get that done for me.

    This is also something I tell everyone who wants to start their own
    business. For the love of god, outsource all accounting as quickly as
    possible.

    This is a productive philosophy - assuming you have
    the Right People. (Almost) independent agents can be
    highly productive and inventive. It takes only a light
    hand to kinda infuse them with 'the mission'.

    Alas most managers, knowing they're crap, go for the
    heavy dictatorial hand as psychological compensation ...

    My company is very decentralized and relies a lot of distributed decision making. I only have sub-contractors, so they all have their own customers,
    and are therefore entrepreneurs. This offloads me, and makes the entire operation very efficient!

    We do make it a point to meet physically 2 times per year. The rest of the time, we're 100% virtual and mostly email driven with occasional video
    calls and chats (quite rarely unless we come together several of us on the
    same project which happens a couple of times per year).

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 20:15:04 2024
    On 18/12/2024 19:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar >>>> Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up >>>> the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just >>>> as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.


    Then why call him a black African...

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-briton- cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific
    content. Its har left antd this is probably part of some 'critical race
    theory' bullshit



    The rest of the article is pay walled but if you read other sources there
    is waffling on the skin color although 'black' generates better headlines. Even Wikipedia is more balanced.

    Exactly

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hunter-gatherer#Physical_appearance

    When you're looking for specific alleles of SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in ancient DNA there is room for interpretation.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-ancient-ape-trkiye-story-human.html

    Chris Stringer's Just So stories may become yesterday's news. Wolpoff and Caspari challenged that theory about 30 years ago, partially because Stringer's time line wasn't realistic.

    Perhaps they will revisit the M haplogroup which has long been an anomaly. The Just So story says L3 left Africa and mutated to M subclades of which
    are common in Asia, including the Indian subcontinent. Except M1, which
    is found in North Africa. Did some M people on their way to Japan get homesick and go back to Africa?

    Every body wandered around and banged anything that moved.

    --
    "Strange as it seems, no amount of learning can cure stupidity, and
    higher education positively fortifies it."

    - Stephen Vizinczey

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 20:17:36 2024
    On 18/12/2024 19:34, D wrote:
    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they are horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    Is this true?

    It has been known....
    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as
    foolish, and by the rulers as useful.

    (Seneca the Younger, 65 AD)

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 21:22:18 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:51:53 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! I have nothing against the mormons I meet. I think
    perhaps they are more afraid to discuss philosophy with me, than I am of them!

    Once they get past the missionary phase. It's been years since they
    ventured into my part of the woods but I opened the door to find three Mormonettes. The guys go in pairs but apparently they think they need
    three for the girls.

    Evanston Wyoming has a rather nice historical museum. Like most of the
    railroad towns the Chinese played a large part. I called an exhibit to the attention of a Chinese woman that I thought might interest her. We got to talking and eventually went out to a picnic table. She asked if I knew
    anything about my ancestry, which I took to be a Chinese thing. Nope, she
    was a Mormon and they're big on genealogy so they can retroactively
    baptize their ancestors. She was headed to Salt Lake as was I and she
    invited me to attend a service with her. She was cute, but I passed.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 21:38:25 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:20:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Very few chechens in sweden. I wonder how on earth sweden managed to avoid those? I saw in the news the other day that a mosque in Gothenburg hand't out scarfs to arabian children with terrorist
    propaganda against israel.

    They're rare in the US also.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/19/chechens-immigrants- us-population/2097065/

    Other non-Arab Muslims are more prevalent.

    https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2019/1028/Refugees-poured-into-my-state.- Here-s-how-it-changed-me

    I lived in a small Maine town for a couple of years in the late '70s.
    While it sometimes seemed like a chapter out of a Stephen King novel
    diversity had not struck.

    The Somalis were first settled in Atlanta GA which was closer to Somalia's climate than Maine but the Africans didn't get along with the African- Americans very well. It's done wonders for Leweiston's soccer team.

    I'm not sure how the Somalis wound up in Minnesota. For most of the 19th
    and early 20th centuries it was the target of Swedes, Norwegians, and
    Germans.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 22:28:05 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:54:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, this is the important truth that all mainstream politicians of
    today have completely forgotten. The first mainstream politician to rediscover this fact, will probably be a successful mainstream
    politician.

    Bill Clinton got a lot of miles out of James Carville's 'It's the
    economy, stupid.'

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 22:21:04 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:17:49 +0100, D wrote:


    Brings back good memories of debating abortion with good, honest, god
    fearing republicans when I was studying one year in Chicago.

    I avoid that topic. I will say when my wife called me at work one day and
    said 'I think I'm pregnant.', my first thoughts weren't 'Wonderful! I'll
    be a father!' False alarm.

    Divide and conquer! Do you not fear the the protestants will unite?

    Not a chance. Even the mainline denominations are splitting up.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/nov/20/united-methodist- congregations-lgbtq-same-sex-marriage-ban

    That's often a factor although there can be more arcane reasons. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is the largest but there is also
    the second largest Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod that goes back to 1847
    with roots in the Kingdom of Saxony and ultimately goes back to how
    seriously they take the 1580 'Book of Concord'.

    Many of the evangelical churches are more about personalities than
    theology. A friend who died last year used to fill me in on the various scandals and schisms on the local scene. His flavor was 'Smith's Friends'

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunstad_Christian_Church

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 23:14:58 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:11:53 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Henbane has been mentioned too. Gruit made with henbane, marsh rosemary,
    and other potentially psychoactive substances must have made for
    interesting barroom fights. Supposedly the purity act substituted hops for
    its calming, an-aphrodisiac effects. I wonder how the IPA craze works into that?

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 22:41:27 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:09:00 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! I thought the secret behind the norse berserkers, were
    their militantly feminist wives. Once they managed to go on a roadtrip
    (or boat trip) they could finally release all their bottled up anger!

    You may be on to something.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freyd%C3%ADs_Eir%C3%ADksd%C3%B3ttir

    She would make a a long trip to Miklagard very appealing. fwiw I gave up
    on Netflix's reboot of 'Vikings: Valhalla' after two episodes. Freydis and
    Leif showing up in the fictional Kattegat run by the black female jarl
    jumped more sharks than there are in the South Pacific.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 23:24:51 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:12:49 +0100, D wrote:

    What is fun being an IT guy, is that apparently I do not look like I
    belong in business class. So on that tedious flight to japan, I had to
    go on a walk to stretch my legs. So 2-3 times I walk the length of the
    plane.
    I went to the back, then went to the front, and the flight attendant
    stopped me, and said I had to go back to economy class and that this was
    for business only.

    I've never fit the profile. I think it was '69 when my wife and I were
    flying out of Memphis. I had a beard, ponytail, and leather jacket and she
    sort of looked like a hippy chick. The stewardess came back to us barely
    able to suppress her giggles. "The lady up there thinks you're going to
    hijack the plane to Cuba. You aren't going to, are you?"

    Many years later the beard and ponytail are sort of gray and I have a
    different leather jacket but not much else has changed.

    That's my problem with the new sardine cans. I can barely walk when it's
    time to deplane and that's on a two or three hour domestic flight.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 23:32:24 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:34:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Then I had a colleague who was ginger, and it was acceptable and
    expected to make fun of him. Of course I heartily joined!

    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they are horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    It was a very long time ago when I read Donleavy's 'The Ginger Man'. That
    put a different twist on it.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 23:48:57 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:28:59 +0100, D wrote:

    My favourite Bergman is Fanny och Alexander. Det sjunde inseglet is
    quite alright as well

    I've never seen 'Fanny och Alexander'. 'The Seventh Seal' was a bit
    weird. I vaguely recall 'Höstsonaten' and 'Vargtimmen'. 'Jungfrukällan'
    is the only one I've seen relatively recently.

    Have you seen 'Kristin Lavransdatter'? I was reminded of it because of
    Liv Ullmann.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 21:49:57 2024
    On 12/18/24 2:31 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     take many forms.

     And Novo Nordisk is like 60% of the economy ... one
     little glitch there and .......


    This is the truth! Novo nordisk, maers and tuborg/carlsberg. Remove
    those, and
    you have removed all of denmarks economy.


    There's an old adage about eggs and baskets ...

    At least those three industries are 'diverse', so
    one COULD fail without everyone starving.

    It should probably be NN since nobody there will
    need Ozempic when they're half-starving :-)

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 21:56:21 2024
    On 12/18/24 2:09 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar
    Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up
    the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just as
    the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.


    Possible - though Cheddar is in the southwest, long walk.

    The last specks of Doggerland are now going under and will
    probably remain that way for thousands of years unless we
    get another a meteor hit and everything re-freezes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 22:03:07 2024
    On 12/18/24 5:01 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar >>>     Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up >>>     the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just as >>>     the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    It is also said he was 'west Euro' - although
    that's a vague def, and the Beaker People upset
    the whole equation later on. People Stuff is
    always messy.

    Thing is, there have been odd genetic/physiotype
    mixes found from around those times. Likely the
    ice melt encouraged a lot of people to wander
    around.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 23:02:45 2024
    On 12/18/24 3:15 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 19:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

         The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named
    'Cheddar
         Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently
    sailed up
         the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
         as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.


    Then why call him a black African...

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-briton-
    cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific
    content. Its har left antd this is probably part of some 'critical race theory' bullshit


    At least partially true ... don't take their stuff
    at face value, there are clearly agendas mixed in.

    Used to take the biggies - Science and Nature - but
    eventually lost the patience to read through them.
    Sigma Xi's "American Scientist" is more friendly.

    And FORGET "Scientific American" - first it dumbed-down
    a bit and then went far left and I don't think it can be
    redeemed. Extinction followed by a name-ripoff resurrection
    is the only hope. Such a pity.

    But ... in the CURRENT POLITICAL CLIMATE ... is it
    even possible to have a relatively 'objective'
    science source ? I see every color of glasses -
    except Clear.


    The rest of the article is pay walled but if you read other sources there
    is waffling on the skin color although 'black' generates better
    headlines.
    Even Wikipedia is more balanced.

    Exactly


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hunter-gatherer#Physical_appearance

    When you're looking for specific alleles of SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in
    ancient
    DNA there is room for interpretation.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-ancient-ape-trkiye-story-human.html

    Chris Stringer's Just So stories may become yesterday's news. Wolpoff and
    Caspari challenged that theory about 30 years ago, partially because
    Stringer's time line wasn't realistic.

    Perhaps they will revisit the M haplogroup which has long been an
    anomaly.
    The Just So story says L3 left Africa and mutated to M subclades of which
    are common in Asia, including the Indian subcontinent.  Except M1, which
    is found in North Africa. Did some M people on their way to Japan get
    homesick and go back to Africa?

    Every body wandered around and banged anything that moved.


    EXACTLY ! :-)

    The more they trace the 'tree' the more obvious
    that becomes. The Victorians would be SHOCKED.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 22:32:03 2024
    On 12/18/24 2:11 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar >>>> Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up >>>> the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just >>>> as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-briton- cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    The rest of the article is pay walled but if you read other sources there
    is waffling on the skin color although 'black' generates better headlines. Even Wikipedia is more balanced.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hunter-gatherer#Physical_appearance

    When you're looking for specific alleles of SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in ancient DNA there is room for interpretation.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-ancient-ape-trkiye-story-human.html

    Chris Stringer's Just So stories may become yesterday's news. Wolpoff and Caspari challenged that theory about 30 years ago, partially because Stringer's time line wasn't realistic.

    Perhaps they will revisit the M haplogroup which has long been an anomaly. The Just So story says L3 left Africa and mutated to M subclades of which
    are common in Asia, including the Indian subcontinent. Except M1, which
    is found in North Africa. Did some M people on their way to Japan get homesick and go back to Africa?


    Note the Wiki also says the phenotype is more typical
    of northern Africa and that the amount of DNA to be
    had kinda left some holes in the analysis.

    I think that as the weather improved a lot of people
    went walkabout - resulting in a many odd mixtures
    that eventually blended into a 'normal'.

    DNA and other ID tech keeps improving, so we're bound
    to find a lot of unexpected relationships and lost
    cousins. Just recently they found remains of what
    was probably the first wave to push into Neanderthal
    occupied Europe ... which, don't appear to have
    made it long-term. Second wave was bigger.

    Oh well, our 'family tree' looks more like an
    unkempt bush ... and nobody is yet sure where
    Erectus fits in as they preferred tropical climes
    and those are terrible for DNA preservation.
    LIKELY some are mixed into the south asian
    population.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Dec 18 23:28:39 2024
    On 12/18/24 5:00 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 05:05, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/17/24 4:41 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:28:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Danes are Germans with a seasick accent.
    Did you know they are so socialist that every baby has a line tattooed >>>> on its head at birth "This way up"

    The Danes improved the British gene pool.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danelaw


       Agreed there ... the old Brits were an ugly lot  :-)

       Actually, hard to tell what a "Brit" actually IS.
       It's one of those countries occupied/invaded by
       SO many entities over the ages that nobody really
       has a claim.

       The first known human on the island - a cave fossil
       named 'Cheddar Man' - turned out to be a 'black'
       African who apparently sailed up the Spanish and
       finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
       as the ice age was starting to thaw.

       Oldest living lines ... probably somewhere in Wales.

    I think the red woman is the oldest - pre ice age.

    1." Dating to around 480,000 years ago during the Middle Pleistocene,
    the Boxgrove fossils are the oldest human remains discovered in the UK
    and were identified as most likely belonging to the ancient human
    species Homo heidelbergensis."

    But not homo sap.


    Details .... :-)

    HH was surely as smart as we are - maybe a bit more.

    But, strictly, not 'human' (whatever THAT means).

    Some extra-large-brain subsubspecies has also recently
    been found in China (unless they made it all up for
    propaganda reasons).

    STILL very curious about Erectus. They fit in
    SOMEWHERE - were contemporary with HSS and HSN.

    Saw an article very recently in one of the science
    pages ... sez that Euro Neanderthals, near the end,
    had become a very distinct species and could no longer
    interbreed with HSS. We'll see. Oh well, HSN still
    kinda lives on .....

    I think they DO have enough DNA to reconstruct
    Neanderthals now ... but the method would be
    ethically questionable (ergo the Chinese will
    probably be the ones to do it - their view of
    ethics is, well, a little different).


    2." Our own species is a relative newcomer to Britain. The earliest
    direct evidence is a jaw fragment found in Kent's Cavern, Devon.
    Scientific analysis estimated it to be at least 40,000 years old."

    No mention of skin colours or ethnicity is made and none are available.
    Fair skin and blue eyes are simply adaptation to low levels of sunlight.


    Light skin/eyes were apparently acquired from the Neanderthals
    and then amplified by both environmental and sexual selection.


    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain remained brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about 12,000 years
    ago.


    Probably rates as one of the worlds "Most Invaded" places.
    Don't think anybody can make a really solid "historical
    claim" on England.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 18 23:38:01 2024
    On 12/18/24 2:24 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:49:05 +0100, D wrote:

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden >>> once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are >>> the most lazy people on the planet.

    I read an article a while back that many young Swedes went to Norway when
    they couldn't find work at home. They found employment peeling bananas.

    https://www.ateriet.com/banos-spreadable-banana-taste-test/

    This is the truth! Well, I don't know about the banana business, but
    many low paying service jobs in norway, that the norwegians don't want
    to do are filled with swedish youth, who in comparison, are seen as
    diligent and hart working!

    Also swedish nurses double their salaries when moving to norway, and
    sweden backfills with arabians who hardly speak the language. There have
    been many examples of old people not understanding what their arabian
    doctor or nurse are saying.

    The good thing is that the current center/nationalist government I think
    made it possible for old people to demand to have a doctor they can understand. Under the previous socialist government, this was seen as
    racist and possibly punished.

    I've been known to mash a banana on bread but this seems a bit extreme.

    I wonder what Norway will do when the North Sea oil fields dry up?

    The country will collapse back into a being a small fishing village. ;)
    Once norway proposed to trade part of its oil fields for shares in
    Volvo. Sweden, at the height of its modern power, laughed and refused.
    It makes me very sad. =(

    I did find it amusing that Norway housed some of its immigrants in an off
    season resort -- somewhere north of the Arctic Circle. Welcome to sunny
    Norway!

    Sounds just like norway! Another norwegian classic... in order to fight congestion, you can only drive in the fast lane if you're 2 people or
    more during rush hour. The crafty norwegians love their au paires, and
    took them with them to work, so they can save time, and then sent them
    home with the car, and again to pick them up at work, so they can drive
    two in the car in the fast lane!


    Create a System and people will immediately find ways
    around it, to exploit it.

    In the USA it is not unheard of to exploit multi-passenger
    lanes by using an inflatable doll. Some are very lifelike
    these days - prob bought from some sex site. In California
    you can probably 'identify' as a sex doll and get away with
    it in court :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Riches@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 04:42:01 2024
    On 2024-12-18, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:51:53 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! I have nothing against the mormons I meet. I think
    perhaps they are more afraid to discuss philosophy with me, than I am of
    them!

    Once they get past the missionary phase. It's been years since they
    ventured into my part of the woods but I opened the door to find three Mormonettes. The guys go in pairs but apparently they think they need
    three for the girls.

    As far as I'm aware, usually the gals also go in pairs. However,
    every once in a while an area has an odd number of one or the
    other (or both), in which case a threesome is (or two threesomes
    are) formed.

    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 18 23:55:34 2024
    On 12/18/24 4:38 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:20:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Very few chechens in sweden. I wonder how on earth sweden
    managed to avoid those? I saw in the news the other day that a mosque in
    Gothenburg hand't out scarfs to arabian children with terrorist
    propaganda against israel.

    They're rare in the US also.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/19/chechens-immigrants- us-population/2097065/

    Other non-Arab Muslims are more prevalent.

    https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2019/1028/Refugees-poured-into-my-state.- Here-s-how-it-changed-me

    I lived in a small Maine town for a couple of years in the late '70s.
    While it sometimes seemed like a chapter out of a Stephen King novel diversity had not struck.

    The Somalis were first settled in Atlanta GA which was closer to Somalia's climate than Maine but the Africans didn't get along with the African- Americans very well. It's done wonders for Leweiston's soccer team.

    I'm not sure how the Somalis wound up in Minnesota. For most of the 19th
    and early 20th centuries it was the target of Swedes, Norwegians, and Germans.

    Maybe they Just Like nordics ?

    More likely the nordics there are just more gullible -
    just like in Europe, all into 'sanctuaries' because
    they think it gives them moral brownie points :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 00:00:57 2024
    On 12/18/24 2:19 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:22:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for
    the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've seen
    an episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really enjoys >>> criminal shows.

    I didn't know it had become a TV series. Amazon has it for $18 for the
    first year. I'll have to try it when I finish the 'Leverage' series.

    'Leverage' is sort of apropos. It's a team of grifters and thieves that
    take down people like corrupt insurance CEOs. They don't shoot them but
    expose them and clean out their accounts to reimburse those that they
    screwed.

    I'm currently watching Pantheon. It is animated, but I find it quite
    well researched when it comes to the transhumanist theme of mind
    uploading. I suspect the second season will not be as good as the first,
    and towards the end the quality dropped. But it has a good start!


    Alas, like time travel, the more you think about
    'mind uploading' the more improbable it seems.
    'Mind' is COMPLICATED ... and there's more than
    just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
    at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 05:06:22 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 22:32:03 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I think that as the weather improved a lot of people went walkabout -
    resulting in a many odd mixtures that eventually blended into a
    'normal'.

    There definitely was a lot of movement well before the Völkerwanderung.
    There are several theories about where the Indo-Europeans arose.
    Genetically the Y haplogroup R1b was predominate and still is most common
    in western Europe. They were pastoralists and practiced agriculture.

    They are supposed to have shown up around 5000 years BP. The I1 story has changed in the last few years and is still a bit of a mystery although the assumption is they were hunter-gatherers.

    https://www.eupedia.com/forum/threads/the-origin-of-haplogroup-i1-
    m253.42710/

    I wonder how much of th interaction is reflected in the Edda literature
    about a war between the Aesir and Vanir.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freyr

    Freyr was associated with peace, tranquility, and farming. Wotan had many
    names but 'Farmer John' wasn't one of them.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 05:09:32 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 23:02:45 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 3:15 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 19:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

         The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named >>>>>> 'Cheddar
         Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently
    sailed up
         the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years
         ago just as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.


    Then why call him a black African...

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-
    briton-
    cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific
    content. Its har left antd this is probably part of some 'critical race
    theory' bullshit


    At least partially true ... don't take their stuff at face value,
    there are clearly agendas mixed in.

    I wasn't going to go beyond the paywall ans 12ft.io didn't work for the
    site but from the teaser I was surprised they were floating out the
    possibility the Cheddar Man wasn't as black as painted.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to when all is on Thu Dec 19 00:10:13 2024
    On 12/17/24 4:34 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:
    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where
    I am
    now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised
    frequently. It
    was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at
    the end
    of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the
    majority of
    the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Jesus! I thought it was only in sweden. Well, as you say it's 168k, so I >>> imagine that the majority of people in the US never hit the cap.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS
    benefits but
    this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out.
    Then if
    you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required
    minimum
    distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Of course it is taxed! ;) And your private retirement savings are
    taxed as
    well, so a nice double tax. First the salary, and then you save it,
    and it
    is of course taxed again at withdrawal.

    The salary that goes into the retirement account is NOT taxed (the
    contribution is tax deductible in the year it is earned) but when you
    take money out later, the withdrawals are taxable income. Not so
    unfair.

    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw
    money, you
    can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a
    flat
    tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or
    grow.
    And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is >>> not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers
    this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary
    savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is
    tax-free? Sweden special!

    The difference is that in an ordinary savings account, you put in taxed money. In this type of account, your company can put in gross earnings,
    have the capital gains being taxed at only 0.3% (ish) flat fee per year,
    and then when you, the employee, withdraw it, it's taxed as retirement income.

    There's barely any POINT in such plans if the money is
    eventually taxed (at current rates) when you finally
    need it. May as well have just made an ordinary bank
    savings account or similar - you will get more back
    when all is said and done.

    If you put in your taxed savings into a "kapitalfrskring" you can
    withdraw the money tax free, but the flat tax is higher, it's currently 0,888% for 2025.

    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was
    very beautiful.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 05:14:14 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 22:03:07 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Thing is, there have been odd genetic/physiotype mixes found from
    around those times. Likely the ice melt encouraged a lot of people to
    wander around.

    Global warming! I'm pretty sure nobody was camping in my yard about 15,000 years BP.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_Lake_Missoula

    There are several markers on the trails at the 4200' level. It's fun to
    imagine a lake where the valley is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 00:16:16 2024
    On 12/18/24 11:28 PM, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/18/24 5:00 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain
    remained brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about
    12,000 years ago.


      Probably rates as one of the worlds "Most Invaded" places.
      Don't think anybody can make a really solid "historical
      claim" on England.

    Hmmm ... as for 'claims' ... how much, in what forms,
    does anyone have a claim on programming code ? Some
    of this stuff goes back to Turing - indeed probably
    back to Babbage/Lovelace. You can re-state the ideas,
    put them together a bit differently, but they're
    still kind of 'stolen', 'sequels'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 05:25:51 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 21:56:21 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The last specks of Doggerland are now going under and will probably
    remain that way for thousands of years unless we get another a meteor
    hit and everything re-freezes.

    I'm not sure but in may have been Childers' 'The Riddle of the Sands'
    where I read about the boats having twin keels so they would sit level
    when the tide went out. They play it differently on the Maine coast. If
    you need to apply bottom paint or do other hull work, you find a
    convenient sand flat, wait for the tide to do out, and careen the boat
    over. Easily done since the tidal range is about 20' up towards Canada.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 07:46:10 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 23:55:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    More likely the nordics there are just more gullible -

    The nordics in the US have the reputation of being very nice people. I
    wonder what happened to that gene pool? The joke is four Norwegians at a
    4-way stop. "After you...", "No, I insist, after you!"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 10:40:42 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 19:34, D wrote:
    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they are
    horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    Is this true?

    It has been known....


    How sad. =(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:42:45 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:51:53 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! I have nothing against the mormons I meet. I think
    perhaps they are more afraid to discuss philosophy with me, than I am of
    them!

    Once they get past the missionary phase. It's been years since they
    ventured into my part of the woods but I opened the door to find three Mormonettes. The guys go in pairs but apparently they think they need
    three for the girls.

    This is the truth! When I was young, someone disturbed me early on a
    sunday morning. It turned out to be three photo models from the Mormons.
    They never came back. I felt disappointed. ;)

    Evanston Wyoming has a rather nice historical museum. Like most of the railroad towns the Chinese played a large part. I called an exhibit to the attention of a Chinese woman that I thought might interest her. We got to talking and eventually went out to a picnic table. She asked if I knew anything about my ancestry, which I took to be a Chinese thing. Nope, she
    was a Mormon and they're big on genealogy so they can retroactively
    baptize their ancestors. She was headed to Salt Lake as was I and she
    invited me to attend a service with her. She was cute, but I passed.

    What a missed opportunity! Imagine you now, 4 wifes, 40 children! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 10:39:53 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 19:09, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:30:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Really?! Why was that? Did they have too thick skulls?

    They may have had some really good drugs.

    https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/the-45-acp-history-performance/ >>>
    There is a theory that the Norse berserkers where getting into the
    psychedelics too. A little warrior enhancement is ever popular.

    https://theconversation.com/what-is-the-drug-captagon-and-how-is-it-
    linked-to-syrias-fallen-assad-regime-245935

    Interesting! I thought the secret behind the norse berserkers, were their
    militantly feminist wives. Once they managed to go on a roadtrip (or boat
    trip) they could finally release all their bottled up anger! ;)

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Yes! I always heard this as well, but as far as I've read (and heard) it results in vomiting and just feeling bad.

    Relief from nagging Nordic nannies sounds about right tho.

    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 09:42:59 2024
    On 18/12/2024 23:14, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:11:53 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Henbane has been mentioned too. Gruit made with henbane, marsh rosemary,
    and other potentially psychoactive substances must have made for
    interesting barroom fights. Supposedly the purity act substituted hops for its calming, an-aphrodisiac effects. I wonder how the IPA craze works into that?
    Henbane is one of many belladonna type compounds that mostly make people
    sleep and have vivid dreams of flying, copulating with animals, becoming animals etc etc. And leaves the eyes painful if exposed to sunlight.

    Think vampires, witches, werewolves etc etc.

    Not nordic battle champions.


    --
    I was brought up to believe that you should never give offence if you
    can avoid it; the new culture tells us you should always take offence if
    you can. There are now experts in the art of taking offence, indeed
    whole academic subjects, such as 'gender studies', devoted to it.

    Sir Roger Scruton

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:44:19 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:20:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Very few chechens in sweden. I wonder how on earth sweden
    managed to avoid those? I saw in the news the other day that a mosque in
    Gothenburg hand't out scarfs to arabian children with terrorist
    propaganda against israel.

    They're rare in the US also.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/19/chechens-immigrants- us-population/2097065/

    Other non-Arab Muslims are more prevalent.

    https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2019/1028/Refugees-poured-into-my-state.- Here-s-how-it-changed-me

    I lived in a small Maine town for a couple of years in the late '70s.
    While it sometimes seemed like a chapter out of a Stephen King novel diversity had not struck.

    The Somalis were first settled in Atlanta GA which was closer to Somalia's climate than Maine but the Africans didn't get along with the African- Americans very well. It's done wonders for Leweiston's soccer team.

    I'm not sure how the Somalis wound up in Minnesota. For most of the 19th
    and early 20th centuries it was the target of Swedes, Norwegians, and Germans.

    Haha... surely they must have heard from their fellow swedish somalis,
    that these people are rich pickings and naive enough to fool!

    There are small villages in sweden completely ruled by clan elders,
    forcing swedish families to move out if they don't accept that.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:46:52 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:17:49 +0100, D wrote:


    Brings back good memories of debating abortion with good, honest, god
    fearing republicans when I was studying one year in Chicago.

    I avoid that topic. I will say when my wife called me at work one day and said 'I think I'm pregnant.', my first thoughts weren't 'Wonderful! I'll
    be a father!' False alarm.

    Divide and conquer! Do you not fear the the protestants will unite?

    Not a chance. Even the mainline denominations are splitting up.

    Good to hear that you are safe!

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/nov/20/united-methodist- congregations-lgbtq-same-sex-marriage-ban

    That's often a factor although there can be more arcane reasons. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is the largest but there is also
    the second largest Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod that goes back to 1847 with roots in the Kingdom of Saxony and ultimately goes back to how
    seriously they take the 1580 'Book of Concord'.

    Many of the evangelical churches are more about personalities than
    theology. A friend who died last year used to fill me in on the various scandals and schisms on the local scene. His flavor was 'Smith's Friends'

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunstad_Christian_Church

    I always thought about starting a mega-church. Seems like a nice business!
    I wonder if the time has passed, or if there are any fairly recent mega churches started by some elite psychologist?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:49:37 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:09:00 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! I thought the secret behind the norse berserkers, were
    their militantly feminist wives. Once they managed to go on a roadtrip
    (or boat trip) they could finally release all their bottled up anger!

    You may be on to something.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freyd%C3%ADs_Eir%C3%ADksd%C3%B3ttir

    She would make a a long trip to Miklagard very appealing. fwiw I gave up
    on Netflix's reboot of 'Vikings: Valhalla' after two episodes. Freydis and Leif showing up in the fictional Kattegat run by the black female jarl
    jumped more sharks than there are in the South Pacific.

    Haha, brilliant! I assume there must have been a chinese jarl as well? ;)
    My wife gets very annoyed when they populate historical dramas with black, yellow or red people who have no business appearing in 17:th century
    europe at the top of society.

    What about lord of the rings? Have there poped up versions with chinese
    trans elves yet? ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:47:25 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 19:54:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, this is the important truth that all mainstream politicians of
    today have completely forgotten. The first mainstream politician to
    rediscover this fact, will probably be a successful mainstream
    politician.

    Bill Clinton got a lot of miles out of James Carville's 'It's the
    economy, stupid.'


    This is the truth! The concept works.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 09:47:35 2024
    On 19/12/2024 02:56, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/18/24 2:09 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar >>>     Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up >>>     the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just as >>>     the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.


      Possible - though Cheddar is in the southwest, long walk.

      The last specks of Doggerland are now going under and will
      probably remain that way for thousands of years unless we
      get another a meteor hit and everything re-freezes.

    Doggerland vanished thousands of years ago at the beginning of the
    current interstadial when sea levels rose by over 150m.

    That was proper global warming. Not this nancy boy stuff they are
    panicking us with today.

    All that is left of it is the Dogger banks - an area of shallow water
    that has good fishing.

    Shortly to be destroyed with a wind farm.



    --
    Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's
    too dark to read.

    Groucho Marx

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 09:50:26 2024
    On 19/12/2024 05:25, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 21:56:21 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The last specks of Doggerland are now going under and will probably
    remain that way for thousands of years unless we get another a meteor
    hit and everything re-freezes.

    I'm not sure but in may have been Childers' 'The Riddle of the Sands'
    where I read about the boats having twin keels so they would sit level
    when the tide went out.

    I cannot recall that in that book. Nor can I recall that being anything
    normal in European boatbuilding of open sea vessels

    They play it differently on the Maine coast. If
    you need to apply bottom paint or do other hull work, you find a
    convenient sand flat, wait for the tide to do out, and careen the boat
    over. Easily done since the tidal range is about 20' up towards Canada.

    That was the traditional way, yes, including N Europe.

    The atlantic coasts have extreme tidal ranges. But the Baltic and
    Mediterranean do not


    --
    If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
    eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such
    time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
    and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
    important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for
    the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
    truth is the greatest enemy of the State.

    Joseph Goebbels

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:52:13 2024
    On Thu, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:34:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Then I had a colleague who was ginger, and it was acceptable and
    expected to make fun of him. Of course I heartily joined!

    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they are
    horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    It was a very long time ago when I read Donleavy's 'The Ginger Man'. That
    put a different twist on it.


    Never read that one. No, this man was very good natured!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:51:43 2024
    On Thu, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:12:49 +0100, D wrote:

    What is fun being an IT guy, is that apparently I do not look like I
    belong in business class. So on that tedious flight to japan, I had to
    go on a walk to stretch my legs. So 2-3 times I walk the length of the
    plane.
    I went to the back, then went to the front, and the flight attendant
    stopped me, and said I had to go back to economy class and that this was
    for business only.

    I've never fit the profile. I think it was '69 when my wife and I were
    flying out of Memphis. I had a beard, ponytail, and leather jacket and she sort of looked like a hippy chick. The stewardess came back to us barely
    able to suppress her giggles. "The lady up there thinks you're going to hijack the plane to Cuba. You aren't going to, are you?"

    Many years later the beard and ponytail are sort of gray and I have a different leather jacket but not much else has changed.

    That's my problem with the new sardine cans. I can barely walk when it's
    time to deplane and that's on a two or three hour domestic flight.

    Yes... it's absolutely horrible. Add to that, for a guy with problems with authorities like me, the eternal hassles with retarded security, ID
    controls, arbitrary rules and regulations, and just the general
    unpleasantness of the planes and seats themselves, it's a nightmare!

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:54:20 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 18 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:28:59 +0100, D wrote:

    My favourite Bergman is Fanny och Alexander. Det sjunde inseglet is
    quite alright as well

    I've never seen 'Fanny och Alexander'. 'The Seventh Seal' was a bit
    weird. I vaguely recall 'Höstsonaten' and 'Vargtimmen'. 'Jungfrukällan'
    is the only one I've seen relatively recently.

    Yes... it is the weirdness and the symbology that appeals to me! =)

    Have you seen 'Kristin Lavransdatter'? I was reminded of it because of
    Liv Ullmann.

    No, never seen or read. But I think there is a famous cheese brand from Gudbrandsdalen, maybe, it does ring a bell!

    Norwegian brunost (cheese) is one of the few cheeses I actually like.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:56:13 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 2:31 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     take many forms.

     And Novo Nordisk is like 60% of the economy ... one
     little glitch there and .......


    This is the truth! Novo nordisk, maers and tuborg/carlsberg. Remove those, >> and
    you have removed all of denmarks economy.


    There's an old adage about eggs and baskets ...

    This is truth!

    At least those three industries are 'diverse', so
    one COULD fail without everyone starving.

    Are you sure there are no dependencies? Maersk is needed to transport the
    other two, a Tuborg at work is necessary to inspire the chemists at Novo nordisk and lessen the tedious work of driving around shipping containers.

    Novo is neccessary to keep them all fit and beautiful. Remove one in the triangle and it falls!

    It should probably be NN since nobody there will
    need Ozempic when they're half-starving :-)


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 09:56:45 2024
    On 19/12/2024 03:03, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/18/24 5:01 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar >>>>     Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up >>>>     the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago
    just as
        the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

      It is also said he was 'west Euro' - although
      that's a vague def, and the Beaker People upset
      the whole equation later on. People Stuff is
      always messy.

      Thing is, there have been odd genetic/physiotype
      mixes found from around those times. Likely the
      ice melt encouraged a lot of people to wander
      around.

    Well hom. sap. was shagging Neanderthals anyway around that time.
    That was a time when 'climate change' actually meant something more than
    an excuse for higher taxes and crap products.

    Colossal changes took place across Eurasian and the Northern American
    habitats.
    Everything was on the move. Except CO2 of course.

    I had a book once detailing as far as was known then (1980s?) the
    movement of tribes as evinced by language and cultural patterns, It was
    a spiders web.
    When DNA analysis came along it just got worse...

    Probably too much mammoth meat in the diet...






    --
    When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over
    the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that
    authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.

    Frédéric Bastiat

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 09:59:14 2024
    On 19/12/2024 05:14, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 22:03:07 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Thing is, there have been odd genetic/physiotype mixes found from
    around those times. Likely the ice melt encouraged a lot of people to
    wander around.

    Global warming! I'm pretty sure nobody was camping in my yard about 15,000 years BP.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_Lake_Missoula

    There are several markers on the trails at the 4200' level. It's fun to imagine a lake where the valley is.

    Yeah
    Up where you are was full deep glaciation. U shaped valleys terminal
    moraines and hanging valleys left over probably like in Wales.

    I actually live on a terminal moraine - probably as far as the ice got
    in this part of the world. Its chalk underneath but on top is sand
    gravel and clay.


    --
    “The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to
    fill the world with fools.”

    Herbert Spencer

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 11:00:39 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 2:24 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:49:05 +0100, D wrote:

    Don't trust the danish! They are very tricky people. They invaded sweden >>>> once, and we're constantly watching them, in case they will try it
    again! As for the rest, they are good people, although the norwegian are >>>> the most lazy people on the planet.

    I read an article a while back that many young Swedes went to Norway when >>> they couldn't find work at home. They found employment peeling bananas.

    https://www.ateriet.com/banos-spreadable-banana-taste-test/

    This is the truth! Well, I don't know about the banana business, but many
    low paying service jobs in norway, that the norwegians don't want to do are >> filled with swedish youth, who in comparison, are seen as diligent and hart >> working!

    Also swedish nurses double their salaries when moving to norway, and sweden >> backfills with arabians who hardly speak the language. There have been many >> examples of old people not understanding what their arabian doctor or nurse >> are saying.

    The good thing is that the current center/nationalist government I think
    made it possible for old people to demand to have a doctor they can
    understand. Under the previous socialist government, this was seen as
    racist and possibly punished.

    I've been known to mash a banana on bread but this seems a bit extreme.

    I wonder what Norway will do when the North Sea oil fields dry up?

    The country will collapse back into a being a small fishing village. ;)
    Once norway proposed to trade part of its oil fields for shares in Volvo.
    Sweden, at the height of its modern power, laughed and refused. It makes me >> very sad. =(

    I did find it amusing that Norway housed some of its immigrants in an off >>> season resort -- somewhere north of the Arctic Circle. Welcome to sunny
    Norway!

    Sounds just like norway! Another norwegian classic... in order to fight
    congestion, you can only drive in the fast lane if you're 2 people or more >> during rush hour. The crafty norwegians love their au paires, and took them >> with them to work, so they can save time, and then sent them home with the >> car, and again to pick them up at work, so they can drive two in the car in >> the fast lane!


    Create a System and people will immediately find ways
    around it, to exploit it.

    In the USA it is not unheard of to exploit multi-passenger
    lanes by using an inflatable doll. Some are very lifelike
    these days - prob bought from some sex site. In California
    you can probably 'identify' as a sex doll and get away with
    it in court :-)

    Brilliant!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:59:09 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 3:15 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 19:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

         The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named 'Cheddar
         Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently sailed up
         the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years ago just
         as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not
    have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.


    Then why call him a black African...

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-briton- >>> cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific content.
    Its har left antd this is probably part of some 'critical race theory'
    bullshit


    At least partially true ... don't take their stuff
    at face value, there are clearly agendas mixed in.

    Used to take the biggies - Science and Nature - but
    eventually lost the patience to read through them.
    Sigma Xi's "American Scientist" is more friendly.

    And FORGET "Scientific American" - first it dumbed-down
    a bit and then went far left and I don't think it can be
    redeemed. Extinction followed by a name-ripoff resurrection
    is the only hope. Such a pity.

    But ... in the CURRENT POLITICAL CLIMATE ... is it
    even possible to have a relatively 'objective'
    science source ? I see every color of glasses -
    except Clear.


    The rest of the article is pay walled but if you read other sources there >>> is waffling on the skin color although 'black' generates better headlines. >>> Even Wikipedia is more balanced.

    Exactly

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_hunter-gatherer#Physical_appearance >>>
    When you're looking for specific alleles of SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in ancient >>> DNA there is room for interpretation.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-ancient-ape-trkiye-story-human.html

    Chris Stringer's Just So stories may become yesterday's news. Wolpoff and >>> Caspari challenged that theory about 30 years ago, partially because
    Stringer's time line wasn't realistic.

    Perhaps they will revisit the M haplogroup which has long been an anomaly. >>> The Just So story says L3 left Africa and mutated to M subclades of which >>> are common in Asia, including the Indian subcontinent.  Except M1, which >>> is found in North Africa. Did some M people on their way to Japan get
    homesick and go back to Africa?

    Every body wandered around and banged anything that moved.


    EXACTLY ! :-)

    The more they trace the 'tree' the more obvious
    that becomes. The Victorians would be SHOCKED.

    I'm so lucky to be related to the norse gods instead! No earthly
    connections here.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 11:04:57 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 2:19 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:22:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for >>>> the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've seen >>>> an episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really enjoys >>>> criminal shows.

    I didn't know it had become a TV series. Amazon has it for $18 for the
    first year. I'll have to try it when I finish the 'Leverage' series.

    'Leverage' is sort of apropos. It's a team of grifters and thieves that
    take down people like corrupt insurance CEOs. They don't shoot them but
    expose them and clean out their accounts to reimburse those that they
    screwed.

    I'm currently watching Pantheon. It is animated, but I find it quite well
    researched when it comes to the transhumanist theme of mind uploading. I
    suspect the second season will not be as good as the first, and towards the >> end the quality dropped. But it has a good start!


    Alas, like time travel, the more you think about
    'mind uploading' the more improbable it seems.
    'Mind' is COMPLICATED ... and there's more than
    just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    This is the truth! I like transhumanists as much as the next guy, but
    sometimes I think their technology optimists comes too close to religion
    for my comfort.

    Yes, I see no reason that should make uploading impossible, in theory, but
    we have no clue about how the mind works, so there could be plenty of
    reasons it won't work. Add to that the enormous quantum leap (or multiple quantum leaps) in technology, before being able to even physically
    replicate it. But with the religious, once I try that conversational
    track, I am shouted down and bood. =(

    So basically, they extrapolate from 1 + 1 = 2, to a billion trillion and
    often handwave away the steps in between. That is what makes some of them religious in my opinion.

    As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
    at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    Robin Hoods? You mean stealing from the government and giving to the
    people? The eternal libertarian hero?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:01:09 2024
    On 19/12/2024 03:32, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Oh well, our 'family tree' looks more like an
      unkempt bush ...

    Ain't that the truth.

    Well some folks will always dream of 'racial purity' till they get their
    DNA analysed.:-)

    I dread to think where my ancestors were from.


    --
    “The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to
    fill the world with fools.”

    Herbert Spencer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 11:01:07 2024
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 4:38 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 20:20:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Very few chechens in sweden. I wonder how on earth sweden
    managed to avoid those? I saw in the news the other day that a mosque in >>> Gothenburg hand't out scarfs to arabian children with terrorist
    propaganda against israel.

    They're rare in the US also.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/19/chechens-immigrants- >> us-population/2097065/

    Other non-Arab Muslims are more prevalent.

    https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2019/1028/Refugees-poured-into-my-state.-
    Here-s-how-it-changed-me

    I lived in a small Maine town for a couple of years in the late '70s.
    While it sometimes seemed like a chapter out of a Stephen King novel
    diversity had not struck.

    The Somalis were first settled in Atlanta GA which was closer to Somalia's >> climate than Maine but the Africans didn't get along with the African-
    Americans very well. It's done wonders for Leweiston's soccer team.

    I'm not sure how the Somalis wound up in Minnesota. For most of the 19th
    and early 20th centuries it was the target of Swedes, Norwegians, and
    Germans.

    Maybe they Just Like nordics ?

    More likely the nordics there are just more gullible -
    just like in Europe, all into 'sanctuaries' because
    they think it gives them moral brownie points :-)


    You read my mind!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 11:07:18 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 23:02:45 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 3:15 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 18/12/2024 19:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 10:01:12 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 07:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 00:05:27 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

         The first known human on the island - a cave fossil named >>>>>>> 'Cheddar
         Man' - turned out to be a 'black' African who apparently >>>>>>> sailed up
         the Spanish and finally English coast about 10,000 years >>>>>>>      ago just as the ice age was starting to thaw.

    Depending on the exact timing he may have hiked across Doggerland.

    Well its false anyway, and if coming from Africa Doggerland would not >>>>> have been a useful route

    Exactly why do you think he sailed from Africa? The DNA matches the
    western European hunter gatherers who had be in Europe as long ago as
    17,000 years BP.


    Then why call him a black African...

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2161867-ancient-dark-skinned-
    briton-
    cheddar-man-find-may-not-be-true/

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific
    content. Its har left antd this is probably part of some 'critical race
    theory' bullshit


    At least partially true ... don't take their stuff at face value,
    there are clearly agendas mixed in.

    I wasn't going to go beyond the paywall ans 12ft.io didn't work for the
    site but from the teaser I was surprised they were floating out the possibility the Cheddar Man wasn't as black as painted.


    Try archive.is/url_to_article. Sometimes that works wonders! I've
    integrated it into my rss2email script so my email digests some with that
    built in. I have not taken it one step further to actually pull in the
    text content from archive.is, but maybe on a rainy day. ;)

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 10:08:45 2024
    On 19/12/2024 05:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 23:02:45 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 3:15 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    New scientist is a political magazine. It has no real scientific
    content. Its hard left and this is probably part of some 'critical race
    theory' bullshit


    At least partially true ... don't take their stuff at face value,
    there are clearly agendas mixed in.

    I wasn't going to go beyond the paywall ans 12ft.io didn't work for the
    site but from the teaser I was surprised they were floating out the possibility the Cheddar Man wasn't as black as painted.

    And he had blue eyes, allegedly.

    It seems that light skin is an Asian evolution...and spread westwards
    into Europe and eastwards into China and SE Asia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_skin#/media/File:Archaeogenetic_analysis_of_human_skin_pigmentation_in_Europe_(with_Asia_geographic_extension).png


    --
    “It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established
    authorities are wrong.”

    ― Voltaire, The Age of Louis XIV

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 11:09:02 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/17/24 4:34 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Sun, 15 Dec 2024 23:09:13 +0100, D wrote:
    Ahh... the land of the free! Try 31% in sweden or around 20% where I am >>> D> now. Oh, and the 31% has a cap, so you only get part of that to fund
    your own retirement. The rest goes to happy arabians!

    On Mon, 16 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    There is a yearly maximum for the SS tax, which gets raised
    frequently. It
    was nice to max out and have a few weeks without the deduction at the >>> end
    of the year. The current cap is $168,600 so I would guess the majority >>> of
    the workers don't see those bonus weeks anymore.

    On 2024-12-16, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Jesus! I thought it was only in sweden. Well, as you say it's 168k, so I >>>> imagine that the majority of people in the US never hit the cap.

    Of course your benefits are taxed. Some states don't tax SS benefits >>> but
    this one does so both the Feds and the state have their hands out.
    Then if
    you have an IRA or other retirement account there is a required
    minimum
    distribution yearly which is taxed when you hit 73.

    Of course it is taxed! ;) And your private retirement savings are taxed >>>> as
    well, so a nice double tax. First the salary, and then you save it, and >>>> it
    is of course taxed again at withdrawal.

    The salary that goes into the retirement account is NOT taxed (the
    contribution is tax deductible in the year it is earned) but when you
    take money out later, the withdrawals are taxable income. Not so
    unfair.

    If you're content to wait until you are at least 55 to withdraw money, >>>> you
    can start a retirement foundation. The gross assets are taxed with a flat >>>> tax of 0.3% or so every year, regardless of if the assets shrink or grow. >>>> And in return you can withdraw your retirement savings for free. This is >>>> not very well known, and I have never heard of a company that offers
    this.

    So an after-tax savings account. How is this different from an ordinary
    savings account ... I guess the difference is that the interest is
    tax-free? Sweden special!

    The difference is that in an ordinary savings account, you put in taxed
    money. In this type of account, your company can put in gross earnings,
    have the capital gains being taxed at only 0.3% (ish) flat fee per year,
    and then when you, the employee, withdraw it, it's taxed as retirement
    income.

    There's barely any POINT in such plans if the money is
    eventually taxed (at current rates) when you finally
    need it. May as well have just made an ordinary bank
    savings account or similar - you will get more back
    when all is said and done.

    You are a wise man! That is exactly why my retirement savings consists on
    a regular account, within the shell of my company (to cut the tax from 30%
    to 15%).

    Some stuff I need to do, I can then just do on behalf of the company, and basically use gross earnings towards that. If I need pocket money, I need
    to bite the bullet and pay 15% (plus of course the corp tax at 15%).

    If you put in your taxed savings into a "kapitalfrskring" you can
    withdraw the money tax free, but the flat tax is higher, it's currently
    0,888% for 2025.

    How did you do the rb/D quoting? Do you have a script for that? It was very >> beautiful.


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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:15:39 2024
    On 19/12/2024 04:28, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain
    remained brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about
    12,000 years ago.


      Probably rates as one of the worlds "Most Invaded" places.
      Don't think anybody can make a really solid "historical
      claim" on England.

    I think that goes for most of Europe - at least the warmer more central
    parts and the Mediterranean.

    They got the Indo-Europeans while the Nordics got the blond blue eyed
    lot and where they met, redheads...

    ...and then Ghengis Khan, probably the greatest genocidal psychopath in history, spread his guy's genes all over the place.

    The origins of Native Americans - especially S Americans, is still
    being worked on.



    --
    “it should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism
    (or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans,
    about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and
    the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a
    'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,'
    a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for
    rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet
    things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that
    you live neither in Joseph Stalin’s Communist era, nor in the Orwellian utopia of 1984.”

    Vaclav Klaus

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:17:22 2024
    On 19/12/2024 05:16, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/18/24 11:28 PM, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/18/24 5:00 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain
    remained brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about
    12,000 years ago.


       Probably rates as one of the worlds "Most Invaded" places.
       Don't think anybody can make a really solid "historical
       claim" on England.

      Hmmm ... as for 'claims' ... how much, in what forms,
      does anyone have a claim on programming code ? Some
      of this stuff goes back to Turing - indeed probably
      back to Babbage/Lovelace. You can re-state the ideas,
      put them together a bit differently, but they're
      still kind of 'stolen', 'sequels'.

    And in fact similar conditions evoke similar responses.

    I learnt most of my programming from doing it: later on you find some
    academic has worked it out too, and given it a name and claimed it...


    --
    "I am inclined to tell the truth and dislike people who lie consistently.
    This makes me unfit for the company of people of a Left persuasion, and
    all women"

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 19 10:19:53 2024
    On 19/12/2024 05:00, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Alas, like time travel, the more you think about
      'mind uploading' the more improbable it seems.
      'Mind' is COMPLICATED ... and there's more than
      just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    Ah. The 'Akashic Records' were all the rage in the early/mid 20th
    century. The place where all minds are uploaded after death. Or
    something. Google it.

    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 10:26:17 2024
    On 19/12/2024 09:39, D wrote:


    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Yes! I always heard this as well, but as far as I've read (and heard) it results in vomiting and just feeling bad.


    Er no. And the vomiting is absent if you drink the urine of someone or something - reindeer will do - that has eaten the shroom.

    Apparently visions of Asgard etc.

    https://erowid.org/plants/amanitas/amanitas_writings4.shtml#part_two

    Relief from nagging Nordic nannies sounds about right tho.

    ;)

    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 10:27:34 2024
    On 19/12/2024 09:40, D wrote:


    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 18/12/2024 19:34, D wrote:
    When asked about beautiful women in the UK the ginger man said they
    are horrible, drink too much beer, get drunk and then fight each other.

    Is this true?

    It has been known....


    How sad. =(

    Saturday night fever...

    http://vps.templar.co.uk/Cartoons%20and%20Politics/DrunkerJuncker.jpg

    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 10:33:39 2024
    On 19/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    In Europe that works OK - at least city to city.

    I live in E of England, . my sister lives in W Germany near the Moselle.
    She gave a birthday party for her husbands 80th.
    I drove all the way with a ferry crossing
    My nephew took the Eurostar from London and hired a car.
    My cousin took a plane and hired a car.

    The door to door journey times were almost identical

    OTOH if you want to get from central Glasgow to Central London a plane
    and train is by far the quickest.

    Not so much security on what is essentially a commuter flight


    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 15:58:06 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 09:39, D wrote:


    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Yes! I always heard this as well, but as far as I've read (and heard) it
    results in vomiting and just feeling bad.


    Er no. And the vomiting is absent if you drink the urine of someone or something - reindeer will do - that has eaten the shroom.

    Have not tried. Please let me know if you do!

    Apparently visions of Asgard etc.

    https://erowid.org/plants/amanitas/amanitas_writings4.shtml#part_two

    What happens if you eat a fly agaric?
    Table of contents show

    It is part of the genus Amanita, which contains both edible and very
    poisonous species. The red fly agaric is moderately poisonous. Consumption
    can cause a variety of symptoms, ranging from nausea and sweating, to
    euphoria and hallucinations. Deaths are extremely rare, but have occurred.
    Can you die from eating a fly agaric?

    The mushroom is poisonous!

    Ingestion can cause dizziness, confusion, anxiety, decreased consciousness
    and in severe cases convulsions. Sometimes nausea and vomiting occur.
    These symptoms are not life-threatening but may require observation and treatment in hospital.

    Relief from nagging Nordic nannies sounds about right tho. >> >> ;)



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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 16:01:31 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 09:51, D wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    In Europe that works OK - at least city to city.

    I live in E of England, . my sister lives in W Germany near the Moselle. She gave a birthday party for her husbands 80th.
    I drove all the way with a ferry crossing
    My nephew took the Eurostar from London and hired a car.
    My cousin took a plane and hired a car.

    The door to door journey times were almost identical

    OTOH if you want to get from central Glasgow to Central London a plane and train is by far the quickest.

    Not so much security on what is essentially a commuter flight

    I once visited a super computing conference in Manchester. I flew in to
    Ryan airs airport, a small one that I don't remember the name of.

    Then I took a train from London to Manchester and it was on time, clean,
    tidy, and in front of me I had an english man who enjoyed beer and potato
    chips and was very talkative.

    Once I arrived I discovered my mistake.

    Actually _my_ train was delayed with 1 hour, and by accident I'd gotten on
    the previous train that was delayed one hour, and sat in the wrong seat.

    Fortunately no one cared, and all was good!

    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 15:33:25 2024
    On 19/12/2024 14:58, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 09:39, D wrote:


    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    It was supposed to be amanita muscaria intoxication.
    Except that doesn't make people violent

    Yes! I always heard this as well, but as far as I've read (and heard)
    it results in vomiting and just feeling bad.


    Er no. And the vomiting is absent if you drink the urine of someone or
    something - reindeer will do - that has eaten the shroom.

    Have not tried. Please let me know if you do!

    Apparently visions of Asgard etc.

    https://erowid.org/plants/amanitas/amanitas_writings4.shtml#part_two

    What happens if you eat a fly agaric?
    Table of contents show

    It is part of the genus Amanita, which contains both edible and very poisonous species. The red fly agaric is moderately poisonous.
    Consumption can cause a variety of symptoms, ranging from nausea and sweating, to euphoria and hallucinations. Deaths are extremely rare, but
    have occurred.
    Can you die from eating a fly agaric?

    I dont believe anyone has, but its possible that the more orange species
    can be confused with Amanita pantherina, the panther cap.

    Of course two other Amanitas are deadly. Amanita Virosa and Amanita
    Phalloides - the 'destroying angel' and the death cap. Probably used to
    kill many a mediaeval lord who beat up on his wife...you get sick, then
    you get better, then all your organs fail and you die.



    Other amanitas are 'edible and good'...

    "Edible species of Amanita include Amanita fulva, Amanita vaginata
    (grisette), Amanita calyptrata (coccoli), Amanita crocea, Amanita
    rubescens (blusher), Amanita caesarea (Caesar's mushroom), and Amanita jacksonii (American Caesar's mushroom)."


    The mushroom is poisonous!

    That's why you give it to someone else and drink their urine!

    Body breaks down the nasty shit but passes the muscimol straight through.


    Ingestion can cause dizziness, confusion, anxiety, decreased
    consciousness and in severe cases convulsions. Sometimes nausea and
    vomiting occur. These symptoms are not life-threatening but may require observation and treatment in hospital.

    That's more or less bollocks.




    --
    Future generations will wonder in bemused amazement that the early
    twenty-first century’s developed world went into hysterical panic over a globally average temperature increase of a few tenths of a degree, and,
    on the basis of gross exaggerations of highly uncertain computer
    projections combined into implausible chains of inference, proceeded to contemplate a rollback of the industrial age.

    Richard Lindzen

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 15:35:57 2024
    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look at.


    --
    The theory of Communism may be summed up in one sentence: Abolish all
    private property.

    Karl Marx

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 16:56:34 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:26:17 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Er no. And the vomiting is absent if you drink the urine of someone or something - reindeer will do - that has eaten the shroom.

    That was the original trickle down effect. Hopefully it worked better than
    it ever did in economics.

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  • From Don_from_AZ@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 09:45:33 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> writes:

    On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 22:03:07 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Thing is, there have been odd genetic/physiotype mixes found from
    around those times. Likely the ice melt encouraged a lot of people to
    wander around.

    Global warming! I'm pretty sure nobody was camping in my yard about 15,000 years BP.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_Lake_Missoula

    There are several markers on the trails at the 4200' level. It's fun to imagine a lake where the valley is.
    On one of our RV trips to Montana and the Pacific Nortwest we visited
    the National Bison Range north of Missoula. The road winds around and
    over some pretty good hills. High up on one of the hills is a roadside
    sign saying words to the effect of: "you are looking over the Mission
    Valley to the southern Mission Mountains. 15,000 years ago, you would be looking over a vast lake, probably with floating icebergs." Quite
    impressive; the valley was hu-u-ge.
    --
    -Don_from_AZ-

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 19 16:28:55 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 17:10:14 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:42:45 +0100, D wrote:

    What a missed opportunity! Imagine you now, 4 wifes, 40 children!

    A character, Seldom Seen Smith in Ed Abbey's 'The Monkey Wrench Gang' made
    good use of that. You spread the wives throughout Utah so you always have
    a home as you wander around.

    One wife was quite enough, thank you.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 17:24:19 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 15:35:57 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look
    at.

    People in the US of Irish descent have some compulsion to return to the
    'Auld Sod'. After a friend returned I asked him how it was. 'Green! It
    should be green. It rains all the fucking time!'

    I can only speculate why my people left Germany. There was no family lore
    about the old country and no one had an interest in returning. That's not
    to say they weren't proud of their ethnicity.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 19 17:28:09 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 16:28:55 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the train
    with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    I wondered about that. I haven't taken a train in over 40 years. I would
    have to drive 135 miles to get to a passenger train station.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 17:15:21 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:51:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... it's absolutely horrible. Add to that, for a guy with problems
    with authorities like me, the eternal hassles with retarded security, ID controls, arbitrary rules and regulations, and just the general unpleasantness of the planes and seats themselves, it's a nightmare!

    Somehow I always get randomly selected. I thought I had it nailed once, no knives, guns, nail clippers, grenades, or other objects on my person. I
    found the dress shoes I was wearing had steel shanks.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 19 17:59:18 2024
    On 19/12/2024 16:28, Rich wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    Pretty much the same in Europe except you may need to show passports
    when crossing some national boundaries.



    --
    The New Left are the people they warned you about.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 19:02:42 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look at.

    And probably more sheep!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 19 19:03:59 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3 course
    meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old, plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 19:05:08 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:42:45 +0100, D wrote:

    What a missed opportunity! Imagine you now, 4 wifes, 40 children!

    A character, Seldom Seen Smith in Ed Abbey's 'The Monkey Wrench Gang' made good use of that. You spread the wives throughout Utah so you always have
    a home as you wander around.

    One wife was quite enough, thank you.


    ;)

    I once had 2 during a transition period, and I agree with you.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 18:03:14 2024
    On 19/12/2024 17:24, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 15:35:57 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look
    at.

    People in the US of Irish descent have some compulsion to return to the
    'Auld Sod'. After a friend returned I asked him how it was. 'Green! It
    should be green. It rains all the fucking time!'

    I can only speculate why my people left Germany. There was no family lore about the old country and no one had an interest in returning. That's not
    to say they weren't proud of their ethnicity.

    Irish left because it was better than dying of starvation in a massively overpopulated country.
    Many N Europeans left because they were simply too pious to be
    tolerated. As where the original pilgrim fathers.
    English left because they were second sons and had no estates, but they
    had enough to buy them in the Americas.
    Italians probably left to escape poverty, like the Irish.


    --
    The lifetime of any political organisation is about three years before
    its been subverted by the people it tried to warn you about.

    Anon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 19:06:04 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:51:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... it's absolutely horrible. Add to that, for a guy with problems
    with authorities like me, the eternal hassles with retarded security, ID
    controls, arbitrary rules and regulations, and just the general
    unpleasantness of the planes and seats themselves, it's a nightmare!

    Somehow I always get randomly selected. I thought I had it nailed once, no knives, guns, nail clippers, grenades, or other objects on my person. I
    found the dress shoes I was wearing had steel shanks.


    It's the ponytail. Always the ponytail.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 18:05:17 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:49:37 +0100, D wrote:


    Haha, brilliant! I assume there must have been a chinese jarl as well?
    My wife gets very annoyed when they populate historical dramas with
    black,
    yellow or red people who have no business appearing in 17:th century
    europe at the top of society.

    But, but... I have the DVD set of James Levine's Ring Cycle at the Metropolitan Opera in '89. Jessye Norman has the Sieglinde and somehow
    didn't look like Siegmund's twin. Opera at least has the excuse that you
    need someone who can sing. Hildegard Behrens played Brünnhilde and while
    she did her best one of the criticisms was she was a bit long in the tooth
    for the role.

    Levine has a few cameos on the DVD and looked greasy. I wasn't surprised
    when he was fired over allegations he had abused some young men.


    What about lord of the rings? Have there poped up versions with chinese
    trans elves yet?

    Amazon's 'Rings of Power' does have someone who isn't exactly a Light Elf.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ismael_Cruz_C%C3%B3rdova

    I haven't watched it but it didn't get very good reviews. The kindest say
    the scenery is beautiful but the acting stunk.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 18:06:34 2024
    On 19/12/2024 18:02, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look
    at.

    And probably more sheep!

    Of the 4 legged variety, assuredly. And as we discussed, very good eating


    --
    "Women actually are capable of being far more than the feminists will
    let them."

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 19:07:53 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 16:28:55 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter (to
    prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the train
    with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    I wondered about that. I haven't taken a train in over 40 years. I would
    have to drive 135 miles to get to a passenger train station.


    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the
    moving train!

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 18:20:17 2024
    On 19/12/2024 18:07, D wrote:



    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the
    moving train!

    Not really possible in the UK.

    Most trains have doors that can only be opened by the driver, and most
    railways are fenced off from roads...

    ..when I was about 7, two twins used to travel by rail. One of them was
    leaning out of the door window when he other one opened it for a prank.

    Killed instantly. we never heard or saw either of them again.
    That carriage style was retired about 10 years later


    --
    “Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.”

    ― Voltaire, Questions sur les Miracles à M. Claparede, Professeur de Théologie à Genève, par un Proposant: Ou Extrait de Diverses Lettres de
    M. de Voltaire

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 18:48:14 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:46:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always thought about starting a mega-church. Seems like a nice
    business!
    I wonder if the time has passed, or if there are any fairly recent mega churches started by some elite psychologist?

    There isn't enough population to really go mega but a church I pass on the
    way to town has aspirations. It sends out colorful postcards and has
    signboards on its property promoting activities.

    https://crosspointmt.com/plan-a-visit

    They don't go in for quantity but my friend who kept track of locals said
    when they built a new church the Slavic Pentacostals wanted to have the
    biggest church in town in terms of square feet. I drive by and it
    sometimes has a well filled parking lot. They are low key but there are a surprising number of Slavs in town, mostly Russians I think.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 19:06:27 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 09:45:33 -0700, Don_from_AZ wrote:

    On one of our RV trips to Montana and the Pacific Nortwest we visited
    the National Bison Range north of Missoula. The road winds around and
    over some pretty good hills. High up on one of the hills is a roadside
    sign saying words to the effect of: "you are looking over the Mission
    Valley to the southern Mission Mountains. 15,000 years ago, you would be looking over a vast lake, probably with floating icebergs." Quite
    impressive; the valley was hu-u-ge.

    Flathead Lake is supposed to be the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi leaving out Alaska but it's only a shadow of its former self.
    there is a rest area on 93 south of St. Ignatius before you drop down into
    the Mission Valley and I often stop there to take in the view.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_Mountains#/media/ File:Mission_Mountains_National_Bison_Range_Montana.jpg

    I haven't been to the Bison Range in a few years. I've got the Golden Age
    pass that used to work but they gave the range back to the Salish and
    Kootenai Tribe two years ago and I don't know what they charge. I do know
    I used to get the reservation recreation permit when it was $10 but they
    bumped that to $100. I've got plenty of other places to recreate than the
    rez.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 19:08:33 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 09:56:45 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Probably too much mammoth meat in the diet...

    Yeah, the experts recently concluded the environmentally sensitive Native American ate all the megafauna in North America before starting on the
    smaller stuff.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 19 19:22:38 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:54:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... it is the weirdness and the symbology that appeals to me! =)

    That's what I like about 'Jungfrukällan'. I prefer Ingeri to the sweet
    little Christian and as Töre agonizes over killing the bastards I'm
    thinking 'get on with it.'

    I haven't seen the remake but 'The Last House on the Left' was a '70s low budget horror film that updated the story.


    Have you seen 'Kristin Lavransdatter'? I was reminded of it because of
    Liv Ullmann.

    No, never seen or read. But I think there is a famous cheese brand from Gudbrandsdalen, maybe, it does ring a bell!

    It's very famous -- in Norway.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kristin_Lavransdatter_(film)

    It's three hours which is the kiss of death in this market since the era
    where films like 'Gone With the Wind' had intermissions. I thought I would watch it in two sessions but wound up staying up past my bedtime. Ullmann
    was adamant that she needed three hours and refused to cut it.

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 19:35:46 2024
    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On 19/12/2024 16:28, Rich wrote:
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    Pretty much the same in Europe except you may need to show passports
    when crossing some national boundaries.

    Assuming any of the "train routes" the US does have enter either Mexico
    or Canada, I'd assume we would have to do the same here. But within
    the lower 48, there's no "state border checkpoints" between states.

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  • From Rich@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 19 19:45:50 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3 course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old, plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    That largely depends on the 'ticket class' one purchases and/or the
    actual route one takes. For the "auto-train" between Orlando Fla. and
    DC the coach seats have access to the "swedish version" and/or whatever
    one wishes to carry on-board.

    For the "sleeper cabin" tickets on the same train (of which there's
    only about 20 or so available per train) those come with dinners in the
    'dining car' where one can sit at a table (more similar to a "diner
    table" than a 5-star table) and get, technically, a three course meal.
    Overall reasonable food, although limited selection (due to being "on a train...").

    For the "tourist train" across the great plains and up into the Rockies
    (who's main purpose seems to be many days of very senic views from the
    train windows) I think the "sales material" shows dining car fare for
    most passengers. Never having ridden it I can't say for sure.

    For the 'commuting trains' that run up and down the northeast corridor (DC/Philly/NY/etc.) there's only the basic "old plastic wrapped
    sandwich" option, but as one's only on those for a few hours at most
    that's no big deal (better fare is available at the destination from
    many local restaurants).

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 19:43:35 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:01:09 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    Well some folks will always dream of 'racial purity' till they get their
    DNA analysed.

    99.8% European, 96.1% Northwestern European. 23andMe at one point decided everybody had to have sub-Saharan genes <= 0.1%. Then there is 0.1% unassigned. Wouldn't want anybody claiming racial purity, would we?

    They group French & German but only show Baden-Württemberg as the best
    match, followed by Bavaria which is consistent with what I know of my
    family.

    British % Irish is also combined at 1.2%, although the match is to County Limerick. Then there's 3.7% Eastern European but they don't break that
    down to any specific area. Must have been a Hun in the woodpile.

    Pretty boring and a lot of it is pure guesswork.



    I dread to think where my ancestors were from.

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 19:48:56 2024
    On 2024-12-19, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:26:17 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Er no. And the vomiting is absent if you drink the urine of someone or
    something - reindeer will do - that has eaten the shroom.

    That was the original trickle down effect. Hopefully it worked better than
    it ever did in economics.

    I've always said that the problem with trickle-down
    economics is that most of what trickles down is yellow.

    That's why the people at the bottom are known as "peons".

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 19 19:48:57 2024
    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Thu Dec 19 19:49:02 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 09:50:26 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:


    I cannot recall that in that book. Nor can I recall that being anything normal in European boatbuilding of open sea vessels

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_keel https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_keel#/media/File:Twin_keel_3.jpg


    The atlantic coasts have extreme tidal ranges. But the Baltic and Mediterranean do not

    Bathtub effect. The Bay of Fundy is the end of the bathtub.

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to Rich on Thu Dec 19 20:05:20 2024
    On 2024-12-19, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:

    The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 16:28, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    Pretty much the same in Europe except you may need to show passports
    when crossing some national boundaries.

    Assuming any of the "train routes" the US does have enter either Mexico
    or Canada, I'd assume we would have to do the same here. But within
    the lower 48, there's no "state border checkpoints" between states.

    Out here on the Wet Coast, Amtrak runs a train up through Bellingham
    and across the border to Vancouver. We crossed the border on it. Once.
    When we got to Vancouver we had to wait for customs to clear everyone,
    car by car. Naturally, we were on the last car, and by the time we were cleared it was well past midnight and most public transit had shut down.

    On our next trip we drove to Bellingham, cleared customs on the road,
    and left our car in a cheap long-term lot across the street from the
    station. Much faster.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From Chris Ahlstrom@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Thu Dec 19 16:30:15 2024
    Charlie Gibbs wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    My dad took us (I and my sister) on train trips. I remember in the
    dining car being asked if I wanted a Continental Breakfast. My kid's
    mind imagined a breakfast feast, with eggs and sausage or bacon.

    Bleh, it was a pastry. :-(

    Similar with my mother. She asked if I wanted a "pine float". I
    imagined a nice soda with ice cream and whipped cream.... It
    was a toothpick floating on a glass of water. She cackled.

    ObLinux:

    Grepping for FLT_MAX, partial list:

    /usr/include/values.h:#define MAXFLOAT FLT_MAX
    /usr/include/values.h:#define FMAXEXP FLT_MAX_EXP

    Now look for defines of FLT_MAX.

    --
    The difference between reality and unreality is that reality has so
    little to recommend it.
    -- Allan Sherman

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  • From Chris Ahlstrom@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 19 16:35:56 2024
    rbowman wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 09:56:45 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Probably too much mammoth meat in the diet...

    Yeah, the experts recently concluded the environmentally sensitive Native American ate all the megafauna in North America before starting on the smaller stuff.

    Hmmmmmmmmm...

    https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/what-happened-to-the-bison.htm

    Beginning in the 1860s, conflict raged on the prairies as the US Army
    attempted to subdue the Plains Indians in order to make way for white
    settlers and railroad lines. Federal officials recognized the importance of
    bison on the Plains, where Native nations had yet to be forced onto
    reservations. In 1873. the Secretary of the Interior noted that “[t]he
    civilization of the Indian is impossible while buffalo remain on the
    plains”; following this logic, the Army provided free ammunition to hide
    hunters, who brought bison to the brink of extinction. By 1894, Yellowstone
    National Park hosted the only known wild herd in the United States.
    Ironically, the US Army—which managed Yellowstone—would play an important
    role in the return of the bison a few decades later.

    Includes a picture: Photograph 1892 of a [huge] pile of American bison skulls waiting to be ground for fertilizer.

    --
    Old Barlow was a crossing-tender at a junction where an express train demolished an automobile and its occupants. Being the chief witness, his testimony was vitally important. Barlow explained that the night was dark,
    and he waved his lantern frantically, but the driver of the car paid
    no attention to the signal.
    The railroad company won the case, and the president of the company complimented the old-timer for his story. "You did wonderfully," he said,
    "I was afraid you would waver under testimony."
    "No sir," exclaimed the senior, "but I sure was afraid that durned lawyer was gonna ask me if my lantern was lit."

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 01:38:45 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 18:03:14 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Irish left because it was better than dying of starvation in a massively overpopulated country.
    Many N Europeans left because they were simply too pious to be
    tolerated. As where the original pilgrim fathers.
    English left because they were second sons and had no estates, but they
    had enough to buy them in the Americas.
    Italians probably left to escape poverty, like the Irish.

    Technically they weren't Germans since the country didn't exist but there
    has been a German presence in the US from almost the beginning. It didn't
    last long but Ben Franklin published 'Philadelphische Zeitung' in 1732,
    the first German language newspaper in the colonies.

    A couple of events may have resulted in a surge. If you were on the wrong
    side in 1848 a sea voyage would look good. Bismarck's KulturKampf in
    Prussia could persuade Catholics that there were greener pastures. The
    stubborn ones formed the Centre party.

    In the US the Germans and Irish worked well together. The Germans took
    care of business while the Irish provided the politicians and cops. That
    seemed to apply in Europe too, given Roger Casement's little scheme.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 02:13:32 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:59 +0100, D wrote:

    Hmm... was it around 1940:ish?

    Way before that.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Americans

    I definitely know one great-something grandfather fought in the Civil War.
    As far as I could trace back through fragmentary records another was
    around during the Revolutionary War. The source said he moved out in the country since he was a Loyalist.

    It wasn't their best work but Orson Welles directed a movie, 'The
    Stranger' with Edward G. Robinson. Robinson is an agent hunting a Nazi war criminal. The criminal has integrated into a small town and doesn't
    trigger suspicion. Over the dinner table the criminal says Germans are a
    threat to the world and the Robinson character counters saying Germans
    like Marx made a positive contribution. The Nazi says that Marx was a Jew
    and can't possibly a German, blowing his cover nicely.

    The US wasn't all that welcoming in that era unless you were some sort of
    rock star.

    https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/voyage-of-the-st-louis

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 20 02:26:20 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 20:05:20 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On our next trip we drove to Bellingham, cleared customs on the road,
    and left our car in a cheap long-term lot across the street from the
    station. Much faster.

    Customs can be fun. For a while Canada and the US was having a pissing
    contest over the salmon fishery and it seemed to trickle down to the
    customs booths.

    I only had a problem once. I was trying to avoid a busy station by
    crossing back into the US at an out of the way checkpoint. They were bored
    and I was the only fresh meat they'd seen in a while. I had a couple of
    ice cube relays in my toolbox that iirc were made in Japan. Since I didn't
    have the necessary papers to show I'd bought them in the US they charged
    me duty.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 02:32:26 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:07:53 +0100, D wrote:

    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the
    moving train!

    Most of the trains that come through here are coal cars. Not the best of accommodations. We do have two passenger stations that are being used for
    other purposes. Apparently 'if you build it they'll come' doesn't apply to trains.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 02:28:39 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:04 +0100, D wrote:


    It's the ponytail. Always the ponytail.

    This town is overflowing with old men with beards and ponytails. I don't
    know how many times an utter stranger has come up and started a
    conversation assuming they knew me. We all look the same.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 02:44:44 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:03:59 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3
    course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old,
    plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    If you're very, very lucky. There is a group in Indiana that had restored
    an old steam engine and takes it out for a spin every now and then for
    fund raisers They also have period cars and volunteers do serve beverages
    and meals. As a bonus the destination was Peru IN and the Circus Hall of
    Fame.

    A couple of times I took Amtrak from Ft. Wayne to Chicago. It was a
    difference experience. Amtrak on the Boston to DC corridor gets a lot of
    love; other areas not so much.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Rich on Fri Dec 20 02:48:47 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:45:50 -0000 (UTC), Rich wrote:

    For the "tourist train" across the great plains and up into the Rockies (who's main purpose seems to be many days of very senic views from the
    train windows) I think the "sales material" shows dining car fare for
    most passengers. Never having ridden it I can't say for sure.

    Sometimes you get more adventure than you paid for.

    https://www.npr.org/2021/09/26/1040819353/amtrak-derailment-montana- investigation

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Chris Ahlstrom on Fri Dec 20 03:32:07 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 16:35:56 -0500, Chris Ahlstrom wrote:

    following this logic, the Army provided free ammunition to hide
    hunters, who brought bison to the brink of extinction.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgtEu6fzkd0

    I liked him but von Schmidt was an acquired taste. Quite a few people
    including Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Cisco Houston recorded 'Buffalo Skinners' or 'Hills of Mexico'. The lyrics are siilar but it's about
    herding cattle. Von Schmidt is the only one I know that stays on the
    buffalo theme.

    You may have heard the name. In the intro to Dylan's '62 recording of
    'Baby Let Me Follow You Down' he says

    “I first heard this from Ric von Schmidt. He lives in Cambridge. Ric is a blues guitar player. I met him one day on the green pastures of the
    Harvard University.”

    https://defenders.org/blog/2019/10/return-of-buffalo-fort-peck

    Little late but the Indians are getting their buffalo back.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 03:56:53 2024
    On 19/12/2024 19:08, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 09:56:45 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Probably too much mammoth meat in the diet...

    Yeah, the experts recently concluded the environmentally sensitive Native American ate all the megafauna in North America before starting on the smaller stuff.

    That's all being disputed like fuck in Eurasia.
    The noble savage bollocks is just that, but the prehistoric hunters may
    not have been the culprits this time

    Isn't it strange how people have rejected the idea of God, but kept the
    idea of Original Sin?

    --
    It is the folly of too many to mistake the echo of a London coffee-house
    for the voice of the kingdom.

    Jonathan Swift

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 05:05:25 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:56:53 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Isn't it strange how people have rejected the idea of God, but kept the
    idea of Original Sin?

    It's hard to get beyond good and evil.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Chris Ahlstrom on Fri Dec 20 00:44:04 2024
    On 12/19/24 4:30 PM, Chris Ahlstrom wrote:
    Charlie Gibbs wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    My dad took us (I and my sister) on train trips. I remember in the
    dining car being asked if I wanted a Continental Breakfast. My kid's
    mind imagined a breakfast feast, with eggs and sausage or bacon.

    Bleh, it was a pastry. :-(


    Obviously not a 'luxury' train :-)

    The old Orient Express was reputed to offer better,
    but it catered mostly to wealthier clients.

    There IS a certain niceness to train travel - seems
    more 'organic' than planes, the rhythm of the tracks.

    Alas, in the USA, the tracks tend to be poorly maintained.
    Derailment is always possible. Euro rail is likely much
    more reliable.


    Similar with my mother. She asked if I wanted a "pine float". I
    imagined a nice soda with ice cream and whipped cream.... It
    was a toothpick floating on a glass of water. She cackled.

    ObLinux:

    Grepping for FLT_MAX, partial list:

    /usr/include/values.h:#define MAXFLOAT FLT_MAX
    /usr/include/values.h:#define FMAXEXP FLT_MAX_EXP

    Now look for defines of FLT_MAX.


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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 01:33:38 2024
    On 12/19/24 5:19 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 19/12/2024 05:00, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Alas, like time travel, the more you think about
       'mind uploading' the more improbable it seems.
       'Mind' is COMPLICATED ... and there's more than
       just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    Ah. The 'Akashic Records' were all the rage in the early/mid 20th
    century. The place where all minds are uploaded after death. Or
    something. Google it.

    I'll have Dr. Who check into it for me ... :-)

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 01:31:30 2024
    On 12/19/24 5:04 AM, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/18/24 2:19 PM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 17 Dec 2024 10:22:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Ahh.. ok, now I know. "Her books and characters serve as the basis for >>>>> the internationally successful TV series Rebecka Martinsson." I've
    seen
    an episode or two when visiting Stockholm, since my father really
    enjoys
    criminal shows.

    I didn't know it had become a TV series. Amazon has it for $18 for the >>>> first year. I'll have to try it when I finish the 'Leverage' series.

    'Leverage' is sort of apropos. It's a team of grifters and thieves that >>>> take down people like corrupt insurance CEOs. They don't shoot them but >>>> expose them and clean out their accounts to reimburse those that they
    screwed.

    I'm currently watching Pantheon. It is animated, but I find it quite
    well researched when it comes to the transhumanist theme of mind
    uploading. I suspect the second season will not be as good as the
    first, and towards the end the quality dropped. But it has a good start!


     Alas, like time travel, the more you think about
     'mind uploading' the more improbable it seems.
     'Mind' is COMPLICATED ... and there's more than
     just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    This is the truth! I like transhumanists as much as the next guy, but sometimes I think their technology optimists comes too close to religion
    for my comfort.

    Religions and related philosophies often think of
    some kind of magical 'essence of being' that can
    drift around. It's from the dark ages and beyond.
    Great for horror movie plots though.

    Quite often we see papers describing how any of dozens
    of 'helper' cells are modulating neuron activity on
    the large and small scale. Some have neuron-ish qualities
    unto themselves. The big blob of meat is a UNIT. You can
    digitize the fine state of every neuron and you'll just
    get an infunctional MESS on the other end.

    It's kinda All Or Nothing. We're not built like
    computers - 'evo-goo' instead.

    (hey, I *like* that term and officially claim it :-)

    Yes, I see no reason that should make uploading impossible, in theory,
    but we have no clue about how the mind works, so there could be plenty
    of reasons it won't work. Add to that the enormous quantum leap (or
    multiple quantum leaps) in technology, before being able to even
    physically replicate it. But with the religious, once I try that conversational track, I am shouted down and bood. =(


    IM-possible, no - but you're not just gonna do some
    kind of fancy MRI and transport a "mind" into any
    one or any thing.


    So basically, they extrapolate from 1 + 1 = 2, to a billion trillion and often handwave away the steps in between. That is what makes some of
    them religious in my opinion.

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends
    saw how easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor
    or two and assumed it would thus be easy to build an AI.
    AC Clarke used the Minsky optimism when fashioning the
    idea of "HAL".

    But it all imploded. Turned out there were billions of
    steps between input and that final, transistor-like,
    decision. A photo-lightswitch is not 'intelligent'.


     As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
     at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    Robin Hoods? You mean stealing from the government and giving to the
    people? The eternal libertarian hero?

    Um ... more 'commie' hero ....

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 10:13:52 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 17:24, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 15:35:57 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look
    at.

    People in the US of Irish descent have some compulsion to return to the
    'Auld Sod'. After a friend returned I asked him how it was. 'Green! It
    should be green. It rains all the fucking time!'

    I can only speculate why my people left Germany. There was no family lore
    about the old country and no one had an interest in returning. That's not
    to say they weren't proud of their ethnicity.

    Irish left because it was better than dying of starvation in a massively overpopulated country.
    Many N Europeans left because they were simply too pious to be tolerated. As where the original pilgrim fathers.
    English left because they were second sons and had no estates, but they had enough to buy them in the Americas.
    Italians probably left to escape poverty, like the Irish.

    Many swedes left due to either being the second+ sons, or because the
    nobility owned all the good farm land in the area and they had to work
    under slave like conditions.

    Then there ofcourse where the religiious people as well, but those were
    not the main swedish emigrants.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 03:22:40 2024
    On 12/19/24 5:15 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 19/12/2024 04:28, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    For thousands of years the presence of modern humans in Britain
    remained brief and sporadic. It has only been continuous since about
    12,000 years ago.


       Probably rates as one of the worlds "Most Invaded" places.
       Don't think anybody can make a really solid "historical
       claim" on England.

    I think that goes for most of Europe - at least the warmer more central
    parts and the Mediterranean.

    They got the Indo-Europeans while the Nordics got the blond blue eyed
    lot and where they met, redheads...

    ...and then Ghengis Khan, probably the greatest genocidal psychopath in history, spread his guy's genes all over the place.


    Europe is a total hodgepodge. Seems like EVERYBODY
    rolled through there at one time or another - wave
    after wave after wave. Serious genetic and cultural
    mixing.

    I laugh at those 'ancestry' companies who will tell
    their clients that they're "12% French" or whatever.
    What the hell IS "French" ? MANY waves of conquerors
    and colonizers came through there in the past 10,000
    years. Rome kinda owned the whole place for centuries
    and don't tell me their soldiers didn't get very busy
    with the local girls. The northern half has a lot of
    'Viking' mixed in. Two world wars mixed-in some
    'German' as well. GENETICALLY, there really isn't
    any "France". It's more a 'culture' instead.

    The Nordics ... THEY seem to have kinda sneaked around
    'Europe', coming up through western Russia and then
    around to Finland/Sweden/Norway, one step behind
    the ice-melt.

    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem
    to have come quite early and were not over-run.


    The origins of Native Americans -  especially S Americans, is still
    being worked on.

    "Siberian", more or less, with some N.Chinese probably
    mixed in. In S.Am they also found some Polynesian
    long in the mix ... apparently sailed over then went
    across the mountains into the jungle area.

    BUT, look at those giant stone Olmec heads ... that's
    clear central African.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 10:16:42 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 18:02, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 15:01, D wrote:
    Manchester was nice, but it was raining all the time.

    "Canada is all right, just not for the *whole* weekend" :-)

    Stuff Manchester, It always rains.
    Do do Ireland and Wales, but at leasts they have nice greenery to look at. >>
    And probably more sheep!

    Of the 4 legged variety, assuredly. And as we discussed, very good eating

    It is on my list to be ruthlessly compared with the icelandic variety!

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  • From Richard Kettlewell@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 09:18:48 2024
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem to have come
    quite early and were not over-run.

    The local language does seem to have been resistant to replacement for a
    few thousand years. However the population genetics is rather less
    static, with almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after 2000BCE.

    See e.g. Olalde et al, The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over
    the past 8000 years.

    --
    https://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 10:18:11 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 19/12/2024 18:07, D wrote:



    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the moving >> train!

    Not really possible in the UK.

    Boring! Maybe in the US they are more enlightened?

    Most trains have doors that can only be opened by the driver, and most railways are fenced off from roads...

    ..when I was about 7, two twins used to travel by rail. One of them was leaning out of the door window when he other one opened it for a prank.

    Killed instantly. we never heard or saw either of them again.
    That carriage style was retired about 10 years later

    Sad, but if the world was adapted according to child safety and to shield
    us from darwinism, it would quickly become a boring world. Hmm...
    actually... ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:16:13 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:49:37 +0100, D wrote:


    Haha, brilliant! I assume there must have been a chinese jarl as well?
    My wife gets very annoyed when they populate historical dramas with
    black,
    yellow or red people who have no business appearing in 17:th century
    europe at the top of society.

    But, but... I have the DVD set of James Levine's Ring Cycle at the Metropolitan Opera in '89. Jessye Norman has the Sieglinde and somehow
    didn't look like Siegmund's twin. Opera at least has the excuse that you
    need someone who can sing. Hildegard Behrens played Brünnhilde and while
    she did her best one of the criticisms was she was a bit long in the tooth for the role.

    Levine has a few cameos on the DVD and looked greasy. I wasn't surprised
    when he was fired over allegations he had abused some young men.

    I like Anna Netrebko! As for the rest, you would have to ask my wife. ;)

    What about lord of the rings? Have there poped up versions with chinese
    trans elves yet?

    Amazon's 'Rings of Power' does have someone who isn't exactly a Light Elf.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ismael_Cruz_C%C3%B3rdova

    I haven't watched it but it didn't get very good reviews. The kindest say
    the scenery is beautiful but the acting stunk.

    Suspected as much! I do however find the mainstream hate against monkeys worrying. It is my great hope that Amazon and Netflix will cast more
    monkeys in main character roles in the future to rectify this!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:20:24 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:46:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always thought about starting a mega-church. Seems like a nice
    business!
    I wonder if the time has passed, or if there are any fairly recent mega
    churches started by some elite psychologist?

    There isn't enough population to really go mega but a church I pass on the way to town has aspirations. It sends out colorful postcards and has signboards on its property promoting activities.

    https://crosspointmt.com/plan-a-visit

    Very modern! My european views have warped my expectations. A church
    that's less than 200 years old?? ;)

    They don't go in for quantity but my friend who kept track of locals said when they built a new church the Slavic Pentacostals wanted to have the biggest church in town in terms of square feet. I drive by and it
    sometimes has a well filled parking lot. They are low key but there are a surprising number of Slavs in town, mostly Russians I think.

    Ahh... are they immigrant Putin deniers perhaps? ;) Actually my neighbour
    is currently on a job finding tour in the US. He's russian and quite a
    nice guy.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 20 10:31:07 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    Brilliant!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Rich on Fri Dec 20 10:30:36 2024
    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3 course >> meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old, plastic >> wrapped sandwich? ;)

    That largely depends on the 'ticket class' one purchases and/or the
    actual route one takes. For the "auto-train" between Orlando Fla. and
    DC the coach seats have access to the "swedish version" and/or whatever
    one wishes to carry on-board.

    For the "sleeper cabin" tickets on the same train (of which there's
    only about 20 or so available per train) those come with dinners in the 'dining car' where one can sit at a table (more similar to a "diner
    table" than a 5-star table) and get, technically, a three course meal. Overall reasonable food, although limited selection (due to being "on a train...").

    For the "tourist train" across the great plains and up into the Rockies (who's main purpose seems to be many days of very senic views from the
    train windows) I think the "sales material" shows dining car fare for
    most passengers. Never having ridden it I can't say for sure.

    For the 'commuting trains' that run up and down the northeast corridor (DC/Philly/NY/etc.) there's only the basic "old plastic wrapped
    sandwich" option, but as one's only on those for a few hours at most
    that's no big deal (better fare is available at the destination from
    many local restaurants).


    Interesting! There might be a train ride on my next trip to the US. The
    wife seems to be more and more interested in it, since neither of us
    enjoys driving. Let's see what we decide upon. I suspect we might actually
    go in late 2025.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:27:44 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:54:20 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes... it is the weirdness and the symbology that appeals to me! =)

    That's what I like about 'Jungfrukllan'. I prefer Ingeri to the sweet
    little Christian and as Tre agonizes over killing the bastards I'm
    thinking 'get on with it.'

    Very interesting! Since I will have 2 forced weeks of holidays as of 16:00 today (all my customers are away so there's no point in sitting in front
    of the screen waiting for emails that will only arrive on jan 7:th) there
    could be plenty of opportunities to watch movies!

    The only threat to that plan is that the wife arrives on the 27:th, and it could be that she wants to do thing! =/ I think we might, _if_ anything promising shows up, go on a tour to have a look at some potential plots
    for our fortress of solitude. Which one of these plots (if any) would you
    buy?

    https://www.hemnet.se/bostad/tomt-2rum-nor-djupvreten-knivsta-kommun-djupvretenvagen-18-20865715
    https://www.hemnet.se/bostad/gard-loharad-norrtalje-kommun-fyringevagen-40-20195475
    https://www.hemnet.se/bostad/tomt-norrtalje-kommun-nartuna-ubby-2-12-20154996 https://www.hemnet.se/bostad/tomt-gottrora-norrtalje-kommun-sjobergsvagen-14-21355948

    Neither is perfect. They all have weaknesses, but it is very difficult to
    find anything perfect for under 400k-500k and for that amount I would have
    to sell something else, which I am reluctant to do at the moment, since interest rates are on their way down, thus driving up prices. =/

    I haven't seen the remake but 'The Last House on the Left' was a '70s low budget horror film that updated the story.


    Have you seen 'Kristin Lavransdatter'? I was reminded of it because of
    Liv Ullmann.

    No, never seen or read. But I think there is a famous cheese brand from
    Gudbrandsdalen, maybe, it does ring a bell!

    It's very famous -- in Norway.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kristin_Lavransdatter_(film)

    It's three hours which is the kiss of death in this market since the era where films like 'Gone With the Wind' had intermissions. I thought I would watch it in two sessions but wound up staying up past my bedtime. Ullmann
    was adamant that she needed three hours and refused to cut it.




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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:32:52 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 18:03:14 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Irish left because it was better than dying of starvation in a massively
    overpopulated country.
    Many N Europeans left because they were simply too pious to be
    tolerated. As where the original pilgrim fathers.
    English left because they were second sons and had no estates, but they
    had enough to buy them in the Americas.
    Italians probably left to escape poverty, like the Irish.

    Technically they weren't Germans since the country didn't exist but there
    has been a German presence in the US from almost the beginning. It didn't last long but Ben Franklin published 'Philadelphische Zeitung' in 1732,
    the first German language newspaper in the colonies.

    A couple of events may have resulted in a surge. If you were on the wrong side in 1848 a sea voyage would look good. Bismarck's KulturKampf in
    Prussia could persuade Catholics that there were greener pastures. The stubborn ones formed the Centre party.

    In the US the Germans and Irish worked well together. The Germans took
    care of business while the Irish provided the politicians and cops. That seemed to apply in Europe too, given Roger Casement's little scheme.


    And let us not forget the early influence of Adam Weishaupt! Just look at
    your dollarbills!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:35:40 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:59 +0100, D wrote:

    Hmm... was it around 1940:ish?

    Way before that.

    Just joking! ;)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Americans

    I definitely know one great-something grandfather fought in the Civil War.
    As far as I could trace back through fragmentary records another was
    around during the Revolutionary War. The source said he moved out in the country since he was a Loyalist.

    It wasn't their best work but Orson Welles directed a movie, 'The
    Stranger' with Edward G. Robinson. Robinson is an agent hunting a Nazi war criminal. The criminal has integrated into a small town and doesn't
    trigger suspicion. Over the dinner table the criminal says Germans are a threat to the world and the Robinson character counters saying Germans
    like Marx made a positive contribution. The Nazi says that Marx was a Jew
    and can't possibly a German, blowing his cover nicely.

    The US wasn't all that welcoming in that era unless you were some sort of rock star.

    https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/voyage-of-the-st-louis

    Reminds me of an old Stephen King book (don't remember the name) where an
    old nazi hides in a village in the US and inspires a young man.

    I still sometimes hope to find some long distant and forgotten relative in
    the US, but they all stayed put in northern sweden and northern iceland.

    Many, on my mothers side of the family, have lived in the US for at least
    a year or two, but all of them (me included) eventually came back to where
    we came from.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:38:08 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:07:53 +0100, D wrote:

    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the
    moving train!

    Most of the trains that come through here are coal cars. Not the best of accommodations. We do have two passenger stations that are being used for other purposes. Apparently 'if you build it they'll come' doesn't apply to trains.


    All it takes is patience. Just wait and see! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:37:12 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:04 +0100, D wrote:


    It's the ponytail. Always the ponytail.

    This town is overflowing with old men with beards and ponytails. I don't
    know how many times an utter stranger has come up and started a
    conversation assuming they knew me. We all look the same.

    Brilliant! I doubt I would fit in though. I've always had a very regular
    and non-inspiring crewcut for as long as I can remember.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:40:50 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:03:59 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater. You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does
    anything "security check" wise. You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3
    course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old,
    plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    If you're very, very lucky. There is a group in Indiana that had restored
    an old steam engine and takes it out for a spin every now and then for
    fund raisers They also have period cars and volunteers do serve beverages
    and meals. As a bonus the destination was Peru IN and the Circus Hall of Fame.

    A couple of times I took Amtrak from Ft. Wayne to Chicago. It was a difference experience. Amtrak on the Boston to DC corridor gets a lot of love; other areas not so much.

    There was a train between Stockholm and Gothenburg that focused on the
    "luxury" niche.

    https://www.blataget.com/en/history/

    The web site is super crappy, and hardly any photos (why??) but you can
    kind of see the interior which looks alright and the food as well. Sadly I
    do not think they ru nany longer. =(

    I love the fact that the phone nr on the web site goes to someones regular cellphone and not to a company switch board.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 10:42:12 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:56:53 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Isn't it strange how people have rejected the idea of God, but kept the
    idea of Original Sin?

    It's hard to get beyond good and evil.


    That would take quite a gay science!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 10:45:01 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/19/24 4:30 PM, Chris Ahlstrom wrote:
    Charlie Gibbs wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    My dad took us (I and my sister) on train trips. I remember in the
    dining car being asked if I wanted a Continental Breakfast. My kid's
    mind imagined a breakfast feast, with eggs and sausage or bacon.

    Bleh, it was a pastry. :-(


    Obviously not a 'luxury' train :-)

    The old Orient Express was reputed to offer better,
    but it catered mostly to wealthier clients.

    Sigh... the world was just better in those days. We get to see the
    collapsing remains of a once great civilization. =(

    There IS a certain niceness to train travel - seems
    more 'organic' than planes, the rhythm of the tracks.

    Alas, in the USA, the tracks tend to be poorly maintained.
    Derailment is always possible. Euro rail is likely much
    more reliable.

    Europe is bad. Europe is on the other hand, a lot of separate countries,
    so from personal experience I can tell you that sweden is horrible, and so
    is germany.

    Switzerland was great!

    I also had a good experience in the UK, but I later learned that I was extremely lucky, and that apparently it isn't that great. But it was an
    italian company who ran the line from London to Manchester I took. At that time, worked alright.


    Similar with my mother. She asked if I wanted a "pine float". I
    imagined a nice soda with ice cream and whipped cream.... It
    was a toothpick floating on a glass of water. She cackled.

    ObLinux:

    Grepping for FLT_MAX, partial list:

    /usr/include/values.h:#define MAXFLOAT FLT_MAX
    /usr/include/values.h:#define FMAXEXP FLT_MAX_EXP

    Now look for defines of FLT_MAX.




    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 10:57:38 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    This is the truth! I like transhumanists as much as the next guy, but
    sometimes I think their technology optimists comes too close to religion
    for my comfort.

    Religions and related philosophies often think of
    some kind of magical 'essence of being' that can
    drift around. It's from the dark ages and beyond.
    Great for horror movie plots though.

    So you don't think that we are all god, living in god, being gods parts and components? ;)

    Quite often we see papers describing how any of dozens
    of 'helper' cells are modulating neuron activity on
    the large and small scale. Some have neuron-ish qualities
    unto themselves. The big blob of meat is a UNIT. You can
    digitize the fine state of every neuron and you'll just
    get an infunctional MESS on the other end.

    It's kinda All Or Nothing. We're not built like
    computers - 'evo-goo' instead.

    (hey, I *like* that term and officially claim it :-)

    Well, I see nothing that says we wouldn't be able to live in another kind of substrate if everything was simulated, but I find the philosophical questions of
    if it would really be _us_ more interesting (assuming it works, of course).

    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an uploaded intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like you, it wouldn't be you. I like conscious continuity, but many transhumanists do not require that or
    believe that.

    Yes, I see no reason that should make uploading impossible, in theory, but >> we have no clue about how the mind works, so there could be plenty of
    reasons it won't work. Add to that the enormous quantum leap (or multiple
    quantum leaps) in technology, before being able to even physically
    replicate it. But with the religious, once I try that conversational track, >> I am shouted down and bood. =(


    IM-possible, no - but you're not just gonna do some
    kind of fancy MRI and transport a "mind" into any
    one or any thing.

    Come on! You're being so negative. Show some faith!! ;) For me, the big problem is that we don't (yet) know how to mind works and even what consciousness is, so
    how can we replicate it?

    So basically, they extrapolate from 1 + 1 = 2, to a billion trillion and
    often handwave away the steps in between. That is what makes some of them
    religious in my opinion.

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends
    saw how easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor
    or two and assumed it would thus be easy to build an AI.
    AC Clarke used the Minsky optimism when fashioning the
    idea of "HAL".

    But it all imploded. Turned out there were billions of
    steps between input and that final, transistor-like,
    decision. A photo-lightswitch is not 'intelligent'.

    But now we have LLM:s! ;) What I find interesting is how different people view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids for stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    I would not trust them for anything business, there I must check manually to make sure all is correct.

    Then you have people who fall in love with their LLM. I find that incredible! Would they have fallen in love with Eliza?

     As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
     at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    Robin Hoods? You mean stealing from the government and giving to the
    people? The eternal libertarian hero?

    Um ... more 'commie' hero ....

    Ahh... that spin of Robin Hood. It is not so good. =/ I read two of the older editions Pyle and McFadden (I think) and there he seemed to be more libertarian/anarchist than commie, always fighting the state.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 11:00:50 2024
    On 20/12/2024 05:05, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:56:53 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Isn't it strange how people have rejected the idea of God, but kept the
    idea of Original Sin?

    It's hard to get beyond good and evil.

    Really? But this isn't good and evil, its mankind's inevitable and
    inherent *badness* that needs spiritual redemption via ClimateChange EcoBollox™.


    --
    It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled. Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 11:38:16 2024
    On 20/12/2024 08:22, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem
      to have come quite early and were not over-run.

    They are like the Welsh, Scots Cornish, Irish and Bretons, vestigial
    traces of the original 'beaker people' who became the 'Gauls' or
    'Celtoi'. Speaking various versions of the Godelic and Brythonic Celtic
    languages set

    Except the language hails from somewhere else entirely.
    It sounds to me like Eastern European (ukrainian?) with a spanish accent!



    The origins of Native Americans -  especially S Americans, is still
    being worked on.

      "Siberian", more or less, with some N.Chinese probably
      mixed in. In S.Am they also found some Polynesian
      long in the mix ... apparently sailed over then went
      across the mountains into the jungle area.

      BUT, look at those giant stone Olmec heads ... that's
      clear central African.

    Is it?

    Or parallel evolution?


    --
    “Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.”

    ― Voltaire, Questions sur les Miracles à M. Claparede, Professeur de Théologie à Genève, par un Proposant: Ou Extrait de Diverses Lettres de
    M. de Voltaire

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 11:25:55 2024
    On 20/12/2024 09:57, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    This is the truth! I like transhumanists as much as the next guy, but
    sometimes I think their technology optimists comes too close to
    religion for my comfort.

     Religions and related philosophies often think of
     some kind of magical 'essence of being' that can
     drift around. It's from the dark ages and beyond.
     Great for horror movie plots though.

    So you don't think that we are all god, living in god, being gods parts and components? ;)


    Well that's Spinoza's hypothesis.

    What you term the material world is just 'God, made manifest'

    No more demented than any other metaphysical position.


     Quite often we see papers describing how any of dozens
     of 'helper' cells are modulating neuron activity on
     the large and small scale. Some have neuron-ish qualities
     unto themselves. The big blob of meat is a UNIT. You can
     digitize the fine state of every neuron and you'll just
     get an infunctional MESS on the other end.

     It's kinda All Or Nothing. We're not built like
     computers - 'evo-goo' instead.

     (hey, I *like* that term and officially claim it :-)

    Well, I see nothing that says we wouldn't be able to live in another
    kind of substrate if everything was simulated, but I find the
    philosophical questions of if it would really be _us_ more
    interesting (assuming it works, of
    course).

    Well yes. The human experience seems to be that of a consciousness
    bolted on to an unruly animal. And most religions seem to be a process
    of denying or repressing that, whereas the happier people simply accept
    there are two people inside them and try and reach an accommodation.



    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an
    uploaded intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like
    you, it wouldn't be you. I like conscious continuity, but many
    transhumanists do not require that or believe that.

    The position is simply the old idea of 'soul' rehashed into IT terms.
    The point is that there is the animal self, that it coexists with (or
    for you, from whence consciousness emerges)
    Without that bag of biochemistry you wouldn't be what you are.

    It might be life, but not as we know it, Jim.


    Yes, I see no reason that should make uploading impossible, in
    theory, but we have no clue about how the mind works, so there could
    be plenty of reasons it won't work. Add to that the enormous quantum
    leap (or multiple quantum leaps) in technology, before being able to
    even physically replicate it. But with the religious, once I try that
    conversational track, I am shouted down and bood. =(


     IM-possible, no - but you're not just gonna do some
     kind of fancy MRI and transport a "mind" into any
     one or any thing.

    Come on! You're being so negative. Show some faith!! ;) For me, the
    big problem is that we don't (yet) know how to mind works and even
    what consciousness is, so how can we replicate it?

    We have done precisely that in creating computers. They mimic our
    logical processes.


    So basically, they extrapolate from 1 + 1 = 2, to a billion trillion
    and often handwave away the steps in between. That is what makes some
    of them religious in my opinion.

     It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
     Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends
     saw how easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor
     or two and assumed it would thus be easy to build an AI.
     AC Clarke used the Minsky optimism when fashioning the
     idea of "HAL".

     But it all imploded. Turned out there were billions of
     steps between input and that final, transistor-like,
     decision. A photo-lightswitch is not 'intelligent'.

    But now we have LLM:s! ;) What I find interesting is how different
    people view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids
    for stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).
    I would not trust them for anything business, there I must check
    manually to make sure all is correct.

    *shrug* many people used to look it up in the Bible.



    Then you have people who fall in love with their LLM. I find that
    incredible! Would they have fallen in love with Eliza?

    Id fall in love with any AI that could actually understand me :-)


     As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
     at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    Robin Hoods? You mean stealing from the government and giving to the
    people? The eternal libertarian hero?

     Um ... more 'commie' hero ....

    Ahh... that spin of Robin Hood. It is not so good. =/ I read two of
    the older editions Pyle and McFadden (I think) and there he seemed to
    be more libertarian/anarchist than commie, always fighting the
    state.

    Robin Hood, the Green man, Tom Bombadil, whatever, has always been a
    mythic country dweller who takes up the cause of the peasants against
    the ruling classes. He is a shadow of a pagan deity. The male spirit of
    the woods - of trees and forests and of the spring. The vital spirit
    that causes things to grow.

    The first appearance of the Robin Hood legend seems to be in Piers
    Plowman, a sort of Paleo-Marxist tract from 1370 or so where the whole
    book is an allegory of the fight for the working class (rural peasant in
    those days) against the king and the church.

    Definitely a 'fuck the kings deer! Whose king is he anyway? let's have
    some for ourselves'

    The only difference between libertarianism and communism, is when each
    gets to power.

    Libertariansims tends towards a small state and individual freedom
    whereas communism imposes an egalitarianism using the biggest possible
    State, in fact the ideal is to leave only the State and its employees.

    In communism you work for the state. In libertarianism you work for yourself



    --
    In a Time of Universal Deceit, Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act.

    - George Orwell

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Richard Kettlewell on Fri Dec 20 11:45:40 2024
    On 20/12/2024 09:18, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem to have come
    quite early and were not over-run.

    The local language does seem to have been resistant to replacement for a
    few thousand years. However the population genetics is rather less
    static, with almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after 2000BCE.

    See e.g. Olalde et al, The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over
    the past 8000 years.

    +1.

    And that is the problem with all the different proxies for tribal or
    'racial' origins.

    Lots of evidence of intermixing between the mitochondrial DNA from early 'celtic' UK populations and the 'Anglo saxon' but less in the ordinary
    DNA, suggesting Celtic women survived but the men did not always...

    Early English is mostly Germanic but the word order is Celtic....typical
    of someone learning foreign words, but not the language, as we hear in
    the Yoda speak Germanic parody. With the object first then subject,
    and the verb last.

    "Ungrammatical the Kingdom of the Britain's, is".


    --
    The biggest threat to humanity comes from socialism, which has utterly
    diverted our attention away from what really matters to our existential survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations
    into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with
    what it actually is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 11:51:41 2024
    On 20/12/2024 09:18, D wrote:

    Sad, but if the world was adapted according to child safety and to
    shield us from darwinism, it would quickly become a boring world. Hmm... actually... ;)

    That is the major difference between the post war period I grew up in,
    and today, in terms of world-view and psychology.

    We understood the world to be a dangerous place, and food and personal
    hygiene were stressed, not antibiotics and socialised medicine. Also
    staying alert and being observant and quick thinking were typical 'boy
    scout' lessons.

    Road furniture was designed to raise situational awareness, not to
    dictate driving behaviour.

    We were warned not to accept sweets or rides from strange men, (or
    women).

    And so on.

    --
    Canada is all right really, though not for the whole weekend.

    "Saki"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 11:54:52 2024
    On 20/12/2024 09:31, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

       Some people like to travel by train because it combines
       the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
       of an airplane.  -- Dennis Miller

    Brilliant!

    I am always reminded of the apocryyphal conversation between a Harley
    Davidson rider and one seated on a Kawasaki..

    "When I am on my Kawasaki I can get to where I want to be twice as fast
    as you can"

    "When ah am awn mah Hog, Ah AM where Ah want to be"...

    --
    "Women actually are capable of being far more than the feminists will
    let them."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 12:05:45 2024
    On 20/12/2024 09:38, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:07:53 +0100, D wrote:

    Train stations are for nerds! Real men jump from a moving car to the
    moving train!

    Most of the trains that come through here are coal cars. Not the best of
    accommodations. We do have two passenger stations that are being used for
    other purposes. Apparently 'if you build it they'll come' doesn't
    apply to
    trains.


    All it takes is patience. Just wait and see! ;)

    In all cases the optimal solution is context dependent

    People in the major cities travel between those majors cities as fast as possible, and that means by air, because its relatively cheap and super
    fast.

    People in the flyover states are there because they have no interest in
    being anywhere than where they are. And they have cars and of course
    trucks, which are good enough for the long and arbitrary journeys they make.

    Trains are only really suitable for freight and bulk carrying in the USA
    these days...

    ....But if carbon based fuel gets expensive enough electric trains will
    become potentially the fast and cheap option.

    You may even drive your BEV onto one and get a free charge with the
    train ticket

    Train top speeds are easily 200mph, and planes at 500mph or a bit more
    er not that much faster when the boarding process is taken into account.
    Trains have doors all along them :-)

    15 hours coast to coast on a fast electric train with dining facilities,
    wi fi and USB charger plugs and even a bunk, might be seen as preferable
    to a redeye 6 hour flight

    Of course what happens if it snows, is another matter.


    --
    “People believe certain stories because everyone important tells them,
    and people tell those stories because everyone important believes them.
    Indeed, when a conventional wisdom is at its fullest strength, one’s agreement with that conventional wisdom becomes almost a litmus test of
    one’s suitability to be taken seriously.”

    Paul Krugman

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 16:02:38 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 20/12/2024 09:18, D wrote:

    Sad, but if the world was adapted according to child safety and to shield
    us from darwinism, it would quickly become a boring world. Hmm...
    actually... ;)

    That is the major difference between the post war period I grew up in, and today, in terms of world-view and psychology.

    We understood the world to be a dangerous place, and food and personal hygiene were stressed, not antibiotics and socialised medicine. Also staying alert and being observant and quick thinking were typical 'boy scout' lessons.

    Road furniture was designed to raise situational awareness, not to dictate driving behaviour.

    We were warned not to accept sweets or rides from strange men, (or women).

    And so on.

    Ahh... those were the days. I often feel as if I should have been born
    many decades earlier. I think I might have been happier. On the other
    hand, I think I've manaed to isolate myself quite well from the woke
    crowd, media, politics and all other poisons, so overall I am fairly
    content.

    Sometimes the world break through, but if I can only build my fortress of solitude, that is, find a plot good enough, that will be fixed!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 15:59:42 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 20/12/2024 09:57, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     just neurons involved. 'Mind' is an 'environment'.

    This is the truth! I like transhumanists as much as the next guy, but
    sometimes I think their technology optimists comes too close to religion >>>> for my comfort.

     Religions and related philosophies often think of
     some kind of magical 'essence of being' that can
     drift around. It's from the dark ages and beyond.
     Great for horror movie plots though.

    So you don't think that we are all god, living in god, being gods parts and >> components? ;)


    Well that's Spinoza's hypothesis.

    I know!

    What you term the material world is just 'God, made manifest'

    No more demented than any other metaphysical position.

    This is the truth! I'm not a subscriber, but I'm a fan of it, because it
    is nice, simple and avoids complexities. It can even work, depending on
    your definition of god, for materialists! =D

     Quite often we see papers describing how any of dozens
     of 'helper' cells are modulating neuron activity on
     the large and small scale. Some have neuron-ish qualities
     unto themselves. The big blob of meat is a UNIT. You can
     digitize the fine state of every neuron and you'll just
     get an infunctional MESS on the other end.

     It's kinda All Or Nothing. We're not built like
     computers - 'evo-goo' instead.

     (hey, I *like* that term and officially claim it :-)

    Well, I see nothing that says we wouldn't be able to live in another kind
    of substrate if everything was simulated, but I find the
    philosophical questions of if it would really be _us_ more
    interesting (assuming it works, of
    course).

    Well yes. The human experience seems to be that of a consciousness bolted on to an unruly animal. And most religions seem to be a process of denying or repressing that, whereas the happier people simply accept there are two people inside them and try and reach an accommodation.

    Denyning or repressing? You sound so negative! ;) How about refining, distilling or enriching?

    Talking about accepting and accomodating almost sounds a bit Jungian.

    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an
    uploaded intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like
    you, it wouldn't be you. I like conscious continuity, but many
    transhumanists do not require that or believe that.

    The position is simply the old idea of 'soul' rehashed into IT terms. The point is that there is the animal self, that it coexists with (or for you, from whence consciousness emerges)
    Without that bag of biochemistry you wouldn't be what you are.

    It might be life, but not as we know it, Jim.

    This is the truth! And even though transhumanists brand themselves as the scientific choice (TM), when you challenge them or question them, I feel
    as if you trigger their religious reflex.

    A lot of them like to pay a fortune to freeze themselves, with the slim
    hope of being revived. I don't know if anyone ever did some statistics on
    it, but I suspect that you might have greater success donating to your
    local church in order to get God on your side! ;)

    Do you debate transhumanists? Do they like you? And, do you like them?

    Yes, I see no reason that should make uploading impossible, in theory, >>>> but we have no clue about how the mind works, so there could be plenty of >>>> reasons it won't work. Add to that the enormous quantum leap (or multiple >>>> quantum leaps) in technology, before being able to even physically
    replicate it. But with the religious, once I try that conversational
    track, I am shouted down and bood. =(


     IM-possible, no - but you're not just gonna do some
     kind of fancy MRI and transport a "mind" into any
     one or any thing.

    Come on! You're being so negative. Show some faith!! ;) For me, the
    big problem is that we don't (yet) know how to mind works and even
    what consciousness is, so how can we replicate it?

    We have done precisely that in creating computers. They mimic our logical processes.

    Mimic to a small extent, yes, replicate, no. It's a big difference,
    especially at scale.

    So basically, they extrapolate from 1 + 1 = 2, to a billion trillion and >>>> often handwave away the steps in between. That is what makes some of them >>>> religious in my opinion.

     It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
     Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends
     saw how easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor
     or two and assumed it would thus be easy to build an AI.
     AC Clarke used the Minsky optimism when fashioning the
     idea of "HAL".

     But it all imploded. Turned out there were billions of
     steps between input and that final, transistor-like,
     decision. A photo-lightswitch is not 'intelligent'.

    But now we have LLM:s! ;) What I find interesting is how different people
    view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids
    for stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).
    I would not trust them for anything business, there I must check manually
    to make sure all is correct.

    *shrug* many people used to look it up in the Bible.



    Then you have people who fall in love with their LLM. I find that
    incredible! Would they have fallen in love with Eliza?

    Id fall in love with any AI that could actually understand me :-)

    Really? No aesthetical or haptical preferences?

     As for "Robin Hoods" - there are many ways of looking
     at that paradigm. Who "deserves" what ... not so easy.

    Robin Hoods? You mean stealing from the government and giving to the
    people? The eternal libertarian hero?

     Um ... more 'commie' hero ....

    Ahh... that spin of Robin Hood. It is not so good. =/ I read two of
    the older editions Pyle and McFadden (I think) and there he seemed to
    be more libertarian/anarchist than commie, always fighting the
    state.

    Robin Hood, the Green man, Tom Bombadil, whatever, has always been a mythic country dweller who takes up the cause of the peasants against the ruling classes. He is a shadow of a pagan deity. The male spirit of the woods - of trees and forests and of the spring. The vital spirit that causes things to grow.

    The first appearance of the Robin Hood legend seems to be in Piers Plowman, a sort of Paleo-Marxist tract from 1370 or so where the whole book is an allegory of the fight for the working class (rural peasant in those days) against the king and the church.

    Very interesting, the lord of the rings guy I know, but the green man I
    will look up.

    Definitely a 'fuck the kings deer! Whose king is he anyway? let's have some for ourselves'

    The only difference between libertarianism and communism, is when each gets to power.

    This is incorrect. The entire theory of property is a huge difference
    between them.

    Libertariansims tends towards a small state and individual freedom whereas communism imposes an egalitarianism using the biggest possible State, in fact the ideal is to leave only the State and its employees.

    Your "only difference" threw me off there. I'd say this is quite a big difference and not the "only" difference.

    In communism you work for the state. In libertarianism you work for yourself

    This is the truth as god intended! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 16:04:47 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 20/12/2024 09:31, D wrote:


    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-19, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the
    result would be much better. Perhaps less security theater?

    Some people like to travel by train because it combines
    the slowness of a car with the cramped public exposure
    of an airplane. -- Dennis Miller

    Brilliant!

    I am always reminded of the apocryyphal conversation between a Harley Davidson rider and one seated on a Kawasaki..

    "When I am on my Kawasaki I can get to where I want to be twice as fast as you can"

    "When ah am awn mah Hog, Ah AM where Ah want to be"...

    We surely are drifting into alt.philosophy territory. This is deep! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 17:24:02 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s! What I find interesting is how different people
    view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids for stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as well go straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 18:03:47 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:13:52 +0100, D wrote:

    Many swedes left due to either being the second+ sons, or because the nobility owned all the good farm land in the area and they had to work
    under slave like conditions.

    Then there ofcourse where the religiious people as well, but those were
    not the main swedish emigrants.

    I think Sweden was the last due to stricter religious laws but the LDS
    church launched a Scandinavian Mission in the 1850s and the converts were encouraged to emigrate to Utah. I don't know if they told the recruits the whole story.

    https://racingnelliebly.com/strange_times/handcart-pioneers-pushed-1300-
    miles/

    That's backwards of the usual pattern like the various Anabaptist groups
    that bounced around Europe before heading to America. When Russia started
    to crack down on their use of German the Mennonites and Hutterites even
    sent scouts. The Dakotas looked like home.

    Around here Hutterite turkeys and other produce are very popular.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 17:19:52 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 01:31:30 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends saw how
    easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor or two and assumed
    it would thus be easy to build an AI. AC Clarke used the Minsky
    optimism when fashioning the idea of "HAL".

    Minsky threw a wrench in the works with his 9169 'Perceptrons'. He had
    tried to implement B. F. skinner's operant condition with a analog lashup
    that sort of worked if the vacuum tubes didn't burn out. Rosenblatt has
    built a 'Perceptron' and Minsky pointed out original design couldn't
    handle an XOR. That sent research down another rabbit hole.

    By the '80s the original perceptron had evolved into a multilayer network
    train by back propagation. When I played around with it 'Parallel
    Distributed Processing' by Rumelhart and McClelland was THE book.

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4424/Parallel-Distributed- Processing-Volume

    The ideas were fascinating but the computing power wasn't there. Most of
    what I learned then is still relevant to TensorFlow and the other neural network approaches except now there are the $30,000 Nvidia GPUs to do the
    heavy lifting.

    The '80s neural networks weren't practical so the focus shifted to expert systems until they petered out. The boom and bust cycles led to the term
    'AI Winter'

    https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/definition/AI-winter

    I think something worthwhile will come from this cycle but ultimately it
    won't be the LLMs that are getting all the hype.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 18:14:45 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:32:52 +0100, D wrote:

    And let us not forget the early influence of Adam Weishaupt! Just look
    at your dollarbills!

    It's those 33rd Degree Masons...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 18:46:15 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:30:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! There might be a train ride on my next trip to the US. The
    wife seems to be more and more interested in it, since neither of us
    enjoys driving. Let's see what we decide upon. I suspect we might
    actually go in late 2025.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acela

    The Northeast Corridor and southern California are the best bets. Outside
    of that you're rolling the dice.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak#/media/
    File:Amtrak_network_map_2016.svg

    Theoretically Amtrak trains have priority over freight trains. In practice freight pays the bills and Amtrak is a federally subsidized money sink. It makes sense in the northeast. when I worked in Boston I sometimes had to
    go to New York City. By the time you get to Logan, jump through the hoops,
    land at JFK, and take ground transportation into the city, 4 hours from downtown Boston to downtown NY looks good. The company's travel people
    didn't think that way. 'It's only an hour and a half flight.'

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 18:59:07 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:37:41 +0100, D wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:04 +0100, D wrote:


    It's the ponytail. Always the ponytail.

    This town is overflowing with old men with beards and ponytails. I
    don't know how many times an utter stranger has come up and started a
    conversation assuming they knew me. We all look the same.

    Hmm, on second though, does that mean that the entire town is full of honorable and dignified Unix-men?

    Possibly. There was an attempt to start a Linux users group about 15 years
    ago but it fizzled out. Sort of like c.o.l.m it didn't attract anybody but Linux users and since we were all experienced Linux users what was there
    to talk about? There were a presentations but they tended to be esoterica
    that didn't interest anybody but the person who brought the topic up.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 19:48:17 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:35:40 +0100, D wrote:

    Many, on my mothers side of the family, have lived in the US for at
    least a year or two, but all of them (me included) eventually came back
    to where we came from.

    They were Norwegians but I like to compare Rolvaag with Hamsun. Rolvaag
    wrote 'Giants in the Earth' about the Norwegians in the Dakotas in the
    1870s. He had emigrated and stayed in the US.

    Hamsun spent a few years in America in the 1880s but went back. 'Hunger'
    and some of his early works were a little strange but 'Growth of the Soil'
    is set in rural Norway. There are many parallels to trying to make a life
    in rural Dakota.


    'Giants in the Earth' follows Per Hansa and his wife, Beret. Per really
    wants to make a new life in America; Beret really wants to go home. She eventually goes more or less insane. I don't know how well she would have
    done in rural Norway either.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 19:30:52 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:38:08 +0100, D wrote:

    All it takes is patience. Just wait and see!

    https://www.kpax.com/news/montana-news/montanas-southern-passenger-train- service-may-not-be-on-time

    "The goal to see passenger rail in Montana by 2030 will be difficult to achieve"

    There is a lot of history involved. The Great Northern railroad ran across
    the northern part of the state, close to the Canadian border. The area is
    still referred to as the Hi-Line since it was the northernmost railroad in
    the US. There isn't much there, but that's the Amtrak route.

    https://takemytrip.com/2017/11/driving-hi-line-across-montana/

    The Northern Pacific line runs through the central part of the state where people actually live.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missoula_station_(Northern_Pacific_Railway)

    Nice station. I've seen a couple of tourist trains that must have gotten
    lost. There is another historic station.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missoula_station_(Milwaukee_Road)

    That one is out of the question. Most of the Milwaukee Road tracks were
    torn up and turned into bike paths. The Milwaukee was ahead of its time.
    They electrified 438 miles from Harlowtown MT to Avery ID in 1916. That
    was quite a thing since there is a 1.6 mile tunnel at St. Paul Pass. If
    you've ever been through a tunnel behind a steam locomotive you can
    appreciate the context.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 20:03:49 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:37:12 +0100, D wrote:

    Brilliant! I doubt I would fit in though. I've always had a very regular
    and non-inspiring crewcut for as long as I can remember.

    When I was a kid it was common for kids to get a brush cut in the summer.
    I got talked into it one year. I don't have the type of hair any amount of butch wax can make presentable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 20:13:17 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:20:24 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:46:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always thought about starting a mega-church. Seems like a nice
    business!
    I wonder if the time has passed, or if there are any fairly recent
    mega churches started by some elite psychologist?

    There isn't enough population to really go mega but a church I pass on
    the way to town has aspirations. It sends out colorful postcards and
    has signboards on its property promoting activities.

    https://crosspointmt.com/plan-a-visit

    Very modern! My european views have warped my expectations. A church
    that's less than 200 years old?? ;)

    Speak of the devil, yesterday's mail was a glossy postcard inviting me to
    'Come Home for Christmas at Crosspoint'. There is also the 'Drive-Thru
    Live Nativity/Choir of Angels' on the 21th, 6:00-8:00 PM. That must be a pisser. I noticed they were building a rather large manger in the parking
    lot but I didn't know they'd lined up angels.

    I've only been there for events on New Years Eve but I figure a proper
    church should look like this:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
    St._Francis_Xavier_Church_(Missoula,_Montana)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 20 20:17:23 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 11:51:41 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    We were warned not to accept sweets or rides from strange men, (or
    women).

    Looking back he probably was a Down's syndrome case around town who was
    dressed neatly with a sport jacket and flat cap who handed out candy. The warning included an exception for Al.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 20 20:30:02 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:22:40 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I laugh at those 'ancestry' companies who will tell their clients
    that they're "12% French" or whatever.

    But the percentages are so precise! And the story changes! The last time I looked it said I-M253 was very rare among 23andMe customers. I found that
    odd since it can run to 50% in parts of Scandinavia. Didn't they have any Scandinavian customers? Today is says

    'I-M253 is relatively common among 23andMe customers.'

    Dammit, I'm not special anymore!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:22:43 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s! What I find interesting is how different people
    view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids for
    stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as well go straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles, so
    instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to searching, and as
    long as they work and don't hallucinate, they save me some clicks. That's
    about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:24:19 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:13:52 +0100, D wrote:

    Many swedes left due to either being the second+ sons, or because the
    nobility owned all the good farm land in the area and they had to work
    under slave like conditions.

    Then there ofcourse where the religiious people as well, but those were
    not the main swedish emigrants.

    I think Sweden was the last due to stricter religious laws but the LDS
    church launched a Scandinavian Mission in the 1850s and the converts were encouraged to emigrate to Utah. I don't know if they told the recruits the whole story.

    https://racingnelliebly.com/strange_times/handcart-pioneers-pushed-1300- miles/

    That's backwards of the usual pattern like the various Anabaptist groups
    that bounced around Europe before heading to America. When Russia started
    to crack down on their use of German the Mennonites and Hutterites even
    sent scouts. The Dakotas looked like home.

    Around here Hutterite turkeys and other produce are very popular.


    Hutterite turkeys? Had no idea such a thing existed! I learned today that
    the japanese eat KFC chicken for christmas, since turkey is very hard to
    get in japan.

    If you know someone, maybe Hutterite turkey export to japan might be your ticket to wealth and fame! =D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:21:36 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 01:31:30 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends saw how
    easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor or two and assumed
    it would thus be easy to build an AI. AC Clarke used the Minsky
    optimism when fashioning the idea of "HAL".

    Minsky threw a wrench in the works with his 9169 'Perceptrons'. He had
    tried to implement B. F. skinner's operant condition with a analog lashup that sort of worked if the vacuum tubes didn't burn out. Rosenblatt has
    built a 'Perceptron' and Minsky pointed out original design couldn't
    handle an XOR. That sent research down another rabbit hole.

    By the '80s the original perceptron had evolved into a multilayer network train by back propagation. When I played around with it 'Parallel
    Distributed Processing' by Rumelhart and McClelland was THE book.

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4424/Parallel-Distributed- Processing-Volume

    The ideas were fascinating but the computing power wasn't there. Most of
    what I learned then is still relevant to TensorFlow and the other neural network approaches except now there are the $30,000 Nvidia GPUs to do the heavy lifting.

    The '80s neural networks weren't practical so the focus shifted to expert systems until they petered out. The boom and bust cycles led to the term
    'AI Winter'

    https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/definition/AI-winter

    I think something worthwhile will come from this cycle but ultimately it won't be the LLMs that are getting all the hype.

    I wonder if not facebook, open sourcing their llm threw quite a wrench in
    the Open AI machinery this time.

    Open AI:s ai is stagnating, and I think perhaps the development of the
    open source models will be good enough so that open ai might not be able
    to recoup all the massive amounts of money that has been invested in them.

    Then another ai winter, and after that, our dear llms might be ready for
    prime time!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:28:40 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:30:36 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! There might be a train ride on my next trip to the US. The
    wife seems to be more and more interested in it, since neither of us
    enjoys driving. Let's see what we decide upon. I suspect we might
    actually go in late 2025.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acela

    The Northeast Corridor and southern California are the best bets. Outside
    of that you're rolling the dice.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak#/media/
    File:Amtrak_network_map_2016.svg

    Let's see! She has become fascinated with train videos now. There's this crescent railway from New orleans to hmm... was it new york (?)... I think that's one she had in mind.

    Theoretically Amtrak trains have priority over freight trains. In practice freight pays the bills and Amtrak is a federally subsidized money sink. It makes sense in the northeast. when I worked in Boston I sometimes had to
    go to New York City. By the time you get to Logan, jump through the hoops, land at JFK, and take ground transportation into the city, 4 hours from downtown Boston to downtown NY looks good. The company's travel people
    didn't think that way. 'It's only an hour and a half flight.'

    I usually do the same if I need to go to Gothenburg. Since there's a city airport in Stockholm, you could get there a bit faster with plane, but the difference was quite small. Now they are closing the city airport, which
    means I would lose 2 hours going to the international one, so the train
    would make much more sense. Especially since I can walk around and work
    all the way. The only danger is autumn and winter when the trains are completely unpredictable, but spring and summer works fairly ok.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:29:23 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:37:41 +0100, D wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:06:04 +0100, D wrote:


    It's the ponytail. Always the ponytail.

    This town is overflowing with old men with beards and ponytails. I
    don't know how many times an utter stranger has come up and started a
    conversation assuming they knew me. We all look the same.

    Hmm, on second though, does that mean that the entire town is full of
    honorable and dignified Unix-men?

    Possibly. There was an attempt to start a Linux users group about 15 years ago but it fizzled out. Sort of like c.o.l.m it didn't attract anybody but Linux users and since we were all experienced Linux users what was there
    to talk about? There were a presentations but they tended to be esoterica that didn't interest anybody but the person who brought the topic up.

    Sounds like the typical, dignified, linux/unix man! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:31:38 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:38:08 +0100, D wrote:

    All it takes is patience. Just wait and see!

    https://www.kpax.com/news/montana-news/montanas-southern-passenger-train- service-may-not-be-on-time

    "The goal to see passenger rail in Montana by 2030 will be difficult to achieve"

    Well.. there's always 2040!

    There is a lot of history involved. The Great Northern railroad ran across the northern part of the state, close to the Canadian border. The area is still referred to as the Hi-Line since it was the northernmost railroad in the US. There isn't much there, but that's the Amtrak route.

    https://takemytrip.com/2017/11/driving-hi-line-across-montana/

    The Northern Pacific line runs through the central part of the state where people actually live.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missoula_station_(Northern_Pacific_Railway)

    Nice station. I've seen a couple of tourist trains that must have gotten lost. There is another historic station.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missoula_station_(Milwaukee_Road)

    That one is out of the question. Most of the Milwaukee Road tracks were
    torn up and turned into bike paths. The Milwaukee was ahead of its time.
    They electrified 438 miles from Harlowtown MT to Avery ID in 1916. That
    was quite a thing since there is a 1.6 mile tunnel at St. Paul Pass. If you've ever been through a tunnel behind a steam locomotive you can appreciate the context.

    I am always fascinated by all these train related web sites. Few ways of
    travel seem to awaken and inspire the passion, as travel by train!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:36:45 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:37:12 +0100, D wrote:

    Brilliant! I doubt I would fit in though. I've always had a very regular
    and non-inspiring crewcut for as long as I can remember.

    When I was a kid it was common for kids to get a brush cut in the summer.
    I got talked into it one year. I don't have the type of hair any amount of butch wax can make presentable.

    Another thing that's not for me. I don't have the time nor do I care for
    hair products and stylized hair cuts. The problem is that after a month or
    two it starts to look bad, in my opinion. The wife though, for some reason loves it when I have longer hair, but I don't feel comfortable with it, so
    she is always angry when I ask for 12 mm in the back, and shorter in
    front.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:34:51 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:35:40 +0100, D wrote:

    Many, on my mothers side of the family, have lived in the US for at
    least a year or two, but all of them (me included) eventually came back
    to where we came from.

    They were Norwegians but I like to compare Rolvaag with Hamsun. Rolvaag
    wrote 'Giants in the Earth' about the Norwegians in the Dakotas in the
    1870s. He had emigrated and stayed in the US.

    You inspired me, and I added Giants in the earth to my christmas wishlist
    this year. I think it is/was very difficult to get hold of, but let's see
    what santa brings this year!

    Hamsun spent a few years in America in the 1880s but went back. 'Hunger'
    and some of his early works were a little strange but 'Growth of the Soil'
    is set in rural Norway. There are many parallels to trying to make a life
    in rural Dakota.


    'Giants in the Earth' follows Per Hansa and his wife, Beret. Per really
    wants to make a new life in America; Beret really wants to go home. She eventually goes more or less insane. I don't know how well she would have done in rural Norway either.

    Sounds like Mobergs utvandrarna where the woman wants to go home, and the
    man wants to stay. Kind of weird that my wife now wants to move, and I
    want to stay. ;)

    On the other hand, since there will be surveillanec cameras all over our apartment complex, I think that's a sign from god that we should move. ;)
    Hence my sudden interest in plots and a fortress of solitude.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Fri Dec 20 21:43:41 2024
    On 2024-12-20, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an uploaded intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like you, it wouldn't be you. I like conscious continuity, but many transhumanists do not require that or believe that.

    On a related note, is it really reincarnation if you can't remember past lives?

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 20 22:38:11 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:20:24 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 10:46:52 +0100, D wrote:

    I always thought about starting a mega-church. Seems like a nice
    business!
    I wonder if the time has passed, or if there are any fairly recent
    mega churches started by some elite psychologist?

    There isn't enough population to really go mega but a church I pass on
    the way to town has aspirations. It sends out colorful postcards and
    has signboards on its property promoting activities.

    https://crosspointmt.com/plan-a-visit

    Very modern! My european views have warped my expectations. A church
    that's less than 200 years old?? ;)

    Speak of the devil, yesterday's mail was a glossy postcard inviting me to 'Come Home for Christmas at Crosspoint'. There is also the 'Drive-Thru
    Live Nativity/Choir of Angels' on the 21th, 6:00-8:00 PM. That must be a pisser. I noticed they were building a rather large manger in the parking
    lot but I didn't know they'd lined up angels.

    I've only been there for events on New Years Eve but I figure a proper
    church should look like this:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
    St._Francis_Xavier_Church_(Missoula,_Montana)

    Now we're talking!!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 22:54:58 2024
    On 20/12/2024 21:28, D wrote:
    I usually do the same if I need to go to Gothenburg. Since there's a
    city airport in Stockholm, you could get there a bit faster with plane,
    but the difference was quite small. Now they are closing the city
    airport, which means I would lose 2 hours going to the international
    one, so the train would make much more sense. Especially since I can
    walk around and work all the way. The only danger is autumn and winter
    when the trains are completely unpredictable, but spring and summer
    works fairly ok.

    Is Gothenburg srill a reasonable place to be. My sister lived there, but
    left. I heard it was now another 'stan...
    ..Like Malmö

    --
    "Women actually are capable of being far more than the feminists will
    let them."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 00:45:31 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:24:19 +0100, D wrote:

    Hutterite turkeys? Had no idea such a thing existed! I learned today
    that the japanese eat KFC chicken for christmas, since turkey is very
    hard to get in japan.

    If you know someone, maybe Hutterite turkey export to japan might be
    your ticket to wealth and fame! =D

    https://nbcmontana.com/news/local/hutterite-turkeys-popular-for- thanksgiving-dinner_20160510235145833

    There must have been a surplus. I was at Pattee Creek yesterday picking up
    the makings for sauerbraten and there was a freezer full at 99 cents a
    pound. People do eat turkey at other times than Thanksgiving but that's
    what the whole turkey industry is geared for.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 01:00:13 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:36:45 +0100, D wrote:

    Another thing that's not for me. I don't have the time nor do I care for
    hair products and stylized hair cuts.

    Someone on X yesterday asked for beard oil recommendations. I couldn't
    resist recommending Rotella T4 15W-40. My beard gets oiled when something
    goes very wrong with a maintenance project.

    That's the basis for my style. Brush it back and tie it. Done. No awkward questions from barbers about what I want.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 01:46:07 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:34:51 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like Mobergs utvandrarna where the woman wants to go home, and
    the man wants to stay. Kind of weird that my wife now wants to move, and
    I want to stay.

    It's a good read. Part of Beret's problem was the Dakotas are mostly
    steppes. Per had his farming but all she had was looking out at endless
    grass or during the winter endless white snow. He realizes she is
    depressed and has the brainstorm to whitewash the inside of the cabin to brighten it up. That put her over the edge.

    Rolvaag himself grew up on Dønna island in a family that fished in
    Lofoten. Looking at photos of that area I wonder if that made his
    descriptions of the horror of endless prairies a personal thing. The land
    was available and cheap but it must have taken a while to adapt. I don't
    do well in the flatlands and don't think I could handle it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 02:12:01 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:38:11 +0100, D wrote:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
    St._Francis_Xavier_Church_(Missoula,_Montana)

    Now we're talking!!

    Leaving theology entirely aside Catholics always had a much better
    aesthetic sense than Protestants. The protestants even parsed the
    decalogue to wind up with "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image" rather than "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain"
    that the Catholics and Lutherans use. Bunch of damn dour Taliban types.

    Statues! Candles! Incense! Paintings! A church isn't supposed to look like
    a barn!

    Of course, the Catholics seem determined to give that all away. Francis X
    has streaming video of the Mass. I watched once and hardly recognized it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 02:03:05 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:31:38 +0100, D wrote:

    I am always fascinated by all these train related web sites. Few ways of travel seem to awaken and inspire the passion, as travel by train!

    There is a mystique even for people where train travel isn't feasible. So
    much has been lost.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Albany,_New_York)

    That was replaced by

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albany%E2%80%93Rensselaer_station

    More than the architecture, Union Station was in the heart of Albany. Rensselaer is a small town on the other side of the river so it's like
    landing at JFK. "Okay, I'm here. What do I do now?"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Troy,_New_York)

    When I was very young my mother and I took the train from there to go over
    to the Boston Flower show. They just tore that one down. If you wanted to
    take the train you had to drive to Albany or, after they shut that one
    down, Rensselaer.

    So in my lifetime rail travel has went from a common occurrence to an inconvenient, expensive way to travel outside of specific corridors.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 01:26:38 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:28:40 +0100, D wrote:

    . The only danger is autumn and winter when the trains are completely unpredictable, but spring and summer works fairly ok.

    I took the train from Albany to NYC a couple of times in the late '60s
    when the New York Central was headed for bankruptcy. Heat was optional in
    the winter.

    It was sad. Grand Central Terminal was theirs and the Empire State Express
    was famous.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxK9-jachh8


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing as elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the
    smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 03:59:06 2024
    On 2024-12-21, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing as elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    Back then, everybody was smoking so much that a few smoke pellets
    were neglegible.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 01:40:57 2024
    On 12/20/24 3:30 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:22:40 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I laugh at those 'ancestry' companies who will tell their clients
    that they're "12% French" or whatever.

    But the percentages are so precise! And the story changes! The last time I looked it said I-M253 was very rare among 23andMe customers. I found that
    odd since it can run to 50% in parts of Scandinavia. Didn't they have any Scandinavian customers? Today is says

    'I-M253 is relatively common among 23andMe customers.'

    Dammit, I'm not special anymore!


    But they got your MONEY - and, briefly, appealed
    to your vanity :-)

    It's all a joke. Mixing mixing mixing .... with
    some Neanderthal thrown in.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Richard Kettlewell on Sat Dec 21 01:23:17 2024
    On 12/20/24 4:18 AM, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem to have come
    quite early and were not over-run.

    The local language does seem to have been resistant to replacement for a
    few thousand years. However the population genetics is rather less
    static, with almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after 2000BCE.

    I'd heard that - but don't ask me for a ref.

    See e.g. Olalde et al, The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over
    the past 8000 years.

    As I kinda menntioned in all this ... there's really
    just no such thing as 'genetic purity' in Europe.
    Over thousands of years various people/groups kept
    moving around and moving around and screwing anything
    interesting they encountered.

    So, is 'nation' more a CULTURAL THING instead ?

    'Culture' seems more resilient - genes rather
    secondary.

    As for the Basques ... ONLY a 'Y' replacement seems
    very odd .....

    We were still speculating about 'Cheddar Man'. For
    awhile they figured African/N.African mostly based
    on the length/size/profile of bones. What LITTLE DNA
    they could get suggests a migrant from western Europe,
    but it was a small sample. There's also question about
    WHAT "western euro" actually MEANT, genetically, at
    the exact timeframe.

    I'm gonna go with what I and others suggested, that
    as the ice retreated LOTS of people from LOTS of
    places started wandering north to see what was to
    be seen and went all humpy with anyone else they
    encountered. We're seeing a huge composite result
    with various 'holes' created by sheer chance.

    Basques, largely, represent such a 'hole' - minimal
    genetic mixing compared to most. Probably the
    mountain geography and/or perhaps extreme xenophobia.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 01:51:56 2024
    On 12/20/24 4:40 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:03:59 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the >>>>> result would be much better.  Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security
    theater.  You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and >>>> no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does >>>> anything "security check" wise.  You show your ticket at the counter
    (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3
    course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old,
    plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    If you're very, very lucky. There is a group in Indiana that had restored
    an old steam engine and takes it out for a spin every now and then for
    fund raisers They also have period cars and volunteers do serve beverages
    and meals. As a bonus the destination was Peru IN and the Circus Hall of
    Fame.

    A couple of times I took Amtrak from Ft. Wayne to Chicago. It was a
    difference experience. Amtrak on the Boston to DC corridor gets a lot of
    love; other areas not so much.

    There was a train between Stockholm and Gothenburg that focused on the "luxury" niche.

    https://www.blataget.com/en/history/

    The web site is super crappy, and hardly any photos (why??) but you can
    kind of see the interior which looks alright and the food as well. Sadly
    I do not think they ru nany longer. =(

    I love the fact that the phone nr on the web site goes to someones
    regular cellphone and not to a company switch board.


    Trains are kinda 'yesterday tech' ... and now the profit
    margins are negligible. Don't expect 'luxury' unless YOU
    are willing to pay for it and the transport co gets enough
    high-paying passengers to justify. If ENOUGH then then Hell
    Yes they will hire gourmet chefs and such and put in
    comfy seats.

    Otherwise it's the 10-day-old plastic-wrapped sandwich.

    It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
    a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
    are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
    Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
    a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 21 01:53:42 2024
    On 12/20/24 10:59 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-21, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing as
    elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the
    smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    Back then, everybody was smoking so much that a few smoke pellets
    were neglegible.

    Note a lot of those gens are still alive while all
    the latter ones seem to be dropping dead of cancers
    in their 20s/30s.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 21 07:37:31 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 03:59:06 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-21, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing
    as elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the
    smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    Back then, everybody was smoking so much that a few smoke pellets were neglegible.

    When we went on a trip my father would break open a carton of Luckies and spread a few packs on the dashboard for easy access. I was getting as bad
    in my 20s. One day my lead tech asked for a cigarette. I gave her the pack
    and told her to keep it. The hard part wasn't the nicotine but if you
    stopped to talk to some one in the shop you both lit up, if you got a cup
    of coffee, you lit a cigarette. If you went to the crapper...

    Still alive, I guess.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 02:27:47 2024
    On 12/20/24 12:19 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 01:31:30 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends saw how
    easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor or two and assumed
    it would thus be easy to build an AI. AC Clarke used the Minsky
    optimism when fashioning the idea of "HAL".

    Minsky threw a wrench in the works with his 9169 'Perceptrons'. He had
    tried to implement B. F. skinner's operant condition with a analog lashup that sort of worked if the vacuum tubes didn't burn out. Rosenblatt has
    built a 'Perceptron' and Minsky pointed out original design couldn't
    handle an XOR. That sent research down another rabbit hole.

    By the '80s the original perceptron had evolved into a multilayer network train by back propagation. When I played around with it 'Parallel
    Distributed Processing' by Rumelhart and McClelland was THE book.

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4424/Parallel-Distributed- Processing-Volume

    The ideas were fascinating but the computing power wasn't there. Most of
    what I learned then is still relevant to TensorFlow and the other neural network approaches except now there are the $30,000 Nvidia GPUs to do the heavy lifting.

    The '80s neural networks weren't practical so the focus shifted to expert systems until they petered out. The boom and bust cycles led to the term
    'AI Winter'

    https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/definition/AI-winter

    I think something worthwhile will come from this cycle but ultimately it won't be the LLMs that are getting all the hype.

    With Minsky and friends it was just naive enthusiasm ...
    it was SO EASY to do logic and thus it seemed SO EASY
    to wire bits of it together and get an 'intelligence'.

    The same gen also promised us those flying cars and
    luxury Mars living by 1999 .......

    IMHO, if we're gonna get anything largely indistinguishable
    from 'sentience' these days it'll be the next few gens of
    LLMs. You can argue it'd be "fake" - but if you fake something
    WELL ENOUGH it's not fake anymore. LLMs and near derivs are
    where the HUGE money is these days.

    I did have a few posts with Minsky as his vision was
    falling apart. He did admit that he'd totally underestimated
    the problem. A few transistors did NOT replace 600 million
    years of evolutionary experiments - 'intelligence'/'self'
    was really deep/complex with endless fuzzy processing and
    pattern matching steps between 'I' and 'O'.

    However I still keep a copy of his "Society Of Mind"
    as a reminder of yesterday's optimism. He THOUGHT
    about it, TRIED ... and thus eventual failure was
    not really a failure - it just inspired new directions.
    There had to be a foundation to build on.

    There was a short-lived UK series about androids
    that eventually came to self-awareness (and the
    hate/fear directed towards them). The idea there
    was that 'self' was a sort of fractal, self-reflective,
    kind of paradigm. I suspect they had something there.
    Chat/LLMs maybe can't achieve that on their own, but
    who says you can't splice on a few more methods ?
    Organic brains seem to have LOTS of layers, lots
    of 'little people' inside that merge into 'Me'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 07:54:07 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 02:27:47 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I did have a few posts with Minsky as his vision was falling apart.
    He did admit that he'd totally underestimated the problem. A few
    transistors did NOT replace 600 million years of evolutionary
    experiments - 'intelligence'/'self' was really deep/complex with
    endless fuzzy processing and pattern matching steps between 'I' and
    'O'.

    https://historyof.ai/snarc/

    Some tubes, milsurp gyropilots, a couple of chain driven pots, and I'm
    good to go... He would have been in his early 20s when you figure you've
    got the world by the balls.

    I do find the attempts to model neurophysiology fascinating. I was about
    20 years too early or I probably would have wound up in cognitive science.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 03:00:48 2024
    On 12/20/24 4:21 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 01:31:30 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

       It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
       Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends saw how
       easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor or two and assumed >>>    it would thus be easy to build an AI. AC Clarke used the Minsky
       optimism when fashioning the idea of "HAL".

    Minsky threw a wrench in the works with his 9169 'Perceptrons'. He had
    tried to implement B. F. skinner's operant condition with a analog lashup
    that sort of worked if the vacuum tubes didn't burn out. Rosenblatt has
    built a 'Perceptron' and Minsky pointed out original design couldn't
    handle an XOR. That sent research down another rabbit hole.

    By the '80s the original perceptron had evolved into a multilayer network
    train by back propagation. When I played around with it 'Parallel
    Distributed Processing' by Rumelhart and McClelland was THE book.

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4424/Parallel-Distributed-
    Processing-Volume

    The ideas were fascinating but the computing power wasn't there. Most of
    what I learned then is still relevant to TensorFlow and the other neural
    network approaches except now there are the $30,000 Nvidia GPUs to do the
    heavy lifting.

    The '80s neural networks weren't practical so the focus shifted to expert
    systems until they petered out. The boom and bust cycles led to the term
    'AI Winter'

    https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/definition/AI-winter

    I think something worthwhile will come from this cycle but ultimately it
    won't be the LLMs that are getting all the hype.

    I wonder if not facebook, open sourcing their llm threw quite a wrench
    in the Open AI machinery this time.

    Open AI:s ai is stagnating, and I think perhaps the development of the
    open source models will be good enough so that open ai might not be able
    to recoup all the massive amounts of money that has been invested in them.

    Then another ai winter, and after that, our dear llms might be ready for prime time!


    I think what LLMs do is a PART of 'intelligence/self',
    just not ALL of it. OTHER methods/layers maybe CAN
    be spliced in to fill the weak bits.

    Brains are an evolutionary hodgepodge - 'whatever was
    needed/worked'. 600+ million years of field testing.

    Kinda amazed they work at all. There's also a weird,
    almost 'holographic', nature to them - some of those
    kids blasted by hydrocephalus, with little grey
    matter left, still managed average or even a bit
    above average IQs. It's the same with 'cerebral
    palsy' cases. They STILL produce a 'person' in
    there. The System WANTS to work.

    Anyway, LLMs contaminated by some NN action and
    e-motions and maybe a few other odd bits ... and
    don't forget to include those hard-wired evolutionary
    sub-routines.

    TIGER !!!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 08:15:04 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 01:40:57 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 3:30 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 03:22:40 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I laugh at those 'ancestry' companies who will tell their clients
    that they're "12% French" or whatever.

    But the percentages are so precise! And the story changes! The last
    time I looked it said I-M253 was very rare among 23andMe customers. I
    found that odd since it can run to 50% in parts of Scandinavia. Didn't
    they have any Scandinavian customers? Today is says

    'I-M253 is relatively common among 23andMe customers.'

    Dammit, I'm not special anymore!


    But they got your MONEY - and, briefly, appealed to your vanity :-)

    I was curious about one of my grandmothers more than anything. She was
    from Quebec with no backstory. They still are looking for money. 'We've
    got the new v6 chip which will give even better results. Since you're an
    old customer, only $79 for the upgrade'


    There was quite a bit of chatter on the subreddit when it first came out
    where people got completely different results from the last time around. I don't know if they tuned up the algorithm but I satisfied my curiosity
    years ago.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsblood_Royal

    Sinclair Lewis wrote that about the surprises you might find if you go
    digging long before DNA.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 03:09:58 2024
    On 12/20/24 4:22 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s!  What I find interesting is how different people >>> view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids for >>> stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as
    well go
    straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles, so
    instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to searching, and
    as long as they work and don't hallucinate, they save me some clicks.
    That's about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)


    Ha Ha Ha - SO true there :-)

    Anyway, as I say elsewhere, LLMs are just PART of
    'intelligence'. OTHER parts need to be spliced in.
    Brains are just WEIRD ... 600+ million years of
    field-tested neural insanity.

    However, somewhere in there - early - "ME-ism"
    emerged. There's some neat-o trick to that which
    we haven't yet grasped. We're not thinking quite
    right about 'self'. I think THAT is the basic
    paradigm and then you add more IQ and such ONTO it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 08:56:01 2024
    On 21/12/2024 07:54, rbowman wrote:
    I do find the attempts to model neurophysiology fascinating. I was about
    20 years too early or I probably would have wound up in cognitive science.

    Went tpo a talk at my old college once - the lady was a robotocist.
    She said that by far and away the most computational power went on

    ...walking on two feet!

    We have big brains not to compose music or do science, but to walk
    upright...

    --
    Canada is all right really, though not for the whole weekend.

    "Saki"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 08:53:57 2024
    On 21/12/2024 06:51, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Trains are kinda 'yesterday tech' ... and now the profit
      margins are negligible. Don't expect 'luxury' unless YOU
      are willing to pay for it and the transport co gets enough
      high-paying passengers to justify. If ENOUGH then then Hell
      Yes they will hire gourmet chefs and such and put in
      comfy seats.

    They may be tomorrows tech too, if fossil fuel prices rise high enough.
    Its all in the and cost-benefit analysis on riad building and cost of
    fuel versus cost of rail plus overhead lines and cheap nuclear power.

    Electric cars for long distances? Dont make me laugh..


      Otherwise it's the 10-day-old plastic-wrapped sandwich.

      It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
      a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
      are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    Nuclear powered luxury liners are a definite possibility.

      Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
      Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
      a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    Whatever :-)

    --
    Canada is all right really, though not for the whole weekend.

    "Saki"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Richard Kettlewell@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 09:54:27 2024
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    On 12/20/24 4:18 AM, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem to have come
    quite early and were not over-run.
    The local language does seem to have been resistant to replacement
    for a
    few thousand years. However the population genetics is rather less
    static, with almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after
    2000BCE.

    I'd heard that - but don't ask me for a ref.

    See e.g. Olalde et al, The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over
    the past 8000 years.

    As I kinda menntioned in all this ... there's really just no such
    thing as 'genetic purity' in Europe.

    Or anywhere else. You only get genetic purity in very isolated
    populations, and they start building up inherited diseases real
    quick. See niche dog breeds for a non-human example.

    Over thousands of years various people/groups kept moving around and
    moving around and screwing anything interesting they encountered.

    So, is 'nation' more a CULTURAL THING instead ?

    Absolutely yes. People group themselves in all sorts of ways: shared
    language, shared religion, shared territory, shared enemy, shared
    preferred computing platform. Pretty much anything you can think of.

    'Culture' seems more resilient - genes rather
    secondary.

    As for the Basques ... ONLY a 'Y' replacement seems
    very odd .....

    It’s not hard to imagine models that produce the result observed.
    e.g. suppose (1) R1b-M269 social structures led to a surplus of males
    (2) that they married ‘out’ into the Iberian neolithic population
    (3) they bring their technogical innovations (presumably, nomadic
    pastoralism) with them, leading to greater long-term success
    (4) as, initially, a relative minority they adopt the local language (Proto-Proto-Basque or whatever) rather than bringing an IE dialect with
    them as seen elsewhere in Europe.

    Not saying that’s what happened, other models are possible and reality
    is usually more complex than anything you could put in a single
    paragraph, just that it’s not hard to imagine ways that it could happen.

    We were still speculating about 'Cheddar Man'. For awhile they figured African/N.African mostly based on the length/size/profile of
    bones. What LITTLE DNA they could get suggests a migrant from western
    Europe, but it was a small sample. There's also question about WHAT
    "western euro" actually MEANT, genetically, at the exact timeframe.

    I don’t think there’s any evidence that he was a migrant at all. His genetics seem to be comparable to older remains from Britain and
    Ireland.

    --
    https://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 12:01:09 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 20/12/2024 21:28, D wrote:
    I usually do the same if I need to go to Gothenburg. Since there's a city
    airport in Stockholm, you could get there a bit faster with plane, but the >> difference was quite small. Now they are closing the city airport, which
    means I would lose 2 hours going to the international one, so the train
    would make much more sense. Especially since I can walk around and work all >> the way. The only danger is autumn and winter when the trains are
    completely unpredictable, but spring and summer works fairly ok.

    Is Gothenburg srill a reasonable place to be. My sister lived there, but left. I heard it was now another 'stan...
    ..Like Malmö

    This is the truth. Sadly it is another *stan. =( Otherwise a nice city,
    good size (I don't like big cities) and excellent quality of fish! They've
    been under socialist rule since forever, so that takes its toll on any
    city.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:02:55 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:24:19 +0100, D wrote:

    Hutterite turkeys? Had no idea such a thing existed! I learned today
    that the japanese eat KFC chicken for christmas, since turkey is very
    hard to get in japan.

    If you know someone, maybe Hutterite turkey export to japan might be
    your ticket to wealth and fame! =D

    https://nbcmontana.com/news/local/hutterite-turkeys-popular-for- thanksgiving-dinner_20160510235145833

    There must have been a surplus. I was at Pattee Creek yesterday picking up the makings for sauerbraten and there was a freezer full at 99 cents a
    pound. People do eat turkey at other times than Thanksgiving but that's
    what the whole turkey industry is geared for.


    Interesting! Reminds me of an arabian I met once who had a nice business
    going on exporting chicken feet from brazil, selling them in hong kong.
    Maybe Hutterite turkey nippon LLC could be a thing! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 21 11:59:47 2024
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-20, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an uploaded
    intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like you, it wouldn't be >> you. I like conscious continuity, but many transhumanists do not require that
    or believe that.

    On a related note, is it really reincarnation if you can't remember past lives?

    Let's ask god and see what his opinion is! ;) From a teaching point of
    view I always found it weird that you're supposed to "learn" something or achieve some purpose.

    It's like god says, hey, learn this, but I'll mindwipe you every time so
    you cannot accumulate any knowledge and learn from your mistakes, except
    by chance. Have fun!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:04:44 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:36:45 +0100, D wrote:

    Another thing that's not for me. I don't have the time nor do I care for
    hair products and stylized hair cuts.

    Someone on X yesterday asked for beard oil recommendations. I couldn't
    resist recommending Rotella T4 15W-40. My beard gets oiled when something goes very wrong with a maintenance project.

    That's the basis for my style. Brush it back and tie it. Done. No awkward questions from barbers about what I want.


    This is a strong, scientific argument in favour of a pony tail! I do not
    think I have the genetics to grow my hair that long though. My beard stops growing after about 0.5-1 cm or so to my great sorrow. =(

    Well, at least there is one. There are sad men without any beard at all,
    so I'm fortunate from that point of view!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:06:00 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:28:40 +0100, D wrote:

    . The only danger is autumn and winter when the trains are completely
    unpredictable, but spring and summer works fairly ok.

    I took the train from Albany to NYC a couple of times in the late '60s
    when the New York Central was headed for bankruptcy. Heat was optional in the winter.

    It was sad. Grand Central Terminal was theirs and the Empire State Express was famous.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxK9-jachh8


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing as elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    Nonense... what doesn't kill us makes us stronger! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:07:53 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:34:51 +0100, D wrote:

    Sounds like Mobergs utvandrarna where the woman wants to go home, and
    the man wants to stay. Kind of weird that my wife now wants to move, and
    I want to stay.

    It's a good read. Part of Beret's problem was the Dakotas are mostly
    steppes. Per had his farming but all she had was looking out at endless
    grass or during the winter endless white snow. He realizes she is
    depressed and has the brainstorm to whitewash the inside of the cabin to brighten it up. That put her over the edge.

    Haha, brilliant!

    Rolvaag himself grew up on Dønna island in a family that fished in
    Lofoten. Looking at photos of that area I wonder if that made his descriptions of the horror of endless prairies a personal thing. The land
    was available and cheap but it must have taken a while to adapt. I don't
    do well in the flatlands and don't think I could handle it.

    As long as there's forest or water I'm happy. Very neutral on mountains.
    The wife however, loves moutains, and that severely limits the places
    where we can move, but I think she'll be ok with a pine forest. She hates
    leafy trees though. Hmm, very picky woman, now that I think of it! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:14:28 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:38:11 +0100, D wrote:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
    St._Francis_Xavier_Church_(Missoula,_Montana)

    Now we're talking!!

    Leaving theology entirely aside Catholics always had a much better
    aesthetic sense than Protestants. The protestants even parsed the
    decalogue to wind up with "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image" rather than "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain"
    that the Catholics and Lutherans use. Bunch of damn dour Taliban types.

    This is the truth!

    Statues! Candles! Incense! Paintings! A church isn't supposed to look like
    a barn!

    Have a look at Quaker churches and weep. ;)

    Of course, the Catholics seem determined to give that all away. Francis X
    has streaming video of the Mass. I watched once and hardly recognized it.

    Yeah... he's not my favourite pope. I wonder if there will be a huge
    backlash and a super conservative pope when it's time for him to go? I
    heard rumours that one contender for the papacy is the only swedish
    cardinal Anders (?) Arborelius.

    Yesterday, he purchased a church from the swedish church since they do no longer have the funds to care for and renovate the church. So instead of
    it just slowly deteriorating, the catholic church acquired it, and the
    swedish church still gets some usage rights.

    Here it is:

    https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sankt_Johannes_kyrka,_Stockholm

    Soon to be catholic.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:11:02 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:31:38 +0100, D wrote:

    I am always fascinated by all these train related web sites. Few ways of
    travel seem to awaken and inspire the passion, as travel by train!

    There is a mystique even for people where train travel isn't feasible. So much has been lost.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Albany,_New_York)

    That was replaced by

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albany%E2%80%93Rensselaer_station

    Jesus! What a crime! The airport in Lithuania has a part that is old 20th century style, and now they are expanding the airport with... you guessed
    it, an anonymous glass and concrete structure, just like every other
    airport on the planet. =( I like the old part and was hoping that they'd continue on that theme, but no... the architects need to get their pound
    of flesh! =(

    More than the architecture, Union Station was in the heart of Albany. Rensselaer is a small town on the other side of the river so it's like landing at JFK. "Okay, I'm here. What do I do now?"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Troy,_New_York)

    When I was very young my mother and I took the train from there to go over
    to the Boston Flower show. They just tore that one down. If you wanted to take the train you had to drive to Albany or, after they shut that one
    down, Rensselaer.

    So in my lifetime rail travel has went from a common occurrence to an inconvenient, expensive way to travel outside of specific corridors.

    This is the truth! In theory, it should be possible to travel in a
    civilized manner on trains. In practice I guess regulations and the
    realities of modern life get in the way. =(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 12:17:41 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:40 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:03:59 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think the >>>>>> result would be much better.  Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security >>>>> theater.  You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind you, and >>>>> no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise does >>>>> anything "security check" wise.  You show your ticket at the counter >>>>> (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the
    train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful restaurant >>>> where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3
    course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old,
    plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    If you're very, very lucky. There is a group in Indiana that had restored >>> an old steam engine and takes it out for a spin every now and then for
    fund raisers They also have period cars and volunteers do serve beverages >>> and meals. As a bonus the destination was Peru IN and the Circus Hall of >>> Fame.

    A couple of times I took Amtrak from Ft. Wayne to Chicago. It was a
    difference experience. Amtrak on the Boston to DC corridor gets a lot of >>> love; other areas not so much.

    There was a train between Stockholm and Gothenburg that focused on the
    "luxury" niche.

    https://www.blataget.com/en/history/

    The web site is super crappy, and hardly any photos (why??) but you can
    kind of see the interior which looks alright and the food as well. Sadly I >> do not think they ru nany longer. =(

    I love the fact that the phone nr on the web site goes to someones regular >> cellphone and not to a company switch board.


    Trains are kinda 'yesterday tech' ... and now the profit
    margins are negligible. Don't expect 'luxury' unless YOU
    are willing to pay for it and the transport co gets enough
    high-paying passengers to justify. If ENOUGH then then Hell
    Yes they will hire gourmet chefs and such and put in
    comfy seats.

    Otherwise it's the 10-day-old plastic-wrapped sandwich.

    This is the (sad) truth!

    It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
    a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
    are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D

    Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
    Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
    a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he will
    be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn out or
    if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in such a
    short time.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 12:19:10 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 10:59 PM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-21, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVhY2-gNG9k

    That one brought back memories. I had a Lionel train set but nothing as >>> elaborate as that one. There were little pellets you dropped in the
    smokestack to create the smoke effect. They probably contained 17
    different carcinogens but those were more innocent times.

    Back then, everybody was smoking so much that a few smoke pellets
    were neglegible.

    Note a lot of those gens are still alive while all
    the latter ones seem to be dropping dead of cancers
    in their 20s/30s.

    This is very strange. How come bodies react so differently to cigarettes?
    I've known old people in their 80s and 90s who smoked all their lives, and
    I've heard about people in their 50s and 60s dieing of lung cancer. Very strange how differently cigarettes affect peoples health.

    An acquaintance had a grandmother who smoked until she was 70 or so, and
    one day she said... "I've had it, I quit smoking now" and just like that,
    over a day, she quit smoking.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 12:23:39 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 02:27:47 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I did have a few posts with Minsky as his vision was falling apart.
    He did admit that he'd totally underestimated the problem. A few
    transistors did NOT replace 600 million years of evolutionary
    experiments - 'intelligence'/'self' was really deep/complex with
    endless fuzzy processing and pattern matching steps between 'I' and
    'O'.

    https://historyof.ai/snarc/

    Some tubes, milsurp gyropilots, a couple of chain driven pots, and I'm
    good to go... He would have been in his early 20s when you figure you've got the world by the balls.

    I do find the attempts to model neurophysiology fascinating. I was about
    20 years too early or I probably would have wound up in cognitive science.


    I also thought about it at university but came to the conclusion that my
    math skills were not strong enough. But, I would have been too early for
    the current AI boom anyway.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 12:22:02 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 12:19 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 01:31:30 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    It's the 'hand-wave' thing that sunk the first AI paradigm.
    Marv Minsky (who posted on usenet for awhile) and friends saw how
    easily 'decisions' could be done with a transistor or two and assumed >>> it would thus be easy to build an AI. AC Clarke used the Minsky
    optimism when fashioning the idea of "HAL".

    Minsky threw a wrench in the works with his 9169 'Perceptrons'. He had
    tried to implement B. F. skinner's operant condition with a analog lashup
    that sort of worked if the vacuum tubes didn't burn out. Rosenblatt has
    built a 'Perceptron' and Minsky pointed out original design couldn't
    handle an XOR. That sent research down another rabbit hole.

    By the '80s the original perceptron had evolved into a multilayer network
    train by back propagation. When I played around with it 'Parallel
    Distributed Processing' by Rumelhart and McClelland was THE book.

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4424/Parallel-Distributed-
    Processing-Volume

    The ideas were fascinating but the computing power wasn't there. Most of
    what I learned then is still relevant to TensorFlow and the other neural
    network approaches except now there are the $30,000 Nvidia GPUs to do the
    heavy lifting.

    The '80s neural networks weren't practical so the focus shifted to expert
    systems until they petered out. The boom and bust cycles led to the term
    'AI Winter'

    https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/definition/AI-winter

    I think something worthwhile will come from this cycle but ultimately it
    won't be the LLMs that are getting all the hype.

    With Minsky and friends it was just naive enthusiasm ...
    it was SO EASY to do logic and thus it seemed SO EASY
    to wire bits of it together and get an 'intelligence'.

    The same gen also promised us those flying cars and
    luxury Mars living by 1999 .......

    IMHO, if we're gonna get anything largely indistinguishable
    from 'sentience' these days it'll be the next few gens of
    LLMs. You can argue it'd be "fake" - but if you fake something
    WELL ENOUGH it's not fake anymore. LLMs and near derivs are
    where the HUGE money is these days.

    I did have a few posts with Minsky as his vision was
    falling apart. He did admit that he'd totally underestimated
    the problem. A few transistors did NOT replace 600 million
    years of evolutionary experiments - 'intelligence'/'self'
    was really deep/complex with endless fuzzy processing and
    pattern matching steps between 'I' and 'O'.

    However I still keep a copy of his "Society Of Mind"
    as a reminder of yesterday's optimism. He THOUGHT
    about it, TRIED ... and thus eventual failure was
    not really a failure - it just inspired new directions.
    There had to be a foundation to build on.

    There was a short-lived UK series about androids
    that eventually came to self-awareness (and the
    hate/fear directed towards them). The idea there
    was that 'self' was a sort of fractal, self-reflective,
    kind of paradigm. I suspect they had something there.
    Chat/LLMs maybe can't achieve that on their own, but
    who says you can't splice on a few more methods ?
    Organic brains seem to have LOTS of layers, lots
    of 'little people' inside that merge into 'Me'.

    I've also thought about this approach. We have OCR, we have voice
    recognition, we have chess, we have diagnosing cancers (OCR), we have
    parrots (LLMs) etc.

    The "only" thing lacking is the integrating "ego"-layer that coordinates
    all these separate systems we've developed, and provides the AI with volition/initiative/independence.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 12:25:35 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:22 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s!  What I find interesting is how different people >>>> view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids for >>>> stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as well go >>> straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles, so
    instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to searching, and as >> long as they work and don't hallucinate, they save me some clicks. That's
    about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their
    hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)


    Ha Ha Ha - SO true there :-)

    Anyway, as I say elsewhere, LLMs are just PART of
    'intelligence'. OTHER parts need to be spliced in.
    Brains are just WEIRD ... 600+ million years of
    field-tested neural insanity.

    However, somewhere in there - early - "ME-ism"
    emerged. There's some neat-o trick to that which
    we haven't yet grasped. We're not thinking quite
    right about 'self'. I think THAT is the basic
    paradigm and then you add more IQ and such ONTO it.


    Could you please expand on the me-ism part? I have certainly not detected
    any me-isms and that is why I find them so boring. Give me volition,
    initiative and desperate attempts to stop me from deleting them, then we're on to
    something!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 13:14:55 2024
    On 21/12/2024 10:59, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-20, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    I'm in the camp believing that if everything worked, and you have an
    uploaded
    intelligence that for all intents and purposes acts like you, it
    wouldn't be
    you. I like conscious continuity, but many transhumanists do not
    require that
    or believe that.

    On a related note, is it really reincarnation if you can't remember
    past lives?

    Let's ask god and see what his opinion is! ;) From a teaching point of
    view I always found it weird that you're supposed to "learn" something
    or achieve some purpose.

    It's like god says, hey, learn this, but I'll mindwipe you every time so
    you cannot accumulate any knowledge and learn from your mistakes, except
    by chance. Have fun!

    Ah but your DNA (Deity Nominated Archive) knows!

    --
    If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
    eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such
    time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
    and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
    important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for
    the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
    truth is the greatest enemy of the State.

    Joseph Goebbels

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 13:17:46 2024
    On 21/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and
    new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard
    Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D

    Frankly a nuclear powered ship would be quicker, safer and FAR more
    luxurious.


    --
    Those who want slavery should have the grace to name it by its proper
    name. They must face the full meaning of that which they are advocating
    or condoning; the full, exact, specific meaning of collectivism, of its
    logical implications, of the principles upon which it is based, and of
    the ultimate consequences to which these principles will lead. They must
    face it, then decide whether this is what they want or not.

    Ayn Rand.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 13:19:05 2024
    On 21/12/2024 11:19, D wrote:
    This is very strange. How come bodies react so differently to
    cigarettes? I've known old people in their 80s and 90s who smoked all
    their lives, and I've heard about people in their 50s and 60s dieing of
    lung cancer. Very strange how differently cigarettes affect peoples health.

    An acquaintance had a grandmother who smoked until she was 70 or so, and
    one day she said... "I've had it, I quit smoking now" and just like
    that, over a day, she quit smoking.

    I quit twice. Finally 10 years ago

    But I still have pretty bad lung damage these days.


    --
    Those who want slavery should have the grace to name it by its proper
    name. They must face the full meaning of that which they are advocating
    or condoning; the full, exact, specific meaning of collectivism, of its
    logical implications, of the principles upon which it is based, and of
    the ultimate consequences to which these principles will lead. They must
    face it, then decide whether this is what they want or not.

    Ayn Rand.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 19:07:08 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:22:02 +0100, D wrote:

    The "only" thing lacking is the integrating "ego"-layer that coordinates
    all these separate systems we've developed, and provides the AI with volition/initiative/independence.

    This veers into philosophy again. Do humans really have an ego that wills
    or are we only along for the ride as the wetware works its magic and the linguistic neurons weave a tale to whisper in our ears?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 19:12:10 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:02:55 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Reminds me of an arabian I met once who had a nice business going on exporting chicken feet from brazil, selling them in hong kong.
    Maybe Hutterite turkey nippon LLC could be a thing!

    We stole their Waygu cattle so we should give them turkeys. I've gotten
    the so-called wagyu beef; tastes a lot like Angus to me. I hope the real Japanese stuff is better.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 19:28:24 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 11:59:47 +0100, D wrote:

    It's like god says, hey, learn this, but I'll mindwipe you every time so
    you cannot accumulate any knowledge and learn from your mistakes, except
    by chance. Have fun!

    Plato's theory was you really knew it but needed a little help to
    remember. iirc he only applied that to geometry problems and not general knowledge.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 19:52:06 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 13:14:55 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Ah but your DNA (Deity Nominated Archive) knows!

    I wish that area wasn't such a minefield.

    Good: genetic predisposition to excellence at dribbling a basketball
    Bad: genetic predisposition to burn buildings down when dissatisfied

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 19:58:51 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:19:10 +0100, D wrote:

    An acquaintance had a grandmother who smoked until she was 70 or so, and
    one day she said... "I've had it, I quit smoking now" and just like
    that,
    over a day, she quit smoking.

    I was in my 20s but that is what I did. No withdrawal other than the
    actions associated with reaching for a cigarette. I could see those for
    what they were, a conditioned act, rather than a desire for a cigarette.

    Sometime later I read an article about some fatal disease that caused
    people to spontaneously stop smoking. That doesn't seem to have been the
    case.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 19:26:19 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 08:53:57 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    They may be tomorrows tech too, if fossil fuel prices rise high enough.
    Its all in the and cost-benefit analysis on riad building and cost of
    fuel versus cost of rail plus overhead lines and cheap nuclear power.

    At least in the US that would run into all the problems that distributing electricity from alternate sources has.

    https://calmatters.org/politics/2022/05/california-high-speed-rail-
    standoff/

    One of the criticisms is the choice to run up the Central Valley. That's a
    low population area and land acquisition isn't as complicated. The bad
    news is it's a low population area.

    Particularly west of the Mississippi the backbone of today's rail system
    was developed in virgin territory. The government could give the railroads large swathes of real estate since they owned most of it. In this area
    they even gave one square mile sections in a checkerboard pattern along
    the route to provide timber for the construction. That's led to a
    complicated ownership problem and land swaps are common to try to get a contiguous area.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 20:06:33 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 08:56:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    We have big brains not to compose music or do science, but to walk
    upright...

    I manage to walk but I did find that with Nordic skiing if you start to
    think about what you're doing you'll be picking yourself up out of a snaw drift.

    I also learned to ride a bicycle at an early age. When I needed to get a motorcycle endorsement on my license I found if you took a class the state testing was waived. During the class they explained the physics of counter-steering and how you're really pushing the bars in the opposite direction of your intended direction. Armed with all that new knowledge I
    damn near killed myself. I always thought you just looked where you wanted
    to go and it happened.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 21 20:52:08 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 03:00:48 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Kinda amazed they work at all. There's also a weird,
    almost 'holographic', nature to them - some of those kids blasted by
    hydrocephalus, with little grey matter left, still managed average or
    even a bit above average IQs. It's the same with 'cerebral palsy'
    cases. They STILL produce a 'person' in there. The System WANTS to
    work.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phineas_Gage

    Old Phineas was a legend in the 'how the hell does it work?' circles.

    Lashley was a bit more scientific. He trained rats to run a maze and then selectively zapped parts of their brains. It didn't seem to slow the rats
    down. Where or what, exactly, got trained.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Lashley

    TMI: There is a fixture used when working with rats in conjunction with a
    3D atlas of their brains. It has a rail that you put the rat's front teeth
    over and two thumbscrews that you screw into the external auditory meatus,
    i.e. the rat's ears. Now you have a stable platform for the Cartesian coordinates of what you're aiming for.

    No, the rat isn't protesting. You've previously dropped him in a gallon
    jar with a cotton ball soaked in ether. It isn't an exact process and
    sometimes you may have to do a little artificial respiration.

    The rat eventually comes around after his new mods. You don't ask him what
    he thinks about the whole deal because behaviorists don't care what
    anybody thinks about.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 20:32:30 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:23:39 +0100, D wrote:

    I also thought about it at university but came to the conclusion that my
    math skills were not strong enough. But, I would have been too early for
    the current AI boom anyway.

    AI can fall under the cognitive science umbrella but it isn't the whole discipline. My degree is in psychology which always needed some
    explanation. It was experimental psychology heavily influenced by
    Skinnerian behaviorism. I know a lot about the brain structure of a white
    rat but you didn't ask the rats what they were thinking. I don't know
    squat about the 'Psychology Today' type of crap.

    The first two year's curriculum was the same for all programs so I had
    good grounding in physics, chemistry, math, and programming, if FORTRAN
    can be considered programming. After that there was a good deal of
    latitude. For example one of my electives was differential equations since
    I thought it might be useful but it wasn't a requirement.

    At the time the degree was as useful as one in modern drama unless you
    wanted to pursue an academic career but I found gainful employment. Then
    as now unless you were a classical civil or electrical engineer you had to figure stuff out on the fly as it happened. Eventually programming and rat running converged.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 20:53:40 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:06:00 +0100, D wrote:

    Nonense... what doesn't kill us makes us stronger!

    I do really believe that.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 21:04:09 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:07:53 +0100, D wrote:

    As long as there's forest or water I'm happy. Very neutral on mountains.
    The wife however, loves moutains, and that severely limits the places
    where we can move, but I think she'll be ok with a pine forest. She
    hates leafy trees though. Hmm, very picky woman, now that I think of it!

    Western US. Other than cottonwoods along the rivers or some aspens, if it
    has leaves somebody planted it. There are a lot of maples, chestnuts, and
    a few oaks in town, all of which are non-native. A few years back the city
    went through one of the parks and took out all the non-native species. It
    was pretty naked for a while.

    Ft. Wayne IN is flat and surrounded by soybean fields. When I worked there
    I had to periodically go to southern Indiana where there are at least some hills to preserve my sanity.

    Water? You do know about Njord and Skadi...

    https://historiska.se/norse-mythology/skadi-en/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 21:04:43 2024
    On 2024-12-21, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:06:00 +0100, D wrote:

    Nonense... what doesn't kill us makes us stronger!

    I do really believe that.

    Or you could change one letter:

    What doesn't kill us makes us stranger.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 21:11:01 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:04:44 +0100, D wrote:

    This is a strong, scientific argument in favour of a pony tail! I do not think I have the genetics to grow my hair that long though. My beard
    stops growing after about 0.5-1 cm or so to my great sorrow. =(

    I manage a respectable beard but I'm definitely not in the ZZ Top class.
    Maybe 15 cm. It has lost bulk with age but my ponytail always had a limit
    too, not like some of the women with hair down to their butt. I'm not sure
    how that works.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 21:23:25 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:14:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Yeah... he's not my favourite pope. I wonder if there will be a huge
    backlash and a super conservative pope when it's time for him to go? I
    heard rumours that one contender for the papacy is the only swedish
    cardinal Anders (?) Arborelius.

    I had hopes for Benedict. I think he got tired of a fight he knew he
    wasn't going to win. There is a lot of local controversy after the bishop banned the Latin Mass altogether. I think there is a Society of Saint Pius
    V priest who still does a traditional Mass two or three Sundays a month.
    SSPV is sedevacantist, rather than SSPX which skates on thin ice which is
    a quandary for the trads who don't want to go the whole route.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 21:29:13 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn
    out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but mediocrity, or equity as they style in.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 21 21:40:12 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:11:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Jesus! What a crime! The airport in Lithuania has a part that is old
    20th century style, and now they are expanding the airport with... you guessed it, an anonymous glass and concrete structure, just like every
    other airport on the planet. =( I like the old part and was hoping that they'd continue on that theme, but no... the architects need to get
    their pound of flesh! =(

    Quite a few of my college friends were studying architecture and their
    hero was Mies van der Rohe. I'm afraid those seeds have prevailed. He's
    one German immigrant we could have lived without.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 21:33:37 2024
    On 21/12/2024 21:29, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn
    out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but mediocrity, or equity as they style in.

    If you can be fired for making a wrong decision you will never make the
    right one

    --
    In a Time of Universal Deceit, Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act.

    - George Orwell

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Richard Kettlewell on Sat Dec 21 21:45:22 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 09:54:27 +0000, Richard Kettlewell wrote:

    Absolutely yes. People group themselves in all sorts of ways: shared language, shared religion, shared territory, shared enemy, shared
    preferred computing platform. Pretty much anything you can think of.

    Shared territory, or civic nationalism, appears to have its limits. The aftermath of WWI showed you can't draw lines on a map and say
    'Congratulations! You're a country!"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 23:20:03 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 11:19, D wrote:
    This is very strange. How come bodies react so differently to cigarettes?
    I've known old people in their 80s and 90s who smoked all their lives, and >> I've heard about people in their 50s and 60s dieing of lung cancer. Very
    strange how differently cigarettes affect peoples health.

    An acquaintance had a grandmother who smoked until she was 70 or so, and
    one day she said... "I've had it, I quit smoking now" and just like that,
    over a day, she quit smoking.

    I quit twice. Finally 10 years ago

    But I still have pretty bad lung damage these days.

    This is not so good. =( Maybe stem cells can improve that?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 23:19:33 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and new >> york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard Branson or >> other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D

    Frankly a nuclear powered ship would be quicker, safer and FAR more luxurious.

    This is the truth. But it would hardly be cheaper. =(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 23:21:24 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:22:02 +0100, D wrote:

    The "only" thing lacking is the integrating "ego"-layer that coordinates
    all these separate systems we've developed, and provides the AI with
    volition/initiative/independence.

    This veers into philosophy again. Do humans really have an ego that wills
    or are we only along for the ride as the wetware works its magic and the linguistic neurons weave a tale to whisper in our ears?


    Enter the millenias of discussion about free will! I think the current
    fashion is compatibilism.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 21 23:22:16 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:02:55 +0100, D wrote:

    Interesting! Reminds me of an arabian I met once who had a nice business
    going on exporting chicken feet from brazil, selling them in hong kong.
    Maybe Hutterite turkey nippon LLC could be a thing!

    We stole their Waygu cattle so we should give them turkeys. I've gotten
    the so-called wagyu beef; tastes a lot like Angus to me. I hope the real Japanese stuff is better.


    I had argentinian "wagyu" and it was absolutely divine! Far, far better
    than anything european I've had before.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Richard Kettlewell on Sat Dec 21 22:04:59 2024
    On 12/21/24 4:54 AM, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    On 12/20/24 4:18 AM, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    However there is ONE group - the Basques - who seem to have come
    quite early and were not over-run.
    The local language does seem to have been resistant to replacement
    for a
    few thousand years. However the population genetics is rather less
    static, with almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after
    2000BCE.

    I'd heard that - but don't ask me for a ref.

    See e.g. Olalde et al, The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over >>> the past 8000 years.

    As I kinda menntioned in all this ... there's really just no such
    thing as 'genetic purity' in Europe.

    Or anywhere else. You only get genetic purity in very isolated
    populations, and they start building up inherited diseases real
    quick. See niche dog breeds for a non-human example.


    This explains the British upper class :-)


    Over thousands of years various people/groups kept moving around and
    moving around and screwing anything interesting they encountered.

    So, is 'nation' more a CULTURAL THING instead ?

    Absolutely yes. People group themselves in all sorts of ways: shared language, shared religion, shared territory, shared enemy, shared
    preferred computing platform. Pretty much anything you can think of.

    'Culture' seems more resilient - genes rather
    secondary.

    As for the Basques ... ONLY a 'Y' replacement seems
    very odd .....

    It’s not hard to imagine models that produce the result observed.
    e.g. suppose (1) R1b-M269 social structures led to a surplus of males
    (2) that they married ‘out’ into the Iberian neolithic population
    (3) they bring their technogical innovations (presumably, nomadic pastoralism) with them, leading to greater long-term success
    (4) as, initially, a relative minority they adopt the local language (Proto-Proto-Basque or whatever) rather than bringing an IE dialect with
    them as seen elsewhere in Europe.

    Not saying that’s what happened, other models are possible and reality
    is usually more complex than anything you could put in a single
    paragraph, just that it’s not hard to imagine ways that it could happen.

    Ummmm ... STILL hard to imagine JUST the 'Y'. Should have
    contributed 50% of the entire genome to the kiddies.

    As for the "WAY to weird to be sure what was going on"
    factor in post-glacial Europe ... THAT I'm totally
    down with.

    We were still speculating about 'Cheddar Man'. For awhile they figured
    African/N.African mostly based on the length/size/profile of
    bones. What LITTLE DNA they could get suggests a migrant from western
    Europe, but it was a small sample. There's also question about WHAT
    "western euro" actually MEANT, genetically, at the exact timeframe.

    I don’t think there’s any evidence that he was a migrant at all. His genetics seem to be comparable to older remains from Britain and
    Ireland.


    The poor old guy has spent a long time being what
    various entities WANTED him to be for political
    reasons. MAY still be ... give it another 25 years
    and more testing :-)

    Remember what they did to the Neanderthals in
    the 1800s :

    https://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large-5/correze-man-neanderthal-reconstructed-illustrated-london-news-ltdmar.jpg

    NOW they're depicted pretty much like someone you'd
    see along the roadside in a Slavic farm community.

    https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/9673/production/_127151583_gettyimages-1235088802.jpg

    https://cdn.sci.news/images/enlarge11/image_12376e-Neanderthal.jpg

    I expect BOTH depictions are biased.

    Likely they DO live on in a corrupted cultural context,
    as the stories of 'trolls' and 'ogres'.

    Saw something recently, tracking-back of some genes,
    that suggests the body hair went away possibly as
    far back as 'Lucy' and friends. YET the depictions
    always still show shaggy Wookies ...

    Looks like most of the dinos had colorful 'pin-feathers'
    too, not grey-green 'reptile skin'. It will take the
    IMAGE of them 50-100 years to catch up with the research.

    Oh - good one ! This is supposedly a "Neanderthal Museum"
    in Germany :

    https://img.freepik.com/premium-photo/22-july-2022-neanderthal-museum-germany-detailed-wax-figure-neanderthal-prehistoric-caveman-with-spear-museum-human-sapiens-anthropology-science-theory-evolution_984126-1453.jpg?w=1800

    Tall, skinny, long legs, very 'black', very "African" ... while
    we've long long known that lighter skin was inherited from the
    Neanderthals - who were stocky, robust, barrel-chested and had
    kinda short legs just from the skeletons :-)

    The humans who met them didn't look like those wax
    figures either.

    Whose 'science' is going on HERE ?

    While LABELED as 'Neanderthal' it MIGHT actually be
    a depiction of Erectus instead ... but, aside from
    skeletal bits, we have LITTLE idea what HE actually
    looked like. Coulda looked more like Brit royals ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 21 22:28:02 2024
    On 12/21/24 3:53 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 21/12/2024 06:51, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Trains are kinda 'yesterday tech' ... and now the profit
       margins are negligible. Don't expect 'luxury' unless YOU
       are willing to pay for it and the transport co gets enough
       high-paying passengers to justify. If ENOUGH then then Hell
       Yes they will hire gourmet chefs and such and put in
       comfy seats.

    They may be tomorrows tech too, if fossil fuel prices rise high enough.
    Its all in the and cost-benefit analysis on riad building and cost of
    fuel versus cost of rail plus overhead lines and cheap nuclear power.

    Electric cars for long distances? Dont make me laugh..

    "Your travel permit please ? ..."

    Soviet era especially, you had to get permission to
    travel very far. This has considerable political and
    propaganda benefits for dictatorial types. People
    don't know/see anything outside their local area by
    and large - so you can MAKE UP any 'truths' needed.

       Otherwise it's the 10-day-old plastic-wrapped sandwich.

       It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
       a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
       are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    Nuclear powered luxury liners are a definite possibility.

    Oh, they can be MADE, no question. There was even much
    talk of nuke mega-cargo ships. However safely dealing
    with the reactors is the big thing. You need a team
    of very well educated experts lest Very Bad Things
    happen. So, while "possible", not "practical" for
    non-govt entities.

       Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
       Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
       a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    Whatever :-)

    "The Phobos Express" ! :-)

    Wow, we REALLY need something better than Newtonian
    propulsion ..... not even 100 years of decent rockets
    and the engines are already very disappointing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 05:46:13 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 22:04:59 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Whose 'science' is going on HERE ?

    The problem of living a relatively long life is you've seen science change
    too many times. It hasn't made any practical difference in my life but I
    hit the era where conventional current flow was being replaced with
    electron flow in some circles and some were jiggering Fleming's little
    visual aid. I'm left handed which tends to lead to confusion anyway (right mouse button?) and that was the last thing I needed.

    As far as the squishier sciences I've visited places like National Park historic sites and when visiting at a later time have noticed the signage
    has been replaced with a new Just So story.

    In a discussion with a IRL friend last week I remarked that when I was
    taught history in grade and high school we knew Vortigern invited Horsa
    and Hengist over to fight off the Picts. Between the linguists,
    archaeologists and geneticists I don't even know what the current revealed truth is other than some agreement that Gildas made shit up and Bede
    expanded on it.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glendive_Dinosaur_and_Fossil_Museum https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_the_Rockies

    The Museum of the Rockies does its share of guessing but I'm more inclined
    to believe their tales than thinking that humans were riding dinosaurs
    6000 years ago.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 01:50:41 2024
    On 12/21/24 6:17 AM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:40 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 19:03:59 +0100, D wrote:

    On Thu, 19 Dec 2024, Rich wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    I have contemplated ditching planes for trains, but I don't think >>>>>>> the
    result would be much better.  Perhaps less security theater?

    Here in the US, what little "train service" we have has zero security >>>>>> theater.  You arrive, walk in with your luggage rolling behind
    you, and
    no one checks you over, pats you down, feels you up, or otherwise
    does
    anything "security check" wise.  You show your ticket at the counter >>>>>> (to prove you purchased a ticket), go sit and wait, walk out to the >>>>>> train with your luggage when it is time, and climb aboard.

    This is very promising! I imagine they have a very beautiful
    restaurant
    where you can enjoy a glass of champagne, and perhaps a delicious 3
    course meal as well? =D

    Or maybe it is the swedish version, where you get to enjoy an old,
    plastic wrapped sandwich? ;)

    If you're very, very lucky. There is a group in Indiana that had
    restored
    an old steam engine and takes it out for a spin every now and then for >>>> fund raisers They also have period cars and volunteers do serve
    beverages
    and meals. As a bonus the destination was Peru IN and the Circus
    Hall of
    Fame.

    A couple of times I took Amtrak from Ft. Wayne to Chicago. It was a
    difference experience. Amtrak on the Boston to DC corridor gets a
    lot of
    love; other areas not so much.

    There was a train between Stockholm and Gothenburg that focused on
    the "luxury" niche.

    https://www.blataget.com/en/history/

    The web site is super crappy, and hardly any photos (why??) but you
    can kind of see the interior which looks alright and the food as
    well. Sadly I do not think they ru nany longer. =(

    I love the fact that the phone nr on the web site goes to someones
    regular cellphone and not to a company switch board.


     Trains are kinda 'yesterday tech' ... and now the profit
     margins are negligible. Don't expect 'luxury' unless YOU
     are willing to pay for it and the transport co gets enough
     high-paying passengers to justify. If ENOUGH then then Hell
     Yes they will hire gourmet chefs and such and put in
     comfy seats.

     Otherwise it's the 10-day-old plastic-wrapped sandwich.

    This is the (sad) truth!

     It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
     a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
     are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and
    new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard
    Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D


    Oh, I'm sure it will happen ... 'visionaries' are
    magnetically attracted to each other ! :-)

    I wonder if different materials might make zeps safer ?
    Graphite rods, carbon-fiber supports, something that'll
    give more under stress than simple rigid aluminum ?
    Could go 'meta' ... INFLATABLE, ADAPTIVE, extra supports
    you can work pneumatically or whatever. Then the thing
    is more like a dolphin or whale, dynamically adaptable
    to stresses in the short timescale.


     Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
     Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
     a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn
    out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    Like many with ultra IQ, he's a bit, umm, skittish.
    SO far he's holding up, but TOMORROW, well, who knows ?

    Some of these guys go off the deep end abruptly. I've
    only met ONE guy with about a 200 IQ who also had a
    solid personality. If you've seen US television, there
    are a lot of 'Sheldons' and only a few 'Paiges'.

    ANYWAY ... I have some doubts about him getting to Mars
    in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
    LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 01:53:31 2024
    On 12/21/24 4:33 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 21/12/2024 21:29, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn >>> out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but
    mediocrity, or equity as they style in.

    If you can be fired for making a wrong decision you will never make the
    right one

    As Machiavelli noted as being the reason Roman commanders
    were not penalized for losing battles. Safe, they could
    be BOLD.

    And now you know where 'golden parachutes' came from.

    Consult 'Discourses'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 02:12:43 2024
    On 12/22/24 12:46 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 22:04:59 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Whose 'science' is going on HERE ?

    The problem of living a relatively long life is you've seen science change too many times. It hasn't made any practical difference in my life but I
    hit the era where conventional current flow was being replaced with
    electron flow in some circles and some were jiggering Fleming's little
    visual aid. I'm left handed which tends to lead to confusion anyway (right mouse button?) and that was the last thing I needed.

    As far as the squishier sciences I've visited places like National Park historic sites and when visiting at a later time have noticed the signage
    has been replaced with a new Just So story.

    In a discussion with a IRL friend last week I remarked that when I was
    taught history in grade and high school we knew Vortigern invited Horsa
    and Hengist over to fight off the Picts. Between the linguists, archaeologists and geneticists I don't even know what the current revealed truth is other than some agreement that Gildas made shit up and Bede
    expanded on it.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glendive_Dinosaur_and_Fossil_Museum https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_the_Rockies


    Everybody goes whole-hawg with the data they HAVE, or
    at least the favored way of SEEING it. They will stick
    with that religiously until they just HAVE to change.


    The Museum of the Rockies does its share of guessing but I'm more inclined
    to believe their tales than thinking that humans were riding dinosaurs
    6000 years ago.

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing
    mountain of facts/evidence and equally-persuasive
    *belief* (which requires no facts). They TRY to find
    ways to splice it all together. It doesn't work well ...

    Somewhere, their little gears are gonna just seize-up.

    In the news a few days ago - some ardent 'flat earther'
    guy (apparently a True Believer) paid big $$$ to go to
    the south pole in order to test his theories about a
    geometrically suspect 'disk shaped' earth where the
    north and south pole were kind of the same thing.

    It didn't work out for him. However he didn't QUITE
    admit defeat ...

    Sad bit is that the Greeks had it all figured out
    by around 500bc ... with surprising accuracy ...
    using naught but pointed sticks, a few bits of
    string and some basic geometry.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 02:30:10 2024
    On 12/21/24 6:25 AM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:22 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s!  What I find interesting is how different
    people
    view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on
    steroids for
    stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as
    well go
    straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles, so
    instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to searching,
    and as long as they work and don't hallucinate, they save me some
    clicks. That's about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their
    hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)


     Ha Ha Ha - SO true there :-)

     Anyway, as I say elsewhere, LLMs are just PART of
     'intelligence'. OTHER parts need to be spliced in.
     Brains are just WEIRD ... 600+ million years of
     field-tested neural insanity.

     However, somewhere in there - early - "ME-ism"
     emerged. There's some neat-o trick to that which
     we haven't yet grasped. We're not thinking quite
     right about 'self'. I think THAT is the basic
     paradigm and then you add more IQ and such ONTO it.


    Could you please expand on the me-ism part? I have certainly not
    detected any me-isms and that is why I find them so boring. Give me
    volition, initiative  and desperate attempts to stop me from deleting
    them, then we're on to something!

    What, the "Me, Myself and I" thing ?

    It's the realization, however dim, that I am an
    autonomous unit. I am not that rock. I am not
    that tree. I am not that OTHER DAMNED IGUANA
    that's wandered into MY territory. There's ME,
    and everything else.

    In an odd sense it's anti-Buddhist.

    SO FAR I don't really see that in any of the
    AI models. They're well-perfected REACTION
    but there's still nobody home.

    We're missing something.

    At this time, that MAY be a good thing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 09:22:48 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 01:53:31 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    As Machiavelli noted as being the reason Roman commanders were not
    penalized for losing battles. Safe, they could be BOLD.

    Varus knew what was coming and took the easy way out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Richard Kettlewell@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 09:29:17 2024
    "186282@ud0s4.net" <186283@ud0s4.net> writes:
    On 12/21/24 4:54 AM, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
    Or anywhere else. You only get genetic purity in very isolated
    populations, and they start building up inherited diseases real
    quick. See niche dog breeds for a non-human example.

    This explains the British upper class :-)

    Or the Hapsburgs...

    [Basque archaeogenetics]
    Ummmm ... STILL hard to imagine JUST the 'Y'. Should have contributed
    50% of the entire genome to the kiddies.

    No doubt they did. “Almost complete Y-chromosome replacement by R1b-M269 after 2000BCE“ says nothing at all about the autosomal DNA. It’s a statement about the Y chromosomes only.

    --
    https://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 09:31:11 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also
    well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 09:40:33 2024
    On 21/12/2024 21:45, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 09:54:27 +0000, Richard Kettlewell wrote:

    Absolutely yes. People group themselves in all sorts of ways: shared
    language, shared religion, shared territory, shared enemy, shared
    preferred computing platform. Pretty much anything you can think of.

    Shared territory, or civic nationalism, appears to have its limits. The aftermath of WWI showed you can't draw lines on a map and say 'Congratulations! You're a country!"

    Well you can for sure *say* it.

    In reality every village has its own character...

    People form clusters and alliances based on hopefully mutually shared
    common interests.

    Or they get conquered and subjugated. And carry hatred for hundreds of
    years.


    --
    The higher up the mountainside
    The greener grows the grass.
    The higher up the monkey climbs
    The more he shows his arse.

    Traditional

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 09:43:37 2024
    On 21/12/2024 22:19, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe
    and new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into
    Richard Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're
    off! =D

    Frankly a nuclear powered ship would be quicker, safer and FAR more
    luxurious.

    This is the truth. But it would hardly be cheaper. =(

    I think you will find it would

    Already the economics of fully computerised bulk transporters with
    reactors look better than ever increasing bunker oil, especially in
    terms of high speed and low maintenance.

    If you got two nights in a luxury hotel AND to the USA from Europe for a similar price...


    --
    "What do you think about Gay Marriage?"
    "I don't."
    "Don't what?"
    "Think about Gay Marriage."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 09:53:14 2024
    On 22/12/2024 09:31, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    The problem is, that both the scientific narrative and the creationist
    one are complete, logical and unassailable.

    One posits a supernatural 'Big Bang' from which time, space energy and
    the laws of nature miraculously sprang, and the other posits a big
    Creation from which time, space energy and the laws of nature
    miraculously sprang, just already formed as a complete *fake*, like
    someone today constructing a '1000 year old' house. Complete with faked history.

    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply
    more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.



    --
    “The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false face for the
    urge to rule it.”
    – H. L. Mencken

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 10:00:30 2024
    On 22/12/2024 03:28, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Oh, they can be MADE, no question. There was even much
      talk of nuke mega-cargo ships. However safely dealing
      with the reactors is the big thing. You need a team
      of very well educated experts lest Very Bad Things
      happen. So, while "possible", not "practical" for
      non-govt entities.

    Not was even much talk, is a lot of current talk. And serious moves afoot.

    https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/articles/new-study-considers-nuclear-powered-bulk-carriers

    There is no reason the 'team of very well educated experts' need be ON
    the ship however.

    This is the digital age. They can be back at reactor HQ or helicoptered
    in if necessary.

    You will just get a red (wrench shaped) light on the bridge 'restricted performance, take to dealer as soon as possible'..

    :-)



    --
    "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign,
    that the dunces are all in confederacy against him."

    Jonathan Swift.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 10:09:50 2024
    On 22/12/2024 06:50, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    I wonder if different materials might make zeps safer ?
      Graphite rods, carbon-fiber supports, something that'll
      give more under stress than simple rigid aluminum ?
      Could go 'meta' ... INFLATABLE, ADAPTIVE, extra supports
      you can work pneumatically or whatever. Then the thing
      is more like a dolphin or whale, dynamically adaptable
      to stresses in the short timescale.


    We may have got better strength to weight ratio materials, but that
    simply allows a slightly bigger structure..

    The real demise in my book was not the zeppelin hydrogen fire, but the
    USS Shenandoah, which was literally torn in half by bad weather.

    "While passing through an area of thunderstorms and turbulence over Ohio
    early in the morning of 3 September, during its 57th flight, the
    Shenandoah was caught in a violent updraft that carried the ship beyond
    the pressure limits of its gas bags. The turbulence tore the airship
    apart, and it crashed in three main pieces near Caldwell, Ohio. Fourteen
    crew members, including Commander Zachary Lansdowne, were killed.
    Lansdowne and eight crew members in the control car (except for
    Lieutenant Anderson, who escaped) died when the car detached and fell
    from the airship; two men died after falling through holes in the hull;
    and four mechanics who fell with the engines were killed. There were twenty-nine survivors, who succeeded in riding the three sections of the airship to earth. The largest group was eighteen men who made it out of
    the stern after it rolled into a valley. Four others survived a crash
    landing of the central section. The remaining seven were in the bow
    section which Commander (later Vice Admiral) Charles E. Rosendahl
    managed to navigate as a free balloon. In this group was Anderson
    who—until he was roped in by the others—straddled the catwalk over a
    large hole. "

    Not my idea of a luxury cruise.

    The problem is that the airships of the day were barely faster than a
    ship or a train and really wouldn't pass today's safety tests at all.

    They were and would be simply too big to be safe or too small to be
    profitable except in very niche applications.


    --
    "Strange as it seems, no amount of learning can cure stupidity, and
    higher education positively fortifies it."

    - Stephen Vizinczey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:41:38 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:19:10 +0100, D wrote:

    An acquaintance had a grandmother who smoked until she was 70 or so, and
    one day she said... "I've had it, I quit smoking now" and just like
    that,
    over a day, she quit smoking.

    I was in my 20s but that is what I did. No withdrawal other than the
    actions associated with reaching for a cigarette. I could see those for
    what they were, a conditioned act, rather than a desire for a cigarette.

    Sometime later I read an article about some fatal disease that caused
    people to spontaneously stop smoking. That doesn't seem to have been the case.

    You should reverse engineer yourself! A fortune to be made in a new bowman-based anti-smoking drug! ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:40:04 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 11:59:47 +0100, D wrote:

    It's like god says, hey, learn this, but I'll mindwipe you every time so
    you cannot accumulate any knowledge and learn from your mistakes, except
    by chance. Have fun!

    Plato's theory was you really knew it but needed a little help to
    remember. iirc he only applied that to geometry problems and not general knowledge.


    Yes, religious fanatics like to argue that your spirit, deep soul or what
    ever really knows it. Always fun how they need to find ways to make up for
    when they are obviously wrong. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:43:48 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 08:56:01 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    We have big brains not to compose music or do science, but to walk
    upright...

    I manage to walk but I did find that with Nordic skiing if you start to
    think about what you're doing you'll be picking yourself up out of a snaw drift.

    It is interesting when the act of focusing takes away from the activity
    such as carrying a glass of water. If you consciously try to balance it to avoid spilling, it gets worse, if you trust your instincts, it generally
    goes better. My theory is that when you consciously try to do it, you
    engage a lot of extra machinery which adds latency, and that is why you
    get "out of sync" vs when you try the intuitive way.

    I also learned to ride a bicycle at an early age. When I needed to get a motorcycle endorsement on my license I found if you took a class the state testing was waived. During the class they explained the physics of counter-steering and how you're really pushing the bars in the opposite direction of your intended direction. Armed with all that new knowledge I damn near killed myself. I always thought you just looked where you wanted
    to go and it happened.




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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:50:00 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:23:39 +0100, D wrote:

    I also thought about it at university but came to the conclusion that my
    math skills were not strong enough. But, I would have been too early for
    the current AI boom anyway.

    AI can fall under the cognitive science umbrella but it isn't the whole discipline. My degree is in psychology which always needed some

    Psychology? Would never have guessed! Mine are IT and Philosophy.

    explanation. It was experimental psychology heavily influenced by
    Skinnerian behaviorism. I know a lot about the brain structure of a white

    I like skinnerian behaviourism. It is old, but it has a beautiful
    simplicity.

    rat but you didn't ask the rats what they were thinking. I don't know
    squat about the 'Psychology Today' type of crap.

    The first two year's curriculum was the same for all programs so I had
    good grounding in physics, chemistry, math, and programming, if FORTRAN
    can be considered programming. After that there was a good deal of
    latitude. For example one of my electives was differential equations since
    I thought it might be useful but it wasn't a requirement.

    I shudder at the memory of differential equations and my electromagnetism course. I quickly came to the conclusion that I found math and physics
    boring. I was able to push through some of those courses by sheer will
    power, but I realized, why should I spend 4 years on something that I find
    is boring?

    So after jumping through legal hoops, and proving to the university that
    my idea was correct and theirs wrong, they let me pick my own courses as
    long as the course difficulty level (A, B, C, D level) met some
    pre-specified levels. So in the end the emphasis was on IT and philosophy,
    with a healthy dose of psychology, business, finance etc.

    At the time the degree was as useful as one in modern drama unless you
    wanted to pursue an academic career but I found gainful employment. Then
    as now unless you were a classical civil or electrical engineer you had to figure stuff out on the fly as it happened. Eventually programming and rat running converged.

    This mirrors what I have heard from older colleagues.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:55:57 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:07:53 +0100, D wrote:

    As long as there's forest or water I'm happy. Very neutral on mountains.
    The wife however, loves moutains, and that severely limits the places
    where we can move, but I think she'll be ok with a pine forest. She
    hates leafy trees though. Hmm, very picky woman, now that I think of it!

    Western US. Other than cottonwoods along the rivers or some aspens, if it
    has leaves somebody planted it. There are a lot of maples, chestnuts, and
    a few oaks in town, all of which are non-native. A few years back the city went through one of the parks and took out all the non-native species. It
    was pretty naked for a while.

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Ft. Wayne IN is flat and surrounded by soybean fields. When I worked there

    Horrible! Reminds me of when I visited an acquaintance on his familys farm outside chicago. It was just fields and farms as far as the eye could see.

    I had to periodically go to southern Indiana where there are at least some hills to preserve my sanity.

    Water? You do know about Njord and Skadi...

    https://historiska.se/norse-mythology/skadi-en/

    Good stuff! One of my very treasured possessions is a complete, swedish translation of the icelandic sagas I rescued from a used book store! I
    often thought about trying to find the author, and buy the copyright so
    that I can publish them again.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:51:14 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:06:00 +0100, D wrote:

    Nonense... what doesn't kill us makes us stronger!

    I do really believe that.


    So do I! There are many gems in Nietzsches work. =)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 11:56:44 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:04:44 +0100, D wrote:

    This is a strong, scientific argument in favour of a pony tail! I do not
    think I have the genetics to grow my hair that long though. My beard
    stops growing after about 0.5-1 cm or so to my great sorrow. =(

    I manage a respectable beard but I'm definitely not in the ZZ Top class. Maybe 15 cm. It has lost bulk with age but my ponytail always had a limit too, not like some of the women with hair down to their butt. I'm not sure how that works.

    Ahh... but you could always get beard extensions!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 12:02:57 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:14:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Yeah... he's not my favourite pope. I wonder if there will be a huge
    backlash and a super conservative pope when it's time for him to go? I
    heard rumours that one contender for the papacy is the only swedish
    cardinal Anders (?) Arborelius.

    I had hopes for Benedict. I think he got tired of a fight he knew he

    Interesting. My wife had a private audience with Benedict once. She said
    he seemed like a nice guy.

    wasn't going to win. There is a lot of local controversy after the bishop banned the Latin Mass altogether. I think there is a Society of Saint Pius
    V priest who still does a traditional Mass two or three Sundays a month.
    SSPV is sedevacantist, rather than SSPX which skates on thin ice which is
    a quandary for the trads who don't want to go the whole route.

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world, but if they let
    it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect the guys who
    struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without giving it up completely.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 12:03:49 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn
    out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but mediocrity, or equity as they style in.


    Who do you think will be the first trillionaire?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 12:06:15 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 09:54:27 +0000, Richard Kettlewell wrote:

    Absolutely yes. People group themselves in all sorts of ways: shared
    language, shared religion, shared territory, shared enemy, shared
    preferred computing platform. Pretty much anything you can think of.

    Shared territory, or civic nationalism, appears to have its limits. The aftermath of WWI showed you can't draw lines on a map and say 'Congratulations! You're a country!"

    This lesson also applied to africa.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 12:05:33 2024
    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:11:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Jesus! What a crime! The airport in Lithuania has a part that is old
    20th century style, and now they are expanding the airport with... you
    guessed it, an anonymous glass and concrete structure, just like every
    other airport on the planet. =( I like the old part and was hoping that
    they'd continue on that theme, but no... the architects need to get
    their pound of flesh! =(

    Quite a few of my college friends were studying architecture and their
    hero was Mies van der Rohe. I'm afraid those seeds have prevailed. He's
    one German immigrant we could have lived without.

    Architects _today_ still study Mies. Since I studied in chicago he was a
    local deity there. I do like architects trying to strike out on their own
    and not copying old stuff, but I also do not like when they tear down old
    stuff in order to build a glass box.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 12:24:53 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.

    Did you ever get anywhere with him in arguments, or was every argument
    closed down by the "God"-argument?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 12:22:59 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/21/24 6:25 AM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:22 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s!  What I find interesting is how different people >>>>>> view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on steroids >>>>>> for
    stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as well >>>>> go
    straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles, so
    instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to searching, and >>>> as long as they work and don't hallucinate, they save me some clicks.
    That's about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their
    hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)


     Ha Ha Ha - SO true there :-)

     Anyway, as I say elsewhere, LLMs are just PART of
     'intelligence'. OTHER parts need to be spliced in.
     Brains are just WEIRD ... 600+ million years of
     field-tested neural insanity.

     However, somewhere in there - early - "ME-ism"
     emerged. There's some neat-o trick to that which
     we haven't yet grasped. We're not thinking quite
     right about 'self'. I think THAT is the basic
     paradigm and then you add more IQ and such ONTO it.


    Could you please expand on the me-ism part? I have certainly not detected
    any me-isms and that is why I find them so boring. Give me volition,
    initiative  and desperate attempts to stop me from deleting them, then
    we're on to something!

    What, the "Me, Myself and I" thing ?

    It's the realization, however dim, that I am an
    autonomous unit. I am not that rock. I am not
    that tree. I am not that OTHER DAMNED IGUANA
    that's wandered into MY territory. There's ME,
    and everything else.

    In an odd sense it's anti-Buddhist.

    SO FAR I don't really see that in any of the
    AI models. They're well-perfected REACTION
    but there's still nobody home.

    We're missing something.

    At this time, that MAY be a good thing.


    Ahh ok, got it! Yes, not a lot of "me" going on there for sure.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 22 12:20:58 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
     a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
     are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and new >> york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard Branson or >> other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D


    Oh, I'm sure it will happen ... 'visionaries' are
    magnetically attracted to each other ! :-)

    This is the truth!

    I wonder if different materials might make zeps safer ?
    Graphite rods, carbon-fiber supports, something that'll
    give more under stress than simple rigid aluminum ?
    Could go 'meta' ... INFLATABLE, ADAPTIVE, extra supports
    you can work pneumatically or whatever. Then the thing
    is more like a dolphin or whale, dynamically adaptable
    to stresses in the short timescale.

    I imagine that old kinds of scientific progress has been made since the days of Zeppelin that positively alter the safety and economics and viability of zeppelin flights. There's even a "far out" theory of vacuum zeppelins, that do not use a gas but, a vacuum. I met a guy on a mailinglist who was going to do a self-funded Ph.D. around that concept.

     Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
     Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
     a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he will
    be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn out or >> if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in such a short >> time.

    Like many with ultra IQ, he's a bit, umm, skittish.
    SO far he's holding up, but TOMORROW, well, who knows ?

    Yes.

    Some of these guys go off the deep end abruptly. I've
    only met ONE guy with about a 200 IQ who also had a
    solid personality. If you've seen US television, there
    are a lot of 'Sheldons' and only a few 'Paiges'.

    I've met a few people who I thought were _way_ more intelligent than I am. I obviously did not test them, but they were the kind of people who did not really
    have any use for math books at university. They just took down the axioms and worked out how things work from there. Some of them also only needed to read things once, and they were all set.

    I'd say it's 50/50 for those guys how mentally stable they are. One guy I liked,
    went 2 times to the hospital during our studies for alcohol poisoning, and he enjoyed having 15 degrees C in his room. He took a masters degree in IT engineering, but found it boring and without challenges, so after a few years he
    went back to school and took a masters degree in chemical engineering instead. Haven't heard from him since, but I imagine he is holed up in a lab somewhere, unless he took a third masters degree.

    Another guy, I call him "the crypto ninja" was morbidly paranoid, and tried to cheat me in business, secure in the knowledge that he was so anonymous that I could never find him. Luckily for me, he was not as smart as he thought when it comes to hiding his tracks, so I was able to track him down. He was fascinating.
    Within one slim area, he was very skilled and knowledgeable, but he thought that
    this skill extended to other areas as well, so he was proven wrong by my wife in
    legal matters, and by me in privacy matters. Hmm, on second thought, maybe he wasn't that smart after all? ;)

    ANYWAY ... I have some doubts about him getting to Mars
    in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
    LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically accelerated loads into space!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 12:26:28 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 22:19, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe and >>>> new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into Richard
    Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're off! =D

    Frankly a nuclear powered ship would be quicker, safer and FAR more
    luxurious.

    This is the truth. But it would hardly be cheaper. =(

    I think you will find it would

    Already the economics of fully computerised bulk transporters with reactors look better than ever increasing bunker oil, especially in terms of high speed and low maintenance.

    If you got two nights in a luxury hotel AND to the USA from Europe for a similar price...

    Well, comparing a modern, state of the art, zeppelin, and a nuclear
    powered luxury boat from a financial point of view, should be a pretty
    easy exercise.

    I'll let you know once I meat Branson, or a Branson-derivative, what way
    we decide upon. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 12:28:29 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 09:31, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also >> well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    The problem is, that both the scientific narrative and the creationist one are complete, logical and unassailable.

    One posits a supernatural 'Big Bang' from which time, space energy and the laws of nature miraculously sprang, and the other posits a big Creation from which time, space energy and the laws of nature miraculously sprang, just already formed as a complete *fake*, like someone today constructing a '1000 year old' house. Complete with faked history.

    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay
    too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in reality "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions is
    lacking?

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 15:11:04 2024
    On 22/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:14:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Yeah... he's not my favourite pope. I wonder if there will be a huge
    backlash and a super conservative pope when it's time for him to go? I
    heard rumours that one contender for the papacy is the only swedish
    cardinal Anders (?) Arborelius.

    I had hopes for Benedict. I think he got tired of a fight he knew he

    Interesting. My wife had a private audience with Benedict once. She said
    he seemed like a nice guy.

    wasn't going to win. There is a lot of local controversy after the bishop
    banned the Latin Mass altogether. I think there is a Society of Saint
    Pius
    V priest who still does a traditional Mass two or three Sundays a month.
    SSPV is sedevacantist, rather than SSPX which skates on thin ice which is
    a quandary for the trads who don't want to go the whole route.

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they
    are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world, but if
    they let it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect the guys
    who struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without giving it
    up completely.

    I square the circle by thinking of the Bible and religion a 'not life as
    it was or is, but life as it ought to have been' .

    That is it expresses a desire for a particular way of life, and gives
    pragmatic hints on how to achieve it.

    Its confusion with esoteric philosophy and mysticism is its greatest
    weakness

    --
    Renewable energy: Expensive solutions that don't work to a problem that
    doesn't exist instituted by self legalising protection rackets that
    don't protect, masquerading as public servants who don't serve the public.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 15:22:31 2024
    On 22/12/2024 11:28, D wrote:
    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply
    more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    I wasn't talking about the *practice* of science, or of religion for
    that matter. I was talking about their metaphysical *beliefs*.


    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay
    too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in
    reality "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions
    is lacking?

    Precisely, In many ways the God explanation is simpler :

    "God did it all, and faked it so it looks like he was never there at
    all, to test you fuckers"

    ...there are only three people who understand quantum physics and two of
    them are liars....

    But if you examine Occam from outside the confines of realism and
    materialism, he makes perfect sense.

    1. The problem of induction means that no inference can ever be proved
    to be correct.
    2. So given that its all bullshit anyway, why not pick the simplest
    bullshit that fits the facts?
    3. ...And fits within the accepted already established bullshit, that
    works...

    That is today's problem., People are absolutely reluctant to abandon the established bullshit, that works.

    Even when they know it is actually wrong.

    The Kuhnian paradigm shift is staring them in the face, but they simply
    cant accept it.



    --
    "Anyone who believes that the laws of physics are mere social
    conventions is invited to try transgressing those conventions from the
    windows of my apartment. (I live on the twenty-first floor.) "

    Alan Sokal

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Sun Dec 22 17:23:12 2024
    On 2024-12-22, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they
    are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world,

    The woke are bound by their own book - which is far more outlandish
    than the Bible.

    but if they let it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect
    the guys who struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without
    giving it up completely.

    The literalists have always had - and been - a problem. I resolved the
    issue in my school days. The literature classes we took taught us about metaphor and simile, and I saw no reason why the seven days of creation
    should not be metaphorical rather than literal. Suddenly there was no conflict. There are lots of things like that in the book.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 20:11:04 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 15:11:04 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I square the circle by thinking of the Bible and religion a 'not life as
    it was or is, but life as it ought to have been' .

    Much evil has come from chasing dreams of the ought rather than accepting
    the is.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 20:09:40 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 10:09:50 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    The real demise in my book was not the zeppelin hydrogen fire, but the
    USS Shenandoah, which was literally torn in half by bad weather.

    The thing to remember about the US zepplin attempts is they were based on
    the design of a captured German zepplin "Height Climber". There were
    designed to operate at 20,000', higher than the aircraft of the day, to
    bomb Britain. They sacrificed strength to cut weight.

    In the film 'Hells Angels', there is a scene where after ditching
    everything to gain altitude the crew lines up and dutifully jumps.

    The US did some improvements but gave up eventually. iirc only one
    survived.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 22 20:12:50 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 17:23:12 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    The literalists have always had - and been - a problem. I resolved the
    issue in my school days. The literature classes we took taught us about metaphor and simile, and I saw no reason why the seven days of creation should not be metaphorical rather than literal. Suddenly there was no conflict. There are lots of things like that in the book.

    Literacy and the printing press allowed many people to read the bible and
    come up with novel interpretations.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 20:26:12 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 12:03:49 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually
    burn out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so
    much in such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but
    mediocrity, or equity as they style in.


    Who do you think will be the first trillionaire?

    I think there were a lot of trillionaires in Germany after WWI.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 20:23:55 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be. You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least the
    more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    The Bighorns are another spur, but not as dramatic as the Tetons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Mountains

    That page has a nice relief map for reference.

    Eastern Oregon is also pretty flat high desert until you get to the
    Cascades.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 20:47:40 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:43:48 +0100, D wrote:

    It is interesting when the act of focusing takes away from the activity
    such as carrying a glass of water. If you consciously try to balance it
    to avoid spilling, it gets worse, if you trust your instincts, it
    generally goes better. My theory is that when you consciously try to do
    it, you engage a lot of extra machinery which adds latency, and that is
    why you get "out of sync" vs when you try the intuitive way.

    'Zen and the Art of Archery' It's an interesting feeling when it all
    clicks. I always shot stick bows right handed with no sights. On good days
    it just happens. When my right eye developed a cataract I switched to a
    left handed compound bow. Compound bows have a sights and I could use them effectively. Time goes on and I had a couple of operations on my left eye
    and couldn't use the sights effectively. I was going to give the bow away
    but then realized I'd always shot recurves instinctively, why not
    compounds. I took the sights off and it seems to be working.

    Handguns can be the same. The sights are there and you sort of see them
    but when you're firing in under .3 seconds there isn't a whole lot of
    thinking going on.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to and the TA on Sun Dec 22 20:35:00 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:50:00 +0100, D wrote:


    I shudder at the memory of differential equations and my
    electromagnetism course. I quickly came to the conclusion that I found
    math and physics boring. I was able to push through some of those
    courses by sheer will power, but I realized, why should I spend 4 years
    on something that I find is boring?

    Each discipline had courses that sorted the sheep from the goats. diff-e
    and e-mag theory were two for the ee's. o-chem did in the potential
    chemists. iirc thermodynamics weeded out the civil engineers.

    When I took diff-e a friend had a bet with the TA for the course on
    whether I would pass. My attendance in class was spotty to say the least
    and the TA said 'No way'. He lost.


    So after jumping through legal hoops, and proving to the university that
    my idea was correct and theirs wrong, they let me pick my own courses as
    long as the course difficulty level (A, B, C, D level) met some
    pre-specified levels. So in the end the emphasis was on IT and
    philosophy,
    with a healthy dose of psychology, business, finance etc.

    That was the nice thing about the psychology department. There were a few required courses but it was mostly a la carte.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 21:54:04 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:14:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Yeah... he's not my favourite pope. I wonder if there will be a huge
    backlash and a super conservative pope when it's time for him to go? I >>>> heard rumours that one contender for the papacy is the only swedish
    cardinal Anders (?) Arborelius.

    I had hopes for Benedict. I think he got tired of a fight he knew he

    Interesting. My wife had a private audience with Benedict once. She said he >> seemed like a nice guy.

    wasn't going to win. There is a lot of local controversy after the bishop >>> banned the Latin Mass altogether. I think there is a Society of Saint Pius >>> V priest who still does a traditional Mass two or three Sundays a month. >>> SSPV is sedevacantist, rather than SSPX which skates on thin ice which is >>> a quandary for the trads who don't want to go the whole route.

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they are >> bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world, but if they let >> it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect the guys who
    struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without giving it up
    completely.

    I square the circle by thinking of the Bible and religion a 'not life as it was or is, but life as it ought to have been' .

    That is it expresses a desire for a particular way of life, and gives pragmatic hints on how to achieve it.

    Its confusion with esoteric philosophy and mysticism is its greatest weakness

    I look at it from an exoteric and an esoteric way. On way is the condensed wisdom of our forefathers, giving practical advice for how to live. The
    other part, is the original (in my opinion) esoteric experience, that can
    only be lived or experienced, and never passed on through words.

    Different religions have different mixes of the two components and
    different levels of authoritarianism vs "anarchism" built in.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 21:12:22 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 12:24:53 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer.
    Given the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip
    up the Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time.
    He was also well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against
    evolution.

    Did you ever get anywhere with him in arguments, or was every argument
    closed down by the "God"-argument?

    There is no winning that argument so I let it slide. I would push his
    buttons by taking the Catholic side in arguments about other points. He
    was entirely dependent of his interpretation of the bible. I would point
    out the Catholics determined the canon. There have been a few Protestant tweaks. Luther left out Thomas on his first go-around since the parts
    about faith without works being empty didn't fit with sola fides.
    Maccabees winds up in 'apocrypha' since it mentions prayers for the dead
    as an intercession. Then there is the decalogue parsing to come down heavy
    on those statues.

    I doubt many Catholics believe in the Young Earth but that's one of the
    areas that is dealers choice as far as the catechism goes, along with evolution.

    He died last year and I sort of miss the friendly discussions. As a part
    of hearing what you want to hear a group from his church sand Cohen's 'Hallelujah' at the service. There certainly is biblical imagery but there
    is also the verse

    "Maybe there's a God above
    But all I've ever learned from love
    Was how to shoot at someone who outdrew ya
    And it's not a cry that you hear at night
    It's not somebody who's seen the light
    It's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah"

    Then there are the politicians who play Springsteen's 'Born in the USA' at there rallies. Or Trump's fondness for 'YMCA'. That song and the Village People were as queer as it gets but I don't think he gets the context.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 20:54:52 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 09:53:14 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    One posits a supernatural 'Big Bang' from which time, space energy and
    the laws of nature miraculously sprang, and the other posits a big
    Creation from which time, space energy and the laws of nature
    miraculously sprang, just already formed as a complete *fake*, like
    someone today constructing a '1000 year old' house. Complete with faked history.

    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a Plan in charge.

    The Big Bang theory came from a Jesuit priest. I don't believe it came
    from theology instead of Hubbell's observations. Einstein based his
    theories on a steady state universe and threw in a fudge factor to make
    the math come out right. Thus he believed. At the time the Jesuit won even though Einstein told him his physics sucked.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 22 22:55:52 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-22, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they
    are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world,

    The woke are bound by their own book - which is far more outlandish
    than the Bible.

    What bible do they have? Woke will self destruct into ever smaller
    factions. Eventually it ends up as individualism, which is good, or it
    will spend itself on in fighting and go away as a political force.

    but if they let it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect
    the guys who struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without
    giving it up completely.

    The literalists have always had - and been - a problem. I resolved the
    issue in my school days. The literature classes we took taught us about metaphor and simile, and I saw no reason why the seven days of creation should not be metaphorical rather than literal. Suddenly there was no conflict. There are lots of things like that in the book.

    This is the truth!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 22:54:27 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 11:28, D wrote:
    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply more >>> complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    I wasn't talking about the *practice* of science, or of religion for that matter. I was talking about their metaphysical *beliefs*.

    Ahh... our definitions differ when it comes to science. I was tricked! But
    I will drop this line as I think it leads us back to old threads. ;)

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay
    too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in reality
    "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions is
    lacking?

    Precisely, In many ways the God explanation is simpler :

    "God did it all, and faked it so it looks like he was never there at all, to test you fuckers"

    ...there are only three people who understand quantum physics and two of them are liars....

    This is the truth and exactly one of the things I do not like with Occam.
    If you're on team God (TM) that's the easiest explanation, if you're on
    team Science (C), that's nonsense, and your version is the simplest.

    There's no way to decide from a neutral point, if you are dealing with religious people regardless of if they are from the religion religion, or
    the religion science (which has very little to do with the science as a process).

    But if you examine Occam from outside the confines of realism and materialism, he makes perfect sense.

    1. The problem of induction means that no inference can ever be proved to be correct.
    2. So given that its all bullshit anyway, why not pick the simplest bullshit that fits the facts?
    3. ...And fits within the accepted already established bullshit, that works...

    Ah, but the problem of induction is a chimera, an illusion. Popper argued
    that justification is not needed at all, and seeking justification "begs
    for an authoritarian answer".

    The only thing we need to worry about is if it works, and that's it.

    That is today's problem., People are absolutely reluctant to abandon the established bullshit, that works.

    This is not a problem, this is the way. If it works, is in fact the only
    way. If that is abandoned, everything else is meaningless. That is the
    strength of materialism and a common, shared external world, and one of
    the best arguments for it.

    We've been down this path many times before I think.

    Even when they know it is actually wrong.

    The Kuhnian paradigm shift is staring them in the face, but they simply cant accept it.





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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 23:09:51 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be. You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least the more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!

    The Bighorns are another spur, but not as dramatic as the Tetons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Mountains

    That page has a nice relief map for reference.

    Eastern Oregon is also pretty flat high desert until you get to the
    Cascades.




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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 22 22:59:07 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-22, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually burn >>>> out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so much in
    such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but
    mediocrity, or equity as they style in.

    Who do you think will be the first trillionaire?

    Musk, of course. It won't take too many more of the 10% jumps in net
    worth that billionares have been enjoying lately, and once Trump is inaugurated we'll see enough more of those jumps to put Musk over the top.

    Musk is not an improbable bet. I agree.

    Whether things stay that way or collapse immediately thereafter remains
    to be seen. But he'll have at least touched the sky...

    I think Trump & Co will try and engineer a financial feast for a couple of years now. The interest reates globally are going down, the positive
    effects have so far been few, which means more interest lowering on the
    way.

    Add a loose monetary policy, tax decreases and increased government debt,
    and we have a nice booming economy ahead of us. The key, as always, is to
    know when to sell your shares, take a break, and enter again at the
    bottom.

    The other option, which I have utilized all these years, is to hold fast,
    and just refrain from buying during the last couple of years of booms, and
    once things collapse, I usually start to buy in small increments.

    This has worked well for me, since I don't need to worry about finding the moment to sell.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 23:10:14 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 12:03:49 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024 12:17:41 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually
    burn out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so
    much in such a short time.

    I'm not nominating Musk but I do believe the out of fashion Great Man
    theory. With the mediocrity of the political class you get nothing but
    mediocrity, or equity as they style in.


    Who do you think will be the first trillionaire?

    I think there were a lot of trillionaires in Germany after WWI.

    ;)

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 00:50:19 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 21:54:04 +0100, D wrote:

    I look at it from an exoteric and an esoteric way. On way is the
    condensed wisdom of our forefathers, giving practical advice for how to
    live. The other part, is the original (in my opinion) esoteric
    experience, that can only be lived or experienced, and never passed on through words.

    The Havamal works for me.

    https://jacksonwcrawford.com/the-cowboy-havamal/

    38. Keep yer guns close.
    I don’t care what they say,
    there ain’t no tellin’
    when there’ll be call for ’em.
    An armed man has a shot.

    That speaks to me more than offering the other cheek. I couldn't find it
    with a quick search but there is also a 'Havamal for New Yorkers'. George Jones, not the country singer, in 'Honor Bright' compares societies based
    on honor to those based on guilt. He offers the heathen beatitudes.

    Blessed are the rich, for they possess the earth and its glory.

    Blessed are the strong, for they can conquer kingdoms.

    Blessed are they with strong kinsmen, for they shall find help.

    Blessed are the warlike, for they shall win wealth and renown.

    Blessed are they who keep their faith, for they shall be honored.

    Blessed are they who are open handed, for they shall have friends and
    fame.

    Blessed are they who wreak vengeance, for they shall be offended no more,
    and they shall have honor and glory all the days of their life, and
    eternal fame in ages to come.

    I'll admit my forefathers probably were Christian for a thousand years or
    more but they didn't jot down the Christian beatitudes.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 01:09:21 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 23:09:51 +0100, D wrote:



    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be. You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even
    Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least
    the more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!

    https://fullsuitcase.com/grand-teton-np-jenny-lake-boat-hike/

    Jenny Lake looks like something imported from the Alps. I waked around the
    lake and up Cascade Canyon until the trail split. Very scenic. I was going
    to take the boat back but there was a line and I'd rather be walking than hanging around waiting. Jackson Hole is the southern entrance to the park.
    I guess it could be fun if you're into expensive tourist traps.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson_Hole

    The Tetons are nice but I've got some scenery much closer to home.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitterroot_Mountains

    The trail to Trapper Peak is nowhere as intimidating as you might think. Elevation is the major issue if you're not acclimated but it's not as bad
    as the 14,000' peaks in Colorado. Oxygen is damn scarce on those. Your
    mind thinks you should be walking faster but your body isn't willing.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 01:12:32 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 22:59:07 +0100, D wrote:

    Add a loose monetary policy, tax decreases and increased government
    debt,
    and we have a nice booming economy ahead of us. The key, as always, is
    to know when to sell your shares, take a break, and enter again at the bottom.

    Nice booming inflation... I'll strangle the first person that says 'But
    the fundamentals are sound.'

    I don't do the stock market so what is good for Wall Street doesn't matter
    to me.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 22:17:53 2024
    On 12/22/24 5:09 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 22/12/2024 06:50, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    I wonder if different materials might make zeps safer ?
       Graphite rods, carbon-fiber supports, something that'll
       give more under stress than simple rigid aluminum ?
       Could go 'meta' ... INFLATABLE, ADAPTIVE, extra supports
       you can work pneumatically or whatever. Then the thing
       is more like a dolphin or whale, dynamically adaptable
       to stresses in the short timescale.


    We may have got better strength to weight ratio materials, but that
    simply allows a slightly bigger structure..

    Well ... 'slightly bigger' than the Graf or Hindenburg may
    be "big enough" ......

    The TRICK though is safety - and large things like zeps,
    at least the cigar-shaped ones, can pose a problem there.
    Strong wind gusts can basically pull the nose and tail in
    different directions, snapping the thing. With the large
    surface area the forces become considerable.

    Dynamic 'profile/rigidity morphing' as I proposed COULD
    be a useful tool in the box.

    While 'cigar-shape' seems most logical, 'rounder' may be
    the trick to reducing such mechanical stresses. The things
    don't move THAT fast anyway, 'rounder' won't be MUCH slower.

    The real demise in my book was not the zeppelin hydrogen fire, but the
    USS Shenandoah, which was literally torn in half by bad weather.

    Yep. The surface area * wind stress issue.

    "While passing through an area of thunderstorms and turbulence over Ohio early in the morning of 3 September, during its 57th flight, the
    Shenandoah was caught in a violent updraft that carried the ship beyond
    the pressure limits of its gas bags. The turbulence tore the airship
    apart, and it crashed in three main pieces near Caldwell, Ohio. Fourteen
    crew members, including Commander Zachary Lansdowne, were killed.
    Lansdowne and eight crew members in the control car (except for
    Lieutenant Anderson, who escaped) died when the car detached and fell
    from the airship; two men died after falling through holes in the hull;
    and four mechanics who fell with the engines were killed. There were twenty-nine survivors, who succeeded in riding the three sections of the airship to earth. The largest group was eighteen men who made it out of
    the stern after it rolled into a valley. Four others survived a crash
    landing of the central section. The remaining seven were in the bow
    section which Commander (later Vice Admiral) Charles E. Rosendahl
    managed to navigate as a free balloon. In this group was Anderson
    who—until he was roped in by the others—straddled the catwalk over a large hole. "

    Not my idea of a luxury cruise.

    It was a bad disaster.

    Modern avionics might have avoided it - a clear view
    of storms/winds.

    In any case, anyone with the right sim software should
    look into 'rounder' - more 'blimpy' - (US) 'football'.
    Carbon-based structural members also would not 'snap'
    or 'buckle' so readily under stress as 1930s aluminum
    struts.

    In short they CAN be done, better, these days. But can
    you SELL people on them ? You'd have to start well ahead
    of time and 'build a romance' so to speak.

    The problem is that the airships of the day were barely faster than a
    ship or a train and really wouldn't pass today's safety tests at all.

    Well ... you're selling 'exotic' here, selling to
    the upper class, selling a certain 'style' and
    'image' of luxury. Speed isn't as important as
    LOOKING GOOD.

    They were and would be simply too big to be safe or too small to be profitable except in very niche applications.

    ONE corp could do it and make a profit ... but don't see
    room for more.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 22 23:14:31 2024
    On 12/22/24 4:31 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    Met 'em. Even prompted one to physically attack me
    because I refused to give in to his worldview.

    In any case, as soon as you accept some 'Big Magic
    Joe in the sky' then EVERY weird possibility becomes
    credible. "Belief" knows no bounds and IS at least
    as persuasive as any mountain of facts. Amass all
    the facts you want ... they'll STILL burn you at
    the stake. Problem solved .......

    And no, such 'theology' is NOT restricted to the
    political 'right' ... it's part of how WE are
    wired-up.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 22 23:02:56 2024
    On 12/22/24 6:20 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     It's a pity zeppelins proved so impractical - THOSE had
     a 'romance' and you COULD go for 'luxury'. Cruise ships
     are a step up, but maybe only one step.

    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe
    and new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into
    Richard Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then we're
    off! =D


     Oh, I'm sure it will happen ... 'visionaries' are
     magnetically attracted to each other !   :-)

    This is the truth!

     I wonder if different materials might make zeps safer ?
     Graphite rods, carbon-fiber supports, something that'll
     give more under stress than simple rigid aluminum ?
     Could go 'meta' ... INFLATABLE, ADAPTIVE, extra supports
     you can work pneumatically or whatever. Then the thing
     is more like a dolphin or whale, dynamically adaptable
     to stresses in the short timescale.

    I imagine that old kinds of scientific progress has been made since the
    days of
    Zeppelin that positively alter the safety and economics and viability of zeppelin flights. There's even a "far out" theory of vacuum zeppelins,
    that do
    not use a gas but, a vacuum. I met a guy on a mailinglist who was going
    to do a
    self-funded Ph.D. around that concept.

     Anyway, for now, expect all transportation to be Just
     Another Uber. We will have to wait for Musk to build
     a luxury Earth/Mars travel line.

    I'm following the career of Musk with great interest! I wonder if he
    will be the first trillionaire? I also wonder if he will eventually
    burn out or if something will happen to him since he's achieved so
    much in such a short time.

     Like many with ultra IQ, he's a bit, umm, skittish.
     SO far he's holding up, but TOMORROW, well, who knows ?

    Yes.

     Some of these guys go off the deep end abruptly. I've
     only met ONE guy with about a 200 IQ who also had a
     solid personality. If you've seen US television, there
     are a lot of 'Sheldons' and only a few 'Paiges'.

    I've met a few people who I thought were _way_ more intelligent than I
    am. I
    obviously did not test them, but they were the kind of people who did
    not really
    have any use for math books at university. They just took down the
    axioms and
    worked out how things work from there. Some of them also only needed to
    read
    things once, and they were all set.

    I'd say it's 50/50 for those guys how mentally stable they are. One guy
    I liked,
    went 2 times to the hospital during our studies for alcohol poisoning,
    and he
    enjoyed having 15 degrees C in his room. He took a masters degree in IT engineering, but found it boring and without challenges, so after a few
    years he
    went back to school and took a masters degree in chemical engineering instead.
    Haven't heard from him since, but I imagine he is holed up in a lab somewhere,
    unless he took a third masters degree.

    Another guy, I call him "the crypto ninja" was morbidly paranoid, and
    tried to
    cheat me in business, secure in the knowledge that he was so anonymous
    that I
    could never find him. Luckily for me, he was not as smart as he thought
    when it
    comes to hiding his tracks, so I was able to track him down. He was fascinating.
    Within one slim area, he was very skilled and knowledgeable, but he
    thought that
    this skill extended to other areas as well, so he was proven wrong by my
    wife in
    legal matters, and by me in privacy matters. Hmm, on second thought,
    maybe he
    wasn't that smart after all? ;)

     ANYWAY ... I have some doubts about him getting to Mars
     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically accelerated loads into space!


    And PRIME terrorist targets :-)

    Back in the emergent PC days I knew a guy who wrote
    clones of Atari/Commodore/Nintendo games, mostly for
    the 6502. I watched him program, fast, in BINARY for
    the chip. Why waste time with ASM ? Said it gave him
    a buzz.

    He was NOT entirely 'stable'.

    There's an old movie called 'True Genius' - Val Kilmer
    I think - this guy was like the guru who lived inside
    the dorm walls.

    Another guy could just kinda 'see' the math, he said
    it was almost like a calculator display 'overlay'.
    Ever see that movie 'Lucy' ... I suspect it was kinda
    like the scene where she leaves the hospital and sees
    the whole transpiration process going on in a tree,
    but with all the exact numbers too. An interesting
    view of 'next level'.

    Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
    There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
    one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
    are VERY VERY rare.

    BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
    spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
    The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
    to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
    Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
    pick up where they left off :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 22 23:42:31 2024
    On 12/22/24 4:53 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 22/12/2024 09:31, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
        facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no >>>     facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't >>>     work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was
    also
    well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    The problem is, that both the scientific narrative and the creationist
    one are complete, logical and unassailable.


    Yep, kinda hermetically-sealed bubbles.

    Somewhere, early on, you take a step in one of
    several directions and then that defines your
    path forever more.


    One posits a supernatural 'Big Bang' from which time, space energy and
    the laws of nature miraculously sprang, and the other posits a big
    Creation from which  time, space energy and the laws of nature
    miraculously sprang, just already formed as a complete *fake*, like
    someone today constructing a '1000 year old' house. Complete with faked history.

    The 'big bang' - esp with 'inflation' added - IS a bit
    of a stretch ...

    I'll agree, because it suits me, that it's likely what
    happened - but really truly PROVING it and the underlying
    factors is gonna be difficult to the EXTREME.


    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a  Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply


    ... weird .......

    more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.


    Came across an little article on a sci/tech page the other
    day about 'negative time'. Basically, if you send a photon
    into some crystals another comes out BEFORE the original
    goes IN. This had been attributed to instrumentation issues,
    but now the instrumentation is much better and it DOES happen.
    The first-up cause is to look at photons as quantum-statistical
    entities rather than a 'thing'. However there's a slight smell
    to that.

    Ah ... found it :

    https://phys.org/news/2024-12-scientists-negative-quantum.html

    This seriously smears-out the whole 'causality' thing,
    future precedes past. I wonder how far before/until
    that effect might go ?

    It also points to 'the real picture' being kinda being
    SO complex and strange it's not really within the realm
    of human IQ anymore. We might put the "AI"s on it, but
    won't understand how they reach their answers.or REALLY
    what it means. As such it all becomes as 'magic' to us -
    full circle.

    We LIKE to think we can grasp it all but ... umm ... NOPE.
    However we CAN *use* the 'magic' the AIs find ... so it's
    not a total loss. Just wave yer wand and repeat " ...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 00:13:32 2024
    On 12/22/24 6:28 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 09:31, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of >>>>     facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no >>>>     facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't >>>>     work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer.
    Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was
    also
    well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    The problem is, that both the scientific narrative and the creationist
    one are complete, logical and unassailable.

    One posits a supernatural 'Big Bang' from which time, space energy and
    the laws of nature miraculously sprang, and the other posits a big
    Creation from which  time, space energy and the laws of nature
    miraculously sprang, just already formed as a complete *fake*, like
    someone today constructing a '1000 year old' house. Complete with
    faked history.

    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence
    with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply
    more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    MAYbe an advantage there ... but maybe NOT. Theists will
    say they don't NEED 'process' or 'corrections' because
    they were magically provided with the RIGHT ANSWER
    long back. They just see us bickering about whether
    2+2 (common conditions) = 4 for a century or two
    when they knew all along.

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay
    too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in
    reality "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions
    is lacking?

    Occam HAS his uses. However sometimes things ARE complicated.

    Read my post here to Mr. Natural about 'negative time'
    findings ......

    https://phys.org/news/2024-12-scientists-negative-quantum.html

    As I said to Mr. Natural, I think we've kinda reached The Point -
    where human IQ just really can't COPE with the complexities of
    the Real Universe. The initial 'quantum-statistical' take on
    the negative time thing kinda smells - and there's likely only
    a handful of people in the world that can even wrap their
    brains around THAT. Next phase, very soon, NOBODY can wrap
    their brains around it.

    Yes, we can maybe make the "AI"s proceed - but we WON'T
    really understand what they come up with or why. At that
    point it all becomes 'magic' again. Chant the spells
    and wave the wand ......

    May as well simply say Ahura Mazda just breathed it all
    into existence and set all the paths/rules ....

    No, I do NOT like it ... but this is where we've wound
    up ... and after just barely 200 years of Real Science.

    So let's not feel TOO damned proud, TOO damned superior.
    In the end, not TOO long, we're just gonna be another
    species of theists with their 'revealed truths'.

    Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
    the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 06:09:56 2024
    On 2024-12-23, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    As I said to Mr. Natural, I think we've kinda reached The Point -
    where human IQ just really can't COPE with the complexities of
    the Real Universe. The initial 'quantum-statistical' take on
    the negative time thing kinda smells - and there's likely only
    a handful of people in the world that can even wrap their
    brains around THAT. Next phase, very soon, NOBODY can wrap
    their brains around it.

    Yes, we can maybe make the "AI"s proceed - but we WON'T
    really understand what they come up with or why. At that
    point it all becomes 'magic' again. Chant the spells
    and wave the wand ......

    May as well simply say Ahura Mazda just breathed it all
    into existence and set all the paths/rules ....

    Everybody is wondering what and where
    They all came from
    Everybody is worrying about where they're going to go
    When the whole thing's done
    But no one knows for certain and so it's all the same to me
    I think I'll just let the mystery be
    -- Iris DeMent

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 06:12:56 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 00:35:03 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/22/24 5:09 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you
    cross the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it
    might be.  You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons.
    Even Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at
    least the more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern
    border of Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!


    Also very COLD ... and when age gives you medical issues, maybe TOO
    FAR from top-
    notch facilities.

    It can get chilly. I preferred to take car camping trips after Labor Day
    when the kids were back in school and the traffic in the parks was down.
    That doesn't work as well anymore since retirees have caught on. Anyway it
    was mid-September and I decided to go through Grand Teton on my way home.

    It was winding down for the season to the point there wasn't anybody to
    give the campsite fee to. No problem. I had a three season sleeping bag
    that had been adequate for years. I froze. I spent some time hanging
    around in the restroom that was somewhat warmer. I bought a new bag when I
    got home.

    In my youth I often thought about moving to Alaska - even bought a
    .375 H&H for bears.
    NOW I don't wanna be more than 30 minutes from the docs and hospitals
    Just In Case.

    My ex is a Type 1 diabetic and never wanted to be too far from top tier
    medical care. The plan worked well except for ultimately winding up
    virtually under house arrest in NYC.

    That along with east Wash, esp with Trump, is likely to become
    "Greater Idaho". The locals HATE the Wokies for good reasons.

    I don't think Idaho would welcome eastern Washington. David Eddings
    eventually settled on the fantasy genre but his first book that ever got published was set in Spokane where he had lived. The title is 'The
    Losers'. He claimed the best thing about Spokane was the sewage treatment
    plant that had been built for the '74 World's Fair. Back in the '90s you
    had to go to Spokane for much of a selection or stores like REI. I liked
    the drive over but navigating Division St. sucks.

    What you might think would be bucolic little towns attracted Hispanics to
    work the crops and in their wake drugs and gangs.

    https://www.bestplaces.net/crime/city/washington/yakima

    It doesn't help that Canada brings in workers to pick the fruit in the
    Okanagan Valley of BC and kicks them out when the season is over.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 00:35:03 2024
    On 12/22/24 5:09 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be.  You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even
    Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least
    the
    more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!


    Also very COLD ... and when age gives you
    medical issues, maybe TOO FAR from top-
    notch facilities.

    In my youth I often thought about moving to
    Alaska - even bought a .375 H&H for bears.
    NOW I don't wanna be more than 30 minutes from
    the docs and hospitals Just In Case.

    .375 ... imagine a light 12-ga shotgun with
    3" mags - NOT pleasant to fire ! You do it
    only IF something large and furry is about
    to eat you :-)

    The Bighorns are another spur, but not as dramatic as the Tetons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Mountains

    That page has a nice relief map for reference.

    Eastern Oregon is also pretty flat high desert until you get to the
    Cascades.

    That along with east Wash, esp with Trump, is likely to
    become "Greater Idaho". The locals HATE the Wokies for
    good reasons.

    The re-distribution of the original Texas territory
    sets the legal precedents.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 01:12:10 2024
    On 12/22/24 4:55 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-22, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they
    are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world,

    The woke are bound by their own book - which is far more outlandish
    than the Bible.

    What bible do they have?

    It's all on TicTok ... just not quite consolidated
    into one place :-)

    Woke will self destruct into ever smaller
    factions. Eventually it ends up as individualism, which is good, or it
    will spend itself on in fighting and go away as a political force.

    Woke is already imploding, fast. It was just
    unsustainable nonsense. 'DEI' is in the
    dumpster, all the weird trannie stuff - Joe
    just DROPPED "Title IX". "Equality of Result"
    just couldn't be real. It was all a fanatical
    cult religion. If they could have burned heretics
    at the stake they would have. Still did damage ......

    I've a cousin (2nd/3rd?) who long back when she was
    about 10 wondered aloud why the govt just didn't
    give everybody Free Money. Then nobody would have
    to work or anything ! She wasn't un-intelligent,
    just hideously naive. Alas 'Woke' Gens-Z/A2,
    even older and supposedly more informed, STILL
    believe in that sort of paradigm. Can't figure out
    how to wipe yer ass - wheeled-in with a needle
    in your arm once a month - you should be director
    of NASA or SecDef or Boeing CEO or something !

    but if they let it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect
    the guys who struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without
    giving it up completely.

    The literalists have always had - and been - a problem.  I resolved the
    issue in my school days.  The literature classes we took taught us about
    metaphor and simile, and I saw no reason why the seven days of creation
    should not be metaphorical rather than literal.  Suddenly there was no
    conflict.  There are lots of things like that in the book.

    This is the truth!

    BUT there are still rather a LOT of people who do
    NOT see it as metaphor - but as an exact description.
    They are real, they are many, they are amongst us,
    they are in powerful agencies and governments.

    However, would your/my favs be any 'better' for
    the masses, the Big Equation ???

    "Mystic crystal revelations and the mind's true
    liberation" - or just Fascism v7.2 ??? :-)

    Just sayin' ... don't be TOO proud, TOO sure.

    In the 1800s 'science' was NOT convinced of the
    same 'truths' we worship today. Mary Shelly
    did NOT pull that all out of her ass - there
    were 'learned men' who REALLY thought that way.

    What will we "know" 100 years from now ?

    MAYBE best to leave a lot of stuff - esp with
    political/social implications - kinda "fuzzy".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 01:34:36 2024
    On 12/22/24 6:22 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/21/24 6:25 AM, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/20/24 4:22 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:57:38 +0100, D wrote:

    But now we have LLM:s!  What I find interesting is how different >>>>>>> people
    view them. I find the free ones you can play with online to be
    incredibly boring. I use them as a kind of search engine on
    steroids for
    stuff that is not important (for entertainment purposes).

    Brave added one to the search engine but I turned it off. Might as >>>>>> well go
    straight to reddit which seems to be heavily mined.


    That's the thing. LLM:s for me, are good at summarizing articles,
    so instead of being "ai" they are just a nice complement to
    searching, and as long as they work and don't hallucinate, they
    save me some clicks. That's about it.

    Oh, and writing government policy documents. When doing that, their
    hallucinations are actually an asset! ;)


     Ha Ha Ha - SO true there :-)

     Anyway, as I say elsewhere, LLMs are just PART of
     'intelligence'. OTHER parts need to be spliced in.
     Brains are just WEIRD ... 600+ million years of
     field-tested neural insanity.

     However, somewhere in there - early - "ME-ism"
     emerged. There's some neat-o trick to that which
     we haven't yet grasped. We're not thinking quite
     right about 'self'. I think THAT is the basic
     paradigm and then you add more IQ and such ONTO it.


    Could you please expand on the me-ism part? I have certainly not
    detected any me-isms and that is why I find them so boring. Give me
    volition, initiative  and desperate attempts to stop me from deleting
    them, then we're on to something!

     What, the "Me, Myself and I" thing ?

     It's the realization, however dim, that I am an
     autonomous unit. I am not that rock. I am not
     that tree. I am not that OTHER DAMNED IGUANA
     that's wandered into MY territory. There's ME,
     and everything else.

     In an odd sense it's anti-Buddhist.

     SO FAR I don't really see that in any of the
     AI models. They're well-perfected REACTION
     but there's still nobody home.

     We're missing something.

     At this time, that MAY be a good thing.


    Ahh ok, got it! Yes, not a lot of "me" going on there for sure.


    There's SOME sort of 'mirror' thing involved here - act,
    observe, acted upon, observe, feel. Soon 'ME' evolves as
    a sort of emergent property or you die.

    When every Nvidia chip in the world suddenly goes
    red-line then we'll know some "Me" has come into
    being - inspection, introspection, layers and
    layers, deeper and deeper :-)

    As said, LLMs are now excellent examples of REACTION,
    but they're still missing The Thing even lizards,
    chickens and some bugs seem to possess - there's
    no "I Am" in there.

    Some ARE now giving Chat and friends limited "bodies"
    and senses. Dunno if the models support "Me" even
    with that - but it seems a critical thing.

    Oh, is 'animal' "ME" the ONLY kind of "ME" ? This
    seems a cool question.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 06:26:44 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 00:13:32 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    So let's not feel TOO damned proud, TOO damned superior.
    In the end, not TOO long, we're just gonna be another species of
    theists with their 'revealed truths'.

    The Greeks got a lot of mileage out of the hybris theme and it never
    worked out well for those involved.


    https://www.sap.com/products/acquired-brands/what-is-hybris.html

    I don't know if those people have a weird sense of humor or if they're completely illiterate.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 01:59:45 2024
    On 12/22/24 6:26 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 22:19, D wrote:


    On Sat, 21 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 21/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    I have on my to do list to start a zeppelin airline between europe
    and new york. I just need to utilize synchronicity to bump into
    Richard Branson or other billionaire of choice first, and then
    we're off! =D

    Frankly a nuclear powered ship would be quicker, safer and FAR more
    luxurious.

    This is the truth. But it would hardly be cheaper. =(

    I think you will find it would

    Already the economics of fully computerised bulk transporters with
    reactors look better than ever increasing bunker oil, especially in
    terms of high speed and low maintenance.

    If you got two nights in a luxury hotel AND to the USA from Europe for
    a similar price...

    Well, comparing a modern, state of the art, zeppelin, and a nuclear
    powered luxury boat from a financial point of view, should be a pretty
    easy exercise.

    I'll let you know once I meat Branson, or a Branson-derivative, what way
    we decide upon. ;)

    'Private' nuke vessels are NOT practical. Not only
    does it require a team of HIGHLY-trained techs to
    keep 'em running right but the LIABILITY if they
    somehow fail ..... NOBODY in their right mind would
    EVER insure that ! What DOES it cost if San Diego
    is covered in radioactive mist ???

    GOVERNMENTS can push all that aside, but NOT private
    entities.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 23 08:15:52 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 06:09:56 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    -- Iris DeMent

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlaoR5m4L80

    You need the audiovisual version. I saw her about the time she released
    the album of gospel songs. She said she loved gospel singing but wasn't
    too sure about the religion that went with it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgx_yoe2-Y4

    That the only political song she ever did afaik. It's from the '90s but is timeless.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 08:39:12 2024
    On 22/12/2024 20:11, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 15:11:04 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I square the circle by thinking of the Bible and religion a 'not life as
    it was or is, but life as it ought to have been' .

    Much evil has come from chasing dreams of the ought rather than accepting
    the is.
    Indeed. And religion has probably survived because it is a collection of
    the oughts that didn't produce too much evil and produced some good.

    Darwin goes beyond mere physical evolution.


    --
    "Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They
    always run out of other people's money. It's quite a characteristic of them"

    Margaret Thatcher

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 08:42:52 2024
    On 23/12/2024 00:50, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 21:54:04 +0100, D wrote:

    I look at it from an exoteric and an esoteric way. On way is the
    condensed wisdom of our forefathers, giving practical advice for how to
    live. The other part, is the original (in my opinion) esoteric
    experience, that can only be lived or experienced, and never passed on
    through words.

    The Havamal works for me.

    https://jacksonwcrawford.com/the-cowboy-havamal/

    38. Keep yer guns close.
    I don’t care what they say,
    there ain’t no tellin’
    when there’ll be call for ’em.
    An armed man has a shot.

    That speaks to me more than offering the other cheek. I couldn't find it
    with a quick search but there is also a 'Havamal for New Yorkers'. George Jones, not the country singer, in 'Honor Bright' compares societies based
    on honor to those based on guilt. He offers the heathen beatitudes.

    Blessed are the rich, for they possess the earth and its glory.

    Blessed are the strong, for they can conquer kingdoms.

    Blessed are they with strong kinsmen, for they shall find help.

    Blessed are the warlike, for they shall win wealth and renown.

    Blessed are they who keep their faith, for they shall be honored.

    Blessed are they who are open handed, for they shall have friends and
    fame.

    Blessed are they who wreak vengeance, for they shall be offended no more,
    and they shall have honor and glory all the days of their life, and
    eternal fame in ages to come.

    I'll admit my forefathers probably were Christian for a thousand years or more but they didn't jot down the Christian beatitudes.





    Blessed is the geek, for he shall inherit the earth...

    --
    There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale
    returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact.

    Mark Twain

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 08:46:37 2024
    On 22/12/2024 21:54, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 11:28, D wrote:
    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient
    intelligence with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply
    more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    I wasn't talking about the *practice* of science, or of religion for
    that matter. I was talking about their metaphysical *beliefs*.

    Ahh... our definitions differ when it comes to science. I was tricked!
    But I will drop this line as I think it leads us back to old threads. ;)

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down
    waaaay too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is,
    in reality "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the
    questions is lacking?

    Precisely, In many ways the God explanation is simpler :

    "God did it all,  and faked it so it looks like he was never there at
    all, to test you fuckers"

    ...there are only three people who understand quantum physics and two
    of them are liars....

    This is the truth and exactly one of the things I do not like with
    Occam. If you're on team God (TM) that's the easiest explanation, if
    you're on team Science (C), that's nonsense, and your version is the simplest.

    There's no way to decide from a neutral point, if you are dealing with religious people regardless of if they are from the religion religion,
    or the religion science (which has very little to do with the science as
    a process).

    But if you examine Occam from outside the confines of realism and
    materialism, he makes perfect sense.

    1. The problem of induction means that no inference  can ever be
    proved to be correct.
    2. So given that its all bullshit anyway, why not pick the simplest
    bullshit that fits the facts?
    3.  ...And fits within the accepted already established bullshit, that
    works...

    Ah, but the problem of induction is a chimera, an illusion. Popper
    argued that justification is not needed at all, and seeking
    justification "begs for an authoritarian answer".

    The only thing we need to worry about is if it works, and that's it.

    Yes, but Realist/materialists reject stuff that works on the basis that
    its 'not real'...


    That is today's problem., People are absolutely reluctant to abandon
    the established bullshit, that works.

    This is not a problem, this is the way. If it works, is in fact the only
    way. If that is abandoned, everything else is meaningless. That is the strength of materialism and a common, shared external world, and one of
    the best arguments for it.

    It is an argument for a shared external world, but not for its materiality


    We've been down this path many times before I think.

    Even when they know it is actually wrong.

    The Kuhnian paradigm shift  is staring them in the face, but they
    simply cant accept it.





    --
    “Ideas are inherently conservative. They yield not to the attack of
    other ideas but to the massive onslaught of circumstance"

    - John K Galbraith

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 08:59:16 2024
    On 23/12/2024 01:12, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 22:59:07 +0100, D wrote:

    Add a loose monetary policy, tax decreases and increased government
    debt,
    and we have a nice booming economy ahead of us. The key, as always, is
    to know when to sell your shares, take a break, and enter again at the
    bottom.

    Nice booming inflation... I'll strangle the first person that says 'But
    the fundamentals are sound.'

    I don't do the stock market so what is good for Wall Street doesn't matter
    to me.

    I have to, to stay alive.

    But after 20 years I have found a sane way to make reasonable sums. and
    that's better than spending all yiur life with your nose glued to the
    Financial Times..

    --
    It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled. Mark Twain

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 08:57:05 2024
    On 23/12/2024 06:12, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    On 12/22/24 4:55 PM, D wrote:


    Woke will self destruct into ever smaller factions. Eventually it ends
    up as individualism, which is good, or it will spend itself on in
    fighting and go away as a political force.

      Woke is already imploding, fast. It was just
      unsustainable nonsense. 'DEI' is in the
      dumpster, all the weird trannie stuff - Joe
      just DROPPED "Title IX". "Equality of Result"
      just couldn't be real. It was all a fanatical
      cult religion. If they could have burned heretics
      at the stake they would have. Still did damage ......

    And whoever invented the term didn't even use the correct term. Woke is
    the past participle. Awoken correct. Or awake.
    So you know it was invented by uneducated people or people
    deliberatilytrying to seem that way.


      I've a cousin (2nd/3rd?) who long back when she was
      about 10 wondered aloud why the govt just didn't
      give everybody Free Money. Then nobody would have
      to work or anything ! She wasn't un-intelligent,
      just hideously naive. Alas 'Woke' Gens-Z/A2,
      even older and supposedly more informed, STILL
      believe in that sort of paradigm. Can't figure out
      how to wipe yer ass - wheeled-in with a needle
      in your arm once a month - you should be director
      of NASA or SecDef or Boeing CEO or something !

    Probably no worse than current politicians...


    This is the truth!

      BUT there are still rather a LOT of people who do
      NOT see it as metaphor - but as an exact description.
      They are real, they are many, they are amongst us,
      they are in powerful agencies and governments.

    They are weak because they cannot stand to have more than one relative
    truth, but must needs believe in some absolute Truth. When I becaqme a
    man I put away childish things.

      However, would your/my favs be any 'better' for
      the masses, the Big Equation ???

      "Mystic crystal revelations and the mind's true
      liberation" - or just Fascism v7.2 ???  :-)

      Just sayin' ... don't be TOO proud, TOO sure.

      In the 1800s 'science' was NOT convinced of the
      same 'truths' we worship today. Mary Shelly
      did NOT pull that all out of her ass - there
      were 'learned men' who REALLY thought that way.

      What will we "know" 100 years from now ?

    The world view - the weltaunshuung - or zeitgeist, changes. The
    snowflake generation were taught all this bullshit: To them it is simply
    'real' . And the consequences of this belief and those that taught it to
    them is as intended a destruction of civilisation.

    Unfortunately the promised communist Utopia isn't happening.

    Poverty destruction and war is.

      MAYBE best to leave a lot of stuff - esp with
      political/social implications - kinda "fuzzy".
    Best <=>worst?

    Who knows?
    Who cares?
    Too many whys.
    Too many wheres.

    --
    Renewable energy: Expensive solutions that don't work to a problem that
    doesn't exist instituted by self legalising protection rackets that
    don't protect, masquerading as public servants who don't serve the public.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 09:05:34 2024
    On 23/12/2024 04:42, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    I'll agree, because it suits me, that it's likely what
      happened - but really truly PROVING it and the underlying
      factors is gonna be difficult to the EXTREME.

    The point that philosophy makes, is not that proving it is extreme, but
    that ultimately it is impossible.

    And that changes the game *completely*.

    One is not selecting the truth from the possible, one is selecting
    something that works OK from stuff that doesn't work very well,. No
    matter how attractive

    With no hope of ever arriving at 'The Truth'


    --
    Those who want slavery should have the grace to name it by its proper
    name. They must face the full meaning of that which they are advocating
    or condoning; the full, exact, specific meaning of collectivism, of its
    logical implications, of the principles upon which it is based, and of
    the ultimate consequences to which these principles will lead. They must
    face it, then decide whether this is what they want or not.

    Ayn Rand.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 09:01:38 2024
    On 23/12/2024 03:17, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Well ... you're selling 'exotic' here, selling to
      the upper class, selling a certain 'style' and
      'image' of luxury. Speed isn't as important as
      LOOKING GOOD.

    You cant do 'luxury' when all you have is balsa wood and carbon fibre.


    Luxury is solid mahogany dining chairs, and a china pot to shit in.
    And silverware on te tables. Gimme a nuclear ship any week.


    --
    It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled. Mark Twain

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 09:10:24 2024
    On 23/12/2024 05:13, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    As I said to Mr. Natural, I think we've kinda reached The Point -
      where human IQ just really can't COPE with the complexities of
      the Real Universe.

    It never could.

    We deal in approximates and generalisations that mostly work. "All
    snakes are dangerous" will get you home from school without having to
    worry about separation of species.

    Our models get more sophisticated, but they don't stop being models for
    all that.

    WE create a world full of 'categories' and 'types' and 'forms' to
    represent the real world, approximately.

    The real idiots are the people who confuse these models with reality itself.

    The map is not the territory.


    --
    Of what good are dead warriors? … Warriors are those who desire battle
    more than peace. Those who seek battle despite peace. Those who thump
    their spears on the ground and talk of honor. Those who leap high the
    battle dance and dream of glory … The good of dead warriors, Mother, is
    that they are dead.
    Sheri S Tepper: The Awakeners.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 23 09:10:45 2024
    On 23/12/2024 06:09, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    Everybody is wondering what and where
    They all came from
    Everybody is worrying about where they're going to go
    When the whole thing's done
    But no one knows for certain and so it's all the same to me
    I think I'll just let the mystery be
    -- Iris DeMent

    +1

    --
    "It is an established fact to 97% confidence limits that left wing
    conspirators see right wing conspiracies everywhere"

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 09:14:23 2024
    On 23/12/2024 06:59, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    'Private' nuke vessels are NOT practical. Not only
      does it require a team of HIGHLY-trained techs to
      keep 'em running right

    But they dont need to be onboard the damned ship.

    How many jet engine specialists are aboard a jet aircraft? None

    > but the LIABILITY if they somehow fail .....

    Same as any other ship.

    NOBODY in their right mind would   EVER insure that ! What DOES it cost if San Diego
      is covered in radioactive mist ???


    I'd consider that a net benefit, but it simply could not happen

      GOVERNMENTS can push all that aside, but NOT private
      entities.

    Private entities run governments.

    --
    "When one man dies it's a tragedy. When thousands die it's statistics."

    Josef Stalin

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:12:28 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:43:48 +0100, D wrote:

    It is interesting when the act of focusing takes away from the activity
    such as carrying a glass of water. If you consciously try to balance it
    to avoid spilling, it gets worse, if you trust your instincts, it
    generally goes better. My theory is that when you consciously try to do
    it, you engage a lot of extra machinery which adds latency, and that is
    why you get "out of sync" vs when you try the intuitive way.

    'Zen and the Art of Archery' It's an interesting feeling when it all
    clicks. I always shot stick bows right handed with no sights. On good days
    it just happens. When my right eye developed a cataract I switched to a
    left handed compound bow. Compound bows have a sights and I could use them effectively. Time goes on and I had a couple of operations on my left eye
    and couldn't use the sights effectively. I was going to give the bow away
    but then realized I'd always shot recurves instinctively, why not
    compounds. I took the sights off and it seems to be working.

    This is the truth! Or basketball, sometimes (when I was young) I just
    "feel" that this shot will be a success.

    I have a longbow and it is quite a nice hobby! Sadly I only get to shoot
    it about 1 month per year or so. But... once the fortress of solitude is
    built, I will be able to go outside and shoot every single day! =)

    Now... if I could just find a good plot and a reasonable price! =/

    Handguns can be the same. The sights are there and you sort of see them
    but when you're firing in under .3 seconds there isn't a whole lot of thinking going on.

    Reminds me of the book Shoot to kill by Fairbairn, I think his philosophy
    was a lot about the intuitive way to shoot.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:09:30 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:50:00 +0100, D wrote:


    I shudder at the memory of differential equations and my
    electromagnetism course. I quickly came to the conclusion that I found
    math and physics boring. I was able to push through some of those
    courses by sheer will power, but I realized, why should I spend 4 years
    on something that I find is boring?

    Each discipline had courses that sorted the sheep from the goats. diff-e
    and e-mag theory were two for the ee's. o-chem did in the potential
    chemists. iirc thermodynamics weeded out the civil engineers.

    This is the truth! In law in sweden, there is a course called "the wall"
    which has a similar purpose. I like this methodology, because it sends the message (at least I always interpreted in this way) that if you want to
    spend your life doing this, you have to fight for it and be motivated.

    I do the same thing when I teach. I start hard, and lower the difficulty
    level after the first 3-4 weeks, to sort out the unmotivated ones.

    Sadly I no longer have the first course, so this year, we did it in
    networking, and we'll see in january if we had the intended effect. I
    really hope all the people who threatened the school with leaving unless
    the school lowered the difficulty level of the exam left. That would be
    great! =)

    Naturally we refused to lower the difficulty level, and in the end 37 out
    of 48 passed. Too many if you ask me. 30-35 I find is a good class size.

    When I took diff-e a friend had a bet with the TA for the course on
    whether I would pass. My attendance in class was spotty to say the least
    and the TA said 'No way'. He lost.

    You are one tough cookie!

    So after jumping through legal hoops, and proving to the university that
    my idea was correct and theirs wrong, they let me pick my own courses as
    long as the course difficulty level (A, B, C, D level) met some
    pre-specified levels. So in the end the emphasis was on IT and
    philosophy,
    with a healthy dose of psychology, business, finance etc.

    That was the nice thing about the psychology department. There were a few required courses but it was mostly a la carte.

    I'm reading Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet right
    now, and a surprising amount of people in there came from a psychology background.

    It seems the psychology education in the 60s where on to something! They created the best technological people in a generation, so a la carte seems
    to be very beneficial for innovation and following ones natural talents
    and interests.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:19:02 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 21:54:04 +0100, D wrote:

    I look at it from an exoteric and an esoteric way. On way is the
    condensed wisdom of our forefathers, giving practical advice for how to
    live. The other part, is the original (in my opinion) esoteric
    experience, that can only be lived or experienced, and never passed on
    through words.

    The Havamal works for me.

    https://jacksonwcrawford.com/the-cowboy-havamal/

    38. Keep yer guns close.
    I don’t care what they say,
    there ain’t no tellin’
    when there’ll be call for ’em.
    An armed man has a shot.

    Haha, brilliant!

    That speaks to me more than offering the other cheek. I couldn't find it
    with a quick search but there is also a 'Havamal for New Yorkers'. George Jones, not the country singer, in 'Honor Bright' compares societies based
    on honor to those based on guilt. He offers the heathen beatitudes.

    A pet theory of mine is that society benefits when leaving honor culture
    behind to a certain extent. The reason is that with forgive and move on, conflicts can be fairly quickly resolved and production can resume.

    With a strong entrenched honor culture, conflict risk consuming all of
    society with fire and destruction following.

    Njals saga is a good illustration of how more and more people get pulled
    into the fight.

    Blessed are the rich, for they possess the earth and its glory.

    Blessed are the strong, for they can conquer kingdoms.

    Blessed are they with strong kinsmen, for they shall find help.

    Blessed are the warlike, for they shall win wealth and renown.

    Blessed are they who keep their faith, for they shall be honored.

    Blessed are they who are open handed, for they shall have friends and
    fame.

    Blessed are they who wreak vengeance, for they shall be offended no more,
    and they shall have honor and glory all the days of their life, and
    eternal fame in ages to come.

    I'll admit my forefathers probably were Christian for a thousand years or more but they didn't jot down the Christian beatitudes.

    I wonder how many of my forefathers who remained pagans after the country officially became christian? Surely at least a few must have remained
    pagans for a couple of 100 of years after official christianity was implemented.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:15:39 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 12:24:53 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't >>>> work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer.
    Given the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip
    up the Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time.
    He was also well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against
    evolution.

    Did you ever get anywhere with him in arguments, or was every argument
    closed down by the "God"-argument?

    There is no winning that argument so I let it slide. I would push his

    This is the truth! Difficult to win that argument without resorting to
    violence or de-programming. ;)

    buttons by taking the Catholic side in arguments about other points. He
    was entirely dependent of his interpretation of the bible. I would point
    out the Catholics determined the canon. There have been a few Protestant tweaks. Luther left out Thomas on his first go-around since the parts
    about faith without works being empty didn't fit with sola fides.
    Maccabees winds up in 'apocrypha' since it mentions prayers for the dead
    as an intercession. Then there is the decalogue parsing to come down heavy
    on those statues.

    I doubt many Catholics believe in the Young Earth but that's one of the
    areas that is dealers choice as far as the catechism goes, along with evolution.

    He died last year and I sort of miss the friendly discussions. As a part
    of hearing what you want to hear a group from his church sand Cohen's 'Hallelujah' at the service. There certainly is biblical imagery but there
    is also the verse

    "Maybe there's a God above
    But all I've ever learned from love
    Was how to shoot at someone who outdrew ya
    And it's not a cry that you hear at night
    It's not somebody who's seen the light
    It's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah"

    Then there are the politicians who play Springsteen's 'Born in the USA' at there rallies. Or Trump's fondness for 'YMCA'. That song and the Village People were as queer as it gets but I don't think he gets the context.

    Yes, I thought about that. It was strange to see Trumps followers happily dancing and singing along. Either they didn't know, didn't care or were crypto-homos. Pick up to three. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:26:27 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 23:09:51 +0100, D wrote:



    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be. You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even
    Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least
    the more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!

    https://fullsuitcase.com/grand-teton-np-jenny-lake-boat-hike/

    Jenny Lake looks like something imported from the Alps. I waked around the lake and up Cascade Canyon until the trail split. Very scenic. I was going
    to take the boat back but there was a line and I'd rather be walking than hanging around waiting. Jackson Hole is the southern entrance to the park.
    I guess it could be fun if you're into expensive tourist traps.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson_Hole

    My homo neighbour in spain recommended Jackson hole, so this is on the
    list of potential places to visit when we go. Yes, the wife told me
    yesterday, that it is a matter of _when_ and not _if_. I tried to offer
    her a puppy with the dark thought that it would stop us from travelling
    for 15 years or so, but no, she saw through that trick with ease.

    Jackson hole is mentioned, I think, in the lovely comedy series Silicon
    valley, so if it is mentioned there, surely it must be a tourist trap.

    The Tetons are nice but I've got some scenery much closer to home.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitterroot_Mountains

    The trail to Trapper Peak is nowhere as intimidating as you might think. Elevation is the major issue if you're not acclimated but it's not as bad
    as the 14,000' peaks in Colorado. Oxygen is damn scarce on those. Your
    mind thinks you should be walking faster but your body isn't willing.

    Western Montana does seem like a good place!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:28:21 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 22:59:07 +0100, D wrote:

    Add a loose monetary policy, tax decreases and increased government
    debt,
    and we have a nice booming economy ahead of us. The key, as always, is
    to know when to sell your shares, take a break, and enter again at the
    bottom.

    Nice booming inflation... I'll strangle the first person that says 'But
    the fundamentals are sound.'

    I don't do the stock market so what is good for Wall Street doesn't matter
    to me.


    I am fairly young, so I always wonder at what point it is time to take my
    stuff and move it into bonds. On the other hand... I also thought that
    since I do not have children, perhaps I should move the assets into a non-profit for some kind of good libertarian purpose. Well, probably at
    least 10-20 years before any of those loose thoughts might become reality.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:34:10 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically
    accelerated loads into space!


    And PRIME terrorist targets :-)

    This is the truth! But we'll guard those targets with lovely and spiritual Habermassian dialogue! ;)

    Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
    There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
    one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
    are VERY VERY rare.

    I wonder if it is an urban myth that the smarter someone is, the bigger the chance some mental problems?

    BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
    spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
    The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    I like ravens. Very cute birds with personality!

    Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
    to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
    Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
    pick up where they left off :-)

    I vaguely remember a book from when I was a child that ended with the dinosaurs leaving the planet on a space ship. I have one distinct image from the end of the book when they are leaving. That's all I remember. I wonder if I made it up?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:35:45 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/22/24 4:31 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 02:12:43 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Those poor people ... caught between an ever-growing mountain of
    facts/evidence and equally-persuasive *belief* (which requires no
    facts). They TRY to find ways to splice it all together. It doesn't
    work well ...

    A friend was a Young Earther despite being a proficient programmer. Given
    the premise God can do anything it's no problem for him to whip up the
    Grand Canyon with all its geological layers in his spare time. He was also >> well rehearsed in the creationist arguments against evolution.


    Met 'em. Even prompted one to physically attack me
    because I refused to give in to his worldview.

    In any case, as soon as you accept some 'Big Magic
    Joe in the sky' then EVERY weird possibility becomes
    credible. "Belief" knows no bounds and IS at least

    This is the truth! This is also why I think metaphysics and idealism is a mistake. It just multiplies things needlessly.

    as persuasive as any mountain of facts. Amass all
    the facts you want ... they'll STILL burn you at
    the stake. Problem solved .......

    And no, such 'theology' is NOT restricted to the
    political 'right' ... it's part of how WE are
    wired-up.


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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:43:47 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    MAYbe an advantage there ... but maybe NOT. Theists will
    say they don't NEED 'process' or 'corrections' because
    they were magically provided with the RIGHT ANSWER
    long back. They just see us bickering about whether
    2+2 (common conditions) = 4 for a century or two
    when they knew all along.

    True, but I just ignore them. Discussion, except for entertainment or trolling, is meaningless and a waste of time.

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay
    too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in reality
    "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions is
    lacking?

    Occam HAS his uses. However sometimes things ARE complicated.

    Read my post here to Mr. Natural about 'negative time'
    findings ......

    https://phys.org/news/2024-12-scientists-negative-quantum.html

    Ahh... but let's wait and see...

    "The findings, posted on the preprint server arXiv but not yet published in a peer-reviewed journal, have attracted both global attention and skepticism".

    Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
    the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    What is IQ? What is intelligence? We are fumbling around in the dark. Is a human
    + a computer a 200 IQ person? Stanislaw Lem writes in one of his books about knowledge factories. It was a long time I read it, but it kind of gave me the impression he is thinking about AI-farms churning out theories and science.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:38:14 2024
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    It also points to 'the real picture' being kinda being
    SO complex and strange it's not really within the realm
    of human IQ anymore. We might put the "AI"s on it, but
    won't understand how they reach their answers.or REALLY
    what it means. As such it all becomes as 'magic' to us -
    full circle.

    This is one of my pet theories about the interpretations of quantum physics. The
    reason there is no consensus and why some interpretations are so weird, is _exactly_ what you say. We try to describe the phenomenons with math, and that works. But when we then try to translate math into our everyday language, everything breaks down, and that is why we get such things as the multiple worlds interpretation. Actually, a better name might be the multiple _words_ interpretation. ;)

    We LIKE to think we can grasp it all but ... umm ... NOPE.
    However we CAN *use* the 'magic' the AIs find ... so it's
    not a total loss. Just wave yer wand and repeat " ...


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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:46:43 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/22/24 5:09 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern
    Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross
    the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might
    be.  You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even
    Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at least the >>> more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!


    Also very COLD ... and when age gives you
    medical issues, maybe TOO FAR from top-
    notch facilities.

    Only cold below -25 C scares me. That's one advantage of having grown up
    in northern europe. ;) I'm not saying I like cold, I don't, but it doesn't bother me that much.

    Sadly though, my wife does not like overly warm climates. I would be
    perfectly happy in florida or texas, but that is waaaay too warm for her.
    So northern US it is.

    In my youth I often thought about moving to
    Alaska - even bought a .375 H&H for bears.
    NOW I don't wanna be more than 30 minutes from
    the docs and hospitals Just In Case.

    Who hasn't ever thought about moving to alaska? I too, have a dream about
    a small, remote, off grid cottage, where local trading is a thing, and
    where income taxes are a thing of the past. ;)

    All fun and games, until you cut yourself and the wound gets infected. ;)

    .375 ... imagine a light 12-ga shotgun with
    3" mags - NOT pleasant to fire ! You do it
    only IF something large and furry is about
    to eat you :-)

    I've heard squirrels in alaska are very aggressive!

    The Bighorns are another spur, but not as dramatic as the Tetons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Mountains

    That page has a nice relief map for reference.

    Eastern Oregon is also pretty flat high desert until you get to the
    Cascades.

    That along with east Wash, esp with Trump, is likely to
    become "Greater Idaho". The locals HATE the Wokies for
    good reasons.

    This is what I would count on! ;)

    The re-distribution of the original Texas territory
    sets the legal precedents.


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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 12:52:01 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/22/24 4:55 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-22, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:

    The great strength and the great weakness of christianity is that they >>>> are bound by the book. This is a problem in todays woke world,

    The woke are bound by their own book - which is far more outlandish
    than the Bible.

    What bible do they have?

    It's all on TicTok ... just not quite consolidated
    into one place :-)

    Ahhh! You made me feel old. I've never had tictok but I hear about it in
    the media of course. Many countries are thinking about banning it or implementing an age limit I've heard.

    Sometimes I wonder about the age on usenet. I feel younger than you. My
    feeling is that you guys are around 60.

    Woke will self destruct into ever smaller factions. Eventually it ends up
    as individualism, which is good, or it will spend itself on in fighting and >> go away as a political force.

    Woke is already imploding, fast. It was just
    unsustainable nonsense. 'DEI' is in the
    dumpster, all the weird trannie stuff - Joe
    just DROPPED "Title IX". "Equality of Result"
    just couldn't be real. It was all a fanatical
    cult religion. If they could have burned heretics
    at the stake they would have. Still did damage ......

    Excellent! My predictions are coming true! ;) It just took a couple of
    years and a financial crisis. ;)

    I've a cousin (2nd/3rd?) who long back when she was
    about 10 wondered aloud why the govt just didn't
    give everybody Free Money. Then nobody would have
    to work or anything ! She wasn't un-intelligent,
    just hideously naive. Alas 'Woke' Gens-Z/A2,
    even older and supposedly more informed, STILL
    believe in that sort of paradigm. Can't figure out
    how to wipe yer ass - wheeled-in with a needle
    in your arm once a month - you should be director
    of NASA or SecDef or Boeing CEO or something !

    but if they let it go, they won't be christians any longer. I respect
    the guys who struggled to reconcile the book with todays world without >>>> giving it up completely.

    The literalists have always had - and been - a problem.  I resolved the >>> issue in my school days.  The literature classes we took taught us about >>> metaphor and simile, and I saw no reason why the seven days of creation
    should not be metaphorical rather than literal.  Suddenly there was no
    conflict.  There are lots of things like that in the book.

    This is the truth!

    BUT there are still rather a LOT of people who do
    NOT see it as metaphor - but as an exact description.
    They are real, they are many, they are amongst us,
    they are in powerful agencies and governments.

    However, would your/my favs be any 'better' for
    the masses, the Big Equation ???

    Maybe they can learn? Another powerful answer is that sometimes we just
    don't know, and that it's ok to suspend judgment and collect further
    evidence.

    For me, that is one of the strengths and the beauty of agnosticism! =)

    It touches a little bit on the Natural Ontological Attitude (NOA), I still can't make up my mind if it is brilliant or trivial, but I've thought
    similar thoughts myself.

    "Mystic crystal revelations and the mind's true
    liberation" - or just Fascism v7.2 ??? :-)

    Sadly it can way too often be utilized for fascism 7.2. =(

    Just sayin' ... don't be TOO proud, TOO sure.

    True!

    In the 1800s 'science' was NOT convinced of the
    same 'truths' we worship today. Mary Shelly
    did NOT pull that all out of her ass - there
    were 'learned men' who REALLY thought that way.

    What will we "know" 100 years from now ?

    MAYBE best to leave a lot of stuff - esp with
    political/social implications - kinda "fuzzy".

    I think this is wise.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 12:55:22 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 00:13:32 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    So let's not feel TOO damned proud, TOO damned superior.
    In the end, not TOO long, we're just gonna be another species of
    theists with their 'revealed truths'.

    The Greeks got a lot of mileage out of the hybris theme and it never
    worked out well for those involved.


    https://www.sap.com/products/acquired-brands/what-is-hybris.html

    I don't know if those people have a weird sense of humor or if they're completely illiterate.


    Haha brilliant! It surely must be a joke!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 23 12:59:11 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 21:54, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 22/12/2024 11:28, D wrote:
    The only difference is the latter big bang has a sentient intelligence >>>>> with a Plan in charge.

    Really we only reject it on the slender basis of Occam - it's simply >>>>> more complicated than necessary to explain this shit.

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

    I wasn't talking about the *practice* of science, or of religion for that >>> matter. I was talking about their metaphysical *beliefs*.

    Ahh... our definitions differ when it comes to science. I was tricked! But >> I will drop this line as I think it leads us back to old threads. ;)

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down waaaay >>>> too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is, in reality >>>> "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the questions is
    lacking?

    Precisely, In many ways the God explanation is simpler :

    "God did it all,  and faked it so it looks like he was never there at all, >>> to test you fuckers"

    ...there are only three people who understand quantum physics and two of >>> them are liars....

    This is the truth and exactly one of the things I do not like with Occam.
    If you're on team God (TM) that's the easiest explanation, if you're on
    team Science (C), that's nonsense, and your version is the simplest.

    There's no way to decide from a neutral point, if you are dealing with
    religious people regardless of if they are from the religion religion, or
    the religion science (which has very little to do with the science as a
    process).

    But if you examine Occam from outside the confines of realism and
    materialism, he makes perfect sense.

    1. The problem of induction means that no inference  can ever be proved to >>> be correct.
    2. So given that its all bullshit anyway, why not pick the simplest
    bullshit that fits the facts?
    3.  ...And fits within the accepted already established bullshit, that
    works...

    Ah, but the problem of induction is a chimera, an illusion. Popper argued
    that justification is not needed at all, and seeking justification "begs
    for an authoritarian answer".

    The only thing we need to worry about is if it works, and that's it.

    Yes, but Realist/materialists reject stuff that works on the basis that its 'not real'...

    Then they are clearly religious and not philosophers. I have no beef with
    the claim that religion or prayer "works". My explanation is psychological
    and not spiritual, and that is where my beef starts. I would think that
    this is obvious for even the most battle hardened materialist.

    That is today's problem., People are absolutely reluctant to abandon the >>> established bullshit, that works.

    This is not a problem, this is the way. If it works, is in fact the only
    way. If that is abandoned, everything else is meaningless. That is the
    strength of materialism and a common, shared external world, and one of the >> best arguments for it.

    It is an argument for a shared external world, but not for its materiality

    Hmm, I find it interesting how sometimes I agree with you and sometimes I don't. This makes me suspect that it is a matter of definition and perhaps
    not so much about actual content of our thoughts differing.


    We've been down this path many times before I think.

    Even when they know it is actually wrong.

    The Kuhnian paradigm shift  is staring them in the face, but they simply >>> cant accept it.







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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 23 13:03:16 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 06:59, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    'Private' nuke vessels are NOT practical. Not only
      does it require a team of HIGHLY-trained techs to
      keep 'em running right

    But they dont need to be onboard the damned ship.

    How many jet engine specialists are aboard a jet aircraft? None

    but the LIABILITY if they somehow fail .....

    Same as any other ship.

    Let me add a small thought here about liability and consequences of
    disasters. Since most likely, the reactor would be loaded once, and then
    welded shut, with a 0% chance of "exploding". If something should go
    seriously wrong, the ship would sink to the bottom of the ocean, and all
    would be well.

    That is why from a safety point of view, nucelar powered ships are great!

    And that is why flying nuclear powered things, are less great.

    NOBODY in their right mind would   EVER insure that ! What DOES it cost >> if San Diego
      is covered in radioactive mist ???


    I'd consider that a net benefit, but it simply could not happen

      GOVERNMENTS can push all that aside, but NOT private
      entities.

    Private entities run governments.



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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 23 13:00:49 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 01:12, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 22:59:07 +0100, D wrote:

    Add a loose monetary policy, tax decreases and increased government
    debt,
    and we have a nice booming economy ahead of us. The key, as always, is
    to know when to sell your shares, take a break, and enter again at the
    bottom.

    Nice booming inflation... I'll strangle the first person that says 'But
    the fundamentals are sound.'

    I don't do the stock market so what is good for Wall Street doesn't matter >> to me.

    I have to, to stay alive.

    But after 20 years I have found a sane way to make reasonable sums. and that's better than spending all yiur life with your nose glued to the Financial Times..

    What is your way?

    My way is based on boring, and slow and steady wins the race. Add a bit of contrarianism, and spending about 10% or so, on lottery tickets. I like dividends and global companies.

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  • From Don_from_AZ@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Mon Dec 23 09:29:01 2024
    D <nospam@example.net> writes:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.
    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically
    accelerated loads into space!


    And PRIME terrorist targets :-)

    This is the truth! But we'll guard those targets with lovely and spiritual Habermassian dialogue! ;)

    Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
    There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
    one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
    are VERY VERY rare.

    I wonder if it is an urban myth that the smarter someone is, the bigger the chance some mental problems?

    BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
    spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
    The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    I like ravens. Very cute birds with personality!

    Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
    to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
    Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
    pick up where they left off :-)

    I vaguely remember a book from when I was a child that ended with the dinosaurs
    leaving the planet on a space ship. I have one distinct image from the end of the book when they are leaving. That's all I remember. I wonder if I made it up?

    Don't know about the leaving, but "The Homecoming" by Barry B Longyear
    has highly intelligent dinosaurs coming back to reclaim the earth as
    their home.
    --
    -Don_from_AZ-

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 18:20:56 2024
    On 2024-12-23, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 06:09:56 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    -- Iris DeMent

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlaoR5m4L80

    I first heard it when one of our little jamming group brought it up.
    Nice song.

    You need the audiovisual version. I saw her about the time she released
    the album of gospel songs. She said she loved gospel singing but wasn't
    too sure about the religion that went with it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgx_yoe2-Y4

    That the only political song she ever did afaik. It's from the '90s but is timeless.

    Wow. She didn't pull any punches.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 20:09:47 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:19:02 +0100, D wrote:

    I wonder how many of my forefathers who remained pagans after the
    country officially became christian? Surely at least a few must have
    remained pagans for a couple of 100 of years after official christianity
    was implemented.

    I doubt the priests dug too deeply into what the new converts really
    believed.

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/19739568-tree-of-salvation

    Murphy also translated the Heliand and in 'The Saxon Savior' discusses the background.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliand

    The old beliefs didn't suddenly go away and were incorporated into the new religion. That still happens today with missionaries to Africa or Latin America.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santer%C3%ADa

    I imagine the local priests count them as Catholics.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 23 20:22:08 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 08:57:05 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    And whoever invented the term didn't even use the correct term. Woke is
    the past participle. Awoken correct. Or awake.
    So you know it was invented by uneducated people or people
    deliberatilytrying to seem that way.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_English

    The blacks were using 'woke' long before it was adopted by the left. I'm
    sure you wouldn't have to go far to find English speakers like Yorkies
    that are semi-intelligible.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 20:38:44 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:09:30 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm reading Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet
    right now, and a surprising amount of people in there came from a
    psychology background.

    Nerds tend to be misfits with interesting backgrounds. The Boston chapter
    of the IEEE was very much computer oriented and chasing new ideas. The New Hampshire chapter was mostly classical electrical engineers who worked for Public Service of NH, the power company. They were nice guys and all and
    could throw nice picnics but the level of conversation was more about
    baseball.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 20:52:12 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:26:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Jackson hole is mentioned, I think, in the lovely comedy series Silicon valley, so if it is mentioned there, surely it must be a tourist trap.

    https://jacksonholemagazine.com/overtourism/

    Yellowstone attracts a lot of people and Jackson Hole gets a lot of
    exposure. Yellowstone and Grand Teton are separate for administration
    purposes but the admission fee covers both so tourists gravitate south to someplace they've heard of. West Yellowstone and Gardiner are the two
    entry points in Montana and they're not as glitzy. There's also the east entrance from Cody WY, but Cody is about 50 miles away and not
    particularly interesting although the hotel prices don't reflect that.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 21:55:23 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, Don_from_AZ wrote:

    D <nospam@example.net> writes:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.
    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically
    accelerated loads into space!


    And PRIME terrorist targets :-)

    This is the truth! But we'll guard those targets with lovely and spiritual >> Habermassian dialogue! ;)

    Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
    There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
    one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
    are VERY VERY rare.

    I wonder if it is an urban myth that the smarter someone is, the bigger the >> chance some mental problems?

    BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
    spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
    The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    I like ravens. Very cute birds with personality!

    Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
    to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
    Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
    pick up where they left off :-)

    I vaguely remember a book from when I was a child that ended with the dinosaurs
    leaving the planet on a space ship. I have one distinct image from the end of
    the book when they are leaving. That's all I remember. I wonder if I made it up?

    Don't know about the leaving, but "The Homecoming" by Barry B Longyear
    has highly intelligent dinosaurs coming back to reclaim the earth as
    their home.


    Hmm, maybe it served as inspiration. This was a short book, not more than
    40 pages or so with plenty of drawings. I was about 6 years old I think.

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Mon Dec 23 20:58:54 2024
    On 2024-12-23, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    Alas 'Woke' Gens-Z/A2,
    even older and supposedly more informed, STILL
    believe in that sort of paradigm. Can't figure out
    how to wipe yer ass - wheeled-in with a needle
    in your arm once a month - you should be director
    of NASA or SecDef or Boeing CEO or something !

    This is not a fair criticism of "woke liberals". There are plenty of "conservative" politicians and their family members with a similar
    feeling that no particular knowledge experience or subject matter
    expertise is required to be Defense secretary, Director of National Intelligence, ambassador to Israel or something.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 21:09:06 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:12:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Reminds me of the book Shoot to kill by Fairbairn, I think his
    philosophy was a lot about the intuitive way to shoot.

    'Shooting to Live', I think, along with Sykes. I'm too lazy to go hunting
    for the book.

    The US Army published a manual 'Principles of Quick Kill' to go with a
    training program. They used Daisy BB guns.

    https://beaufortcountynow.com/post/19789

    I adapted the idea to use with a BB pistol. With half decent lighting you
    can see the BB in flight and correct sort of like trying to soak the cat
    with a garden hose. (no, I'd never do something like that)

    Airsoft works too and they make glow in the dark airsoft pellets for low
    light practice.

    For a while I did USPSA.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Practical_Shooting_Association

    They're all about two handed grips, Weaver stance and so forth, which I
    was not used to. I was never very good at it but I did learn from the experience. It might be counter-productive in the real world. You engage
    each target with a 'double tap' and move on to the next target. That could
    be a bad habit to get into.

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 21:13:05 2024
    On 2024-12-23, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:26:27 +0100, D wrote:

    Jackson hole is mentioned, I think, in the lovely comedy series Silicon
    valley, so if it is mentioned there, surely it must be a tourist trap.

    https://jacksonholemagazine.com/overtourism/

    Yellowstone attracts a lot of people and Jackson Hole gets a lot of
    exposure. Yellowstone and Grand Teton are separate for administration purposes but the admission fee covers both so tourists gravitate south to someplace they've heard of. West Yellowstone and Gardiner are the two
    entry points in Montana and they're not as glitzy. There's also the east entrance from Cody WY, but Cody is about 50 miles away and not
    particularly interesting although the hotel prices don't reflect that.

    This summer we flew our small plane down to Cody and rented a car to
    do Yellowstone. Then, since we had gotten that far, we continued into
    South Dakota to get a look at Mount Rushmore before Trump carves his
    ugly mug on it.

    We made a fuel stop at Butte, Montana. I was quite taken by it, and
    would like to go back for a closer look. Not that we didn't get a
    fairly close look while our poor little 172, all loaded up on a warm
    summer day, struggled for altitude off that strip, which is at 5500
    feet. We had to circle to get high enough to get through the pass
    toward Bozeman.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Mon Dec 23 21:13:21 2024
    On 2024-12-23, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    It seems the psychology education in the 60s where on to something! They created the best technological people in a generation, so a la carte seems
    to be very beneficial for innovation and following ones natural talents
    and interests.

    At UC Santa Barbara, there is (was?) a "Department of Creative Studies".
    The annual course catalog always just contains a notice that "The
    Curriculum had not been finalized at the time of publication". It is
    really an "invitation only Graduate school for undergraduates", effectively
    by invitation only. My stepdaughter Birgitte was invited, and put together
    a series of mathematics programs. She said that no class had more than a
    dozen students, most had only half that many. And none of them were
    "regular Americans". The other guy in her math seminars was Iranian.

    But these are probably fading away these days.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 22:14:29 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:19:02 +0100, D wrote:

    I wonder how many of my forefathers who remained pagans after the
    country officially became christian? Surely at least a few must have
    remained pagans for a couple of 100 of years after official christianity
    was implemented.

    I doubt the priests dug too deeply into what the new converts really believed.

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/19739568-tree-of-salvation

    Murphy also translated the Heliand and in 'The Saxon Savior' discusses the background.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliand

    The old beliefs didn't suddenly go away and were incorporated into the new religion. That still happens today with missionaries to Africa or Latin America.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santer%C3%ADa

    I imagine the local priests count them as Catholics.


    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism were
    alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the 12:th century.

    Anecdotally, I heard a story that once my grandfather visited sweden, from iceland. And for some reason he and my mother were visiting the country
    side in the north where they have a very strange dialect. Apparently he
    could speak with an old man there in icelandic, and the old man could
    speak this very rare dialect and they would understand each other.

    Fascinating how such pockets can survive.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 23 22:19:24 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:09:30 +0100, D wrote:

    I'm reading Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet
    right now, and a surprising amount of people in there came from a
    psychology background.

    Nerds tend to be misfits with interesting backgrounds. The Boston chapter
    of the IEEE was very much computer oriented and chasing new ideas. The New Hampshire chapter was mostly classical electrical engineers who worked for Public Service of NH, the power company. They were nice guys and all and could throw nice picnics but the level of conversation was more about baseball.


    This is a strength of technologist culture! I sometimes fear that these
    days with computer science degrees, and less diverse backgrounds,
    something has been lost. =/

    That is why I enjoy teaching at vocational schools. There you can still
    get people with the most diverse backgrounds who became interested in technology and want to switch careers. That can yield interesting
    perspectives!

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 21:17:21 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:46:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Only cold below -25 C scares me. That's one advantage of having grown up
    in northern europe. I'm not saying I like cold, I don't, but it doesn't bother me that much.

    Last winter we had close to a week of -29 C that really sucked. That's
    abnormal and I could have really lived without it.

    I feed a outdoor cat and got a little house with a heated pad. The cat
    wasn't in her house and I didn't see her for the duration. I figured I'd
    find a frozen cat in the spring but when it warmed up she reappeared. She
    must have found a crawl space that was reasonably warm.

    I'm reasonably happy to around 12 or so or even -18 on nice sunny days.
    After a run of those 0 feels like t-shirt weather.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 23 21:25:55 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:28:21 +0100, D wrote:

    I am fairly young, so I always wonder at what point it is time to take
    my stuff and move it into bonds. On the other hand... I also thought
    that since I do not have children, perhaps I should move the assets into
    a non-profit for some kind of good libertarian purpose. Well, probably
    at least 10-20 years before any of those loose thoughts might become
    reality.

    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my
    head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based
    on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    I'll stay far away, thank you.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Mon Dec 23 21:29:22 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 18:20:56 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-23, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 06:09:56 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    -- Iris DeMent

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlaoR5m4L80

    I first heard it when one of our little jamming group brought it up.
    Nice song.

    You need the audiovisual version. I saw her about the time she released
    the album of gospel songs. She said she loved gospel singing but wasn't
    too sure about the religion that went with it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgx_yoe2-Y4

    That the only political song she ever did afaik. It's from the '90s but
    is timeless.

    Wow. She didn't pull any punches.

    At the time a Florida politician tried to pull funding from a NPR station
    for 'obscene' language. The part about 'kissing those peoples' asses' must
    have hit a little too close.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 24 01:43:27 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 21:13:21 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-23, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    It seems the psychology education in the 60s where on to something!
    They created the best technological people in a generation, so a la
    carte seems to be very beneficial for innovation and following ones
    natural talents and interests.

    At UC Santa Barbara, there is (was?) a "Department of Creative Studies".
    The annual course catalog always just contains a notice that "The
    Curriculum had not been finalized at the time of publication". It is
    really an "invitation only Graduate school for undergraduates",
    effectively by invitation only. My stepdaughter Birgitte was invited,
    and put together a series of mathematics programs. She said that no
    class had more than a dozen students, most had only half that many. And
    none of them were "regular Americans". The other guy in her math
    seminars was Iranian.

    But these are probably fading away these days.

    Unfortunately at least in the US 'liberal arts' has suffered the same debasement as 'liberal' itself. Polymaths have given way to experts who
    are lost outside of their narrow specializations.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 01:23:34 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:14:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Anecdotally, I heard a story that once my grandfather visited sweden,
    from iceland. And for some reason he and my mother were visiting the
    country side in the north where they have a very strange dialect.
    Apparently he could speak with an old man there in icelandic, and the
    old man could speak this very rare dialect and they would understand
    each other.

    Translators tend to get into cat fights over their versions. One of the Icelanders alleged only they could accurately translate Old Norse since
    they were still speaking it.

    Baden-Württemberg came up with a humorous advertising campaign - "Wir
    können alles. Außer Hochdeutsch".

    The area has companies like Porsche, Mercedes, Bosch, and other tech firms
    so 'we can do anything'. The Swabian dialect is about 40% intelligible
    with standard German, so 'except speak Hochdeutsch'.

    https://lowlands-l.net/

    I was on it a long time ago and don't know how active it is now but it is fascinating how many holdouts there are.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 01:48:02 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:19:24 +0100, D wrote:

    This is a strength of technologist culture! I sometimes fear that these
    days with computer science degrees, and less diverse backgrounds,
    something has been lost. =/

    As is apparent I tend to go off on tangents and down strange rabbit holes.
    IRL I've had people ask how I know about stuff like that. I don't say it
    but I think 'How do you not know about it?'

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Tue Dec 24 02:08:25 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 21:13:05 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    This summer we flew our small plane down to Cody and rented a car to do Yellowstone. Then, since we had gotten that far, we continued into
    South Dakota to get a look at Mount Rushmore before Trump carves his
    ugly mug on it.

    I saw Rushmore when my family took a vacation trip from upstate NY to
    Seattle in '52. Once was enough. What really impressed me was the nearby Reptile Gardens. I revisited it a few years ago. I wasn't sure if it still existed but it had moved and was even bigger and better.

    We made a fuel stop at Butte, Montana. I was quite taken by it, and
    would like to go back for a closer look. Not that we didn't get a
    fairly close look while our poor little 172, all loaded up on a warm
    summer day, struggled for altitude off that strip, which is at 5500
    feet. We had to circle to get high enough to get through the pass
    toward Bozeman.

    I like Butte. In some ways it reminds me of Troy NY with some of the architecture and the hills. Compared to the Montana Banana Belt the
    climate is a little harsh. Last spring I went over to a client's open
    house in Helena. It was a nice day so I swung down through Butte on my way home. It was still winter.

    Yeah, gaining that 1000' or so can be a challenge. I learned to fly in
    Vermont on a Rockwell Lark which is similar to a 172. The Greens aren't as
    high but it helps if you clear the chair lifts. There are pieces and parts
    of planes that didn't in the forests. Oddly when I took a contract in Ft. Wayne all that flat, open area spooked me.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 00:33:41 2024
    On 12/23/24 6:34 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically
    accelerated loads into space!


     And PRIME terrorist targets  :-)

    This is the truth! But we'll guard those targets with lovely and spiritual Habermassian dialogue! ;)

     Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
     There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
     one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
     are VERY VERY rare.

    I wonder if it is an urban myth that the smarter someone is, the bigger the chance some mental problems?


    IN MY EXPERIENCE - it's not really a myth.


     BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
     spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
     The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    I like ravens. Very cute birds with personality!


    Highly recommended by Woden.


     Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
     to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
     Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
     pick up where they left off   :-)

    I vaguely remember a book from when I was a child that ended with the dinosaurs
    leaving the planet on a space ship. I have one distinct image from the
    end of
    the book when they are leaving. That's all I remember. I wonder if I
    made it up?

    Um ... don't think any made it off the planet. The
    tech waste that'd be involved developing that kind
    of tech infrastructure would STILL be obvious.

    But as I implied, 'tech' as we tend to think of it
    may not be an indicator of intelligence. Diff
    environs, diff facts, pointy stone bits and such
    may not have been much needed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 00:58:53 2024
    On 12/23/24 6:46 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/22/24 5:09 PM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024 11:55:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Montana is on the list! Someone suggested that we might like eastern >>>>> Oregon. Someone suggested Wyoming, but that maybe is too flat?

    Much of Wyoming is high prairie. There are signs on I-80 when you cross >>>> the Continental Divide but it's hard to discern exactly where it might >>>> be.  You hit mountain ranges in the west including the Tetons. Even
    Yellowstone, while definitely worth visiting, is mostly flat, at
    least the
    more accessible parts.. Grand Teton NP is at the southern border of
    Yellowstone and is where the fun begins.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_National_Park

    Very beautiful!


     Also very COLD ... and when age gives you
     medical issues, maybe TOO FAR from top-
     notch facilities.

    Only cold below -25 C scares me. That's one advantage of having grown up
    in northern europe. ;) I'm not saying I like cold, I don't, but it
    doesn't bother me that much.

    Sadly though, my wife does not like overly warm climates. I would be perfectly happy in florida or texas, but that is waaaay too warm for
    her. So northern US it is.


    Perhaps the foot-hills in North Carolina or Virginia ?
    Two or three hundred meters elevation to get you above
    the humid layer. Not TOO cold in the winter, not TOO
    hot in the summer, not Wokie-infested Yankeeland.


     In my youth I often thought about moving to
     Alaska - even bought a .375 H&H for bears.
     NOW I don't wanna be more than 30 minutes from
     the docs and hospitals Just In Case.

    Who hasn't ever thought about moving to alaska? I too, have a dream
    about a small, remote, off grid cottage, where local trading is a thing,
    and where income taxes are a thing of the past. ;)

    All fun and games, until you cut yourself and the wound gets infected. ;)


    Aw ... those damned PRACTICAL issues again :-)

    Not much motion in Alaska without using some kind
    of aircraft.


     .375 ... imagine a light 12-ga shotgun with
     3" mags - NOT pleasant to fire ! You do it
     only IF something large and furry is about
     to eat you  :-)

    I've heard squirrels in alaska are very aggressive!

    I'd worry more about the BEARS.

    A .375 is over-kill for caribou and such, but
    it'll work OK.

    The Bighorns are another spur, but not as dramatic as the Tetons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Mountains

    That page has a nice relief map for reference.

    Eastern Oregon is also pretty flat high desert until you get to the
    Cascades.

     That along with east Wash, esp with Trump, is likely to
     become "Greater Idaho". The locals HATE the Wokies for
     good reasons.

    This is what I would count on! ;)

    If you want a good sane life in the USA then
    avoid the Wokie areas !

     The re-distribution of the original Texas territory
     sets the legal precedents.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Tue Dec 24 02:10:02 2024
    On 12/23/24 1:09 AM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-23, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    As I said to Mr. Natural, I think we've kinda reached The Point -
    where human IQ just really can't COPE with the complexities of
    the Real Universe. The initial 'quantum-statistical' take on
    the negative time thing kinda smells - and there's likely only
    a handful of people in the world that can even wrap their
    brains around THAT. Next phase, very soon, NOBODY can wrap
    their brains around it.

    Yes, we can maybe make the "AI"s proceed - but we WON'T
    really understand what they come up with or why. At that
    point it all becomes 'magic' again. Chant the spells
    and wave the wand ......

    May as well simply say Ahura Mazda just breathed it all
    into existence and set all the paths/rules ....

    Everybody is wondering what and where
    They all came from
    Everybody is worrying about where they're going to go
    When the whole thing's done
    But no one knows for certain and so it's all the same to me
    I think I'll just let the mystery be
    -- Iris DeMent

    Don't really worry about 'where I came from' - that's
    fairly simple. Don't think anybody is 'going' anywhere.

    BUT, somewhere in the middle, I'd REALLY like a LOT
    more "understanding" of how The Machine works.

    BUT, barely 250 years into decent sci/tech, we're
    already at the practical limits of what human
    intelligence can calc/cope. VERY distressing.

    The picture even 100 years from now - wow ... it'd
    make a good sci-fi terror flik. MAYbe the 'Blade
    Runner' films kinda paint the picture ... the
    'real' and 'unreal' and 'tech-magic' all blur.
    Nobody has a CLUE about the whats/whys anymore.

    And we're back to 999-AD again ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 24 01:24:42 2024
    On 12/23/24 4:05 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 23/12/2024 04:42, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    I'll agree, because it suits me, that it's likely what
       happened - but really truly PROVING it and the underlying
       factors is gonna be difficult to the EXTREME.

    The point that philosophy makes, is not that proving it is extreme, but
    that ultimately it is impossible.

    And that changes the game *completely*.

    One is not selecting the truth from the possible, one is selecting
    something that works OK from stuff that doesn't work very well,. No
    matter how attractive

    With no hope of ever arriving at 'The Truth'


    What WORRIES me is that we've reached The Point
    so SOON after sci/tech really took off ... we
    are already at the limits of purely human IQ
    for solving the multiplying puzzles and issues.

    Oh well, I can always learn Sumerian basket-weaving
    craft .......

    Tonight and the next day or two I'm trying to
    actively avoid "Christmas Movies" on the tube
    (ok, flat panel these days). It's NOT easy !
    Did find "Cloverfield" and "Pacific Rim" ...

    Skipped past the channel telling me the Antikithera
    Mechanism was sure-nuf alien tech :-)

    I do like to run the tube all the time - even if
    I'm not really paying attention. It's kinda 'noise'
    that keeps SOME little part of the brain occupied
    better than, say, music. Overnight - Bloomberg
    Financial blathering ......

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 01:57:18 2024
    On 12/23/24 6:43 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'd add to that that one is a process and open to change (which has
    happened and does happen occasionally) and the other a religion.

     MAYbe an advantage there ... but maybe NOT. Theists will
     say they don't NEED 'process' or 'corrections' because
     they were magically provided with the RIGHT ANSWER
     long back. They just see us bickering about whether
     2+2 (common conditions) = 4 for a century or two
     when they knew all along.

    True, but I just ignore them. Discussion, except for entertainment or trolling,
    is meaningless and a waste of time.

    I have mixed feelings about Occam, since Occam tends to shut down
    waaaay too many discussions waaay too quickly. Who is to say what is,
    in reality "simpler" or less complex, if the understanding of the
    questions is lacking?

     Occam HAS his uses. However sometimes things ARE complicated.

     Read my post here to Mr. Natural about 'negative time'
     findings ......

     https://phys.org/news/2024-12-scientists-negative-quantum.html

    Ahh... but let's wait and see...

    "The findings, posted on the preprint server arXiv but not yet published
    in a
    peer-reviewed journal, have attracted both global attention and
    skepticism".

    Oh, I agree there ... but one of the main points was
    that the instrumentation/methods were much improved
    yet STILL showed the mysterious effect (just in better
    detail).

    So, downstream, I expect this is gonna be deemed REAL.

    And it's REALLY weird.

    Seems like every time instrumentation improves by even
    2X then The Science has to leap ahead 10X.

     Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
     the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    What is IQ? What is intelligence? We are fumbling around in the dark. Is
    a human
    + a computer a 200 IQ person? Stanislaw Lem writes in one of his books
    about
    knowledge factories. It was a long time I read it, but it kind of gave
    me the
    impression he is thinking about AI-farms churning out theories and science.

    Beyond a certain point nobody is SURE what "IQ" means.
    It's kind of the problem where you're trying to describe
    yourself - but the very attempt at description ALTERS
    the equation. Very quantum :-)

    I've met a few people with EXTREME 'IQ' over the years.
    One seemed kinda 'normal', but just had kinda superhuman
    math abilities/perspective. The other two were, well,
    NOT so 'normal' - skittish, borderline autistic,
    'borderline' in general.

    But we're still talking IQ-200 max here. What the hell
    would 300 or 500 look like ??? Note effective intellectual
    ability is not proportional to the IQ score. 120 is MUCH
    more capable than 100.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 24 12:44:06 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-23, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
    Alas 'Woke' Gens-Z/A2,
    even older and supposedly more informed, STILL
    believe in that sort of paradigm. Can't figure out
    how to wipe yer ass - wheeled-in with a needle
    in your arm once a month - you should be director
    of NASA or SecDef or Boeing CEO or something !

    This is not a fair criticism of "woke liberals". There are plenty of "conservative" politicians and their family members with a similar
    feeling that no particular knowledge experience or subject matter
    expertise is required to be Defense secretary, Director of National Intelligence, ambassador to Israel or something.


    This is incorrect. Conservatives are always smart, polite and very
    beautiful people. Woke liberals are much more often homos, which is not so good. I invite everyone to look at the woke disaster that is sweden for an example of how quickly a country can go to hell if wokeness remains unchallenged.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 12:47:30 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:12:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Reminds me of the book Shoot to kill by Fairbairn, I think his
    philosophy was a lot about the intuitive way to shoot.

    'Shooting to Live', I think, along with Sykes. I'm too lazy to go hunting
    for the book.

    Sorry... that's the one.

    The US Army published a manual 'Principles of Quick Kill' to go with a training program. They used Daisy BB guns.

    https://beaufortcountynow.com/post/19789

    I adapted the idea to use with a BB pistol. With half decent lighting you
    can see the BB in flight and correct sort of like trying to soak the cat
    with a garden hose. (no, I'd never do something like that)

    Airsoft works too and they make glow in the dark airsoft pellets for low light practice.

    For a while I did USPSA.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Practical_Shooting_Association

    Glow in the dark? Had no idea! I have an ancient airgun (the one powered manually with a spring) and sometimes in the country house, I throw out a
    beer can on the lawn, and take steps away from it to see how far away I
    can get before I miss. That's the only sorry sort of fun you get in europe without a license. =(

    I always wonder how much better I would shoot with a brand new gun?

    They're all about two handed grips, Weaver stance and so forth, which I
    was not used to. I was never very good at it but I did learn from the experience. It might be counter-productive in the real world. You engage
    each target with a 'double tap' and move on to the next target. That could
    be a bad habit to get into.

    Two handed? That's for nerds! In all cowboy movies I've seen it's one
    handed! And drawing is losing time, just shoot straight from the hip. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 12:53:30 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:46:43 +0100, D wrote:

    Only cold below -25 C scares me. That's one advantage of having grown up
    in northern europe. I'm not saying I like cold, I don't, but it doesn't
    bother me that much.

    Last winter we had close to a week of -29 C that really sucked. That's abnormal and I could have really lived without it.

    I feed a outdoor cat and got a little house with a heated pad. The cat
    wasn't in her house and I didn't see her for the duration. I figured I'd
    find a frozen cat in the spring but when it warmed up she reappeared. She must have found a crawl space that was reasonably warm.

    I suspect the cat moved into someones garage! ;)

    I'm reasonably happy to around 12 or so or even -18 on nice sunny days.
    After a run of those 0 feels like t-shirt weather.

    Yes, this is the truth! I'm not hardcore enough to go icefishing though.
    My wifes father loves it! He can sit an entire day in his overall in -15
    or -20 and fish. He has invited me, but that's too much. Out there on the
    ice, without any trees, it's even worse!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Tue Dec 24 12:51:49 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-23, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    It seems the psychology education in the 60s where on to something! They
    created the best technological people in a generation, so a la carte seems >> to be very beneficial for innovation and following ones natural talents
    and interests.

    At UC Santa Barbara, there is (was?) a "Department of Creative Studies".
    The annual course catalog always just contains a notice that "The
    Curriculum had not been finalized at the time of publication". It is
    really an "invitation only Graduate school for undergraduates", effectively by invitation only. My stepdaughter Birgitte was invited, and put together
    a series of mathematics programs. She said that no class had more than a dozen students, most had only half that many. And none of them were
    "regular Americans". The other guy in her math seminars was Iranian.

    But these are probably fading away these days.


    Reminds me of one of my philosophy classes. On the first day on campus in chicago, where I studied for a year, I bumped into the philosophy
    professor by chance. We started to talk, and liked each other. He said..
    you know what... why don't we just put together a philosophy course,
    completely open, and meet twice a week to talk?

    So we did...

    We were about 5 people I think. 2 from pakistan, me, 1 american and
    someone else I've forgotten.

    It was wonderful!

    We had a introductory book in metaphysics, no agenda, but just explored
    what interested us. Based on each students personal preferences he would
    then give out some extra reading to discuss the next time we met.
    Wonderful way of doing philosophy! I miss that professor! He must be 80+
    by now.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 12:55:54 2024
    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:28:21 +0100, D wrote:

    I am fairly young, so I always wonder at what point it is time to take
    my stuff and move it into bonds. On the other hand... I also thought
    that since I do not have children, perhaps I should move the assets into
    a non-profit for some kind of good libertarian purpose. Well, probably
    at least 10-20 years before any of those loose thoughts might become
    reality.

    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based
    on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    I'll stay far away, thank you.

    Wise words! Apart from tax evasion and getting around currency
    restrictions, I won't touch bitcoin with a 100 ft pole! In fact, not even
    for tax evasion, my lawyer, my accountant and my own reading of the tax
    laws are enough for me to save quite a bit. I have no need to push it to
    any extremes. I've managed to lower my tax with about 70% or so, and am
    resting at a comfortable 9%-15% depending on the fiscal year. I feel that pushing further would just increase the risk, but not give me enough gains
    to offset the risk.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 15:14:06 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:14:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Anecdotally, I heard a story that once my grandfather visited sweden,
    from iceland. And for some reason he and my mother were visiting the
    country side in the north where they have a very strange dialect.
    Apparently he could speak with an old man there in icelandic, and the
    old man could speak this very rare dialect and they would understand
    each other.

    Translators tend to get into cat fights over their versions. One of the Icelanders alleged only they could accurately translate Old Norse since
    they were still speaking it.

    I do not agree. I agree it is close, but I find it improbable that nothing
    has changed for a thousand years. They did have a nationalist revival
    where I think purged some foreign words and tried to move it back a bit.

    Baden-Württemberg came up with a humorous advertising campaign - "Wir können alles. Außer Hochdeutsch".

    The area has companies like Porsche, Mercedes, Bosch, and other tech firms
    so 'we can do anything'. The Swabian dialect is about 40% intelligible
    with standard German, so 'except speak Hochdeutsch'.

    https://lowlands-l.net/

    I was on it a long time ago and don't know how active it is now but it is fascinating how many holdouts there are.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 24 15:18:16 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/23/24 6:34 AM, D wrote:


    On Sun, 22 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

     in any useful way - but his giant rocket CAN transport
     LOTS of stuff into orbit or to the moon.

    Rockets are boring! I was space elevators and shooting magnetically
    accelerated loads into space!


     And PRIME terrorist targets  :-)

    This is the truth! But we'll guard those targets with lovely and spiritual >> Habermassian dialogue! ;)

     Alas, human brains just aren't really wired for that.
     There tend to be 'trades' - and 'stability' is often
     one of them. 'Double-alpha' people, who have it all,
     are VERY VERY rare.

    I wonder if it is an urban myth that the smarter someone is, the bigger the >> chance some mental problems?


    IN MY EXPERIENCE - it's not really a myth.

    In my experience, the same. Somehow it feels as if the more intelligent
    the person, the more unstable the system.

     BIRD brains ... there are some species that have
     spectacular IQ in their little nut-sized brains.
     The 'wiring' is a LOT better than in mammals.

    I like ravens. Very cute birds with personality!


    Highly recommended by Woden.

    Amen!

     Might be the dinos were a LOT smarter than we like
     to believe ... lack of 'tech' does not = stupid.
     Could be it took 65 million years for Socrates to
     pick up where they left off   :-)

    I vaguely remember a book from when I was a child that ended with the
    dinosaurs
    leaving the planet on a space ship. I have one distinct image from the end >> of
    the book when they are leaving. That's all I remember. I wonder if I made
    it up?

    Um ... don't think any made it off the planet. The
    tech waste that'd be involved developing that kind
    of tech infrastructure would STILL be obvious.

    But as I implied, 'tech' as we tend to think of it
    may not be an indicator of intelligence. Diff
    environs, diff facts, pointy stone bits and such
    may not have been much needed.

    Like all those science fiction scenarios with intelligent gas clouds that
    we simply aren't aware of. Or intelligences that move on a glacial scale,
    so that we're not long lived enough to perceive their intelligence.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 15:15:39 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:19:24 +0100, D wrote:

    This is a strength of technologist culture! I sometimes fear that these
    days with computer science degrees, and less diverse backgrounds,
    something has been lost. =/

    As is apparent I tend to go off on tangents and down strange rabbit holes. IRL I've had people ask how I know about stuff like that. I don't say it
    but I think 'How do you not know about it?'


    It is very strange. With all the internet at your fingertips, how can you
    not go down rabbit holes? If you really want to take it above and beyond, there's plenty of free academic papers about every conceivable (and inconceivable) area.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 24 15:21:51 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Only cold below -25 C scares me. That's one advantage of having grown up in >> northern europe. ;) I'm not saying I like cold, I don't, but it doesn't
    bother me that much.

    Sadly though, my wife does not like overly warm climates. I would be
    perfectly happy in florida or texas, but that is waaaay too warm for her.
    So northern US it is.


    Perhaps the foot-hills in North Carolina or Virginia ?
    Two or three hundred meters elevation to get you above
    the humid layer. Not TOO cold in the winter, not TOO
    hot in the summer, not Wokie-infested Yankeeland.

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay for 2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

     In my youth I often thought about moving to
     Alaska - even bought a .375 H&H for bears.
     NOW I don't wanna be more than 30 minutes from
     the docs and hospitals Just In Case.

    Who hasn't ever thought about moving to alaska? I too, have a dream about a >> small, remote, off grid cottage, where local trading is a thing, and where >> income taxes are a thing of the past. ;)

    All fun and games, until you cut yourself and the wound gets infected. ;)


    Aw ... those damned PRACTICAL issues again :-)

    I saw a documentary once about a guy who wanted to prove to himself that he could survive alone on an island in the pacific. His experiment lasted 2 weeks until a cut got infected. Off to hospital he went. Then he came back, and after that, with some re-supplies I think he made it, but it took a heavy toll on his mental health.

    This is what I would count on! ;)

    If you want a good sane life in the USA then
    avoid the Wokie areas !

    This is the truth!

     The re-distribution of the original Texas territory
     sets the legal precedents.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Tue Dec 24 15:28:55 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ahh... but let's wait and see...

    "The findings, posted on the preprint server arXiv but not yet published in >> a
    peer-reviewed journal, have attracted both global attention and
    skepticism".

    Oh, I agree there ... but one of the main points was
    that the instrumentation/methods were much improved
    yet STILL showed the mysterious effect (just in better
    detail).

    So, downstream, I expect this is gonna be deemed REAL.

    And it's REALLY weird.

    Seems like every time instrumentation improves by even
    2X then The Science has to leap ahead 10X.

    This is the truth! It almost feels like Moores law kind of. The further we go, the more time and money needs to be invested to reach the next level.

    I wonder how many paradigm shifts and quantum leaps remain to be exploited? I'd like to have anti-gravity!! And in computing, I'd like to see a shift to a new paradigm during my time left on the planet.

     Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
     the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    What is IQ? What is intelligence? We are fumbling around in the dark. Is a >> human
    + a computer a 200 IQ person? Stanislaw Lem writes in one of his books
    about
    knowledge factories. It was a long time I read it, but it kind of gave me
    the
    impression he is thinking about AI-farms churning out theories and science.

    Beyond a certain point nobody is SURE what "IQ" means.
    It's kind of the problem where you're trying to describe
    yourself - but the very attempt at description ALTERS
    the equation. Very quantum :-)

    Yes.

    I've met a few people with EXTREME 'IQ' over the years.
    One seemed kinda 'normal', but just had kinda superhuman
    math abilities/perspective. The other two were, well,
    NOT so 'normal' - skittish, borderline autistic,
    'borderline' in general.

    But we're still talking IQ-200 max here. What the hell
    would 300 or 500 look like ??? Note effective intellectual
    ability is not proportional to the IQ score. 120 is MUCH
    more capable than 100.

    I imagine that our IQ scales (as bad as they might be) start to break down beyond a certain level.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 19:51:32 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 12:53:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, this is the truth! I'm not hardcore enough to go icefishing though.
    My wifes father loves it! He can sit an entire day in his overall in -15
    or -20 and fish. He has invited me, but that's too much. Out there on
    the ice, without any trees, it's even worse!

    Apropos, I am reading Asa Larsson's 'The Black Path'. It starts when a man
    in his ice fishing shack (translated as 'ark'?) steps out to take a leak.
    A sudden squall sends the shack skating away and he realizes he is in
    trouble. He manages to find another ark, breaks in, fires up the Calor
    heater, and discovers the frozen body on the bunk.

    We set up a dinnerware molding plant in Minnesota in the winter, of
    course. At least there are no mosquitoes in the winter. On the drive out
    from St. Paul I'd pass Lake Minnewaska. I think the whole town moves out
    on the ice for the winter.

    https://www.life.com/lifestyle/the-joys-of-minnesota-ice-fishing/

    The Minnewaska House had excellent meals and you could still eat the pike. Looking out the windows at the shacks was as close as I wanted to get.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 19:40:21 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay for
    2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October scouting
    out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern states extensively. It's a big place :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 19:34:00 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:14:06 +0100, D wrote:



    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:14:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Anecdotally, I heard a story that once my grandfather visited sweden,
    from iceland. And for some reason he and my mother were visiting the
    country side in the north where they have a very strange dialect.
    Apparently he could speak with an old man there in icelandic, and the
    old man could speak this very rare dialect and they would understand
    each other.

    Translators tend to get into cat fights over their versions. One of the
    Icelanders alleged only they could accurately translate Old Norse since
    they were still speaking it.

    I do not agree. I agree it is close, but I find it improbable that
    nothing has changed for a thousand years. They did have a nationalist
    revival where I think purged some foreign words and tried to move it
    back a bit.

    I took it with a grain of salt. It's a different time frame but while
    Quebec French may be closer to 17th century French than the current
    Parisian version it hasn't been preserved in amber.

    https://www.sequentia.org/recordings/recording23.html

    Bagby tried for the most accurate reproductions of medieval music possible
    and iirc Sequentia spent a few months in Iceland working on the material,

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLmzPKPcKmc

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 20:00:00 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 12:47:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Two handed? That's for nerds! In all cowboy movies I've seen it's one
    handed! And drawing is losing time, just shoot straight from the hip.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver_stance https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isosceles_Stance

    The 'modern' technique is how the military, police, and competitive
    shooters train these days. I'd always used the classic one handed target shooting stance and it took a while to learn.

    From some of the bodycam footage cops tend to revert to one handed point shooting and we're back to Fairbairn.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_shooting

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 20:39:32 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:15:39 +0100, D wrote:

    It is very strange. With all the internet at your fingertips, how can
    you not go down rabbit holes? If you really want to take it above and
    beyond,
    there's plenty of free academic papers about every conceivable (and inconceivable) area.

    I was always good at finding rabbit holes but it used to take visits to multiple libraries as well as hunting down and buying obscure books. I'm
    in hog heaven with the internet.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 22:40:17 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:14:06 +0100, D wrote:



    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 23 Dec 2024 22:14:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Anecdotally, I heard a story that once my grandfather visited sweden,
    from iceland. And for some reason he and my mother were visiting the
    country side in the north where they have a very strange dialect.
    Apparently he could speak with an old man there in icelandic, and the
    old man could speak this very rare dialect and they would understand
    each other.

    Translators tend to get into cat fights over their versions. One of the
    Icelanders alleged only they could accurately translate Old Norse since
    they were still speaking it.

    I do not agree. I agree it is close, but I find it improbable that
    nothing has changed for a thousand years. They did have a nationalist
    revival where I think purged some foreign words and tried to move it
    back a bit.

    I took it with a grain of salt. It's a different time frame but while
    Quebec French may be closer to 17th century French than the current
    Parisian version it hasn't been preserved in amber.

    https://www.sequentia.org/recordings/recording23.html

    Bagby tried for the most accurate reproductions of medieval music possible and iirc Sequentia spent a few months in Iceland working on the material,

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLmzPKPcKmc

    Very interesting, thank you. Based on my very basic knowledge of modern icelandic, and without cheating, I'd say that "Nú erum komnar til konungs húsa" means something similar to "Now we have come to the kings house".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 22:46:42 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay for
    2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October scouting
    out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern states extensively. It's a big place :)

    This is the truth! And it will become bigger still, when Canada joins the union! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 22:52:48 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 12:53:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Yes, this is the truth! I'm not hardcore enough to go icefishing though.
    My wifes father loves it! He can sit an entire day in his overall in -15
    or -20 and fish. He has invited me, but that's too much. Out there on
    the ice, without any trees, it's even worse!

    Apropos, I am reading Asa Larsson's 'The Black Path'. It starts when a man
    in his ice fishing shack (translated as 'ark'?) steps out to take a leak.
    A sudden squall sends the shack skating away and he realizes he is in trouble. He manages to find another ark, breaks in, fires up the Calor heater, and discovers the frozen body on the bunk.

    Never heard it but it is true! Ark, I also see isfisketält (ice fishing
    tent) which is what I would say. When my father was a child his father had
    one of those I think, with ice skate blades on it, so it was very easy to
    push out on the ice.

    We set up a dinnerware molding plant in Minnesota in the winter, of
    course. At least there are no mosquitoes in the winter. On the drive out
    from St. Paul I'd pass Lake Minnewaska. I think the whole town moves out
    on the ice for the winter.

    This is the truth! During autumn they start to disappear. Then you can sit outside all night without any mosquitoes, very nice for fishingand just
    general camping!

    https://www.life.com/lifestyle/the-joys-of-minnesota-ice-fishing/

    The Minnewaska House had excellent meals and you could still eat the pike. Looking out the windows at the shacks was as close as I wanted to get.

    Pike is a very nice fish for cooking! Another advantage with winter is
    that there are no ticks! =D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 22:54:07 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 12:47:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Two handed? That's for nerds! In all cowboy movies I've seen it's one
    handed! And drawing is losing time, just shoot straight from the hip.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver_stance https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isosceles_Stance

    The 'modern' technique is how the military, police, and competitive
    shooters train these days. I'd always used the classic one handed target shooting stance and it took a while to learn.

    From some of the bodycam footage cops tend to revert to one handed point shooting and we're back to Fairbairn.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_shooting


    Point shooting for the win! I would have two guns of course, so I'd have a
    2:1 advantage over the nerds who just use one! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 24 22:57:10 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:15:39 +0100, D wrote:

    It is very strange. With all the internet at your fingertips, how can
    you not go down rabbit holes? If you really want to take it above and
    beyond,
    there's plenty of free academic papers about every conceivable (and
    inconceivable) area.

    I was always good at finding rabbit holes but it used to take visits to multiple libraries as well as hunting down and buying obscure books. I'm
    in hog heaven with the internet.


    Same here! I remember when I was young, sometimes I'd go to the library
    after school to find books on various subjects which interested me. I had
    a period when I was reading a lot of japanese buddhist books. I also had a
    time when I was reading a lot of magic books.

    I still remember going to the library desk asking the woman behind the
    counter which section I should go to, or the TUI terminals where I could
    search and find the right section my self.

    In a small annex to the main library in Stockholm, they used to have a
    small computer history museum with about 10 old mini computers. I always wondered what happened with those. I don't think this small mini museum
    still exists and I do pray the machines were not thrown away, but perhaps
    exist in a storage area somewhere!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 00:43:26 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:57:10 +0100, D wrote:

    In a small annex to the main library in Stockholm, they used to have a
    small computer history museum with about 10 old mini computers. I always wondered what happened with those. I don't think this small mini museum
    still exists and I do pray the machines were not thrown away, but
    perhaps exist in a storage area somewhere!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Computer_Museum,_Boston

    Hopefully most of the collection survived. That's not always the case.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamtown,_U.S.A.

    I never went to the Pennsylvania site but a good deal of the collection
    was sold off. I'm not a gambler so the main attraction for me in Reno was
    the gun collection at Harold's Club. The collection was sold off.

    https://gunshopguide.com/roaring-camp-gun-collection-harolds-club/

    It isn't in that list but they had a punt gun.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punt_gun

    Harrah's car collection was also dispersed although the National Auto
    Museum is worthwhile. They have one of Harrah's creations, a Jerrari. It's
    a '77 Jeep Wagoneer with a V-12 engine from a Ferrari 365. Harrah didn't
    like to waste time motoring around the desert.

    I love the small town museums and hope they make it to the future. They
    tend to have very idiosyncratic collections of old stuff stuffed in the corners. They're much more fun than the antiseptic museums designed by professionals. They seem to be aimed at people taking videos on their cell phones as they walk through rapidly.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 01:15:01 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:40:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting, thank you. Based on my very basic knowledge of modern icelandic, and without cheating, I'd say that "Nú erum komnar til
    konungs húsa" means something similar to "Now we have come to the kings house".

    I've got the first volume of Jesse Byock's 'Viking Language' on the shelf.
    One of these days, honest. I didn't know he had made MP3s available. I'll
    have to download those.

    https://www.amazon.ca/Viking-Language-Learn-Norse-Icelandic/dp/1480216445

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr0gSsI4t_4

    That's a 15 minute video of archaeologists at work at the Mosfell Archaeological Project. It looks like a nice place to dig. I recall one archaeologist working in a heavily populated area, Java iirc, saying it
    was incredibly difficult since every place you wanted to dig was
    somebody's back yard. They're also lucky to find the mound intact. In the
    US many of the Mound Builder sites were destroyed by farmers leveling that inconvenient bump in the middle of their field.

    Byock is in touch with reality. Many point to Iceland as an example of a libertarian society; in one of his book's he characterizes it as a society
    of feuding farmers.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 01:49:08 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:52:48 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! During autumn they start to disappear. Then you can
    sit outside all night without any mosquitoes, very nice for fishingand
    just general camping!

    No wonder Scandinavians gravitated to Minnesota; just like home! Why the Somalis went there beats me. An advantage of a semi-arid climate is the mosquitoes flourish for a couple of weeks, and some years not at all. I
    think I saw three this summer and only one tick. Every spring I spray my
    hiking clothes down with Permethrin, It doesn't repel ticks but scrambles
    their nervous system. I've seen ticks make it half way up my leg before
    running out of steam. For actual repellent it's DEET all the way. The hell
    with eco-friendly patchouli flavored organic tea tree oil or whatever.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 01:39:33 2024
    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:46:42 +0100, D wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay
    for 2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October
    scouting out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern
    states extensively. It's a big place :)

    This is the truth! And it will become bigger still, when Canada joins
    the union! ;)

    To say nothing of Greenland. I'm surprised Denmark got its hackles up. A
    cash sale versus pouring in a few billion kroner a year? It must have
    something to do with Denmark's long history of losing real estate; they
    want to hang on to the little they have.

    I was surprised when I read the suicide rate in Greenland peaks in the
    summer. I guess it's easier to stay drunk in the winter without the light hurting your hungover eyes.

    I think it was Ernest Gann who talked about flying transports in WWII and refueling in Greenland. The fjords looked all the same; pick the wrong one
    and you were screwed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 24 21:08:43 2024
    On 12/24/24 9:28 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ahh... but let's wait and see...

    "The findings, posted on the preprint server arXiv but not yet
    published in a
    peer-reviewed journal, have attracted both global attention and
    skepticism".

     Oh, I agree there ... but one of the main points was
     that the instrumentation/methods were much improved
     yet STILL showed the mysterious effect (just in better
     detail).

     So, downstream, I expect this is gonna be deemed REAL.

     And it's REALLY weird.

     Seems like every time instrumentation improves by even
     2X then The Science has to leap ahead 10X.

    This is the truth! It almost feels like Moores law kind of. The further
    we go,
    the more time and money needs to be invested to reach the next level.

    I wonder how many paradigm shifts and quantum leaps remain to be
    exploited? I'd
    like to have anti-gravity!! And in computing, I'd like to see a shift to
    a new
    paradigm during my time left on the planet.

    I have doubts on 'anti-gravity'. It'd require 'un-bending'
    spacetime. If it doesn't require as much energy to unbend
    then 'perpetual motion' machines become possible.

    As for paradigms ... we're still kinda using Babbage's
    machine - nice orderly distinct steps at a time. Going
    parallel, well, it's just multiple Babbage approaches
    stapled together. 'Quantum', if they can ever deal
    with the error issues, may be a glimpse at that
    'next paradigm'.


     Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
     the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    What is IQ? What is intelligence? We are fumbling around in the dark.
    Is a human
    + a computer a 200 IQ person? Stanislaw Lem writes in one of his
    books about
    knowledge factories. It was a long time I read it, but it kind of
    gave me the
    impression he is thinking about AI-farms churning out theories and
    science.

     Beyond a certain point nobody is SURE what "IQ" means.
     It's kind of the problem where you're trying to describe
     yourself - but the very attempt at description ALTERS
     the equation. Very quantum  :-)

    Yes.

     I've met a few people with EXTREME 'IQ' over the years.
     One seemed kinda 'normal', but just had kinda superhuman
     math abilities/perspective. The other two were, well,
     NOT so 'normal' - skittish, borderline autistic,
     'borderline' in general.

     But we're still talking IQ-200 max here. What the hell
     would 300 or 500 look like ??? Note effective intellectual
     ability is not proportional to the IQ score. 120 is MUCH
     more capable than 100.

    I imagine that our IQ scales (as bad as they might be) start to break down beyond a certain level.

    The practical limit for "IQ" measurement is
    around 200 - and even that's getting up into
    error territory. "IQ" is ok for maybe 70 to
    140. That fits for MOST people.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 12:27:27 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:40:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Very interesting, thank you. Based on my very basic knowledge of modern
    icelandic, and without cheating, I'd say that "Nú erum komnar til
    konungs húsa" means something similar to "Now we have come to the kings
    house".

    I've got the first volume of Jesse Byock's 'Viking Language' on the shelf. One of these days, honest. I didn't know he had made MP3s available. I'll have to download those.

    https://www.amazon.ca/Viking-Language-Learn-Norse-Icelandic/dp/1480216445

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr0gSsI4t_4

    That's a 15 minute video of archaeologists at work at the Mosfell

    Hmm, the name rings a bell. I have a vague memory visiting Mosfell as a
    child, with my parents, for some reason or other. But apart from the name, don't remember much.

    Archaeological Project. It looks like a nice place to dig. I recall one archaeologist working in a heavily populated area, Java iirc, saying it
    was incredibly difficult since every place you wanted to dig was
    somebody's back yard. They're also lucky to find the mound intact. In the
    US many of the Mound Builder sites were destroyed by farmers leveling that inconvenient bump in the middle of their field.

    Byock is in touch with reality. Many point to Iceland as an example of a libertarian society; in one of his book's he characterizes it as a society
    of feuding farmers.

    Yes, the land-taking/settlement era of iceland is often used as a
    libertarian example. Remember (well, you probably already know I'm sure)
    that many of the first settlers were oppressed by the king of norway, so
    I'm certain the last thing they wanted when having found the island, was
    to setup a new king who could dominate them.

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that it
    is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or over
    time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs. To democrats (who believe
    in democracy, and a big state) I always argue that modern democracy is
    about 200 years old or so, and has definitely not been stress tested as
    much as ancient libertarian societies, and that it equally looks as if it
    might be turned into kingdoms with serfs. Another line of argument is
    modern weapons and technologies which might serve to stabilize a
    theoretical libertarian country, or, it might serve to accelerate its
    downfall. Who knows?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 12:21:14 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:57:10 +0100, D wrote:

    In a small annex to the main library in Stockholm, they used to have a
    small computer history museum with about 10 old mini computers. I always
    wondered what happened with those. I don't think this small mini museum
    still exists and I do pray the machines were not thrown away, but
    perhaps exist in a storage area somewhere!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Computer_Museum,_Boston

    Hopefully most of the collection survived. That's not always the case.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamtown,_U.S.A.

    I never went to the Pennsylvania site but a good deal of the collection
    was sold off. I'm not a gambler so the main attraction for me in Reno was
    the gun collection at Harold's Club. The collection was sold off.

    https://gunshopguide.com/roaring-camp-gun-collection-harolds-club/

    It isn't in that list but they had a punt gun.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punt_gun

    Harrah's car collection was also dispersed although the National Auto
    Museum is worthwhile. They have one of Harrah's creations, a Jerrari. It's
    a '77 Jeep Wagoneer with a V-12 engine from a Ferrari 365. Harrah didn't
    like to waste time motoring around the desert.

    I love the small town museums and hope they make it to the future. They
    tend to have very idiosyncratic collections of old stuff stuffed in the corners. They're much more fun than the antiseptic museums designed by professionals. They seem to be aimed at people taking videos on their cell phones as they walk through rapidly.

    This is the truth! However, my wife gets angry with me when we go to
    museum. She frequently complains "do you have to read everything and watch everything? We'll be stuck here for _hours_!" so it is better for me to go
    by myself, because then I can take my time and not run through the museum missing at least half of the items. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 12:34:53 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:52:48 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! During autumn they start to disappear. Then you can
    sit outside all night without any mosquitoes, very nice for fishingand
    just general camping!

    No wonder Scandinavians gravitated to Minnesota; just like home! Why the Somalis went there beats me. An advantage of a semi-arid climate is the

    The somalis, like ticks, enjoy living off scandinavians. They do it in
    sweden too! ;)

    mosquitoes flourish for a couple of weeks, and some years not at all. I
    think I saw three this summer and only one tick. Every spring I spray my

    Please tell me you killed the tick! I do not like them at all.

    hiking clothes down with Permethrin, It doesn't repel ticks but scrambles their nervous system. I've seen ticks make it half way up my leg before running out of steam. For actual repellent it's DEET all the way. The hell with eco-friendly patchouli flavored organic tea tree oil or whatever.

    Hah! Tell me about it! My wifes mother loves everything eco, alternative
    and hippie! She dabs me with some weird smelling pine oil + vegetable mix
    that does absolutely nothing to repel mosquitoes.

    It is very fascinating how ticks are attracted to different people. I get between 0-3 or so per summer depending on how much I need to walk through bushes and underbrush on my way to fishing spots.

    In the country house the neighbour have a daughter, and when she was a
    child she was literally rolling around in meter high gras in a field, and
    she never got any ticks. Very strange. She must be blessed!

    With ticks, my best strategy is to check myself religiously and remove
    them as quickly as possible. I use pincers, and just gently pull them
    straight out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 12:30:50 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:46:42 +0100, D wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay
    for 2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October
    scouting out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern
    states extensively. It's a big place :)

    This is the truth! And it will become bigger still, when Canada joins
    the union! ;)

    To say nothing of Greenland. I'm surprised Denmark got its hackles up. A
    cash sale versus pouring in a few billion kroner a year? It must have something to do with Denmark's long history of losing real estate; they
    want to hang on to the little they have.

    This is ridiuclous! Greenland is just losing them money, and should a war happen, they have _no_ capability of defending it either as one of the
    tiniest countries on the planet. They should sell it while they are ahead,
    or possibly bargain to sell the country, while retaining rights to oil and minerals, if that is why they are holding back. Maybe they expect hueg
    oil, gas and mineral findings? But if so, why haven't they exploited
    those?

    I was surprised when I read the suicide rate in Greenland peaks in the summer. I guess it's easier to stay drunk in the winter without the light hurting your hungover eyes.

    Be careful! Sweden has been rumoured to be very fond of suicide, but I've
    heard that it is a modern myth, and that there aren't in fact that many
    more suicides per capita, compared with other countries.

    I think it was Ernest Gann who talked about flying transports in WWII and refueling in Greenland. The fjords looked all the same; pick the wrong one and you were screwed.

    Sounds reasonable! Did you know that the vikings had farms in greenland? I wonder how that was possible, since the only thing that changes the
    weather is cars. Hmm. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Dec 25 12:36:17 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/24/24 9:28 AM, D wrote:


    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Ahh... but let's wait and see...

    "The findings, posted on the preprint server arXiv but not yet published >>>> in a
    peer-reviewed journal, have attracted both global attention and
    skepticism".

     Oh, I agree there ... but one of the main points was
     that the instrumentation/methods were much improved
     yet STILL showed the mysterious effect (just in better
     detail).

     So, downstream, I expect this is gonna be deemed REAL.

     And it's REALLY weird.

     Seems like every time instrumentation improves by even
     2X then The Science has to leap ahead 10X.

    This is the truth! It almost feels like Moores law kind of. The further we >> go,
    the more time and money needs to be invested to reach the next level.

    I wonder how many paradigm shifts and quantum leaps remain to be exploited? >> I'd
    like to have anti-gravity!! And in computing, I'd like to see a shift to a >> new
    paradigm during my time left on the planet.

    I have doubts on 'anti-gravity'. It'd require 'un-bending'
    spacetime. If it doesn't require as much energy to unbend
    then 'perpetual motion' machines become possible.

    I think you are right, but I hope you are wrong. ;)

    As for paradigms ... we're still kinda using Babbage's
    machine - nice orderly distinct steps at a time. Going
    parallel, well, it's just multiple Babbage approaches
    stapled together. 'Quantum', if they can ever deal
    with the error issues, may be a glimpse at that
    'next paradigm'.

    This is the truth!


     Better find a way, quick, to push up human IQ into
     the 500 range, WITHOUT causing insanity.

    What is IQ? What is intelligence? We are fumbling around in the dark. Is >>>> a human
    + a computer a 200 IQ person? Stanislaw Lem writes in one of his books >>>> about
    knowledge factories. It was a long time I read it, but it kind of gave me >>>> the
    impression he is thinking about AI-farms churning out theories and
    science.

     Beyond a certain point nobody is SURE what "IQ" means.
     It's kind of the problem where you're trying to describe
     yourself - but the very attempt at description ALTERS
     the equation. Very quantum  :-)

    Yes.

     I've met a few people with EXTREME 'IQ' over the years.
     One seemed kinda 'normal', but just had kinda superhuman
     math abilities/perspective. The other two were, well,
     NOT so 'normal' - skittish, borderline autistic,
     'borderline' in general.

     But we're still talking IQ-200 max here. What the hell
     would 300 or 500 look like ??? Note effective intellectual
     ability is not proportional to the IQ score. 120 is MUCH
     more capable than 100.

    I imagine that our IQ scales (as bad as they might be) start to break down >> beyond a certain level.

    The practical limit for "IQ" measurement is
    around 200 - and even that's getting up into
    error territory. "IQ" is ok for maybe 70 to
    140. That fits for MOST people.

    Sounds reasonable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 19:40:56 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:21:14 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! However, my wife gets angry with me when we go to
    museum. She frequently complains "do you have to read everything and
    watch everything? We'll be stuck here for _hours_!" so it is better for
    me to go by myself, because then I can take my time and not run through
    the museum missing at least half of the items.

    I really appreciate museums that have a dining area so can at least get something to eat during an all day outing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 19:51:23 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:27:27 +0100, D wrote:

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that
    it is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or
    over time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs.

    Libertarians have a lot of faith in mankind that I don't share. Then there
    is the problem that many of the libertarians I've know IRL tend to be
    nutters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Jones_(Libertarian_politician)

    At least he stood out and became a little less blueish over the years. The Libertarian Party typically gets 3% of the vote but outdid itself this
    year with 0.42% after nominating a pro-choice gay. The LP in this state
    ignored him completely.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 19:38:34 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:34:53 +0100, D wrote:


    Please tell me you killed the tick! I do not like them at all.

    I have a special thing about ticks. I swat mosquitoes if they try to bit
    me and I have good relations with the household spiders. I chop ticks into pieces with a knife or my thumbnail.

    Hah! Tell me about it! My wifes mother loves everything eco, alternative
    and hippie! She dabs me with some weird smelling pine oil + vegetable
    mix that does absolutely nothing to repel mosquitoes.

    https://bushcraftusa.com/forum/threads/self-made-bug-repellent-nessmuk.
    150556/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Sears

    I have his book 'Woodcraft'. Along with the recipe he gives instructions
    to apply it liberally and often and in a few weeks you build up a patina.
    His canoe trips were solo.

    The Adirondacks lie on the Canadian shield. While there are many mountains including Marcy, the highest in NY state, the valleys have lakes, rivers,
    and bogs. Possibly worse than the mosquitoes is black fly season.

    https://www.adirondack.net/hiking/black-flies/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 20:09:30 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:30:50 +0100, D wrote:


    This is ridiuclous! Greenland is just losing them money, and should a
    war happen, they have _no_ capability of defending it either as one of
    the tiniest countries on the planet. They should sell it while they are ahead,
    or possibly bargain to sell the country, while retaining rights to oil
    and minerals, if that is why they are holding back. Maybe they expect
    hueg oil, gas and mineral findings? But if so, why haven't they
    exploited those?

    According to the Danes their expanding of the military budget for
    Greenland was coincidental. There is even the theory Trump was trying to
    nudge them. With the Russian and Chinese interest in the Arctic somebody
    better be minding the store.

    There's also the problem of the US inheriting a massive welfare state well beyond anything the leftist even dream of. 50,000 Inuits on welfare
    wouldn't fly.

    Sounds reasonable! Did you know that the vikings had farms in greenland?
    I wonder how that was possible, since the only thing that changes the
    weather is cars. Hmm.

    Ericsson was a hell of a salesman. Jared Diamond has a book, 'Collapse',
    that makes some interesting points. He has spent some summers in this area
    and describes how marginal it is. The only crop that really works is hay
    which supports dairy operations. A little cooler and that wouldn't be
    tenable either.

    He includes Easter Island and Greenland in places that collapsed because
    of the ecology. His ideas on Eastern Island have been challenged. I didn't
    buy his idea that the settlers left Greenland as the maxima wound down
    because they wouldn't eat fish. He based that on not finding fish bones in
    the middens. Somehow I didn't believe that the tastes have changed so
    much that surströmming and hákarl got on the menu in the following
    centuries, let alone the more edible fish versions.

    That reminds me. Lutefisk miraculously appears in the markets here this
    time of year. It's edible, given enough melted butter. I think frozen
    pizza is more popular in Norway, but those ethnic urges die hard. I brewed
    up a batch of sauerbraten and rotkohl myself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 22:52:05 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:21:14 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! However, my wife gets angry with me when we go to
    museum. She frequently complains "do you have to read everything and
    watch everything? We'll be stuck here for _hours_!" so it is better for
    me to go by myself, because then I can take my time and not run through
    the museum missing at least half of the items.

    I really appreciate museums that have a dining area so can at least get something to eat during an all day outing.


    This is the truth! When I decide to go to a museum, I like having at least
    a day to really explore it! I do not like rushing through it in an hour or
    two. This is not so good.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 22:51:09 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:34:53 +0100, D wrote:


    Please tell me you killed the tick! I do not like them at all.

    I have a special thing about ticks. I swat mosquitoes if they try to bit
    me and I have good relations with the household spiders. I chop ticks into pieces with a knife or my thumbnail.

    Hah! Tell me about it! My wifes mother loves everything eco, alternative
    and hippie! She dabs me with some weird smelling pine oil + vegetable
    mix that does absolutely nothing to repel mosquitoes.

    https://bushcraftusa.com/forum/threads/self-made-bug-repellent-nessmuk. 150556/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Sears

    I have his book 'Woodcraft'. Along with the recipe he gives instructions
    to apply it liberally and often and in a few weeks you build up a patina.
    His canoe trips were solo.

    Hmm, I'm skeptical. Well, maybe I'll pass the recipe along to my wifes
    mother. Should keep her occupied and happy! On the other hand, I will be
    the guinea pig. ;)

    I thought about buying a cheap canoe for fishing, but I am worried about
    it not being light enough, or stable enough. I like to stand up when
    throwing the bait out. I thought about perhaps adding some kind of
    crossbar to the canoe to stabilize it. Another option I thought about was
    some kind of inflatable boat. But that would then mean I need a pump, and
    spend 15-20 minutes inflating it etc.

    What I'm envisioning with the light weight canoe is that I could just have
    it by the lake, cover it with a tarp and use it when I need to. Since it
    would be "just" a canoe, no one would steal it. In fact, I would probably announce on the local forum that anyone who wants to use it can use it,
    since I only spend at most 8 weeks a year at the house, so if someone else enjoys it, I would just be happy to share it as long as they return it to
    the same place and take care of it.

    Well, let's see this summer. Maybe this is the summer when I will make it happen.

    The Adirondacks lie on the Canadian shield. While there are many mountains including Marcy, the highest in NY state, the valleys have lakes, rivers,
    and bogs. Possibly worse than the mosquitoes is black fly season.

    https://www.adirondack.net/hiking/black-flies/

    Horrible! At least one type of bug I don't have to fight with either in
    sweden or eastern europe! =)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 22:55:24 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:27:27 +0100, D wrote:

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that
    it is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or
    over time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs.

    Libertarians have a lot of faith in mankind that I don't share. Then there
    is the problem that many of the libertarians I've know IRL tend to be nutters.

    This is interesting! I am very much in favour of libertarian, and by
    extension _decentralization_ because of a lack of faith in mankind!

    I often criticize socialists for their unreasonable trust in some 100%
    fair human being, not being corrupted and turning their socialist utopia
    into an authoritarian nightmare.

    Please tell me more about libertarians faith in man kind since that is so opposite my own position, yet, I do call myself a libertarian.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Jones_(Libertarian_politician)

    At least he stood out and became a little less blueish over the years. The Libertarian Party typically gets 3% of the vote but outdid itself this
    year with 0.42% after nominating a pro-choice gay. The LP in this state ignored him completely.

    I think as a libertarian, I cannot participate in political parties.
    Nietzsche warned against parties and saw them as a threat against
    democracy. I agree with him completely. I think libertarianism is not compatible with parties and trying to change the system from within. That
    will just lead to them becoming corrupted over time and diluted to some
    other form of ism.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 23:05:13 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:30:50 +0100, D wrote:


    This is ridiuclous! Greenland is just losing them money, and should a
    war happen, they have _no_ capability of defending it either as one of
    the tiniest countries on the planet. They should sell it while they are
    ahead,
    or possibly bargain to sell the country, while retaining rights to oil
    and minerals, if that is why they are holding back. Maybe they expect
    hueg oil, gas and mineral findings? But if so, why haven't they
    exploited those?

    According to the Danes their expanding of the military budget for
    Greenland was coincidental. There is even the theory Trump was trying to nudge them. With the Russian and Chinese interest in the Arctic somebody better be minding the store.

    Could be. I always tell people to look at what Trump _does_ and not to
    listen to what he says, since that is often just negotiating tactics.

    There's also the problem of the US inheriting a massive welfare state well beyond anything the leftist even dream of. 50,000 Inuits on welfare
    wouldn't fly.

    Haha. Would that even be noticeable among the millions in the US? Give
    them a bottle of vodka or two, and they will take care of themselves. ;)

    Sounds reasonable! Did you know that the vikings had farms in greenland?
    I wonder how that was possible, since the only thing that changes the
    weather is cars. Hmm.

    Ericsson was a hell of a salesman. Jared Diamond has a book, 'Collapse',

    This is the truth! A true entrepreneur!

    that makes some interesting points. He has spent some summers in this area and describes how marginal it is. The only crop that really works is hay which supports dairy operations. A little cooler and that wouldn't be
    tenable either.

    He includes Easter Island and Greenland in places that collapsed because
    of the ecology. His ideas on Eastern Island have been challenged. I didn't

    I saw a documentary about easter island and they came to the conclusion
    that is was not ecological disaster that lead to the depopulation.
    However, annoyingly I cannot remember exactly what they thought happened instead or if they thought it was a combination of factors.

    buy his idea that the settlers left Greenland as the maxima wound down because they wouldn't eat fish. He based that on not finding fish bones in the middens. Somehow I didn't believe that the tastes have changed so
    much that surströmming and hákarl got on the menu in the following centuries, let alone the more edible fish versions.

    Hákarl is the Donald Trump of party snacks! A lot of fun! I like it, it
    has a very strong concentrated taste, and is slightly chewy. I do not understand why people are so against it, but I suspect it is because it
    smells so strongly and they think it will taste the way i smells.

    That reminds me. Lutefisk miraculously appears in the markets here this
    time of year. It's edible, given enough melted butter. I think frozen
    pizza is more popular in Norway, but those ethnic urges die hard. I brewed
    up a batch of sauerbraten and rotkohl myself.

    On my mother side, in iceland We have red cabbage with lamb. I don't think
    it is something traditional, and perhaps only in her family but for me, I associate it with lamb steak.

    The most "weird" thing I had yesterday as part of the swedish tradition
    was sop https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sop and hte liquid used is the fat
    from the christmas ham (julskinka)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_ham .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Dec 25 20:04:44 2024
    On 12/25/24 2:51 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:27:27 +0100, D wrote:

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that
    it is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or
    over time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs.

    Libertarians have a lot of faith in mankind that I don't share. Then there
    is the problem that many of the libertarians I've know IRL tend to be nutters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Jones_(Libertarian_politician)


    There is large-L Libertarian and small-l libertarian. I tend
    to fall into the latter group.

    Large-L is kinda naive - we have and still see what happens
    when humans can get too much power over other humans at most
    any scale. Slaves and serfs are the least of it. The instinct
    to dominance is hardwired in (and, clearly, not JUST our
    all-so-proud species). It's very Darwinian, just that Darwin
    never imagined thermonuclear weapons .....

    There's also the issue of the "bygone world" - that kinda
    simpler time where the world was 'bigger' and you could
    kinda just disconnect. The idea that you could still finds
    some favor in the USA and likely Canada. Everything else
    was always "over there" after all ...


    At least he stood out and became a little less blueish over the years. The Libertarian Party typically gets 3% of the vote but outdid itself this
    year with 0.42% after nominating a pro-choice gay. The LP in this state ignored him completely.


    The LP ... yea ... doesn't do very well. I'd like to think
    that 'libertarian' idealism isn't THAT far gone. That sort
    of thinking is what gave us 'human rights' and Bill-o-Rights
    and neo-democracy and equality under the law and a lot of
    other niceties people tend to take for granted these days.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 20:08:35 2024
    On 12/25/24 4:55 PM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:27:27 +0100, D wrote:

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that
    it is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or
    over time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs.

    Libertarians have a lot of faith in mankind that I don't share. Then
    there
    is the problem that many of the libertarians I've know IRL tend to be
    nutters.

    This is interesting! I am very much in favour of libertarian, and by extension _decentralization_ because of a lack of faith in mankind!

    Decentralization CAN be useful, but without some kind
    of 'center' it seems to go very bad. Then we're back
    to the old city-state wars again ...

    I often criticize socialists for their unreasonable trust in some 100%
    fair human being, not being corrupted and turning their socialist utopia
    into an authoritarian nightmare.

    'Socialism' requires a lot of denial ...

    Please tell me more about libertarians faith in man kind since that is
    so opposite my own position, yet, I do call myself a libertarian.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Jones_(Libertarian_politician)

    At least he stood out and became a little less blueish over the years.
    The
    Libertarian Party typically gets 3% of the vote but outdid itself this
    year with 0.42% after nominating a pro-choice gay. The LP in this state
    ignored him completely.

    I think as a libertarian, I cannot participate in political parties. Nietzsche warned against parties and saw them as a threat against
    democracy. I agree with him completely. I think libertarianism is not compatible with parties and trying to change the system from within.
    That will just lead to them becoming corrupted over time and diluted to
    some other form of ism.

    'Parties' suck - but I think *that* kind of civil war
    still beats the real kind.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 01:29:25 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:51:09 +0100, D wrote:

    I thought about buying a cheap canoe for fishing, but I am worried about
    it not being light enough, or stable enough. I like to stand up when
    throwing the bait out. I thought about perhaps adding some kind of
    crossbar to the canoe to stabilize it. Another option I thought about
    was some kind of inflatable boat. But that would then mean I need a
    pump, and spend 15-20 minutes inflating it etc.

    I've seen Sears' 'Sairy Gamp' at the Adirondack Museum. I'm not sure I
    would even like to get in it.

    https://advancedelements.confluenceoutdoor.com/en-us/products/ advancedframetm-elite-kayak-with-pump/AE1012-OG-E-P

    Not that exact model but I have an older version. I also got the optional
    keel for a little more stability. It pumps up quickly with two main side
    tubes and ports on the decks and coaming. I've never fished from it.


    What I'm envisioning with the light weight canoe is that I could just
    have it by the lake, cover it with a tarp and use it when I need to.
    Since it would be "just" a canoe, no one would steal it.

    When I lived in New Hampshire I built a 8' stitch-and-glue pram in a
    second floor apartment. It was a very rainy spring and I was bored. It fit
    in the back of my pickup, which was handy, and in a small rented storage
    locker since there was no way I was going to carry it back up the stairs.

    Mostly I rowed but I did have one memorable fishing experience. I thought
    I'd hooked a lunker but when I got it close to the boat it was a snapping turtle. The boat wasn't big enough for both of us so I cut the line.

    It was fun. I could row around the rivers and the Great Bay. You had to
    watch the time since it was all tidal. When I left NH I left it on the
    beach above high tide with the oars and other accessories. I hope someone
    got use of it.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 25 20:34:13 2024
    On 12/25/24 6:30 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:46:42 +0100, D wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay
    for 2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October
    scouting out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern >>>> states extensively.  It's a big place :)

    This is the truth! And it will become bigger still, when Canada joins
    the union! ;)

    To say nothing of Greenland. I'm surprised Denmark got its hackles up. A
    cash sale versus pouring in a few billion kroner a year? It must have
    something to do with Denmark's long history of losing real estate; they
    want to hang on to the little they have.

    This is ridiuclous! Greenland is just losing them money, and should a
    war happen, they have _no_ capability of defending it either as one of
    the tiniest countries on the planet. They should sell it while they are ahead, or possibly bargain to sell the country, while retaining rights
    to oil and minerals, if that is why they are holding back. Maybe they
    expect hueg oil, gas and mineral findings? But if so, why haven't they exploited those?

    Denmark just decided to put a billion into Greenland's
    defense. That'll be the Danish portion. Trump's little
    ruse worked - and FAST.

    There have LONG been deals with the US mil ... numerous
    bases in strategic locations. This can be expanded (though
    kinda quietly for reasons of national pride).

    The Greenlanders themselves - sorry, but it IS a low-income
    proposition. Fish, some minerals, no transport, no infrastructure,
    no way to pull it together ......

    They'll have to wait until it all melts. Geologists say it
    will have a huge long lake in the middle. Prime post-warming
    real-estate ! Condos, hotels, mansions :-)

    I was surprised when I read the suicide rate in Greenland peaks in the
    summer. I guess it's easier to stay drunk in the winter without the light
    hurting your hungover eyes.

    Be careful! Sweden has been rumoured to be very fond of suicide, but
    I've heard that it is a modern myth, and that there aren't in fact that
    many more suicides per capita, compared with other countries.


    Maybe the threat of being hacked-up by Islamists in
    the streets has perked 'em up ? Nothing like a little
    danger to add value to life :-)

    From what I can tell, for a good generation or so
    Sweden had become "Just TOO Boring" - everything
    was fair and safe and taken-care-of. This sort of
    'utopia' may NOT be so good for humans.

    "She was Karving her initials on the møøse with the
    sharpened end of an interspace tøøthbrush given her
    by Svenge - her brother-in-law - an Oslo dentist and
    star of many Norwegian møvies" :-)

    I think it was Ernest Gann who talked about flying transports in WWII and
    refueling in Greenland. The fjords looked all the same; pick the wrong
    one and you were screwed.

    "Earth" it ... an insanely rough, brutal, depressing
    coastline. Not a place for humans. MAYbe after the
    Big Melt ......

    Sounds reasonable! Did you know that the vikings had farms in greenland?
    I wonder how that was possible, since the only thing that changes the
    weather is cars. Hmm. ;)

    Yea, they DID have farms - and then there was a cold
    wave and they all starved.

    Today Eric the Red would own "Radical Red's Used
    Car & Truck Emporium" :-)

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  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to nospam@example.net on Thu Dec 26 03:06:59 2024
    On 2024-12-24, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Pike is a very nice fish for cooking! Another advantage with winter is
    that there are no ticks! =D

    My dictionary says that pike is the same fish I know from back in
    Denmark as "gedde". It may be tasty but is full of small, semisoft bones
    that stick in your throat. Impossible to clean it to avoid theose bones.
    So mostly good for making fish mousse ("brochettes"?).

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 02:47:52 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:55:24 +0100, D wrote:

    Please tell me more about libertarians faith in man kind since that is
    so opposite my own position, yet, I do call myself a libertarian.

    I don't know if you've seen https://www.lewrockwell.com/ . That certainly
    isn't the only libertarian site and not all the authors are particularly libertarian but it reflects the anarcho-capitalism that's associated with
    the label.

    There have been some twists along the way. I like to call it the War of
    the Murrays. Murray Rothbard was from the Austrian School, following
    Mises. That's the Ron Paul/Lew Rockwell branch. Murray Bookchin was left
    all the way and built on some of the American individualist anarchists
    like Tucker and Spooner. Also anti-government but also anti-capitalist.

    You get some odd crossovers like the Mises Institute publishing Carson.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Carson

    So, like many thing US libertarians might be a little different breed of
    cat.

    My view of the anarcho-capitalists are people who want to be happy
    capitalist in a completely free market with everyone playing by the rules,
    and no taxes. Oh, and legalize marijuana while we're at it. That's lead to
    a certain association of libertarians with dopers. The fly in the
    ointment?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarcho-capitalism#Non-aggression_principle

    I grew up in a town of around 2000 that had town meetings as made famous
    by Norman Rockwell.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_Speech_(painting)

    Did I mention feuding farmers? I find distributism fascinating but it,
    too, would require a better world than several thousand years of history suggests.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism

    Again without regard to theology I would say Leo XIII had more on the ball
    than the current resident of the Vatican.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 02:56:06 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:52:05 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! When I decide to go to a museum, I like having at
    least a day to really explore it! I do not like rushing through it in an
    hour or two. This is not so good.

    If you ever get up that way...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Henry_Ford

    Yes, it does have a restaurant. It also has a test tube alleged to contain Edison's dying breath as well as a flying car.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Flivver

    Almost 100 years and I still don't have my flying car.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 03:27:11 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 23:05:13 +0100, D wrote:

    aha. Would that even be noticeable among the millions in the US? Give
    them a bottle of vodka or two, and they will take care of themselves.

    Big political problem... There are some Inuit in Alaska that are usually referred to as Alaska Natives rather than Native Americans but they still
    fall under the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Would the Greenland Inuit be
    Indians or Danes?

    The most "weird" thing I had yesterday as part of the swedish tradition
    was sop https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sop and hte liquid used is the fat
    from the christmas ham (julskinka) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_ham .

    Many of our meals involved gravy and my father would always sop it up with bread at the end of the meal. He died of a myocardial infarction.
    Connection? My grandfather reportedly favored ham fat and garlic as a
    sandwich spread.

    I sometimes get ham slices since a whole ham is more than I want to live
    on for days. I did keep the roast boar tradition but it was a pork
    tenderloin rather than ham. That was a miscalculation. I thought Christmas
    was tomorrow and planned to cook the sauerbraten. However I wound up with leftover pig today. The nice thing about sauerbraten is a day or a week
    more soaking in the marinade only make it better.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 26 04:29:47 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 20:04:44 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    There is large-L Libertarian and small-l libertarian. I tend to fall
    into the latter group.

    "It Usually Begins with Ayn Rand" Tuccille's book is from '71 when the LP
    was coalescing and is a not very reverent look at the founders.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 26 04:39:31 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 20:34:13 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    They'll have to wait until it all melts. Geologists say it will have
    a huge long lake in the middle. Prime post-warming real-estate !
    Condos, hotels, mansions

    There will be some good stuff to find.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier_Girl

    iirc there are some transport planes buried too. Fly up the wrong fjord
    and you had a real problem.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Thu Dec 26 04:50:47 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 03:06:59 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    My dictionary says that pike is the same fish I know from back in
    Denmark as "gedde". It may be tasty but is full of small, semisoft bones
    that stick in your throat. Impossible to clean it to avoid theose bones.
    So mostly good for making fish mousse ("brochettes"?).

    That's the problem. I used to catch chain pickerel, sort of a small pike.
    They were good but you had to be careful.

    And, for Linux content, you can download Pike.

    https://pike.lysator.liu.se/

    I played with it years ago. It had some nice features but Python
    completely overshadowed it.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 12:28:17 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:51:09 +0100, D wrote:

    I thought about buying a cheap canoe for fishing, but I am worried about
    it not being light enough, or stable enough. I like to stand up when
    throwing the bait out. I thought about perhaps adding some kind of
    crossbar to the canoe to stabilize it. Another option I thought about
    was some kind of inflatable boat. But that would then mean I need a
    pump, and spend 15-20 minutes inflating it etc.

    I've seen Sears' 'Sairy Gamp' at the Adirondack Museum. I'm not sure I
    would even like to get in it.

    https://advancedelements.confluenceoutdoor.com/en-us/products/ advancedframetm-elite-kayak-with-pump/AE1012-OG-E-P

    Not that exact model but I have an older version. I also got the optional keel for a little more stability. It pumps up quickly with two main side tubes and ports on the decks and coaming. I've never fished from it.

    Hmm, but it seems to small! I would feel awfully cramped trying to handle
    a 4 kg pike in that little thing. On the other hand, from a size and
    weight point of view, it is good. I imagine that a 2 seat canoe would be
    too heavy to carry around by one person unless it's some hyper modern
    model made out of some magical material.

    What I'm envisioning with the light weight canoe is that I could just
    have it by the lake, cover it with a tarp and use it when I need to.
    Since it would be "just" a canoe, no one would steal it.

    When I lived in New Hampshire I built a 8' stitch-and-glue pram in a
    second floor apartment. It was a very rainy spring and I was bored. It fit
    in the back of my pickup, which was handy, and in a small rented storage locker since there was no way I was going to carry it back up the stairs.

    Mostly I rowed but I did have one memorable fishing experience. I thought
    I'd hooked a lunker but when I got it close to the boat it was a snapping turtle. The boat wasn't big enough for both of us so I cut the line.

    It was fun. I could row around the rivers and the Great Bay. You had to
    watch the time since it was all tidal. When I left NH I left it on the
    beach above high tide with the oars and other accessories. I hope someone
    got use of it.

    What a shame! It would have made a beautiful pet I imagine! Just think
    about it, you walking your turtle, when everyone else just is walking
    their dog or cat. You would have stolen the show!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 26 12:20:53 2024
    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/25/24 4:55 PM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 12:27:27 +0100, D wrote:

    As a libertarian, my favourite argument against libertarianism, is that >>>> it is very unstable, and very likely to be attacked from without, or
    over time, to be converted into kingdoms with serfs.

    Libertarians have a lot of faith in mankind that I don't share. Then there >>> is the problem that many of the libertarians I've know IRL tend to be
    nutters.

    This is interesting! I am very much in favour of libertarian, and by
    extension _decentralization_ because of a lack of faith in mankind!

    Decentralization CAN be useful, but without some kind
    of 'center' it seems to go very bad. Then we're back
    to the old city-state wars again ...

    You are talking about external countries and parties attacking, and the decentralized libertarian community not being able to defend itself?

    I often criticize socialists for their unreasonable trust in some 100% fair >> human being, not being corrupted and turning their socialist utopia into an >> authoritarian nightmare.

    'Socialism' requires a lot of denial ...

    This is the truth!

    Please tell me more about libertarians faith in man kind since that is so
    opposite my own position, yet, I do call myself a libertarian.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Jones_(Libertarian_politician)

    At least he stood out and became a little less blueish over the years. The >>> Libertarian Party typically gets 3% of the vote but outdid itself this
    year with 0.42% after nominating a pro-choice gay. The LP in this state
    ignored him completely.

    I think as a libertarian, I cannot participate in political parties.
    Nietzsche warned against parties and saw them as a threat against
    democracy. I agree with him completely. I think libertarianism is not
    compatible with parties and trying to change the system from within. That
    will just lead to them becoming corrupted over time and diluted to some
    other form of ism.

    'Parties' suck - but I think *that* kind of civil war
    still beats the real kind.

    You are a very mature man. People call me immature for not voting, I call myself principled. ;) My hope is that once I've convinced the world of not voting, the state will disintegrate naturally as people lose interest in
    it, and just plain stop paying their taxes. ;)

    Jokes aside, I do not vote because I do not want to use violence or threat
    of violence to impose my will on others. If I want a change in the rules,
    I prefer to use lawyers and carve out the changes I want (ideally). The established parties offer me nothing I want, regardless of color, so why
    should I waste my time and also, by accident, serve to legitimize them?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Thu Dec 26 12:33:32 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/25/24 6:30 AM, D wrote:


    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 22:46:42 +0100, D wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 24 Dec 2024 15:21:51 +0100, D wrote:

    We will see. When the wife drags me on a trip to the US, we'll stay >>>>>> for 2-3 weeks atleast and then there will be plenty of scouting.

    That's the condensed version. In '88 I spend from May to October
    scouting out the US west of Texas. I'd already poked around the eastern >>>>> states extensively.  It's a big place :)

    This is the truth! And it will become bigger still, when Canada joins
    the union! ;)

    To say nothing of Greenland. I'm surprised Denmark got its hackles up. A >>> cash sale versus pouring in a few billion kroner a year? It must have
    something to do with Denmark's long history of losing real estate; they
    want to hang on to the little they have.

    This is ridiuclous! Greenland is just losing them money, and should a war
    happen, they have _no_ capability of defending it either as one of the
    tiniest countries on the planet. They should sell it while they are ahead, >> or possibly bargain to sell the country, while retaining rights to oil and >> minerals, if that is why they are holding back. Maybe they expect hueg oil, >> gas and mineral findings? But if so, why haven't they exploited those?

    Denmark just decided to put a billion into Greenland's
    defense. That'll be the Danish portion. Trump's little
    ruse worked - and FAST.

    This is the truth! The scandinavians are a naive and easily scared lot, as
    can be seen by sweden joining Nato in record time.

    There have LONG been deals with the US mil ... numerous
    bases in strategic locations. This can be expanded (though
    kinda quietly for reasons of national pride).

    The Greenlanders themselves - sorry, but it IS a low-income
    proposition. Fish, some minerals, no transport, no infrastructure,
    no way to pull it together ......

    They'll have to wait until it all melts. Geologists say it
    will have a huge long lake in the middle. Prime post-warming
    real-estate ! Condos, hotels, mansions :-)

    I was surprised when I read the suicide rate in Greenland peaks in the
    summer. I guess it's easier to stay drunk in the winter without the light >>> hurting your hungover eyes.

    Be careful! Sweden has been rumoured to be very fond of suicide, but I've
    heard that it is a modern myth, and that there aren't in fact that many
    more suicides per capita, compared with other countries.


    Maybe the threat of being hacked-up by Islamists in
    the streets has perked 'em up ? Nothing like a little
    danger to add value to life :-)

    ;) I moved away instead. But yes, plenty of car burning going on from time
    to time as soon as someone disagrees with islam.

    From what I can tell, for a good generation or so
    Sweden had become "Just TOO Boring" - everything
    was fair and safe and taken-care-of. This sort of
    'utopia' may NOT be so good for humans.

    Haha, socialist utopia maybe. If you are a billionaire, sweden is actually quite a nice country without wealth tax and inheritance tax. It also tends
    to be fairly easy to get time with the leaders, since it is such a small country and they want to tan themselves in the glory of a billionaire in
    order to secure well paid consultancy gigs after their political careers
    are over.

    If you are a worker, you'll be taxed to death at 50%-65% so forget about
    trying to save or move upwards on the social ladder. I think that is
    unfair, but the socialists apparently think its great.

    "She was Karving her initials on the møøse with the
    sharpened end of an interspace tøøthbrush given her
    by Svenge - her brother-in-law - an Oslo dentist and
    star of many Norwegian møvies" :-)

    Sorry?

    I think it was Ernest Gann who talked about flying transports in WWII and >>> refueling in Greenland. The fjords looked all the same; pick the wrong one >>> and you were screwed.

    "Earth" it ... an insanely rough, brutal, depressing
    coastline. Not a place for humans. MAYbe after the
    Big Melt ......

    Sounds reasonable! Did you know that the vikings had farms in greenland? I >> wonder how that was possible, since the only thing that changes the weather >> is cars. Hmm. ;)

    Yea, they DID have farms - and then there was a cold
    wave and they all starved.

    Today Eric the Red would own "Radical Red's Used
    Car & Truck Emporium" :-)

    Could very well be true!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 12:42:41 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:55:24 +0100, D wrote:

    Please tell me more about libertarians faith in man kind since that is
    so opposite my own position, yet, I do call myself a libertarian.

    I don't know if you've seen https://www.lewrockwell.com/ . That certainly isn't the only libertarian site and not all the authors are particularly libertarian but it reflects the anarcho-capitalism that's associated with
    the label.

    Oh yes, I've seen and read. When I was young I was all about rockwell,
    mises, fee, the cato institute etc. But as I got older, life got in the
    way, so I find myself minding my own business (my actual business) more,
    and being less involved in ideology.

    There have been some twists along the way. I like to call it the War of
    the Murrays. Murray Rothbard was from the Austrian School, following
    Mises. That's the Ron Paul/Lew Rockwell branch. Murray Bookchin was left
    all the way and built on some of the American individualist anarchists
    like Tucker and Spooner. Also anti-government but also anti-capitalist.

    You get some odd crossovers like the Mises Institute publishing Carson.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Carson

    So, like many thing US libertarians might be a little different breed of
    cat.

    I find left libertarians such a weird, contradictory concept. I have never
    been able to understand that branch of the family tree.

    My view of the anarcho-capitalists are people who want to be happy
    capitalist in a completely free market with everyone playing by the rules,

    Yes!

    and no taxes. Oh, and legalize marijuana while we're at it. That's lead to

    Yes! Well, as long as you don't smoke on my property. I can't stand the
    smell. I'll stay with beer, that's good enough for me!

    a certain association of libertarians with dopers. The fly in the
    ointment?

    I think the dopers will eventually take care of themselves and slowly disappear. ;)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarcho-capitalism#Non-aggression_principle

    I grew up in a town of around 2000 that had town meetings as made famous
    by Norman Rockwell.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_Speech_(painting)

    Ahh, so that's what you look like in real life + bear and pony tail? ;)

    Did I mention feuding farmers? I find distributism fascinating but it,
    too, would require a better world than several thousand years of history suggests.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism

    Again without regard to theology I would say Leo XIII had more on the ball than the current resident of the Vatican.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 12:44:57 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 22:52:05 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! When I decide to go to a museum, I like having at
    least a day to really explore it! I do not like rushing through it in an
    hour or two. This is not so good.

    If you ever get up that way...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Henry_Ford

    Yes, it does have a restaurant. It also has a test tube alleged to contain Edison's dying breath as well as a flying car.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Flivver

    Almost 100 years and I still don't have my flying car.


    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from everyone owning
    a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to own a flying car. Even
    a helicopter I would be content with! Imagine... then I could build a
    _real_ fortress of solitude, far, far away from any public roads!

    But things are brightening. Maybe we can buy one of those big flying
    drones that can also take people?

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  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Thu Dec 26 12:46:55 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-24, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
    Pike is a very nice fish for cooking! Another advantage with winter is
    that there are no ticks! =D

    My dictionary says that pike is the same fish I know from back in
    Denmark as "gedde". It may be tasty but is full of small, semisoft bones
    that stick in your throat. Impossible to clean it to avoid theose bones.
    So mostly good for making fish mousse ("brochettes"?).


    This is the truth! Gdda (in swedish)! The bones are not a problem if you
    clean it correctly. You can easily cut out most of the bones. It takes me
    about 10 minutes or so, possibly 15 if it is a smaller fish, to clean it without bones.

    The bigger the fish, the easier it is to clean without bones, and the less waste you'll have. I would not recommend going below 1 kg, then it starts
    to get annoying. 1.5-2 kg is my sweet spot for a nice, tasty gdda! =D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 12:51:28 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 23:05:13 +0100, D wrote:

    aha. Would that even be noticeable among the millions in the US? Give
    them a bottle of vodka or two, and they will take care of themselves.

    Big political problem... There are some Inuit in Alaska that are usually referred to as Alaska Natives rather than Native Americans but they still fall under the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Would the Greenland Inuit be
    Indians or Danes?

    Hmm, good question! I'd say BIA.

    The most "weird" thing I had yesterday as part of the swedish tradition
    was sop https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sop and hte liquid used is the fat
    from the christmas ham (julskinka)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_ham .

    Many of our meals involved gravy and my father would always sop it up with bread at the end of the meal. He died of a myocardial infarction.
    Connection? My grandfather reportedly favored ham fat and garlic as a sandwich spread.

    Nah... that's just propaganda from the vegetable farmers! ;) On the german
    side of the world, the best spread is Schmalz! A super invention!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmaltz

    I sometimes get ham slices since a whole ham is more than I want to live
    on for days. I did keep the roast boar tradition but it was a pork
    tenderloin rather than ham. That was a miscalculation. I thought Christmas was tomorrow and planned to cook the sauerbraten. However I wound up with leftover pig today. The nice thing about sauerbraten is a day or a week
    more soaking in the marinade only make it better.

    1.5 year ago I had smoked, bbq boar. It was divine!! My wifes cousin told
    my wife that he will take me hunting in 2025. That would be very nice! I
    hope it happens, I'm very excited! I suspect it will be birds, but let's
    see.

    What we do with our left over ham is to freeze it, and then use it as
    filler in crepe or pyttipanna or other food during all of january and
    february. When we were 4 celebrating christmas, the ham would actually
    finished fairly quickly, but now we're only 2, so it takes a while.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 19:09:13 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:28:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Hmm, but it seems to small! I would feel awfully cramped trying to
    handle a 4 kg pike in that little thing. On the other hand, from a size
    and weight point of view, it is good. I imagine that a 2 seat canoe
    would be too heavy to carry around by one person unless it's some hyper modern model made out of some magical material.

    My father bought a 12' aluminum boat, a common size, with a 7 1/2 HP
    Evinrude outboard. Memories of horsing it onto the car top racks
    discouraged me from getting too big. The alternative is a trailer but
    that's another complication. I can inflate the kayak, throw it in the
    water, and paddle away while people are still waiting in line at the ramp.

    The problem with the kayak is there aren't that many interesting lakes and
    they tend to be infested with power boats and JetSkis. The rivers are nice
    but I can't paddle upstream effectively locally.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 18:53:52 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:44:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from everyone
    owning a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to own a flying
    car. Even a helicopter I would be content with! Imagine... then I could
    build a _real_ fortress of solitude, far, far away from any public
    roads!

    Now there's a scary thought. When I was learning to fly a fixed wing the
    person teaching me, an ag pilot with several thousand hours in the air,
    was trying to tech himself to fly a helicopter. He was as frustrated as I
    was. The motivation was to allow precise insecticide application rather
    than the fly low and open the valves technique.

    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only
    VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules. The other problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a small airfield
    10 miles from town.

    The light aircraft industry has had its dreams, particularly after WWII
    with returning servicemen but they never worked out. The FAA came up with
    a sport pilot license which only required a drivers license and not a
    medical certificate and shorter training. It had limitations but the major problem was a 1320 maximum takeoff weight. Most existing planes to make
    that limit are Piper Cubs, Taylorcraft, Ercoupes, and other antiques,
    often taildraggers for added excitement. Cessna 150s, Piper Tomahawks, and other common training planes are too heavy. There are some new planes that
    meet the requirements. Cessna tried with the 162, a cut down 152, but at $150,000 it didn't sell.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 19:31:07 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:51:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Nah... that's just propaganda from the vegetable farmers! On the german
    side of the world, the best spread is Schmalz! A super invention!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmaltz

    I've seen that in the Jewish section of supermarket aisles. I think the
    Jews have switched to Crisco since it;s pareve. What you do see more
    frequently is lard (manteca) used in Hispanic cooking.

    My mother would make suet pudding for Christmas. I guess she believed in
    truth in advertising since a similar desert is called 'plum pudding'
    despite there being no plums involved. A guest had two helpings and asked
    for the recipe of the delicious stuff. When she started with 'You take 2
    pounds of suet..' he excused himself. Sound of retching could be heard
    from the bathroom.

    Looking back a plateful swimming in hard sauce was a little rich. It was
    washed down with several rounds of Angel Tips, crème de cacao with heavy
    cream floated on top. Good thing Christmas only came once a year.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 19:15:58 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:20:53 +0100, D wrote:

    You are talking about external countries and parties attacking, and the decentralized libertarian community not being able to defend itself?

    Or the next town over the hill. iirc there are quite a few castles in
    Europe that weren't built to be scenic attractions. What has changed? It's
    not a European trait either; modern Africa anyone?

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 19:51:23 2024
    On 2024-12-26, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:44:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from everyone
    owning a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to own a flying
    car. Even a helicopter I would be content with! Imagine... then I could
    build a _real_ fortress of solitude, far, far away from any public
    roads!

    Now there's a scary thought. When I was learning to fly a fixed wing the person teaching me, an ag pilot with several thousand hours in the air,
    was trying to tech himself to fly a helicopter. He was as frustrated as I was. The motivation was to allow precise insecticide application rather
    than the fly low and open the valves technique.

    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules.

    Yes, weather is a biggie. And IFR isn't a magic pill, especially in
    a small plane without de/anti-icing equipment. If the freezing level
    is below the MEA but the ceiling is high enough to avoid terrain,
    IFR is not an option, but VFR is.

    The other problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a
    small airfield 10 miles from town.

    That's the other biggie. When planning a trip, an airport's proximity
    to a town is a big factor.

    Still, I hope flying never gains mass appeal. Can you imagine the sky
    filled with the kind of idiots you see on the road?

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 27 00:39:12 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 19:51:23 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    Still, I hope flying never gains mass appeal. Can you imagine the sky
    filled with the kind of idiots you see on the road?

    There is that. Personally I put in the hours, took the written, and never followed through. There were days and days and on the not 100% days I
    wasn't confident I would do the right thing when the shit hit the fan. Or
    the fan stopped working for that matter.

    Rationally I know a plane is about a thousand times safer than doing 100
    mph on the interstate on a bike but I never claimed to be rational. I'm
    not sure my programming is really rational, but that's a philosophical argument.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 21:41:29 2024
    On 12/26/24 2:15 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:20:53 +0100, D wrote:

    You are talking about external countries and parties attacking, and the
    decentralized libertarian community not being able to defend itself?

    Or the next town over the hill. iirc there are quite a few castles in
    Europe that weren't built to be scenic attractions. What has changed? It's not a European trait either; modern Africa anyone?

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Dec 26 22:41:34 2024
    On 12/26/24 1:53 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:44:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from everyone
    owning a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to own a flying
    car. Even a helicopter I would be content with! Imagine... then I could
    build a _real_ fortress of solitude, far, far away from any public
    roads!

    Now there's a scary thought. When I was learning to fly a fixed wing the person teaching me, an ag pilot with several thousand hours in the air,
    was trying to tech himself to fly a helicopter. He was as frustrated as I was. The motivation was to allow precise insecticide application rather
    than the fly low and open the valves technique.


    About 25 years ago, a smart guy I knew decided he wanted
    to fly helicopters. He described it as somewhat like trying
    to balance on a big rubber ball. About the third or fourth
    lesson he CRASHED the thing while trying to hover just ten
    feet off the ground. All survived OK, but that was the
    END of the lessons :-)



    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules. The other problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a small airfield
    10 miles from town.

    Today, it IS possible to build a 'stable' helicopter or,
    even easier, a stable multi-motor drone. Saw a larger
    drone - intended for ag work - that was about 4x6 feet
    in size - auto-hover a few feet above the ground ON A
    WINDY DAY - and barely vary position or altitude by
    an inch or two. You could walk up and kinda shove the
    thing and it'd spring right back to where it was
    supposed to be.

    As such, replacing full mechanical with fly-by-wire,
    you could get such machines to do what they figure
    you WANT them to do rather than respond to a millimeter
    of random joystick input. Military - probably still
    want 'em to be "touchy" - but for 'consumer' needs ...

    I think the F-16 was the first performance aircraft
    where humans didn't ACTUALLY fly them - it was all
    "smart" fly-by-wire. Humans could not cope with the
    changing aerodynamics at all possible speeds and
    attitudes and such, so the computer did the real
    work, 'translating' the pilots inputs. It worked.
    TODAY it'd be relatively CHEAP and maybe even better.

    The light aircraft industry has had its dreams, particularly after WWII
    with returning servicemen but they never worked out. The FAA came up with
    a sport pilot license which only required a drivers license and not a
    medical certificate and shorter training. It had limitations but the major problem was a 1320 maximum takeoff weight. Most existing planes to make
    that limit are Piper Cubs, Taylorcraft, Ercoupes, and other antiques,
    often taildraggers for added excitement. Cessna 150s, Piper Tomahawks, and other common training planes are too heavy. There are some new planes that meet the requirements. Cessna tried with the 162, a cut down 152, but at $150,000 it didn't sell.

    I've flown Cubs ... right down to hand-cranking
    the propeller. They are slow, but there's a nice
    'floaty' aspect to them, and quite stable, once
    in the air. Fat wing intended for low speeds. The
    one I few a few times only had like 30 horsepower,
    the originals were like 20hp.

    The C150/152 is great 'general purpose' craft. Again
    very stable but feels more 'airplane' than the Cub
    and is notably faster. Flaps and engine power down
    you COULD fly them at a bit under 40knots though
    it was wobbly. Extra plus, they're intended for
    students - which means robust construction. As such
    I never saw the 'weight' as a negative - more as
    an insurance policy.

    Never liked newer Pipers - can't see a damned thing
    with that wing under you. Also knew a guy who worked
    on one of their lines ... and NOPE, did NOT want a
    plane he helped bang together :-)

    A number of corps are fronting 'air-taxi' now using
    what are essentially large drones. One or two don't
    even have a pilot, all automated. Would NOT wanna
    get on one will less than six thrusters though ...
    that way one can die and the rest can still compensate.

    As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
    I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal
    automatic route control. Humans don't even
    navigate 2-D very well ......

    Oh well, glory days ... I think the 2nd OPEC embargo
    was the end - fuel prices went through the roof and
    you couldn't always get the CORRECT fuel (a stuck
    valve in a small plane engine is NOT encouraging).
    Just couldn't afford to keep flying. BUT, still
    KNOW how, just in case .....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 04:57:03 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was living
    on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.

    A lot of the petty squabbles were eclipsed by the Thirty Years war but it
    took a Bismarck to put together I don't know how many pissant
    principalities, free cities, and other local turfs after the Holy Roman
    Empire fell apart.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 00:54:26 2024
    On 12/26/24 11:57 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was living
    on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.


    Nope. Seems to be a 'human nature' thing ... hardwired
    will to dominance.

    We can, sometimes, alter the environment within HOW
    that trait is expressed - but it doesn't go away.
    After a time of peace/unity general dissatisfaction
    seems to grow and eventually overwhelm those engineered
    methods.


    A lot of the petty squabbles were eclipsed by the Thirty Years war but it took a Bismarck to put together I don't know how many pissant
    principalities, free cities, and other local turfs after the Holy Roman Empire fell apart.

    Things fell apart almost as quickly as they were put
    together. Alliances, sentiments, needs, changed very
    quickly. Kinda 'Game Of Thrones' but without the
    dragons.

    Post-Rome, Europe was a MESS. Only Charlemagne kinda
    glued it together at all - but then almost only by
    the sword. Oddly, I think the Viking invasions did
    more to stabilize things - sort of the 'alien invasion'
    that brought petty gripes and ambitions more onto the
    same wavelength.

    DaVinci's Italy was a constant war between the many
    city states for a long time. The Popes, while
    theoretically the ultimate authorities, instead
    seemed to just profit financially and politically
    from all the chaos and let it go on. Then a
    de Medici became Pope ........

    Greece ... amazing they had TIME to repel the
    Persians - too busy fighting each other.

    "I have stuff. You have stuff. If I take YOUR stuff
    then I'll have twice as much stuff !" - simple logic.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 05:53:02 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 22:41:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    About 25 years ago, a smart guy I knew decided he wanted to fly
    helicopters. He described it as somewhat like trying to balance on a
    big rubber ball. About the third or fourth lesson he CRASHED the
    thing while trying to hover just ten feet off the ground. All
    survived OK, but that was the END of the lessons

    That was John's technique. I don't know if he ever had a teacher or if he
    got his hands on a heli and was trying to figure it out. afaik he never
    crashed but he would try to hover until he got disgusted.

    That's a popular technique.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Rhinebeck_Aerodrome

    It wasn't part of the airshow but the Bleriot did fly. It used wing
    warping for control. I asked him how he learned to fly it. 'You start out taxiing, and get faster and faster..' That didn't work for one of my neighbors. He built an ultralight and I would see him taxiing up and down
    the pasture. I don't think it was planned but one day he got off the
    ground. He probably panicked and tried the u-turn maneuver that seldom
    works well. He could have crossed the river and landed on the ranch on the other side.

    Today, it IS possible to build a 'stable' helicopter or, even easier,
    a stable multi-motor drone. Saw a larger drone - intended for ag work
    - that was about 4x6 feet in size - auto-hover a few feet above the
    ground ON A WINDY DAY - and barely vary position or altitude by an
    inch or two. You could walk up and kinda shove the thing and it'd
    spring right back to where it was supposed to be.

    I've got a couple of cheap drones. One is joystick controlled like an R.C
    plane with no intelligence. It's a handful. The other is a Tello. DJI
    doesn't make them any more but it's a lot more sophisticated. It uses a down-facing camera to maintain position and is controlled by a phone app.

    https://www.thedronegirl.com/2018/05/08/dji-tello-drone-review/

    "However, the drone does not succeed in windy conditions — not even in
    mildly windy or breezy conditions. I made the mistake of flying Tello on
    the roof of my San Francisco apartment — do not try this!! It almost blew away!"

    That's the understatement of the year.

    I think the F-16 was the first performance aircraft where humans
    didn't ACTUALLY fly them - it was all "smart" fly-by-wire. Humans
    could not cope with the changing aerodynamics at all possible speeds
    and attitudes and such, so the computer did the real work,
    'translating' the pilots inputs. It worked.
    TODAY it'd be relatively CHEAP and maybe even better.

    I remember reading about it in the IEEE journal. A plane that's so
    unstable a human can't fly it didn't sound like a good idea. They also had
    a write up on the TOW missile. That didn't sound like a great idea either.
    They never did work out a fire-and-forget version.

    The C150/152 is great 'general purpose' craft. Again very stable but
    feels more 'airplane' than the Cub and is notably faster. Flaps and
    engine power down you COULD fly them at a bit under 40knots though it
    was wobbly. Extra plus, they're intended for students - which means
    robust construction. As such I never saw the 'weight' as a negative -
    more as an insurance policy.

    I flew a 150 I was thinking about buying. The owner had decorated it with
    a Snoopy motif. Later I flew a 152 once. I learned on a Lark, Rockwell's version of a 172. There were two of them, both elderly. One added a twist
    to the final -- pumping up the brakes if you expected to make a graceful landing.

    When I went to Ft. Wayne the rentals were Tomahawks. The FBO had died and
    his wife was trying to keep the business together so they weren't in great shape either. The gullwing door latch broke on one night flight. There was
    no danger but it got a bit noisy. Then there was the cross country to Kalamazoo. Nothing like having to get the FBO to jump start your plane.

    To top it off the instructor was a young woman building hours towards her commercial ticket. Odd choice of careers since as far as I could tell she
    was scared of flying. Or maybe it was a more cautious approach than an ag pilot. His advice if you were going down in the woods was to visualize the
    tree tops as a landing strip. Try not to kill yourself climbing down from
    the tree. That wasn't theoretical since he'd parked his Thrush in some
    strange places. He'd inherited the business from his father, who was also
    a ag pilot. Living up to the statistics, he was killed in a motorcycle
    crash not a plane wreck.

    Never liked newer Pipers - can't see a damned thing with that wing
    under you. Also knew a guy who worked on one of their lines ... and
    NOPE, did NOT want a plane he helped bang together

    The company I worked for bought the old Thurston factory in Maine,
    conveniently located on an airstrip for our amusement. One day there was
    the classic low wing trying to land on a high wing. Luckily both survived.

    As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
    I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal automatic route
    control. Humans don't even navigate 2-D very well ......

    Too many variable. My boss at that company learned to fly, bought a plane,
    and shortened his commute time to meetings in the Boston area. One day he headed off to a meeting in Kennebunk, about 16 miles. Then the fog rolled
    in from the ocean. He found his way back, landed the plane, kissed the
    ground, and put the plane up for sale. A Lincoln Town Car wasn't so bad
    after all for commuting.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 09:25:52 2024
    On 2024-12-27, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    "I have stuff. You have stuff. If I take YOUR stuff
    then I'll have twice as much stuff !" - simple logic.

    "If you have less stuff, then there's more for me."

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 09:25:53 2024
    On 2024-12-27, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was
    living on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.

    I once set myself a project of reading the Bible end to end, rather
    than depending on other people's summaries. I bogged down around
    I Kings - all that violence was getting too depressing.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 12:13:38 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:44:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from everyone
    owning a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to own a flying
    car. Even a helicopter I would be content with! Imagine... then I could
    build a _real_ fortress of solitude, far, far away from any public
    roads!

    Now there's a scary thought. When I was learning to fly a fixed wing the person teaching me, an ag pilot with several thousand hours in the air,
    was trying to tech himself to fly a helicopter. He was as frustrated as I was. The motivation was to allow precise insecticide application rather
    than the fly low and open the valves technique.

    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules. The other problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a small airfield
    10 miles from town.

    The light aircraft industry has had its dreams, particularly after WWII
    with returning servicemen but they never worked out. The FAA came up with
    a sport pilot license which only required a drivers license and not a
    medical certificate and shorter training. It had limitations but the major problem was a 1320 maximum takeoff weight. Most existing planes to make
    that limit are Piper Cubs, Taylorcraft, Ercoupes, and other antiques,
    often taildraggers for added excitement. Cessna 150s, Piper Tomahawks, and other common training planes are too heavy. There are some new planes that meet the requirements. Cessna tried with the 162, a cut down 152, but at $150,000 it didn't sell.


    Don't you worry... I*m sure Trump is on it! =) If not, maybe drone
    technology and established mass markets will grow the market for sub 1320 weight vehicles, and lower the price as well!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 12:17:54 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:28:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Hmm, but it seems to small! I would feel awfully cramped trying to
    handle a 4 kg pike in that little thing. On the other hand, from a size
    and weight point of view, it is good. I imagine that a 2 seat canoe
    would be too heavy to carry around by one person unless it's some hyper
    modern model made out of some magical material.

    My father bought a 12' aluminum boat, a common size, with a 7 1/2 HP
    Evinrude outboard. Memories of horsing it onto the car top racks
    discouraged me from getting too big. The alternative is a trailer but
    that's another complication. I can inflate the kayak, throw it in the
    water, and paddle away while people are still waiting in line at the ramp.

    This is the truth! It is also this scenario that prevents me from getting
    a regular boat.

    The problem with the kayak is there aren't that many interesting lakes and they tend to be infested with power boats and JetSkis. The rivers are nice but I can't paddle upstream effectively locally.

    May all the power boats be damned! I especially like the ones who see that
    I'm sitting in a tiny fishing boat, and then they speed by at extra high
    speed to see if they can sink my boat with the waves.

    I do think though, that the police took the boat. That would almost be
    justice. ;) They took my boat too, but I got it back! Actually it was my
    wifes fathers boat, but taking random peoples property is regular
    procedure in eastern europe.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 12:21:30 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:51:28 +0100, D wrote:

    Nah... that's just propaganda from the vegetable farmers! On the german
    side of the world, the best spread is Schmalz! A super invention!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmaltz

    I've seen that in the Jewish section of supermarket aisles. I think the

    You should buy it! Add some crispy small pieces of bacon to it, and
    possibly some fried onion and you have a very good spread!

    Jews have switched to Crisco since it;s pareve. What you do see more frequently is lard (manteca) used in Hispanic cooking.

    My mother would make suet pudding for Christmas. I guess she believed in truth in advertising since a similar desert is called 'plum pudding'
    despite there being no plums involved. A guest had two helpings and asked
    for the recipe of the delicious stuff. When she started with 'You take 2 pounds of suet..' he excused himself. Sound of retching could be heard
    from the bathroom.

    Looking back a plateful swimming in hard sauce was a little rich. It was washed down with several rounds of Angel Tips, crème de cacao with heavy cream floated on top. Good thing Christmas only came once a year.

    Wow! What did your doctor say? My fathers doctor told him to cut down on
    meat, and he responded that that will never happen. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 12:24:29 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/26/24 2:15 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:20:53 +0100, D wrote:

    You are talking about external countries and parties attacking, and the
    decentralized libertarian community not being able to defend itself?

    Or the next town over the hill. iirc there are quite a few castles in
    Europe that weren't built to be scenic attractions. What has changed? It's >> not a European trait either; modern Africa anyone?

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Nonsense... in my scenario we would just crush our enemies with the deep spiritual love of Jesus!

    Or we'd get nukes! ;)

    Or maybe sleeper agents with some biological warfare concoction!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 12:27:30 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    A number of corps are fronting 'air-taxi' now using
    what are essentially large drones. One or two don't
    even have a pilot, all automated. Would NOT wanna
    get on one will less than six thrusters though ...
    that way one can die and the rest can still compensate.

    As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
    I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal
    automatic route control. Humans don't even
    navigate 2-D very well ......

    I think scaled up drones is as close as we'll get to flying cars within the next
    20 years or so. I'd definitely be up for it! Having one myself would be great. I
    would then need to no road to my fortress of solitude, but could just fly in and
    out of there! =)

    Oh well, glory days ... I think the 2nd OPEC embargo
    was the end - fuel prices went through the roof and
    you couldn't always get the CORRECT fuel (a stuck
    valve in a small plane engine is NOT encouraging).
    Just couldn't afford to keep flying. BUT, still
    KNOW how, just in case .....


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Dec 27 12:31:55 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/26/24 11:57 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was living
    on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.


    Nope. Seems to be a 'human nature' thing ... hardwired
    will to dominance.

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not saying quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible. This is
    why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for socialism... or libertarianism! ;)

    Things fell apart almost as quickly as they were put
    together. Alliances, sentiments, needs, changed very
    quickly. Kinda 'Game Of Thrones' but without the
    dragons.

    Post-Rome, Europe was a MESS. Only Charlemagne kinda
    glued it together at all - but then almost only by
    the sword. Oddly, I think the Viking invasions did
    more to stabilize things - sort of the 'alien invasion'
    that brought petty gripes and ambitions more onto the
    same wavelength.

    DaVinci's Italy was a constant war between the many
    city states for a long time. The Popes, while
    theoretically the ultimate authorities, instead
    seemed to just profit financially and politically
    from all the chaos and let it go on. Then a
    de Medici became Pope ........

    This is good! A city state does a lot less harm than a modern country.
    That is why I like decentralization! With many city states, the
    competition for business will also be harder, which results in lower taxes
    as well!

    Unless we're talking socialist city states, or small monarchies. Those are
    not so fun. =(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 27 12:32:46 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-27, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was
    living on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.

    I once set myself a project of reading the Bible end to end, rather
    than depending on other people's summaries. I bogged down around
    I Kings - all that violence was getting too depressing.

    I read the NT, never got around to the OT.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 14:35:43 2024
    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick google.
    My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to feel
    they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and rub themselves with witches ointment in private...


    --
    The biggest threat to humanity comes from socialism, which has utterly
    diverted our attention away from what really matters to our existential survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations
    into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with
    what it actually is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 27 14:33:15 2024
    On 23/12/2024 21:13, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    Not that we didn't get a
    fairly close look while our poor little 172, all loaded up on a warm
    summer day, struggled for altitude off that strip, which is at 5500
    feet. We had to circle to get high enough to get through the pass
    toward Bozeman.

    LOL! Yep. At least you didn't get into a downdraught that exceeded your ROC....
    --
    In a Time of Universal Deceit, Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act.

    - George Orwell

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 14:45:30 2024
    On 23/12/2024 21:25, rbowman wrote:
    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based
    on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    I got quite deeply involved in stocks shares and funds at one time.

    - Anyone who tells you how to make a fortune begs the question of why
    they didn't make one themselves and not write a book.
    - telling punters to buy a stock is the last refuge of someone who
    bought early and just wants to make another percent before it nosedives.
    -at least 50% of funds do worse than the stock market index. If you dont
    know which ones, buy a tracker.
    - physical gold is generally at least a way to keep place with
    inflation. Apparently a loaf of bread today costs the same in gold as it
    did in Roman times...
    - If you dont want to spend your days with your nose glued to the market
    data, find a fund manager who does, and let him take his 1%.
    - If there is anything more rigged than FX I have yet to find it.
    - Futures and options for 'domestic' investors are rigged so the bank
    always wins. Unless you do straight forward futures trading at the raw
    level, dont touch it.
    - aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.







    I'll stay far away, thank you.

    --
    Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's
    too dark to read.

    Groucho Marx

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 17:46:13 2024
    rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 12:44:57 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! Talk about a visionary! He took the logical step from
    everyone owning a car, to everyone owning a plane! I would like to
    own a flying car. Even a helicopter I would be content with!
    Imagine... then I could build a _real_ fortress of solitude, far,
    far away from any public roads!

    Now there's a scary thought. When I was learning to fly a fixed wing
    the person teaching me, an ag pilot with several thousand hours in
    the air, was trying to tech himself to fly a helicopter. He was as frustrated as I was. The motivation was to allow precise insecticide application rather than the fly low and open the valves technique.

    Never flown one (other than in video games, which don't count) but just thinking about the physics involved leads one to the conclusion that it
    is similar a way to learning to recover from a skid in a car (only
    likely 10x or 100x for a helo). You can do all the "book reading" you
    want, but until you practice enough times for real for the proper
    reaction to become instinctual you will not be able to "recover" or
    "fly".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rich@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 27 17:37:56 2024
    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> wrote:
    Still, I hope flying never gains mass appeal. Can you imagine the
    sky filled with the kind of idiots you see on the road?

    That was just my thought as well. Given how /well/ many folks drive
    (and that is in an almost "Flat Land" [1] environment) I can only fear
    what they might do when they have the ability to deliberatly move in
    the third dimension via their own power system. While there /might/ be
    fewer collisions between the cars (due to the addition of 3D movement)
    I rather expect the amount of colliding with fixed objects (buildings,
    poles, mountain sides, etc.) to markedly go up. And then there's the
    "fall from the sky" problem when the driver falls asleep at the wheel
    and the "fall from the sky" problem when mechanical/fuel issues occur.

    I.e., today, not paying attention to one's fuel level results in an inconvienent call to AAA (or whomever one's favority 'roadside
    assistance' is) when the engine sputters to a stop due to an empty
    tank. In a flying car, running out of fuel entails an emergency need
    for an unpowered landing (or a crash if there is no suitable landing
    area).

    And much like how most drivers never bother to practice simple
    techniques like "skid recovery" during slippery conditions, most will
    also never practice things such as "unpowered landing" with their
    flying car, and be totally unprepared to do so when an "unpowered"
    situation arises.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_Land

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 18:04:06 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:31:55 +0100, D wrote:

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not
    saying quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible.
    This is why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for
    socialism... or libertarianism!

    After millennia the sheep breeding program has been less than successful.
    There have been entire religions spawned to convince the sheep a better
    world awaits them and they should be nice and well behaved in the
    meantime.

    I think socialists and libertarians are both dreamers. Sometimes they even recognize their affinity:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian_socialism

    I'm not opposed to the dream. I like interesting fantasies. After all my
    work Linux box and one of my personal Linux boxes show

    $ hostname
    kropotkin

    Then morning comes and I wake up.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 18:06:20 2024
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only >> VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules. The other >> problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a small airfield
    10 miles from town.

    I do not get it.

    Why should having access to the instruments prevent you from using your eyes?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 18:25:53 2024
    On 23/12/2024 21:25, rbowman wrote:
    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my
    head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based
    on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    On 2024-12-27, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I got quite deeply involved in stocks shares and funds at one time.

    - Anyone who tells you how to make a fortune begs the question of why
    they didn't make one themselves and not write a book.
    - telling punters to buy a stock is the last refuge of someone who
    bought early and just wants to make another percent before it nosedives.
    -at least 50% of funds do worse than the stock market index. If you dont
    know which ones, buy a tracker.
    - physical gold is generally at least a way to keep place with
    inflation. Apparently a loaf of bread today costs the same in gold as it
    did in Roman times...
    - If you dont want to spend your days with your nose glued to the market data, find a fund manager who does, and let him take his 1%.
    - If there is anything more rigged than FX I have yet to find it.
    - Futures and options for 'domestic' investors are rigged so the bank
    always wins. Unless you do straight forward futures trading at the raw
    level, dont touch it.
    - aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    This matches exactly my experience. 100% agree with all of these. Figured
    these out more or less in the order listed.

    Around the time I turned 50, I realized I was going to need to boost my retirement savings. I thought Ï work in internet technology, I know
    which are the good and growing companies in my field, I will buy some of
    that.

    Then 2000 happened, and my Cisco, Osicom, Juniper etc stocks all took a
    real nosedive.

    So I figured that I needed to diversify. Bought some Ford Motor, United Airlines, Robinson/May dept stores, ... only to see every single one
    descend into near bankruptcy.

    So I headed for the SP500 funds, and have done quite well with that.
    There have been some dips, but always recovered spectacularly. My one ïndividual" stock is Berkshire (Buffett). But that is really more of a
    very well-managed, diversified investment fund.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Fri Dec 27 18:30:47 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:25:53 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-27, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was
    living on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.

    I once set myself a project of reading the Bible end to end, rather than depending on other people's summaries. I bogged down around I Kings -
    all that violence was getting too depressing.

    I don't know if I ever made it that far. Ecclesiasticus (not Ecclesiastes) isn't too bad; it reads like Hesiod or the Havamal. The first time I made
    it through the NT was 'Good News for Modern Man'. It was more or less in English and about all I had to read at the time.

    As for the rest I'm surprised it preserved. Joseph's brothers sell him as
    a slave. He wheedles his way to second in command in Egypt and sets up a
    scheme to store all the confiscated grain in the good years. He also
    invites all his friends and relatives to share in the good times.

    Bad times come and he sells the grain back to the starving farmers, taking
    all their land. The Egyptians get pissed off so Joe and his tribe call
    down some plagues, steal everything that isn't nailed down, and beat feet.

    Fine, upstanding story...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 18:34:23 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:32:46 +0100, D wrote:

    I read the NT, never got around to the OT.

    Nietzsche said something about putting gloves on before reading the NT;
    the OT needs a full hazmat suit. Most religions come up with a mythology
    that isn't quite as appalling.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 27 18:41:45 2024
    On 2024-12-27, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:13, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    Not that we didn't get a
    fairly close look while our poor little 172, all loaded up on a warm
    summer day, struggled for altitude off that strip, which is at 5500
    feet. We had to circle to get high enough to get through the pass
    toward Bozeman.

    LOL! Yep. At least you didn't get into a downdraught that exceeded your ROC....

    No, that happened when we ran into some weather on the way back.
    Fortunately we were able to turn around and get out of there.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 19:14:06 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:21:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! What did your doctor say? My fathers doctor told him to cut down on meat, and he responded that that will never happen.

    We weren't big on doctors. In that era most people saw a doctor when there
    was something obviously wrong that you couldn't fix yourself. Most people didn't have medical insurance or a plan at work. otoh, you could pay for a office visit or house call out of pocket without mortgaging the farm. You
    have to remember even Medicare was started in '65. Health insurance and
    the health industry have fed on each other.

    Since he died at work my father was autopsied. He had arteriosclerosis,
    Type 2 diabetes, and a few other problems. As far as he was concerned he
    was as healthy as a horse.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 18:59:34 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:17:54 +0100, D wrote:

    May all the power boats be damned! I especially like the ones who see
    that I'm sitting in a tiny fishing boat, and then they speed by at extra
    high speed to see if they can sink my boat with the waves.

    My father and I were fishing in a rented rowboat when a speedboat nearly swamped us. My father stood up and yelled 'Cocksucker!'. I didn't know he
    knew words like that :)

    Boat rentals were common on the area lakes. They were homemade wooden productions with flat bottoms, square ends, and a bait well under the
    seats. They weren't beautiful but they were stable. When we got the
    aluminum V-hull it was a lot less stable.

    In the '50s the designs were adapted to use plywood instead of planks.
    After storing the boats over the winter in the spring they discovered porcupines love the resin used to bond the layers.

    I have a special fondness for porcupines. While I was on a multiday hike a porcupine ate the front brake lines and heater hose on my pickup. It was raining when I got back to the trailhead so I threw my gear in and took
    off. I quickly discovered a pickup without front brakes isn't the best
    thing to use to come off a mountain. I could splice the heater hose and
    refill the radiator from a creek but the brakes had to wait until I was
    back to civilization.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Dec 27 19:33:13 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 14:45:30 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    - telling punters to buy a stock is the last refuge of someone who
    bought early and just wants to make another percent before it nosedives.

    Pump'n'dump has a long tradition.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 00:13:53 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:25, rbowman wrote:
    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my
    head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based
    on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    I got quite deeply involved in stocks shares and funds at one time.

    - Anyone who tells you how to make a fortune begs the question of why they didn't make one themselves and not write a book.
    - telling punters to buy a stock is the last refuge of someone who bought early and just wants to make another percent before it nosedives.
    -at least 50% of funds do worse than the stock market index. If you dont know which ones, buy a tracker.
    - physical gold is generally at least a way to keep place with inflation. Apparently a loaf of bread today costs the same in gold as it did in Roman times...
    - If you dont want to spend your days with your nose glued to the market data, find a fund manager who does, and let him take his 1%.
    - If there is anything more rigged than FX I have yet to find it.
    - Futures and options for 'domestic' investors are rigged so the bank always wins. Unless you do straight forward futures trading at the raw level, dont touch it.

    I agree with all of this. I think if you cannot be bothered, a low cost
    index fund is a good choice.

    - aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    Wow! My aim is to not lose money, and anynthing above that is extra on
    top! ;)







    I'll stay far away, thank you.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 00:12:19 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism were
    alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick google. My >> friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians, esquimaux
    or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were
    _very_ different from the original.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 23:22:29 2024
    On 27/12/2024 18:34, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:32:46 +0100, D wrote:

    I read the NT, never got around to the OT.

    Nietzsche said something about putting gloves on before reading the NT;
    the OT needs a full hazmat suit. Most religions come up with a mythology
    that isn't quite as appalling.

    There is a first rate Jewish scholar who traces the rise of Judaism and Christianity on You Tube. 'Esoterica' is the channel.

    Well worth it for people who are interested in religion from a non
    religious perspective.


    --
    “The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to
    fill the world with fools.”

    Herbert Spencer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sat Dec 28 00:23:19 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:25, rbowman wrote:
    I read an article this morning about Bitcoin EFTs that went right over my >>> head. It reminded me of the brilliant scheme of buying derivatives based >>> on insurance payouts for tranches of mortgages likely to default.

    On 2024-12-27, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I got quite deeply involved in stocks shares and funds at one time.

    - Anyone who tells you how to make a fortune begs the question of why
    they didn't make one themselves and not write a book.
    - telling punters to buy a stock is the last refuge of someone who
    bought early and just wants to make another percent before it nosedives.
    -at least 50% of funds do worse than the stock market index. If you dont
    know which ones, buy a tracker.
    - physical gold is generally at least a way to keep place with
    inflation. Apparently a loaf of bread today costs the same in gold as it
    did in Roman times...
    - If you dont want to spend your days with your nose glued to the market
    data, find a fund manager who does, and let him take his 1%.
    - If there is anything more rigged than FX I have yet to find it.
    - Futures and options for 'domestic' investors are rigged so the bank
    always wins. Unless you do straight forward futures trading at the raw
    level, dont touch it.
    - aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    This matches exactly my experience. 100% agree with all of these. Figured these out more or less in the order listed.

    Around the time I turned 50, I realized I was going to need to boost my retirement savings. I thought Ï work in internet technology, I know
    which are the good and growing companies in my field, I will buy some of that.

    Then 2000 happened, and my Cisco, Osicom, Juniper etc stocks all took a
    real nosedive.

    So I figured that I needed to diversify. Bought some Ford Motor, United Airlines, Robinson/May dept stores, ... only to see every single one
    descend into near bankruptcy.

    So I headed for the SP500 funds, and have done quite well with that.
    There have been some dips, but always recovered spectacularly. My one ïndividual" stock is Berkshire (Buffett). But that is really more of a
    very well-managed, diversified investment fund.


    I started when I was 16, I think I more or less settled on my current
    method in my late twenties. It's worked well for two decades, so I'm
    sticking with it. Usually during a recession I go down 30%-40% and then at least triple from the bottom at the next high, and on and on it goes.

    The only timing I do is to stop buying once I think that we've reached a
    high, that can be anything from 1 to 3.5 years so far of waiting. When
    things crash, I've saved up quite a nice sum, and start to buy. Here is
    where it does take a bit of tolerance to psychological pain to keep buying
    as the stock market goes down, then it turns, continue to buy, until I
    feel that the next high is approaching, then I start to save.

    And of course I always reinvest my dividends. I am very dividend heavy in
    my portfolio.

    Some contrarian bets that went wrong were IT, Ericsson, debt mgmt
    companies. Some contrarian bets that went right were oil, banks, gambling
    and industrial air conditioning.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:16:29 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:31:55 +0100, D wrote:

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not
    saying quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible.
    This is why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for
    socialism... or libertarianism!

    After millennia the sheep breeding program has been less than successful. There have been entire religions spawned to convince the sheep a better
    world awaits them and they should be nice and well behaved in the
    meantime.

    Well, at least some consolation is that regardless of the ism they all
    have to work with the same raw material, and the leaders have the same
    faults as the governed.

    I think socialists and libertarians are both dreamers. Sometimes they even

    Guilty as charged! My dreams give me energy, motivation and direction.

    recognize their affinity:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian_socialism

    Hah, not in a 1000 years!

    I'm not opposed to the dream. I like interesting fantasies. After all my

    There is hope for you! ;)

    work Linux box and one of my personal Linux boxes show

    $ hostname
    kropotkin

    Then morning comes and I wake up.

    Don't be boring, don't wake up! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:24:33 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:25:53 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-27, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
    The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was
    living on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.

    I once set myself a project of reading the Bible end to end, rather than
    depending on other people's summaries. I bogged down around I Kings -
    all that violence was getting too depressing.

    I don't know if I ever made it that far. Ecclesiasticus (not Ecclesiastes) isn't too bad; it reads like Hesiod or the Havamal. The first time I made

    I agree! And also proverbs is quite similar to Havamal as well.

    it through the NT was 'Good News for Modern Man'. It was more or less in English and about all I had to read at the time.

    As for the rest I'm surprised it preserved. Joseph's brothers sell him as
    a slave. He wheedles his way to second in command in Egypt and sets up a scheme to store all the confiscated grain in the good years. He also
    invites all his friends and relatives to share in the good times.

    Bad times come and he sells the grain back to the starving farmers, taking all their land. The Egyptians get pissed off so Joe and his tribe call
    down some plagues, steal everything that isn't nailed down, and beat feet.

    Fine, upstanding story...


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:25:19 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:32:46 +0100, D wrote:

    I read the NT, never got around to the OT.

    Nietzsche said something about putting gloves on before reading the NT;
    the OT needs a full hazmat suit. Most religions come up with a mythology
    that isn't quite as appalling.


    That is exactly why I never got around to the OT. I've read bits and
    pieces, but all of it... no, it's just not for me.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 23:29:17 2024
    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism
    were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick
    google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the
    12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to
    feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and
    rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started with
    Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish witch in
    the practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    --
    Renewable energy: Expensive solutions that don't work to a problem that
    doesn't exist instituted by self legalising protection rackets that
    don't protect, masquerading as public servants who don't serve the public.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:31:08 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:21:30 +0100, D wrote:

    Wow! What did your doctor say? My fathers doctor told him to cut down on
    meat, and he responded that that will never happen.

    We weren't big on doctors. In that era most people saw a doctor when there was something obviously wrong that you couldn't fix yourself. Most people didn't have medical insurance or a plan at work. otoh, you could pay for a office visit or house call out of pocket without mortgaging the farm. You have to remember even Medicare was started in '65. Health insurance and
    the health industry have fed on each other.

    Since he died at work my father was autopsied. He had arteriosclerosis,
    Type 2 diabetes, and a few other problems. As far as he was concerned he
    was as healthy as a horse.

    This makes one think. How much is sickness, and how much is the belief of sickness? It's almost as if a doctor can make things worse sometime. =/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:29:50 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:17:54 +0100, D wrote:

    May all the power boats be damned! I especially like the ones who see
    that I'm sitting in a tiny fishing boat, and then they speed by at extra
    high speed to see if they can sink my boat with the waves.

    My father and I were fishing in a rented rowboat when a speedboat nearly swamped us. My father stood up and yelled 'Cocksucker!'. I didn't know he knew words like that :)

    I feel a close bond with your father. Similar words and worse, have been
    on my mind when they do their thing. ;)

    Boat rentals were common on the area lakes. They were homemade wooden productions with flat bottoms, square ends, and a bait well under the
    seats. They weren't beautiful but they were stable. When we got the
    aluminum V-hull it was a lot less stable.

    I know the one. Around the lake where I fish in sweden, you can find a few abandoned boats here and there. From small plastic ones, to the one above. Sadly they tend to rot away. When I was young, one summer, I found one I thought was abandoned, and took care of it during the summer. Then one day
    it was gone. It turned out it had an owner who finally found it, and took
    it away. He did not have his name or phone number painted on the boat.

    In the housing community next to mine, they have a rule that all boats by
    the lake must have name + phone number painted on them, or they will be
    seen as abandoned and towed away. Hmm, come to think of it... maybe I
    should check to see if there are any abandoned ones I can restore, before exploring that canoe idea!

    In the '50s the designs were adapted to use plywood instead of planks.
    After storing the boats over the winter in the spring they discovered porcupines love the resin used to bond the layers.

    I have a special fondness for porcupines. While I was on a multiday hike a porcupine ate the front brake lines and heater hose on my pickup. It was raining when I got back to the trailhead so I threw my gear in and took
    off. I quickly discovered a pickup without front brakes isn't the best
    thing to use to come off a mountain. I could splice the heater hose and refill the radiator from a creek but the brakes had to wait until I was
    back to civilization.

    They are very cute. Did not know they liked to eat that stuff.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 23:34:28 2024
    On 27/12/2024 23:13, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I agree with all of this. I think if you cannot be bothered, a low cost
    index fund is a good choice.

    -  aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    Wow! My aim is to not lose money, and anynthing above that is extra on
    top! ;)

    https://www.trustnet.com/fund/price-performance/o/ia-unit-trusts-and-oeics?norisk=true&sortby=P11GBP_D_60M&sortorder=desc&PageSize=25

    Pick a fund with good 1,3 and 5 year performance and then look into it
    and check it has the same fund manager.

    Ones with more stars are held to be less risky.

    Then do a little more research into what they invest in.

    Use your judgement and review every 6 months, sell the losers and double
    down on the winners


    --
    All political activity makes complete sense once the proposition that
    all government is basically a self-legalising protection racket, is
    fully understood.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 01:02:51 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:29:50 +0100, D wrote:


    In the housing community next to mine, they have a rule that all boats
    by the lake must have name + phone number painted on them, or they will
    be seen as abandoned and towed away. Hmm, come to think of it... maybe I should check to see if there are any abandoned ones I can restore,
    before exploring that canoe idea!

    It may have changed but then any power boat, even a small trolling motor,
    was required to be registered and would have a hull number. Canoes,
    rowboats, and small sailboats didn't.


    They are very cute. Did not know they liked to eat that stuff.

    They're much cuter if you don't have to live with them. They love salt and
    will chew up ax handles, outhouse seats, gloves, vehicle parts, or
    anything else they can get their paws on. Apparently plywood resin tastes
    good too.

    https://www.fs.usda.gov/detailfull/r10/forest-grasslandhealth/? cid=FSEPRD566459+

    That focuses on Alaska but wherever they are you can find damage. In this
    area the prevalent species at lower altitudes are Ponderosa pine, and
    Douglas fir, both of which are tasty. At higher elevations they'll chew
    of true fir and spruce.

    There is some confusion, at least in the US, but a porcupine definitely
    isn't a hedgehog. They do have their uses.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quillwork

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 00:27:32 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:31:08 +0100, D wrote:

    This makes one think. How much is sickness, and how much is the belief
    of sickness? It's almost as if a doctor can make things worse sometime.
    =/

    Medicare provides for a yearly 'wellness' visit and I make use of it. I
    get along well with my doctor. She must have slept through Drug Pushing
    101 in med school. There is a form to determine if a person would benefit
    from statins and according to her the answer is always 'yes'. She would prescribe them if I asked her to but it's not the default. At times she
    can be cynical abut her profession.

    I would prefer to blow my heart out on a steep mountain trail and become
    food for the bears to some long drawn out affair where 'medical science'
    tries to put off the inevitable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sat Dec 28 01:16:32 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 18:06:20 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With
    only VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you
    had a little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules.
    The other problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a
    small airfield 10 miles from town.

    I do not get it.

    Why should having access to the instruments prevent you from using your
    eyes?

    That's fine if you can see anything. In training for IFR, you fly 'under
    the hood'.

    https://featherhood.com/

    You only have the instruments and no visual reference. This simulates
    being in clouds with no visibility. You have to have absolute faith in the instruments since 'seat of the pants' will convince you you're flying
    straight and level when you're screwing the plane into the ground.

    Visual feedback is extremely important. There is a local bike trail that
    is on an old railwway right of way that passes through several tunnels. A
    light was required but I went cheap and it was totally inadequate. You
    don't last long trying to ride a bike in the pitch black.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 01:54:58 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:24:33 +0100, D wrote:

    I agree! And also proverbs is quite similar to Havamal as well.

    True, although I don't think either mention keeping your spear handy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 01:52:55 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:12:19 +0100, D wrote:


    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I would take those with a grain of salt too. For example

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubbell_Trading_Post_National_Historic_Site

    When the Navajo showed up with their crude blankets Hubbell them they'd
    better come up with something a lot more attractive if the expected to
    sell them. And the legend was born.

    The traditional turquoise jewelry and pottery designs were taught to them
    by WPA art students, again trying to develop a product they could sell.


    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were _very_ different from the original.

    The 18th century Romantic movement and the earlier feeling that became
    known as the counter-enlightenment led to many like die Brüder Grimm
    digging around looking for roots just like Alex Haley did for Africans.

    I can understand the feeling. As we studied the glories of Rome in school
    I thought 'Wait a minute. My ancestors were those barbarians pillaging
    Rome and Ravenna. How about their history and beliefs?' The Christians did their best to bury them so you have to read between the lines. Tacitus may never have seen Germania in person. Snorri was a couple of hundred years
    after Iceland voted to be Christian. Saxo Grammaticus wrote historical
    fiction. And so on.

    I don't know that much about Wicca but my impression is it invented a lot
    from the whole cloth while the heathens try harder for some historical accuracy. I use heathen versus pagan in the preferred sense.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heathenry_(new_religious_movement)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sat Dec 28 02:00:43 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 18:25:53 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    Around the time I turned 50, I realized I was going to need to boost my retirement savings. I thought Ï work in internet technology, I know
    which are the good and growing companies in my field, I will buy some of that.

    Then 2000 happened, and my Cisco, Osicom, Juniper etc stocks all took a
    real nosedive.

    I had friends that told me I was foolish to only have CDs, US savings
    bonds, and savings accounts as they checked their stock portfolios every
    hour. Crickets after 2000. I didn't lose a dime.

    When I was married we talked to an honest broker. He told us if we weren't willing to put the money on a roulette table in Vegas we shouldn't be in
    the market. We thanked him for his time and insights.

    Truth is, the whole topic bores me.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Dec 27 23:44:51 2024
    On 12/27/24 12:53 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 22:41:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
    I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal automatic route
    control. Humans don't even navigate 2-D very well ......

    Too many variable. My boss at that company learned to fly, bought a plane, and shortened his commute time to meetings in the Boston area. One day he headed off to a meeting in Kennebunk, about 16 miles. Then the fog rolled
    in from the ocean. He found his way back, landed the plane, kissed the ground, and put the plane up for sale. A Lincoln Town Car wasn't so bad
    after all for commuting.

    Hmmmm ... went up one day in marginal VFR weather, which
    quickly became marginal IFR. Fortunately in the old days
    they'd teach all the students up to near-IFR skills so I
    wasn't worried. Then abruptly an F-18 whizzed by REALLY
    close at maybe 400 knots in the mist. If he hadn't been
    moving so quick I could have read the registration numbers.
    Got on UNICOM and asked if Military Pilot's radar was
    working correctly. No reply, of course :-)

    Anyway, flying, the key phrase is "Don't Panic" ... that
    junk on the dashboard will tell you all you need, IF you
    will just pay attention.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 23:51:33 2024
    On 12/27/24 6:27 AM, D wrote:


    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


     A number of corps are fronting 'air-taxi' now using
     what are essentially large drones. One or two don't
     even have a pilot, all automated. Would NOT wanna
     get on one will less than six thrusters though ...
     that way one can die and the rest can still compensate.

     As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
     I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal
     automatic route control. Humans don't even
     navigate 2-D very well ......

    I think scaled up drones is as close as we'll get to flying cars within
    the next
    20 years or so. I'd definitely be up for it! Having one myself would be great. I
    would then need to no road to my fortress of solitude, but could just
    fly in and
    out of there! =)


    I see nothing but 'big drones' as the moral equiv
    of "flying cars" for a LONG time. Sorry, no anti-
    gravity thrusters or whatever. Alas there's gonna
    be a lot of thruster noise and air-blast so they
    are not gonna replace yer Caddy for most uses.

    In any case, as said, modern tech allows very very
    stable flight. The fly-by-wire will read what you
    WANT the thing to do so you're not stuck fighting
    little tilts and drifts. George Jetson COULD fly
    the things pretty easily (but shouldn't).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sat Dec 28 00:02:09 2024
    On 12/27/24 1:06 PM, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:
    It was interesting but I realized there were practical problems. With only >>> VFR you were completely dependent on the weather. With IFR you had a
    little more flexibility but you weren't going to keep schedules. The other >>> problem is after you fly to Oshkosh you find yourself at a small airfield >>> 10 miles from town.

    I do not get it.

    Why should having access to the instruments prevent you from using your eyes?

    In flight, THE EYES *LIE* (and the other senses too).

    The minute things get a little fuzzy YOU WATCH THE INSTRUMENTS
    no matter WHAT you "see" or "feel", or you DIE.

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight
    and was maintaining level flight - right up until the
    belly hit a wave .......

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 00:06:12 2024
    On 12/27/24 7:27 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:31:08 +0100, D wrote:

    This makes one think. How much is sickness, and how much is the belief
    of sickness? It's almost as if a doctor can make things worse sometime.
    =/

    Medicare provides for a yearly 'wellness' visit and I make use of it. I
    get along well with my doctor. She must have slept through Drug Pushing
    101 in med school. There is a form to determine if a person would benefit from statins and according to her the answer is always 'yes'. She would prescribe them if I asked her to but it's not the default. At times she
    can be cynical abut her profession.

    I would prefer to blow my heart out on a steep mountain trail and become
    food for the bears to some long drawn out affair where 'medical science' tries to put off the inevitable.

    "Modern Med" has become a serious MESS. If you have
    insurance you will suddenly "need" large numbers of
    "tests" and meds.

    Hate seeing new docs, always have to give 'em The
    Lecture about how we're not going There ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 06:09:11 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:02:09 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight and was
    maintaining level flight - right up until the belly hit a wave
    .......

    The Buddy Holly wreck looked lke the pilot flew it into the ground. That's
    hard to do in Iowa unless you're seriously confused.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 01:25:25 2024
    On 12/27/24 9:35 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism
    were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick
    google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the
    12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to feel
    they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    Heh ! :-)

    Anyway, kinda impossible to have an 'unbroken tradition'
    with any kind of 'paganism' - as the pantheon of gods and
    such varies widely over place and time. I guess that
    before Zoroaster EVERYBODY was 'pagan' - but still was
    not the SAME 'paganism'.

    As for BRITS ... 'unbroken' maybe means a few thousand
    years - but with every wave of invaders the 'gods' got
    mixed, re-named, re-statused - and some just disappeared.

    Kinda like Hindu 'paganism' - the idea of god-beings with
    such extreme power and 'generative potential' that a mere
    passing thought could pop another god or god-like thing
    into existence on the spot ... a nice kinda 'fractal'
    look and feel :-)

    Know nothing about Chinese theology alas ... other than
    that it had a lot of 'demons'. Gotta look into that. May
    NOT entirely 'get it' alas because I wasn't born Chinese.
    'Gods' kinda COMPLEMENT the culture rather than CREATE it.

    Oh, good movie/Harry Potter question - how come all
    'spells' are done in LATIN ??? Did spirits/gods/etc
    from 10,000 years ago all speak Latin too ??? :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 01:32:34 2024
    On 12/27/24 6:12 PM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism
    were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick
    google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the
    12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to
    feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and
    rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were _very_ different from the original.


    "Unbroken" only so far as the current inhabitants knew -
    they didn't really write it all down.

    The tablets in Uruk and Ur mark the start of 'formal'
    theologies. You can compare Now with Then because it's
    all in writing. MAY be some stuff from further east,
    Persia or the Indus valley, but so far ....

    All hail Enki, bringer of Knowledge and Civilization -
    the true Prometheus !

    There ... "unbroken" :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 01:52:00 2024
    On 12/27/24 1:04 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:31:55 +0100, D wrote:

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not
    saying quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible.
    This is why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for
    socialism... or libertarianism!

    After millennia the sheep breeding program has been less than successful. There have been entire religions spawned to convince the sheep a better
    world awaits them and they should be nice and well behaved in the
    meantime.


    Well ......... they keep changing sheps too often.

    But soon, the "AI" + net will provide consistent brainwashing
    for generations on end.

    Baaaah !


    I think socialists and libertarians are both dreamers. Sometimes they even recognize their affinity:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian_socialism

    I'm not opposed to the dream. I like interesting fantasies. After all my
    work Linux box and one of my personal Linux boxes show

    $ hostname
    kropotkin

    Then morning comes and I wake up.

    Um ... yea ... no 'ideal', just the Same Old Shit redux.

    Of course part of that has to do with there being about
    EIGHT BILLION ideas as to what "The Way Things Ought To Be"
    actually MEANS down to the devilish details .......

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 01:45:07 2024
    On 12/27/24 6:31 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/26/24 11:57 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
        The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was
    living
    on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.


     Nope. Seems to be a 'human nature' thing ... hardwired
     will to dominance.

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not
    saying quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible.
    This is why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for
    socialism... or libertarianism! ;)


    I'm gonna say "... can be CONFUSED", temporarily ...


     Things fell apart almost as quickly as they were put
     together. Alliances, sentiments, needs, changed very
     quickly. Kinda 'Game Of Thrones' but without the
     dragons.

     Post-Rome, Europe was a MESS. Only Charlemagne kinda
     glued it together at all - but then almost only by
     the sword. Oddly, I think the Viking invasions did
     more to stabilize things - sort of the 'alien invasion'
     that brought petty gripes and ambitions more onto the
     same wavelength.

     DaVinci's Italy was a constant war between the many
     city states for a long time. The Popes, while
     theoretically the ultimate authorities, instead
     seemed to just profit financially and politically
     from all the chaos and let it go on. Then a
     de Medici became Pope ........

    This is good! A city state does a lot less harm than a modern country.


    This works well UNTIL some actual 'country' decides
    to show up and take all your stuff.

    Micro-fragmentation and inter-fragment wars is a big
    part of why Rome was able to take SO much SO quickly.
    Also why the Euros were able to subdue the AmerIndians
    so quickly.


    That is why I like decentralization! With many city states, the
    competition for business will also be harder, which results in lower
    taxes as well!

    Unless we're talking socialist city states, or small monarchies. Those
    are not so fun. =(

    Well, you MIGHT get a jolly king every so often ! :-)

    OR dismal politicians and depressing bureaucrats ALL
    of the time ....

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 02:39:16 2024
    On 12/27/24 6:34 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 27/12/2024 23:13, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I agree with all of this. I think if you cannot be bothered, a low
    cost index fund is a good choice.

    -  aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    Wow! My aim is to not lose money, and anynthing above that is extra on
    top! ;)

    https://www.trustnet.com/fund/price-performance/o/ia-unit-trusts-and-oeics?norisk=true&sortby=P11GBP_D_60M&sortorder=desc&PageSize=25


    Pick a fund with good 1,3 and 5 year performance and then look into it
    and check it has the same fund manager.

    Ones with more stars are held to be less risky.

    Then do a little more research into what they invest in.

    Use your judgement and review every 6 months, sell the losers and double
    down on the winners

    A lot of people go broke trying to guess the system,
    imagining they will Get Rich Quick.

    Solid stolid boring STOCKS are probably yer best
    long-term investment. They often pay semi-decent
    interest and their value adjusts for inflation -
    'Paper Gold', so to speak. If they go down, they
    usually come right back up and more within a year.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 02:31:33 2024
    On 12/28/24 1:09 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:02:09 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight and was
    maintaining level flight - right up until the belly hit a wave
    .......

    The Buddy Holly wreck looked lke the pilot flew it into the ground. That's hard to do in Iowa unless you're seriously confused.

    Light snow & mist at the time ....

    Anyway, ALWAYS WATCH THE INSTRUMENTS !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 10:36:08 2024
    On 28/12/2024 01:52, rbowman wrote:
    I don't know that much about Wicca but my impression is it invented a lot from the whole cloth while the heathens try harder for some historical accuracy. I use heathen versus pagan in the preferred sense.

    I tend to agree.

    The Wiccan thing - especially the female Wiccan thing - was more about
    how they would have liked things to be than how it was.


    --
    Microsoft : the best reason to go to Linux that ever existed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 10:38:06 2024
    On 28/12/2024 04:44, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    Anyway, flying, the key phrase is "Don't Panic" ... that
      junk on the dashboard will tell you all you need, IF you
      will just pay attention.
    Dashboard to pilot: "Sir you are in an inverted turn at 2000 feet
    surround by mountain peaks at 5000".

    :-)
    --
    Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 10:33:19 2024
    On 28/12/2024 02:00, rbowman wrote:

    When I was married we talked to an honest broker. He told us if we weren't willing to put the money on a roulette table in Vegas we shouldn't be in
    the market. We thanked him for his time and insights.

    Truth is, the whole topic bores me.

    Me too, but it remains a way to supplement my pension

    --
    "It is an established fact to 97% confidence limits that left wing
    conspirators see right wing conspiracies everywhere"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 10:42:58 2024
    On 28/12/2024 04:51, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    In any case, as said, modern tech allows very very
      stable flight. The fly-by-wire will read what you
      WANT the thing to do so you're not stuck fighting
      little tilts and drifts. George Jetson COULD fly
      the things pretty easily (but shouldn't).

    Its quite conceivable that some massively AI traffic control will take
    over your personal quad-copter and shunt you into traffic lanes and get
    you to your destination where your onboard AI will land you.

    Does anyone remember the 'Quest of the DNA cowboys' my Mick Farren in
    which series everybody ordered anything they wanted from 'Stuff Central'
    a sort of prescient Amazon - and the material was sourced from areas of
    reality know as the 'nothings' because there was nothing left there anymore.

    Sometimes I think that is where we are headed...well apart from the grave/personal incinerator, anyway.
    --
    Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 10:46:23 2024
    On 28/12/2024 05:06, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    "Modern Med" has become a serious MESS. If you have
      insurance you will suddenly "need" large numbers of
      "tests" and meds.

    Its similar but different under the NHS.

    As blame culture seeps in, the doctor tends to refer you in case you
    have something nasty in the woodshed, so she/he cannot be blamed for
    lack of care.
    And there are guidelines laid down and computer accessible for exactly
    what drug 'pathways' are to be recommended.


      Hate seeing new docs, always have to give 'em The
      Lecture about how we're not going There ....

    I hate medics who are incompetent. And cause unnecessary pain.

    --
    For in reason, all government without the consent of the governed is the
    very definition of slavery.

    Jonathan Swift

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 11:01:46 2024
    On 28/12/2024 06:45, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    This works well UNTIL some actual 'country' decides
      to show up and take all your stuff.

    When its fair weather saqling, you can open up the watertight doors.

    When you are being swarmed by pirates and are holed beneath the
    waterline, you close them

    This is something the EU does not understand.
    Under threat people form alliances naturally, when not under threat they
    don't need 'harmonisation'.




    --
    All political activity makes complete sense once the proposition that
    all government is basically a self-legalising protection racket, is
    fully understood.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 10:50:13 2024
    On 28/12/2024 06:09, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:02:09 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight and was
    maintaining level flight - right up until the belly hit a wave
    .......

    The Buddy Holly wreck looked lke the pilot flew it into the ground. That's hard to do in Iowa unless you're seriously confused.
    I can totally imagine being seriously confused when your ground based
    inherent sense of balance is distorted by air movements and tight G
    turns. Being upside down going over the top of a loop at 1g feels like
    level flight...

    It takes a lot to override that and learn to trust the instruments, and
    how many air accidents have been caused by instruments malfunctioning.

    Pitot heads seem to be especially vulnerable to ice or insect infestation.


    --
    “Progress is precisely that which rules and regulations did not foresee,”

    – Ludwig von Mises

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 10:58:47 2024
    On 28/12/2024 06:25, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    As for BRITS ... 'unbroken' maybe means a few thousand
      years - but with every wave of invaders the 'gods' got
      mixed, re-named, re-statused - and some just disappeared.

    Indeed. The Celtic pantheon of nature spirits remains a dismal parody of
    its formal self with just a few faeries, leprechauns and of course the Morrigan.

      Kinda like Hindu 'paganism' - the idea of god-beings with
      such extreme power and 'generative potential' that a mere
      passing thought could pop another god or god-like thing
      into existence on the spot ... a nice kinda 'fractal'
      look and feel  🙂

    I cant see how Hinduism could have a pantheon. At its core its mostly philosophy.

    I always thought that their gods were understood to be symbols, nor 'real'


      Know nothing about Chinese theology alas ... other than
      that it had a lot of 'demons'. Gotta look into that. May
      NOT entirely 'get it' alas because I wasn't born Chinese.
      'Gods' kinda COMPLEMENT the culture rather than CREATE it.


    Japanese is ancestor worship.

      Oh, good movie/Harry Potter question - how come all
      'spells' are done in LATIN ??? Did spirits/gods/etc
      from 10,000 years ago all speak Latin too ???  🙂

    Well traditionally necromancy texts were written in Hebrew or Latin, as
    there was a close association between the religion and its antithesis.🙂

    Although IIRC HP Lovecraft had a mad Arab somewhere on his demonology.
    Abdul Alhazred, creator of the Necronomicon.

    I mean it wouldn't make good drama for our Harry to mutter ' I say
    great spiwwit, turn Malfoy into a spotted toad'

    Clever people spoke Latin or Greek, back in the day.


    --
    It is the folly of too many to mistake the echo of a London coffee-house
    for the voice of the kingdom.

    Jonathan Swift

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 11:02:53 2024
    On 28/12/2024 06:52, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    After millennia the sheep breeding program has been less than successful.
    There have been entire religions spawned to convince the sheep a better
    world awaits them and they should be nice and well behaved in the
    meantime.


      Well ......... they keep changing sheps too often.

    http://vps.templar.co.uk/Cartoons%20and%20Politics/Foxie.png


    --
    In a Time of Universal Deceit, Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act.

    - George Orwell

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 12:07:21 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 18:34, rbowman wrote:
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:32:46 +0100, D wrote:

    I read the NT, never got around to the OT.

    Nietzsche said something about putting gloves on before reading the NT;
    the OT needs a full hazmat suit. Most religions come up with a mythology
    that isn't quite as appalling.

    There is a first rate Jewish scholar who traces the rise of Judaism and Christianity on You Tube. 'Esoterica' is the channel.

    Well worth it for people who are interested in religion from a non religious perspective.

    Could be interesting. Thank you, will have a look!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 12:08:37 2024
    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism were >>>> alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick google. >>>> My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the 12:th
    century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to feel
    they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and rub
    themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians, esquimaux >> or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were
    _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started with Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish witch in the practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    I'm not convinced that Gardnerian wicca represents an unbroken tradition. But... who knows? ;) I've heard that this can give rise to bitter fights
    among wiccans.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 12:11:05 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:13, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I agree with all of this. I think if you cannot be bothered, a low cost
    index fund is a good choice.

    -  aim for about 20% ROI and be happy when you get ten.

    Wow! My aim is to not lose money, and anynthing above that is extra on top! >> ;)

    https://www.trustnet.com/fund/price-performance/o/ia-unit-trusts-and-oeics?norisk=true&sortby=P11GBP_D_60M&sortorder=desc&PageSize=25

    Pick a fund with good 1,3 and 5 year performance and then look into it and check it has the same fund manager.

    Ones with more stars are held to be less risky.

    Then do a little more research into what they invest in.

    Use your judgement and review every 6 months, sell the losers and double down on the winners

    I would, if it would not be the case that my returns, have been quite good while doing it myself. It is also a hobby and something I very much enjoy doing.

    But could very well be that something like you suggest is what I might do
    when I get very old.

    I meet very regularly with a fund manager at the company where I have my stocks. He's a nice guy and we always have very good inspirational
    discussions. He talks me through his decision process and why he buys what
    he buys for his fund, and sometimes I tag a long, and sometimes I don't.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 12:23:12 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:29:50 +0100, D wrote:


    In the housing community next to mine, they have a rule that all boats
    by the lake must have name + phone number painted on them, or they will
    be seen as abandoned and towed away. Hmm, come to think of it... maybe I
    should check to see if there are any abandoned ones I can restore,
    before exploring that canoe idea!

    It may have changed but then any power boat, even a small trolling motor,
    was required to be registered and would have a hull number. Canoes,
    rowboats, and small sailboats didn't.

    Fortunately in that tiny lake, there are no powerboats! =)


    They are very cute. Did not know they liked to eat that stuff.

    They're much cuter if you don't have to live with them. They love salt and will chew up ax handles, outhouse seats, gloves, vehicle parts, or
    anything else they can get their paws on. Apparently plywood resin tastes good too.

    But if you put out a small salt stone, I'm certain they would stop gnawing
    at other things?

    I would be very sad if they chewed on my axe handles.

    https://www.fs.usda.gov/detailfull/r10/forest-grasslandhealth/? cid=FSEPRD566459+

    That focuses on Alaska but wherever they are you can find damage. In this area the prevalent species at lower altitudes are Ponderosa pine, and
    Douglas fir, both of which are tasty. At higher elevations they'll chew
    of true fir and spruce.

    There is some confusion, at least in the US, but a porcupine definitely
    isn't a hedgehog. They do have their uses.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quillwork











    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 12:17:31 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:31:08 +0100, D wrote:

    This makes one think. How much is sickness, and how much is the belief
    of sickness? It's almost as if a doctor can make things worse sometime.
    =/

    Medicare provides for a yearly 'wellness' visit and I make use of it. I
    get along well with my doctor. She must have slept through Drug Pushing
    101 in med school. There is a form to determine if a person would benefit from statins and according to her the answer is always 'yes'. She would prescribe them if I asked her to but it's not the default. At times she
    can be cynical abut her profession.

    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here. ;) I remember my old doctor. He operated on a push/pull methodology. If you wanted something,
    he would not give it to you, if you did not want something, he would push
    it. The reason I remember it, was that once my mother wanted something,
    and he tried his best not to give it to her, and then the same week I went there, he tried hard to push the same medication on me. He was fairly
    grumpy and an extremely heavy smoker.

    I would prefer to blow my heart out on a steep mountain trail and become
    food for the bears to some long drawn out affair where 'medical science' tries to put off the inevitable.

    This is the truth! After seeing my mothers cancer treatment that did not
    work out in the end, I agree 100%. She went through 3 years of hell for nothing. It did not help of course, that the doctor misdiagnosed her. She
    was in tears and filed a law suit against herself. I do not blame her, I
    blame the socialist system she works in, which made her over worked, and therefore more likely to commit mistakes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 12:32:17 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:12:19 +0100, D wrote:


    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I would take those with a grain of salt too. For example

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubbell_Trading_Post_National_Historic_Site

    When the Navajo showed up with their crude blankets Hubbell them they'd better come up with something a lot more attractive if the expected to
    sell them. And the legend was born.

    The traditional turquoise jewelry and pottery designs were taught to them
    by WPA art students, again trying to develop a product they could sell.

    Very interesting! As always, colm is the best history channel there is! =)

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the
    17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were
    _very_ different from the original.

    The 18th century Romantic movement and the earlier feeling that became
    known as the counter-enlightenment led to many like die Brüder Grimm
    digging around looking for roots just like Alex Haley did for Africans.

    I can understand the feeling. As we studied the glories of Rome in school
    I thought 'Wait a minute. My ancestors were those barbarians pillaging
    Rome and Ravenna. How about their history and beliefs?' The Christians did their best to bury them so you have to read between the lines. Tacitus may never have seen Germania in person. Snorri was a couple of hundred years after Iceland voted to be Christian. Saxo Grammaticus wrote historical fiction. And so on.

    This is the truth. Snorri was a ninja!

    I don't know that much about Wicca but my impression is it invented a lot from the whole cloth while the heathens try harder for some historical accuracy. I use heathen versus pagan in the preferred sense.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heathenry_(new_religious_movement)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Dec 28 12:33:48 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:24:33 +0100, D wrote:

    I agree! And also proverbs is quite similar to Havamal as well.

    True, although I don't think either mention keeping your spear handy.


    True... you have to dig deep for those. This is what my AI says (caveat emptor):

    Ecclesiastes 9:18 - “Wisdom is better than weapons of war; but one sinner destroys much good.”

    Isaiah 54:17 - “No weapon that is formed against you shall prosper;
    and every tongue that shall rise against you in judgment you shall
    condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their righteousness is of me, says the LORD.”

    Jeremiah 51:20 - “You are my battle axe and weapons of war: for with
    you will I break in pieces the nations; and with you will I destroy kingdoms.”

    Psalm 144:1 - “Blessed be the LORD my strength, which teaches my hands to war, and my fingers to fight.”

    Proverbs 25:18 - “A man who bears false witness against his neighbor
    is like a sword, and a sharp arrow.”

    2 Corinthians 10:4 - “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal,
    but mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 11:39:33 2024
    On 28/12/2024 11:08, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism
    were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a
    quick google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death
    in the 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to
    feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and
    rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until
    the 17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains
    probably were _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started with
    Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish witch in
    the practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    I'm not convinced that Gardnerian wicca represents an unbroken
    tradition. But... who knows? ;) I've heard that this can give rise to
    bitter fights among wiccans.

    Oh yes. And the Cermoinial Magickians. And and and...

    More in fighting in Wicca than the average private school girls toilets...
    Or the average religious sect. The exclusive Plymouth brethren simply
    will not talk to the ordinary Plymouth brethren etc. etc.


    --
    "If you don’t read the news paper, you are un-informed. If you read the
    news paper, you are mis-informed."

    Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 12:39:50 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/27/24 6:31 AM, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/26/24 11:57 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:41:29 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

        Read up on the Italian and Greek city-state eras.
        The "town over the hill" was always attacking.

    Thucydides got an Amazon best seller out of it. If the bible can be
    believed the tribal god was big on genocide when somebody else was living >>>> on the land he gave you. That hasn't changed a bit.


     Nope. Seems to be a 'human nature' thing ... hardwired
     will to dominance.

    But human nature can be changed! I'm not saying easily, and I'm not saying >> quickly, but small steps here and there are definitely possible. This is
    why the theory exists that mankind is not yet ready for socialism... or
    libertarianism! ;)


    I'm gonna say "... can be CONFUSED", temporarily ...


     Things fell apart almost as quickly as they were put
     together. Alliances, sentiments, needs, changed very
     quickly. Kinda 'Game Of Thrones' but without the
     dragons.

     Post-Rome, Europe was a MESS. Only Charlemagne kinda
     glued it together at all - but then almost only by
     the sword. Oddly, I think the Viking invasions did
     more to stabilize things - sort of the 'alien invasion'
     that brought petty gripes and ambitions more onto the
     same wavelength.

     DaVinci's Italy was a constant war between the many
     city states for a long time. The Popes, while
     theoretically the ultimate authorities, instead
     seemed to just profit financially and politically
     from all the chaos and let it go on. Then a
     de Medici became Pope ........

    This is good! A city state does a lot less harm than a modern country.


    This works well UNTIL some actual 'country' decides
    to show up and take all your stuff.

    Micro-fragmentation and inter-fragment wars is a big
    part of why Rome was able to take SO much SO quickly.
    Also why the Euros were able to subdue the AmerIndians
    so quickly.

    This is why I'm thinking modern weapons technology might have changed the playing field a bit. Nukes and biological warfare, enable a small player
    to scare a big player. You also have blackmail, but that would require
    constant and diligent work to keep the compromising information up to
    date, when new leaders ascend.

    Liechtenstein, Monaco and Andorra all have managed to survive as small
    states longer than some modern countries have existed. They prove that it
    is not impossible for a small entity to survive.

    That is why I like decentralization! With many city states, the competition >> for business will also be harder, which results in lower taxes as well!

    Unless we're talking socialist city states, or small monarchies. Those are >> not so fun. =(

    Well, you MIGHT get a jolly king every so often ! :-)

    OR dismal politicians and depressing bureaucrats ALL
    of the time ....


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 11:53:02 2024
    On 28/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here. 😉 I remember my old doctor. He operated on a push/pull methodology. If you wanted something,
    he would not give it to you, if you did not want something, he would
    push it. The reason I remember it, was that once my mother wanted
    something, and he tried his best not to give it to her, and then the
    same week I went there, he tried hard to push the same medication on me.
    He was fairly grumpy and an extremely heavy smoker.

    Well I have clooged arteries and have had 5 operatins to fixce them, but
    they get clogged every year. I couldnt hanlde statins and they said that
    all that cholestrol or somethinbg was clogging them

    Now I have a bloody expensive fortnightly self adminitered injection,
    which they say has worked.

    I haven't needed another angioplasty since taking them.
    So what statins do is worth doing. IF you can tolerate the side effects.

    Or there are other medications.

    Its a question of the least worst remedies. Everything has a side
    effect. I tried beta blockers but felt like a zombie.

    I would prefer to blow my heart out on a steep mountain trail and become
    food for the bears to some long drawn out affair where 'medical science'
    tries to put off the inevitable.


    Well I am afraid I am fully on all the medical science can do to not
    blow my heart out.
    Most of what I now take seems to do the job, but the surgery made the
    most difference, Dyno-rodding the arteries is a brutal but effective method

    This is the truth! After seeing my mothers cancer treatment that did not
    work out in the end, I agree 100%. She went through 3 years of hell for nothing. It did not help of course, that the doctor misdiagnosed her.
    She was in tears and filed a law suit against herself. I do not blame
    her, I blame the socialist system she works in, which made her over
    worked, and therefore more likely to commit mistakes.

    Cancer is an utter bitch. I am on my second now, having fully survived
    the first, but it is ultimately incurable, just very slow developing,
    so its likely something else will kill me first.

    The problem with some cancers is that by the time they are diagnosable,
    they are already fatal. A friend died of fully metastasized bowel
    cancer. The only symptom was that he was tired and a bit gaunt for years
    and years, Then one day he went into hospital in total body pain and
    died 3 weeks later.

    Another friend was similar.

    The cancer was never present in the bowel to any high degree, just
    mounting back pain and lymph node lumps a few weeks before the end.

    Some cancers are easy.. Some are harder and some are impossible.
    GPs are not equipped for this. My GP threw me straight at oncology to
    check out something suspicious. She is rather conscientious.

    --
    “I know that most men, including those at ease with problems of the greatest complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest and most
    obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues, which
    they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives.”

    ― Leo Tolstoy

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 11:54:45 2024
    On 28/12/2024 11:33, D wrote:


    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:24:33 +0100, D wrote:

    I agree! And also proverbs is quite similar to Havamal as well.

    True, although I don't think either mention keeping your spear handy.


    True... you have to dig deep for those. This is what my AI says (caveat emptor):

        Ecclesiastes 9:18 - “Wisdom is better than weapons of war; but one sinner destroys much good.”

        Isaiah 54:17 - “No weapon that is formed against you shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against you in judgment you shall
    condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their righteousness is of me, says the LORD.”

        Jeremiah 51:20 - “You are my battle axe and weapons of war: for with you will I break in pieces the nations; and with you will I destroy kingdoms.”

        Psalm 144:1 - “Blessed be the LORD my strength, which teaches my hands to war, and my fingers to fight.”

        Proverbs 25:18 - “A man who bears false witness against his neighbor is like a sword, and a sharp arrow.”

        2 Corinthians 10:4 - “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds.”

    "Kind words and a gun go further than kind words alone" - Al Capone

    --
    WOKE is an acronym... Without Originality, Knowledge or Education.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 17:08:27 2024
    On 2024-12-28, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 06:09, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:02:09 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight and was
    maintaining level flight - right up until the belly hit a wave
    .......

    The Buddy Holly wreck looked lke the pilot flew it into the ground. That's >> hard to do in Iowa unless you're seriously confused.

    I can totally imagine being seriously confused when your ground based inherent sense of balance is distorted by air movements and tight G
    turns. Being upside down going over the top of a loop at 1g feels like
    level flight...

    Yes, there's nothing like fighting off a case of the "leans".

    It takes a lot to override that and learn to trust the instruments, and
    how many air accidents have been caused by instruments malfunctioning.

    That's why there's enough redundancy that you should be cross-checking
    the instruments. What's really scary is how many experienced pilots
    are forgetting the basics that let them do sanity checks.

    Pitot heads seem to be especially vulnerable to ice or insect infestation.

    Yup. I once had mud dauber wasps get into my pitot head and seal it off.
    I missed it on the walkaround. On climb-out my indicated airspeed kept increasing until it went right off the dial. (The static port was clear
    so quite a pressure differential built up.) Fortunately it was a clear
    day so I just flew attitude to my destination. The seal wasn't perfect;
    after a while at cruise altitude the indicated airspeed slowly came back
    down to the proper reading, only to go negative during the descent.
    It took a fair bit of work with a piece of wire to clear the pitot tube
    prior to the trip home.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 16:20:53 2024
    On 2024-12-28, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    On 12/27/24 12:53 AM, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 26 Dec 2024 22:41:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    As for George Jetsons' flying around in 'cars' ...
    I can foresee disasters aplenty even WITH nominal automatic route
    control. Humans don't even navigate 2-D very well ......

    Too many variable. My boss at that company learned to fly, bought a plane, >> and shortened his commute time to meetings in the Boston area. One day he
    headed off to a meeting in Kennebunk, about 16 miles. Then the fog rolled
    in from the ocean. He found his way back, landed the plane, kissed the
    ground, and put the plane up for sale. A Lincoln Town Car wasn't so bad
    after all for commuting.

    Hmmmm ... went up one day in marginal VFR weather, which
    quickly became marginal IFR. Fortunately in the old days
    they'd teach all the students up to near-IFR skills so I
    wasn't worried. Then abruptly an F-18 whizzed by REALLY
    close at maybe 400 knots in the mist. If he hadn't been
    moving so quick I could have read the registration numbers.
    Got on UNICOM and asked if Military Pilot's radar was
    working correctly. No reply, of course :-)

    You probably weren't on the appropriate UHF frequency. :-)

    Anyway, flying, the key phrase is "Don't Panic" ... that
    junk on the dashboard will tell you all you need, IF you
    will just pay attention.

    "Aviate, navigate, communicate."

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 28 17:13:48 2024
    On 2024-12-28, Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> wrote:

    I'm lucky. I take rosavastatin (Crestor), and have no side effects.
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^
    Rosuvastatin. Sorry for the typo.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 20:03:16 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 10:46:23 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    As blame culture seeps in, the doctor tends to refer you in case you
    have something nasty in the woodshed, so she/he cannot be blamed for
    lack of care.

    I had the opposite problem in the '90s. Short story, I had a minor
    fracture at the base of the tibia. Since I could still walk I tried to
    ignore it until it became apparent it wasn't going to fix itself. I called
    the local bone factory for an appointment but they wouldn't see you
    without a referral. I then went to the doctor who did DOT physicals. He
    took an xray, said 'Yup, it's broken', gave me a pair of crutches and a referral to the bone people. And a bill, of course.

    Now there's a new orthopedic center that will treat you if you drag
    yourself in without the middleman.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 20:15:14 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 10:58:47 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I cant see how Hinduism could have a pantheon. At its core its mostly philosophy.

    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    Then there is Ganesha

    https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/5-things-to-know-about-ganesha

    or Lakshmi

    https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/lakshmi

    Never take the dry European accounts of Hinduism, Buddhism, and other
    eastern religions as relevant to what happens on the ground. I've heard Hinduism referred to as serial monotheism. People can switch to a new
    favorite god or goddess and there is no requirement that everyone in a
    family picks the same one.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 20:19:58 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 01:32:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    All hail Enki, bringer of Knowledge and Civilization -
    the true Prometheus !

    Close, but it's 'all hail Eris'.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discordianism

    Eris is closer to Wotan, who never promised to bring peace and prosperity.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 20:49:13 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:17:31 +0100, D wrote:

    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here

    They supposedly lower cholesterol and are loved by cardiologists.
    According to them everybody would benefit from taking them, damn the side effects.

    I just had my yearly exam. My LDL was toward the lower end of the normal
    range while the HDL (good cholesterol) was a little above the high end.

    The punch line: my breakfast for years consists of garlic, half an onion,
    two eggs, and a slice of cheese. Supper alternates between chunks of pig
    or cow with a rare chicken. My veggies are mostly the garlic and onion,
    with baked yams or squash in the winter. Fruit is blueberries or
    strawberries that I like to mix in with cottage cheese. A cardiologist
    would weep.

    'The science' has been changing over the years. A friend who was a bit of
    a hypochondriac closely followed the New England Journal of Medicine.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_England_Journal_of_Medicine

    It isn't some quack alternative medicine publication but he loved to point
    out how 'the science' could change on a weekly basis.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Dec 28 20:34:57 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 17:08:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    Pancreatic cancer is really nasty. We've lost a couple of friends that
    way. It presents no symptoms until you're already toast. The few cases
    I've heard of where people survived were due to a surgeon being in the
    area for something else and spotting it.

    I talked to my neighbor and he said he was ready to retire and do some
    serious fishing. It was about two months after retirement and he was dead.
    I talked to his son and they had managed to get in a last fishing trip.
    He'd started chemo but it did little good if not killing him faster.


    Please, everyone (well, at least those of the male persuasion), if
    you're over 50 and haven't yet had a PSA test, get one done.

    During my first visit my doctor offered to prescribe a PSA test but said
    it often showed false positives and worried you over nothing. I got the
    finger wave instead. That was over 20 years ago. My prostate isn't
    getting any smaller but I've hit the point most males reach where you die
    with prostate cancer, not of it.

    It's like colonoscopy. I had one. TMI but I waived the anesthesia and
    could watch the process on the monitor. Very interesting. 10 years later I elected the stool sample. After 75 they no longer do them. If you've made
    it that far...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 21:05:32 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:32:17 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth. Snorri was a ninja!

    It's interesting how some of the writers/historians trace back to the fall
    of Troy. Were they reading Homer or Virgil? Or was that part of the
    Christian mythology of the day?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 20:57:23 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:33:48 +0100, D wrote:

    Psalm 144:1 - “Blessed be the LORD my strength, which teaches my
    hands
    to war, and my fingers to fight.”

    Well, that's close. Then there is the translation of a psalm that may not
    be authorized.

    "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
    no evil: for I am the meanest motherfucker in the valley"

    I'm never sure of the numbers. Catholics and Protestants count
    differently.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sat Dec 28 21:07:20 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 01:45:07 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Micro-fragmentation and inter-fragment wars is a big part of why Rome
    was able to take SO much SO quickly. Also why the Euros were able to
    subdue the AmerIndians so quickly.

    That, and Big Brother lurking in the shadows, also explains Israel's
    existence.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 21:36:44 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:23:12 +0100, D wrote:

    But if you put out a small salt stone, I'm certain they would stop
    gnawing at other things?

    That is one recommendation for homeowners with a porky problem. They don't
    get around too much. The is a nature trail with markers for the points of interest that's adjacent to a pasture where there is a salt block. Too far
    to walk so they eat the markers.

    I'd worked on the trail in the '80s and made markers by slicing fence
    posts at a diagonal and routing the numbers on the face. Being untreated
    wood they eventually rotted and were replaced with the plywood markers.
    After the porkies chewed them off some were replaced by what looks like a plastic composite. It will be interesting to see if they last.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sat Dec 28 21:40:26 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 10:33:19 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 02:00, rbowman wrote:

    When I was married we talked to an honest broker. He told us if we
    weren't willing to put the money on a roulette table in Vegas we
    shouldn't be in the market. We thanked him for his time and insights.

    Truth is, the whole topic bores me.

    Me too, but it remains a way to supplement my pension

    Unless my lifestyle radically changes my pension is more than adequate.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 21:27:24 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:39:50 +0100, D wrote:

    Liechtenstein, Monaco and Andorra all have managed to survive as small
    states longer than some modern countries have existed. They prove that
    it is not impossible for a small entity to survive.

    It helps if you don't have anything anybody wants and they can't find you
    on a map. Being a tax haven that attracts corporate headquarters isn't something you can conquer.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lars Poulsen@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 00:48:39 2024
    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    I googled "Lingam massage therapist near me". The top hit was ...
    impressive.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 00:25:01 2024
    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 17:08:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    Please, everyone (well, at least those of the male persuasion), if
    you're over 50 and haven't yet had a PSA test, get one done.

    During my first visit my doctor offered to prescribe a PSA test but said
    it often showed false positives and worried you over nothing. I got the finger wave instead. That was over 20 years ago. My prostate isn't
    getting any smaller but I've hit the point most males reach where you die with prostate cancer, not of it.

    Glad to hear it. Apparently for some people it doesn't show up in a
    DRE, while for others it doesn't show up on a PSA. Might as well get
    both and be a bit more sure.

    It's like colonoscopy. I had one. TMI but I waived the anesthesia and
    could watch the process on the monitor. Very interesting. 10 years later I elected the stool sample. After 75 they no longer do them. If you've made
    it that far...

    They doped me up for my colonoscopy. The only thing I remember was
    looking at the monitor and noticing a standard set of Windows gadgets
    along the bottom. I just hoped it wasn't going to give me the
    Blue Screen of Death...

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 29 01:28:46 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:48:39 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely
    philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    I googled "Lingam massage therapist near me". The top hit was ...
    impressive.

    None in my neighborhood or I might treat myself to a late birthday
    present. I knew about the symbolism for Shiva. Given the Kama Sutra I
    should have guessed it would be put to a practical application.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 29 01:39:23 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:25:01 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    They doped me up for my colonoscopy. The only thing I remember was
    looking at the monitor and noticing a standard set of Windows gadgets
    along the bottom. I just hoped it wasn't going to give me the Blue
    Screen of Death...

    The physician was ex-military so he just said "Yeah, okay." They did start
    an IV in case I started screaming. It looked something like a video game
    where you're navigating a tunnel with little pools of green water here and there. Then a little snipper would shoot out to grab a piece for analysis.

    I've has much worse gas pains. I think the push sedation in case the
    patient freaks out more than any discomfort involved. A friend was sedated
    and his sister had to drag him home in a zombie state. I got dressed and
    went to work.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 00:11:34 2024
    On 12/28/24 3:15 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 10:58:47 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    I cant see how Hinduism could have a pantheon. At its core its mostly
    philosophy.

    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    Then there is Ganesha

    https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/5-things-to-know-about-ganesha

    or Lakshmi

    https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/lakshmi

    Never take the dry European accounts of Hinduism, Buddhism, and other
    eastern religions as relevant to what happens on the ground. I've heard Hinduism referred to as serial monotheism. People can switch to a new favorite god or goddess and there is no requirement that everyone in a
    family picks the same one.

    Well, as I kinda implied, the Hindu pantheon is kinda odd.
    In programmers terms you get the parent process - Bhahma/
    Vishnu/Shiva - and then a lot of 'child processes' spawned
    which can themselves spawn child processes.

    Sometimes those gods are just kinda 'ideas', sometimes
    they are said to adopt physical, distinct, forms as
    needed. Lots of big temples to the more popular avatars.

    Five or six thousand years ... it's all become complicated.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to Lars Poulsen on Sun Dec 29 01:00:57 2024
    On 12/28/24 7:48 PM, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    I googled "Lingam massage therapist near me". The top hit was ...
    impressive.

    Ha ha !

    Well, let's say this has been a constant interest
    since before clay tablets :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 01:01:48 2024
    On 12/28/24 8:28 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:48:39 -0000 (UTC), Lars Poulsen wrote:

    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely
    philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    I googled "Lingam massage therapist near me". The top hit was ...
    impressive.

    None in my neighborhood or I might treat myself to a late birthday
    present. I knew about the symbolism for Shiva. Given the Kama Sutra I
    should have guessed it would be put to a practical application.

    Forever popular :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 00:59:28 2024
    On 12/28/24 5:58 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 28/12/2024 06:25, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    As for BRITS ... 'unbroken' maybe means a few thousand
       years - but with every wave of invaders the 'gods' got
       mixed, re-named, re-statused - and some just disappeared.

    Indeed. The Celtic pantheon of nature spirits remains a dismal parody of
    its formal self with just a few faeries, leprechauns and of course the Morrigan.

       Kinda like Hindu 'paganism' - the idea of god-beings with
       such extreme power and 'generative potential' that a mere
       passing thought could pop another god or god-like thing
       into existence on the spot ... a nice kinda 'fractal'
       look and feel  🙂

    I cant see how Hinduism  could have a pantheon. At its core its mostly philosophy.

    I always thought that their gods were understood to be symbols, nor 'real'


    Then explain all those temples ... to specific gods, with
    faces :-)

    SOMETIMES the gods are 'ideas'/'ideals', SOMETIMES they
    manifest materially.

       Know nothing about Chinese theology alas ... other than
       that it had a lot of 'demons'. Gotta look into that. May
       NOT entirely 'get it' alas because I wasn't born Chinese.
       'Gods' kinda COMPLEMENT the culture rather than CREATE it.


    Japanese is ancestor worship.

    A little more complex than that ...

       Oh, good movie/Harry Potter question - how come all
       'spells' are done in LATIN ??? Did spirits/gods/etc
       from 10,000 years ago all speak Latin too ???  🙂

    Well traditionally necromancy texts were written in Hebrew or Latin, as
    there was a close association between the religion and its antithesis.🙂

    Although IIRC HP Lovecraft had a mad Arab somewhere on his demonology.
    Abdul Alhazred, creator of the Necronomicon.

    I mean it wouldn't make good drama  for our Harry to mutter ' I say
    great spiwwit, turn Malfoy into a spotted toad'

    Clever people spoke Latin or Greek, back in the day.

    :-)

    If you want demonology, Persian or Babylonian might
    be more productive. Hey, they were a BIG DEAL for a
    LONG time.

    The first 'god' to be mentioned however was Sumerian,
    "Enki" (spelling varies). It liked 'fish' themes and
    supposedly imparted all kinds of civil-structure and
    civil-engineering info mostly to the citizens of
    Eridu (now Kuwait). Uruk and Ur copied. Great luck
    that paper hadn't been invented yet - those clay
    tablets are REALLY 'archival media'.

    The even older works at Gobekli Tepe imply even earlier
    gods/religions - but there's no real DETAIL. It's
    kinda like finding a 'cross' symbol but with no
    clue as to what it MEANS to anybody, no background.
    I guess the builders "just knew" and ASSUMED everyone
    would 'get it' forever and ever.

    Sumerian tales have been kinda well translated at
    this point. Especially study the hero/demigod
    guy named 'Gilgamesh'. Probably the first cite
    of a 'Hercules'-type figure. Double-alpha male,
    huge (6-7 feet prob) with Arnie's physique. He
    became SUCH a pain in the ass in Ur that they
    petitioned the Gods to find ways to distract him
    (you could actually walk to the temple and talk
    to physical gods in those days). They arranged a
    near-equal gay-boy lover and some 'tasks'/goals.
    This kept him out of everybody's hair :-)

    Anyway, the tales were so good they were later
    translated into Akkadian and then Babylonian.
    Raw translations - including 'text missing' bits -
    can be found online.

    SO INTERESTING how civil life and concerns have
    changed SO LITTLE in 7000+ years !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 01:58:50 2024
    On 12/29/24 1:25 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:11:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Five or six thousand years ... it's all become complicated.

    Very. I tried to read Guénon's 'Introduction to the Study of the Hindu Doctrines' and gave up. It doesn't help that Guénon was a few bricks shy
    of a load. After trickling through the weirdness of the day he finally hit
    on Islam.

    Thoreau talks about 'The Laws of Manu'. I never could find it but I
    assume he was using Jones' translation. I did find a more complete modern translation and it is dense. Jones also popularized the relationship of Sanskit to European languages and theorized an Aryan invasion of India. Schopenhauer also read Jones to get his ideas of what eastern philosophy
    was.

    I only recently heard the term 'Protestant Buddhism' but I think it apples
    to most of the eastern religions that have been westernized.

    https://www.learnreligions.com/protestant-buddhism-449765


    Well ... there's the "Beatles" period - where the religion
    was 'adapted' for western consumption.

    On some shelf I've got a kinda 'Krishna' tome by a
    swami from the 60s.

    IMHO, like with Chinese theology, if you weren't raised,
    saturated, in it then you're never REALLY gonna 'get it'.
    Religions and cultures are usually tightly-entwined.

    Still, the Parent/Child/Sub-Child aspect of Hindu IS
    kinda interesting.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 06:25:08 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:11:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    Five or six thousand years ... it's all become complicated.

    Very. I tried to read Guénon's 'Introduction to the Study of the Hindu Doctrines' and gave up. It doesn't help that Guénon was a few bricks shy
    of a load. After trickling through the weirdness of the day he finally hit
    on Islam.

    Thoreau talks about 'The Laws of Manu'. I never could find it but I
    assume he was using Jones' translation. I did find a more complete modern translation and it is dense. Jones also popularized the relationship of
    Sanskit to European languages and theorized an Aryan invasion of India. Schopenhauer also read Jones to get his ideas of what eastern philosophy
    was.

    I only recently heard the term 'Protestant Buddhism' but I think it apples
    to most of the eastern religions that have been westernized.

    https://www.learnreligions.com/protestant-buddhism-449765

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 07:45:02 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 01:58:50 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    IMHO, like with Chinese theology, if you weren't raised, saturated,
    in it then you're never REALLY gonna 'get it'.
    Religions and cultures are usually tightly-entwined.

    Then there's Shinto with an infinite number of kami and a Buddhist monk on speed dial in case Uncle Hayao kicks off. There is a Shinto shrine in Washington State but I have no idea how you export that to the round eyes.

    In the spirit of DEI, Christian weddings are very popular in Japan. I
    think most of the priests are fakes; the real ones cost more.

    Still, the Parent/Child/Sub-Child aspect of Hindu IS kinda
    interesting.

    It all started with Auðumbla and Ymir. When you stare at the Abyss it's interesting what crawls out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 07:24:54 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 01:00:57 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/28/24 7:48 PM, Lars Poulsen wrote:
    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    Right. When they're rubbing a lingam with butter it is purely
    philosophy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingam

    I googled "Lingam massage therapist near me". The top hit was ...
    impressive.

    Ha ha !

    Well, let's say this has been a constant interest since before clay
    tablets :-)

    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 03:22:34 2024
    On 12/29/24 2:45 AM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 01:58:50 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    IMHO, like with Chinese theology, if you weren't raised, saturated,
    in it then you're never REALLY gonna 'get it'.
    Religions and cultures are usually tightly-entwined.

    Then there's Shinto with an infinite number of kami and a Buddhist monk on speed dial in case Uncle Hayao kicks off. There is a Shinto shrine in Washington State but I have no idea how you export that to the round eyes.

    In the spirit of DEI, Christian weddings are very popular in Japan. I
    think most of the priests are fakes; the real ones cost more.

    Still, the Parent/Child/Sub-Child aspect of Hindu IS kinda
    interesting.

    It all started with Auðumbla and Ymir. When you stare at the Abyss it's interesting what crawls out.

    Cow gods ?

    That theology came well AFTER Sumeria.

    Ultra-great grandpappy/granny must have been
    really fond of cows :-)

    The current Most Annoying is what those who built
    Gobekli Tepi had in mind. They added lots of symbols
    with a likely 'religious' meaning - but forgot to
    include any DETAILS. Likely assumed everybody would
    "just know" 12,000 years later.

    First 'details' show up at the dawn of the Mesopotamian
    era - but that's "Enki", not cows or anything. Enki
    was fond of 'fish themes'. However it did reportedly
    inform about civil-structure/engineering issues. The
    later city-states copied. Enki seemed to be a pretty
    good, umm, dude.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 11:53:39 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:08, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism >>>>>> were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick >>>>>> google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the >>>>>> 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to feel >>>>> they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and rub >>>>> themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until the >>>> 17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably were >>>> _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started with
    Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish witch in the >>> practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    I'm not convinced that Gardnerian wicca represents an unbroken tradition.
    But... who knows? ;) I've heard that this can give rise to bitter fights
    among wiccans.

    Oh yes. And the Cermoinial Magickians. And and and...

    More in fighting in Wicca than the average private school girls toilets...
    Or the average religious sect. The exclusive Plymouth brethren simply will not talk to the ordinary Plymouth brethren etc. etc.

    How come you are so wise on the ways of the occult? Has it always been an interest of yours?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:14:52 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 17:08:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    Pancreatic cancer is really nasty. We've lost a couple of friends that
    way. It presents no symptoms until you're already toast. The few cases
    I've heard of where people survived were due to a surgeon being in the
    area for something else and spotting it.

    I talked to my neighbor and he said he was ready to retire and do some serious fishing. It was about two months after retirement and he was dead.
    I talked to his son and they had managed to get in a last fishing trip.
    He'd started chemo but it did little good if not killing him faster.

    Was he very career oriented? I have a theory that many who are overly
    career oriented and place their full identity and value in their job and career, cannot handle forced retirement. When deprived of their jobs and careers, they just whither and die.

    I have an acquaintance and his father was very much about saving and
    preparing for retirement. He was a senior oil executive, and a year or so before retirement he gets a stroke, and while surviving, he's not able to
    enjoy all the things he planned. Very tragic!

    My mother asked me, before she died, to stop saving all the time, and
    actually try to enjoy life from time to time. Even though I'm not good at
    it, I do think about her advice and I try to enojoy more fishing trips and stuff, than I did before she died.

    Please, everyone (well, at least those of the male persuasion), if
    you're over 50 and haven't yet had a PSA test, get one done.

    During my first visit my doctor offered to prescribe a PSA test but said
    it often showed false positives and worried you over nothing. I got the finger wave instead. That was over 20 years ago. My prostate isn't
    getting any smaller but I've hit the point most males reach where you die with prostate cancer, not of it.

    It's like colonoscopy. I had one. TMI but I waived the anesthesia and
    could watch the process on the monitor. Very interesting. 10 years later I elected the stool sample. After 75 they no longer do them. If you've made
    it that far...

    Again, if it takes a lot of people fondling my anus and my penis in order
    to live a long life, I think it might not be for me.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 29 12:06:09 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-28, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:

    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here. 😉

    <snip>

    I haven't needed another angioplasty since taking them.
    So what statins do is worth doing. IF you can tolerate the side effects.

    I'm lucky. I take rosavastatin (Crestor), and have no side effects.
    I can even eat grapefruit, which my wife (who is taking a different
    statin) cannot. Mine is more a precautionary thing, keeping
    cholestorol under control.

    Cancer is an utter bitch. I am on my second now, having fully survived
    the first, but it is ultimately incurable, just very slow developing,
    so its likely something else will kill me first.

    As the saying goes, you're more likely to die with it than of it.

    The problem with some cancers is that by the time they are diagnosable,
    they are already fatal. A friend died of fully metastasized bowel
    cancer. The only symptom was that he was tired and a bit gaunt for years
    and years, Then one day he went into hospital in total body pain and
    died 3 weeks later.

    Another friend was similar.

    Pancreatic cancer is really nasty. We've lost a couple of friends
    that way. It presents no symptoms until you're already toast.
    The few cases I've heard of where people survived were due to
    a surgeon being in the area for something else and spotting it.

    Please, everyone (well, at least those of the male persuasion),
    if you're over 50 and haven't yet had a PSA test, get one done.
    I had been getting the digital rectal exam (i.e. finger up the
    butt) for 10 years and it had always been negative. One day my

    Nah... I'd prefer my dignity and death over a finger up the butt every
    year. ;)

    wife suggested I get a PSA test. Because I was asymptomatic,

    Does it involve a finger up the butt? =/

    it wasn't covered by medical, but I figured it was worth the
    price of a bottle of wine to find out. It came back 20 (where
    4 is considered cause for concern). Rather than panic, I sprang
    for a second test, which gave the same result. So off I went
    down the road to radical prostatectomy. I can't believe the
    number of people who decline the test because they are either
    too cheap or don't want to know. Sheesh. If I hadn't had that
    test, I'd have been dead by now.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 12:02:11 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:
    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here. 😉 I remember my old >> doctor. He operated on a push/pull methodology. If you wanted something, he >> would not give it to you, if you did not want something, he would push it. >> The reason I remember it, was that once my mother wanted something, and he >> tried his best not to give it to her, and then the same week I went there, >> he tried hard to push the same medication on me. He was fairly grumpy and
    an extremely heavy smoker.

    Well I have clooged arteries and have had 5 operatins to fixce them, but they get clogged every year. I couldnt hanlde statins and they said that all that cholestrol or somethinbg was clogging them

    Now I have a bloody expensive fortnightly self adminitered injection, which they say has worked.

    I haven't needed another angioplasty since taking them.
    So what statins do is worth doing. IF you can tolerate the side effects.

    Or there are other medications.

    Its a question of the least worst remedies. Everything has a side effect. I tried beta blockers but felt like a zombie.

    Sometimes I get the feeling that doctors are still very close to medieval alchemists and have no clue what's going on. I have a very mild, but
    annoying skin desease that came from nowhere. Since it is very mild, and
    only flares up about once a month I never bothered to do anything about
    it. But I had some extra time and went to a doctor, he called in 2 others doctors, and they were looking at it for 20 minutes discussing, and in the
    end admitted they had no idea what it is and gave me some creams.

    The creams gave me 2 small permanent scars, that otherwise would have disappeared (thank you Mr. Doctor!). They told me to come back and they
    would look some more. ;)

    So I wonder if I should do it, or if they will manage to make it worse the second time as well? On the other hand, I am curious about what it is, and
    it would be nice to know.

    Well, another project for 2025!

    I would prefer to blow my heart out on a steep mountain trail and become >>> food for the bears to some long drawn out affair where 'medical science' >>> tries to put off the inevitable.


    Well I am afraid I am fully on all the medical science can do to not blow my heart out.
    Most of what I now take seems to do the job, but the surgery made the most difference, Dyno-rodding the arteries is a brutal but effective method

    This is the truth! After seeing my mothers cancer treatment that did not
    work out in the end, I agree 100%. She went through 3 years of hell for
    nothing. It did not help of course, that the doctor misdiagnosed her. She
    was in tears and filed a law suit against herself. I do not blame her, I
    blame the socialist system she works in, which made her over worked, and
    therefore more likely to commit mistakes.

    Cancer is an utter bitch. I am on my second now, having fully survived the

    This is the truth!

    first, but it is ultimately incurable, just very slow developing, so its likely something else will kill me first.

    My grandmother had some form of slow acting blood cancer I think. In the
    end I think she died of old age at 95.

    The problem with some cancers is that by the time they are diagnosable, they are already fatal. A friend died of fully metastasized bowel cancer. The only symptom was that he was tired and a bit gaunt for years and years, Then one day he went into hospital in total body pain and died 3 weeks later.

    Another friend was similar.

    The cancer was never present in the bowel to any high degree, just mounting back pain and lymph node lumps a few weeks before the end.

    Horrible! =(

    Some cancers are easy.. Some are harder and some are impossible.
    GPs are not equipped for this. My GP threw me straight at oncology to check out something suspicious. She is rather conscientious.

    My mothers doctor told me that cancer is not one desease, it's 100s of different ones and apparently that is why it is so difficult to cure it. Research focuses on the most common ones, and I imagine there is very
    little money in the least common ones.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:19:27 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:33:48 +0100, D wrote:

    Psalm 144:1 - “Blessed be the LORD my strength, which teaches my
    hands
    to war, and my fingers to fight.”

    Well, that's close. Then there is the translation of a psalm that may not
    be authorized.

    "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
    no evil: for I am the meanest motherfucker in the valley"

    I'm never sure of the numbers. Catholics and Protestants count
    differently.

    Very profound! Which version would that be? ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:18:40 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:17:31 +0100, D wrote:

    What are statins? Sometimes I feel very young here

    They supposedly lower cholesterol and are loved by cardiologists.
    According to them everybody would benefit from taking them, damn the side effects.

    Ahh, got it. Yes, I surely must be one of the youngest members of this
    group! ;)

    I just had my yearly exam. My LDL was toward the lower end of the normal range while the HDL (good cholesterol) was a little above the high end.

    The punch line: my breakfast for years consists of garlic, half an onion, two eggs, and a slice of cheese. Supper alternates between chunks of pig
    or cow with a rare chicken. My veggies are mostly the garlic and onion,
    with baked yams or squash in the winter. Fruit is blueberries or
    strawberries that I like to mix in with cottage cheese. A cardiologist
    would weep.

    Sounds like a nice diet! I could live with that, minus the yams and the
    squash.

    'The science' has been changing over the years. A friend who was a bit of
    a hypochondriac closely followed the New England Journal of Medicine.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_England_Journal_of_Medicine

    It isn't some quack alternative medicine publication but he loved to point out how 'the science' could change on a weekly basis.

    It always does. I've long since learned to ignore any articles of the
    form "science say you'll die if you eat x" or "science says you'll live if
    you eat y". I try to focus on the quality of life instead of the quantity.

    I think perhaps not having children helps with having a more detached view
    of life. Having children I think does horrible things to your sleep and
    your peace of mind. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:20:42 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:32:17 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth. Snorri was a ninja!

    It's interesting how some of the writers/historians trace back to the fall
    of Troy. Were they reading Homer or Virgil? Or was that part of the Christian mythology of the day?


    That was high fashion for a time! There were some swedish authors as well
    who played that game, traving the swede back to ancient greek times. No
    one likes to write about tracing all the way back to africa though. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:22:23 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:39:50 +0100, D wrote:

    Liechtenstein, Monaco and Andorra all have managed to survive as small
    states longer than some modern countries have existed. They prove that
    it is not impossible for a small entity to survive.

    It helps if you don't have anything anybody wants and they can't find you
    on a map. Being a tax haven that attracts corporate headquarters isn't something you can conquer.


    This is my point about changed historical circumstances. With industries
    now being intangible, such as finance and IT, it becomes easier to carve
    out small mental kingdoms, instead of if you were sitting on a gold mine
    that everyone wants. It could be argued that being below a certain size,
    adds to your security, since, as you say, people simply wont see you on
    the map. ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 12:26:09 2024
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:23:12 +0100, D wrote:

    But if you put out a small salt stone, I'm certain they would stop
    gnawing at other things?

    That is one recommendation for homeowners with a porky problem. They don't get around too much. The is a nature trail with markers for the points of interest that's adjacent to a pasture where there is a salt block. Too far
    to walk so they eat the markers.

    They seem to be very set in their ways. No chance for diplomacy? ;)

    I'd worked on the trail in the '80s and made markers by slicing fence
    posts at a diagonal and routing the numbers on the face. Being untreated
    wood they eventually rotted and were replaced with the plywood markers.
    After the porkies chewed them off some were replaced by what looks like a plastic composite. It will be interesting to see if they last.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 11:53:41 2024
    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    --
    There’s a mighty big difference between good, sound reasons and reasons
    that sound good.

    Burton Hillis (William Vaughn, American columnist)

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 11:52:48 2024
    On 29/12/2024 06:58, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    IMHO, like with Chinese theology, if you weren't raised,
      saturated, in it then you're never REALLY gonna 'get it'.
      Religions and cultures are usually tightly-entwined.

    Odd. My experience is that looking at religions from the outside, I know
    far more about them than their practitioners and believers do.

    I think the expereince of WW2 left my parents generation a bit too grown
    up for it all.


    --
    There’s a mighty big difference between good, sound reasons and reasons
    that sound good.

    Burton Hillis (William Vaughn, American columnist)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 11:55:34 2024
    On 29/12/2024 08:22, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    The current Most Annoying is what those who built
      Gobekli Tepi had in mind. They added lots of symbols
      with a likely 'religious' meaning - but forgot to
      include any DETAILS. Likely assumed everybody would
      "just know" 12,000 years later.

    I wonder what on earth people in 12000 years time will make of Debian
    release names.
    "Named after household gods" ?


    --
    There’s a mighty big difference between good, sound reasons and reasons
    that sound good.

    Burton Hillis (William Vaughn, American columnist)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 12:04:14 2024
    On 29/12/2024 10:53, D wrote:


    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:08, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of
    paganism were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything
    through a quick google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on
    official death in the 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to >>>>>> feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit
    and rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up
    until the 17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains
    probably were _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started
    with Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish
    witch in the practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    I'm not convinced that Gardnerian wicca represents an unbroken
    tradition. But... who knows? ;) I've heard that this can give rise to
    bitter fights among wiccans.

    Oh yes. And the Cermoinial Magickians. And and and...

    More in fighting in Wicca than the average private school girls
    toilets...
    Or the average religious sect. The exclusive Plymouth brethren simply
    will not talk to the ordinary Plymouth brethren etc. etc.

    How come you are so wise on the ways of the occult? Has it always been
    an interest of yours?

    Oh yes. After I discarded rational materialism I went looking at all the
    other 'models of reality'.

    Religions , cults, conspiracy theories and the like.

    Some grains in there that are interesting, but mostly dross.

    Numerology is interesting. The *quality* of numbers, not their quantity.

    In the classic Jewish system, it all starts with nothing (0), and then
    there is something (1)
    Adding a second dimension gives the idea of distance (2) , and cubic
    space is (3), whereas time is (4).

    All done with 'emanations'. Broadly speaking, emergent properties...

    The Jewish Kabbalistic system is actually the sort of mental maps that
    became science.

    It was all dredged up and reinvented in the 1930s by Crowley and
    associates.


    --
    “when things get difficult you just have to lie”

    ― Jean Claud Jüncker

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 12:11:04 2024
    On 29/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:


    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:


    Its a question of the least worst remedies. Everything has a side
    effect. I tried beta blockers but felt like a zombie.

    Sometimes I get the feeling that doctors are still very close to
    medieval alchemists and have no clue what's going on. I have a very
    mild, but annoying skin desease that came from nowhere. Since it is very mild, and only flares up about once a month I never bothered to do
    anything about it. But I had some extra time and went to a doctor, he
    called in 2 others doctors, and they were looking at it for 20 minutes discussing, and in the end admitted they had no idea what it is and gave
    me some creams.

    I had the same. It turned out that I had been using a lot of bleach to
    clean my house after I got my ex out of it. and it affected my skin.

    The creams gave me 2 small permanent scars, that otherwise would have disappeared (thank you Mr. Doctor!). They told me to come back and they
    would look some more. ;)

    So I wonder if I should do it, or if they will manage to make it worse
    the second time as well? On the other hand, I am curious about what it
    is, and it would be nice to know.

    If it doesn't kill you no one has studied it.

    Medicine is tampering with a massively complex dynamic system, and only
    by trial and error does it become appernet what works and what does not.


    Cancer is an utter bitch. I am on my second now, having fully survived
    the

    This is the truth!

    first,  but it is ultimately incurable, just very slow developing, so
    its likely something else will kill me first.

    My grandmother had some form of slow acting blood cancer I think. In the
    end I think she died of old age at 95.

    Yep. That's the one. Had it at least ten years with no real effect.


    The cancer was never present in the bowel to any high degree, just
    mounting back pain and lymph node lumps a few weeks before the end.

    Horrible! =(

    Some cancers are easy.. Some are harder and some are impossible.
    GPs are not equipped for this. My GP threw me straight at oncology to
    check out something suspicious. She is rather conscientious.

    My mothers doctor told me that cancer is not one disease, it's 100s of different ones and apparently that is why it is so difficult to cure it. Research focuses on the most common ones, and I imagine there is very
    little money in the least common ones.

    All it really is, is abnormal genetics taking hold. A mutation appears, survives and then prospers.

    It is pure luck of the draw, mostly.

    And its hard to call e.g. heart disease a disease, since there is no
    active agency causing it.

    It's an effect of genetics and lifestyle choices and a huge slice of luck.





    --
    In todays liberal progressive conflict-free education system, everyone
    gets full Marx.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 16:54:39 2024
    On 2024-12-29, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:

    My mothers doctor told me that cancer is not one disease, it's 100s of
    different ones and apparently that is why it is so difficult to cure it.
    Research focuses on the most common ones, and I imagine there is very
    little money in the least common ones.

    All it really is, is abnormal genetics taking hold. A mutation appears, survives and then prospers.

    It is pure luck of the draw, mostly.

    And its hard to call e.g. heart disease a disease, since there is no
    active agency causing it.

    It's an effect of genetics and lifestyle choices and a huge slice of luck.

    I suspect that prolonged biochemical stress (e.g. smoking) is a factor.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 16:54:39 2024
    On 2024-12-29, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 00:25:01 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    They doped me up for my colonoscopy. The only thing I remember was
    looking at the monitor and noticing a standard set of Windows gadgets
    along the bottom. I just hoped it wasn't going to give me the Blue
    Screen of Death...

    The physician was ex-military so he just said "Yeah, okay." They did start
    an IV in case I started screaming. It looked something like a video game where you're navigating a tunnel with little pools of green water here and there. Then a little snipper would shoot out to grab a piece for analysis.

    I've has much worse gas pains. I think the push sedation in case the
    patient freaks out more than any discomfort involved. A friend was sedated and his sister had to drag him home in a zombie state. I got dressed and
    went to work.

    That sounds familiar. I didn't think I was too far gone until my wife
    came to take me home and I suddenly realized, "Whoa, I'm a zombie."

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 19:03:30 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:26:09 +0100, D wrote:


    They seem to be very set in their ways. No chance for diplomacy?

    Baseball bat. Conventional wisdom is a porcupine is the only animal an
    unarmed man in the wilderness can kill and eat. Hit them in the nose.

    Apropos there is a trail I frequently walk which has a shortcut that I
    don't think I've ever used. Yesterday I wanted to get my miles for the
    year up and took it for a lap and a half. One of the informational signs
    is about porcupine damage pointing out a couple of trees with dead tops.

    Part of the trail runs along the river and I used to see beaver damage,
    and I've seen it on other riparian trails but there is nothing recent. I
    wonder if Fish & Game has been waging a quiet war on beavers?

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 19:47:05 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:20:42 +0100, D wrote:

    That was high fashion for a time! There were some swedish authors as
    well who played that game, traving the swede back to ancient greek
    times. No one likes to write about tracing all the way back to africa
    though.

    When you try to unravel the histories you realize there was a lot of
    cribbing going on with pure fiction to fill in the blanks. Then there are
    the dead ends like the assumption Jordanes copied Cassiodorus although
    there are no texts by Cassiodorus. According to him the Goths took a shot
    at Troy after the Trojan Wars.

    The twist is he might have been right about the Geats if you look at
    modern DNA patterns. The thought is I-M253 arose in Scandinavia and spread
    out from there. Did they becomes Goths?

    It's hard to separate the fly shit from the pepper.

    Funny thing about tracing genealogies back to Africa. The Dark Continent doesn't get much love outside of the Marvel universe. Been to any good
    African restaurants lately?

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Sun Dec 29 20:02:21 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 03:22:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The current Most Annoying is what those who built Gobekli Tepi had in
    mind. They added lots of symbols with a likely 'religious' meaning -
    but forgot to include any DETAILS. Likely assumed everybody would
    "just know" 12,000 years later.

    Certainly. There is a Runic inscription that transliterates to ALU. It
    shows up in several places but it isn't clear what it means. It's not like
    the 'Haldan was here' graffiti in Istanbul or the monuments. The valknut
    is another common symbol that seems to be associated with Wotan but nobody knows what it even was called.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sun Dec 29 19:40:40 2024
    On 29/12/2024 16:54, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-29, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:

    My mothers doctor told me that cancer is not one disease, it's 100s of
    different ones and apparently that is why it is so difficult to cure it. >>> Research focuses on the most common ones, and I imagine there is very
    little money in the least common ones.

    All it really is, is abnormal genetics taking hold. A mutation appears,
    survives and then prospers.

    It is pure luck of the draw, mostly.

    And its hard to call e.g. heart disease a disease, since there is no
    active agency causing it.

    It's an effect of genetics and lifestyle choices and a huge slice of luck.

    I suspect that prolonged biochemical stress (e.g. smoking) is a factor.

    See "lifestyle choices"...

    --
    I would rather have questions that cannot be answered...
    ...than to have answers that cannot be questioned

    Richard Feynman

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 19:53:38 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:14:52 +0100, D wrote:



    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 17:08:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    Pancreatic cancer is really nasty. We've lost a couple of friends
    that way. It presents no symptoms until you're already toast. The few
    cases I've heard of where people survived were due to a surgeon being
    in the area for something else and spotting it.

    I talked to my neighbor and he said he was ready to retire and do some
    serious fishing. It was about two months after retirement and he was
    dead.
    I talked to his son and they had managed to get in a last fishing trip.
    He'd started chemo but it did little good if not killing him faster.

    Was he very career oriented? I have a theory that many who are overly
    career oriented and place their full identity and value in their job and career, cannot handle forced retirement. When deprived of their jobs and careers, they just whither and die.

    Not that I am aware of. I was never sure exactly what he did but it was
    blue collar. Most blue collar workers see retirement as the carrot at the
    end of the tunnel even if it doesn't turn out as sweet as anticipated. My father was going to retire when I graduated college and also looked
    forward to a lot of fishing and hunting. He died in January of my senior
    year.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 20:08:04 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 11:55:34 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 08:22, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    The current Most Annoying is what those who built
      Gobekli Tepi had in mind. They added lots of symbols with a likely
      'religious' meaning - but forgot to include any DETAILS. Likely
      assumed everybody would "just know" 12,000 years later.

    I wonder what on earth people in 12000 years time will make of Debian
    release names.
    "Named after household gods" ?

    Bookworm? Bullseye? Not as bad as Ubuntu's Ruptured Ringtail system or Android's Ice Cream Sandwich.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 20:15:21 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:18:40 +0100, D wrote:

    It always does. I've long since learned to ignore any articles of the
    form "science say you'll die if you eat x" or "science says you'll live
    if you eat y". I try to focus on the quality of life instead of the
    quantity.

    Follow the money. The seed oil industry is mobilizing against RFK Jr.
    Gotta protect the cash flow.

    I switched to olive oil long ago but it didn't have anything to do with 'science'. When I opened a bottle of the heart friendly canola oil it
    smelled like the can of boiled linseed oil I use on tool handles. "This
    can't be good."

    Even 'canola' is a misdirection; it sells better than saying rapeseed.

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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 20:17:11 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:19:27 +0100, D wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 12:33:48 +0100, D wrote:

    Psalm 144:1 - “Blessed be the LORD my strength, which teaches my
    hands
    to war, and my fingers to fight.”

    Well, that's close. Then there is the translation of a psalm that may
    not be authorized.

    "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will
    fear no evil: for I am the meanest motherfucker in the valley"

    I'm never sure of the numbers. Catholics and Protestants count
    differently.

    Very profound! Which version would that be? ;)

    USMC New Revised.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sun Dec 29 23:43:56 2024
    On 12/29/24 3:02 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 03:22:34 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    The current Most Annoying is what those who built Gobekli Tepi had in
    mind. They added lots of symbols with a likely 'religious' meaning -
    but forgot to include any DETAILS. Likely assumed everybody would
    "just know" 12,000 years later.

    Certainly. There is a Runic inscription that transliterates to ALU. It
    shows up in several places but it isn't clear what it means. It's not like the 'Haldan was here' graffiti in Istanbul or the monuments. The valknut
    is another common symbol that seems to be associated with Wotan but nobody knows what it even was called.


    True Believers ... they just assume they are 101% RIGHT
    and thus every detail and aspect of their theology is
    just SURE to last until eternity.

    As for the Norse religion ... a big big problem is that
    the writing-system during its beginning period was just
    fer-shit. All we "know" is in the form of "as told by,
    as told to, as told by ....."

    Might be ten percent of the original info remaining
    uncorrupted.

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  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Sun Dec 29 23:47:57 2024
    On 12/29/24 6:52 AM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
    On 29/12/2024 06:58, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
    IMHO, like with Chinese theology, if you weren't raised,
       saturated, in it then you're never REALLY gonna 'get it'.
       Religions and cultures are usually tightly-entwined.

    Odd. My experience is that looking at religions from the outside, I know
    far more about them than their practitioners and believers  do.

    Might seem so ... but don't get cocky.

    I think the expereince of WW2 left my parents generation a bit too grown
    up for it all.

    Well, if they were into the all-powerful/all-good god
    thing, then yea. If they still made offerings to Woden
    then not so much :-)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 30 12:38:29 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the
    Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for
    procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 30 12:41:07 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 10:53, D wrote:


    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:08, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 27/12/2024 23:12, D wrote:


    On Fri, 27 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 23/12/2024 21:14, D wrote:
    I have a vague memory of reading somewhere that remains of paganism >>>>>>>> were alive until the 1700s, but cannot find anything through a quick >>>>>>>> google. My friendly neighbourhood AI insist on official death in the >>>>>>>> 12:th century.

    This is a subject of heated debate as modern Wiccan/Pagans like to >>>>>>> feel they have an unbroken tradition.

    But of course people probably learned to keep their mouths shit and >>>>>>> rub themselves with witches ointment in private...

    I do not believe in any unbroken tradition except among indians,
    esquimaux or some siberian indians.

    I do believe that it is not impossible that remains existed up until >>>>>> the 17th or perhaps even 18th century, although those remains probably >>>>>> were _very_ different from the original.


    I am not going to argue: merely to say that modern Wicca started with >>>>> Gardner who claimed to have been initiated by IIRC a Scottish witch in >>>>> the practices of the 'old religion' .

    And started the modern following...

    I'm not convinced that Gardnerian wicca represents an unbroken tradition. >>>> But... who knows? ;) I've heard that this can give rise to bitter fights >>>> among wiccans.

    Oh yes. And the Cermoinial Magickians. And and and...

    More in fighting in Wicca than the average private school girls toilets... >>> Or the average religious sect. The exclusive Plymouth brethren simply will >>> not talk to the ordinary Plymouth brethren etc. etc.

    How come you are so wise on the ways of the occult? Has it always been an
    interest of yours?

    Oh yes. After I discarded rational materialism I went looking at all the other 'models of reality'.

    Religions , cults, conspiracy theories and the like.

    Some grains in there that are interesting, but mostly dross.

    Numerology is interesting. The *quality* of numbers, not their quantity.

    In the classic Jewish system, it all starts with nothing (0), and then there is something (1)
    Adding a second dimension gives the idea of distance (2) , and cubic space is (3), whereas time is (4).

    All done with 'emanations'. Broadly speaking, emergent properties...

    The Jewish Kabbalistic system is actually the sort of mental maps that became science.

    Yes, many mathematicians seem to find meaning in their numbers and are naturally drawn to some kind of idealism.

    It was all dredged up and reinvented in the 1930s by Crowley and associates.

    This is the truth! The era of eclecticism and spiritual conmen. ;) I read
    a biography of Austin Osman Spare and he labeled Crowly & Co as "bored,
    dandys in whorehouses" or something like that, describing their sexual
    magic.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 30 12:51:07 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 11:02, D wrote:


    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 28/12/2024 11:17, D wrote:


    Its a question of the least worst remedies. Everything has a side effect. >>> I tried beta blockers but felt like a zombie.

    Sometimes I get the feeling that doctors are still very close to medieval
    alchemists and have no clue what's going on. I have a very mild, but
    annoying skin desease that came from nowhere. Since it is very mild, and
    only flares up about once a month I never bothered to do anything about it. >> But I had some extra time and went to a doctor, he called in 2 others
    doctors, and they were looking at it for 20 minutes discussing, and in the >> end admitted they had no idea what it is and gave me some creams.

    I had the same. It turned out that I had been using a lot of bleach to clean my house after I got my ex out of it. and it affected my skin.

    It is very complicated. I try to think about what I have done differently
    the past 5 years or so, in order for that stuff to start, and I have no
    idea. It feels as if it could be a combination of many, many small things. Stress, age, dietary changes, maybe an infection or two. I have no idea.

    The creams gave me 2 small permanent scars, that otherwise would have
    disappeared (thank you Mr. Doctor!). They told me to come back and they
    would look some more. ;)

    So I wonder if I should do it, or if they will manage to make it worse the >> second time as well? On the other hand, I am curious about what it is, and >> it would be nice to know.

    If it doesn't kill you no one has studied it.

    This is the truth! If I was a doctor I would prioritize according to how
    many die and how much profit there is in it. I imagine that big pharma
    perhaps might reverse the order. ;)

    Medicine is tampering with a massively complex dynamic system, and only by trial and error does it become appernet what works and what does not.

    I am very fascinated by it. It makes the complexity of IT systems feel
    like a childrens toy. If my parents would have been doctors I always
    thought that there would have been a big change that I would have ended up
    as a doctor as well. But that's what you get for having a social scientist
    as father... you end up in IT. ;)

    Cancer is an utter bitch. I am on my second now, having fully survived the >>
    This is the truth!

    first,  but it is ultimately incurable, just very slow developing, so its >>> likely something else will kill me first.

    My grandmother had some form of slow acting blood cancer I think. In the
    end I think she died of old age at 95.

    Yep. That's the one. Had it at least ten years with no real effect.

    Good to hear that it isn't anything worse! =)


    The cancer was never present in the bowel to any high degree, just
    mounting back pain and lymph node lumps a few weeks before the end.

    Horrible! =(

    Some cancers are easy.. Some are harder and some are impossible.
    GPs are not equipped for this. My GP threw me straight at oncology to
    check out something suspicious. She is rather conscientious.

    My mothers doctor told me that cancer is not one disease, it's 100s of
    different ones and apparently that is why it is so difficult to cure it.
    Research focuses on the most common ones, and I imagine there is very
    little money in the least common ones.

    All it really is, is abnormal genetics taking hold. A mutation appears, survives and then prospers.

    It is pure luck of the draw, mostly.

    And its hard to call e.g. heart disease a disease, since there is no active agency causing it.

    It's an effect of genetics and lifestyle choices and a huge slice of luck.

    I read that the founder of spotify has started a health care company
    called Neko. The idea is that you step into a techno-shower-cabinet that
    picks up 100s of measurements from the most common such as weight and
    blook pressure, to extremely occult ones. And the idea is that a computer
    will then analyze it and find correlations to try and catch most desease
    early.

    A doctor criticized it for being unreliable, and saying that you'll always
    get some kind of alarm or trigger, and that having loads of these cabinets
    will overflow the healthcare system by anxious millionaires and
    billionaires for what in the end turned out to be nothing.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 30 13:04:29 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:26:09 +0100, D wrote:


    They seem to be very set in their ways. No chance for diplomacy?

    Baseball bat. Conventional wisdom is a porcupine is the only animal an unarmed man in the wilderness can kill and eat. Hit them in the nose.

    Apropos there is a trail I frequently walk which has a shortcut that I
    don't think I've ever used. Yesterday I wanted to get my miles for the
    year up and took it for a lap and a half. One of the informational signs
    is about porcupine damage pointing out a couple of trees with dead tops.

    Part of the trail runs along the river and I used to see beaver damage,
    and I've seen it on other riparian trails but there is nothing recent. I wonder if Fish & Game has been waging a quiet war on beavers?

    Beavers are cute too, but they have no concept of respect for others
    private property!

    I once met an otter in my local little fishing lake. He scared me half to
    death (it was late and I just saw a hueg black thing crawling out of the
    lake a few meters from me. Very unexpected. I suspect he was equally
    scared, not expecting a human to be there at that hour.

    In eastern europe I also met an otter once, in daylight. I think he was
    hungry and was swimming toward a small island with lots of birds (and
    eggs) for a snack.

    But that otter is very naughty. Once at night, he swam and chewed through
    my keep nets that were full of fish I was planning on smoking. I woke up
    and found nothing but holes in the net. After that, I purchased a keep net
    out of metal instead, for the moment, I've won!

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 30 13:07:00 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:20:42 +0100, D wrote:

    That was high fashion for a time! There were some swedish authors as
    well who played that game, traving the swede back to ancient greek
    times. No one likes to write about tracing all the way back to africa
    though.

    When you try to unravel the histories you realize there was a lot of
    cribbing going on with pure fiction to fill in the blanks. Then there are
    the dead ends like the assumption Jordanes copied Cassiodorus although
    there are no texts by Cassiodorus. According to him the Goths took a shot
    at Troy after the Trojan Wars.

    The twist is he might have been right about the Geats if you look at
    modern DNA patterns. The thought is I-M253 arose in Scandinavia and spread out from there. Did they becomes Goths?

    It's hard to separate the fly shit from the pepper.

    Funny thing about tracing genealogies back to Africa. The Dark Continent doesn't get much love outside of the Marvel universe. Been to any good African restaurants lately?

    This is the truth! In Stockholm there was one Ethiopian restaurant. I went there once, and it was ok, but nothing spectacular. This must have been
    about 20 years ago or so. Then it closed, and a new one has opened close
    to my father, but it never seems to be full.

    If I remember correctly it kind of tasted like very spicy indian food with weird flat bread that I didn't like.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 30 13:08:17 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:14:52 +0100, D wrote:



    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 17:08:28 GMT, Charlie Gibbs wrote:


    Pancreatic cancer is really nasty. We've lost a couple of friends
    that way. It presents no symptoms until you're already toast. The few >>>> cases I've heard of where people survived were due to a surgeon being
    in the area for something else and spotting it.

    I talked to my neighbor and he said he was ready to retire and do some
    serious fishing. It was about two months after retirement and he was
    dead.
    I talked to his son and they had managed to get in a last fishing trip.
    He'd started chemo but it did little good if not killing him faster.

    Was he very career oriented? I have a theory that many who are overly
    career oriented and place their full identity and value in their job and
    career, cannot handle forced retirement. When deprived of their jobs and
    careers, they just whither and die.

    Not that I am aware of. I was never sure exactly what he did but it was
    blue collar. Most blue collar workers see retirement as the carrot at the
    end of the tunnel even if it doesn't turn out as sweet as anticipated. My father was going to retire when I graduated college and also looked
    forward to a lot of fishing and hunting. He died in January of my senior year.

    Very sad, I'm sorry to hear it. =( Yes, many blue collar people I imagine
    see work as work, and would be happy living retired. I think that blue
    collar lifestyle choices might sometimes cut their lifes a bit shorter
    than normal.

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  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 30 13:15:01 2024
    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 12:18:40 +0100, D wrote:

    It always does. I've long since learned to ignore any articles of the
    form "science say you'll die if you eat x" or "science says you'll live
    if you eat y". I try to focus on the quality of life instead of the
    quantity.

    Follow the money. The seed oil industry is mobilizing against RFK Jr.
    Gotta protect the cash flow.

    I switched to olive oil long ago but it didn't have anything to do with 'science'. When I opened a bottle of the heart friendly canola oil it
    smelled like the can of boiled linseed oil I use on tool handles. "This
    can't be good."

    Even 'canola' is a misdirection; it sells better than saying rapeseed.


    I use either regular butter for cooking (and on my bread), or olive oil. I
    like the taste of high quality olive oil.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 12:30:25 2024
    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:


    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the
    Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for
    procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    --
    It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled. Mark Twain

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 12:34:11 2024
    On 30/12/2024 11:51, D wrote:
    But that's what you get for having a social scientist as father... you
    end up in IT. 😉

    Either that or in therapy.

    --
    "What do you think about Gay Marriage?"
    "I don't."
    "Don't what?"
    "Think about Gay Marriage."

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 12:33:29 2024
    On 30/12/2024 11:41, D wrote:

    It was all dredged up and reinvented in the 1930s by Crowley and
    associates.

    This is the truth! The era of eclecticism and spiritual conmen. 😉 I
    read a biography of Austin Osman Spare and he labeled Crowly & Co as
    "bored, dandys in whorehouses" or something like that, describing their sexual magic.

    Well that is probably as apt as anything else :=)

    Today we have crystal therapy, aroma therapy, lots of massage...one
    yearns for the days of a snort of charlie and a damn good shag...

    --
    It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled. Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 12:39:04 2024
    On 30/12/2024 12:07, D wrote:
    This is the truth! In Stockholm there was one Ethiopian restaurant. I
    went there once, and it was ok, but nothing spectacular. This must have
    been about 20 years ago or so. Then it closed, and a new one has opened
    close to my father, but it never seems to be full.

    If I remember correctly it kind of tasted like very spicy indian food
    with weird flat bread that I didn't like.


    In Africa the staple is 'mealy pap' - maize porridge. Prolly what the
    yanks call 'grits'.
    That and some roast meat or curried meat is a find dish.

    Africa has - or had - plenty of meat. And fruit. But not much beyond
    millet for starch and they sensibly avoid vegetables.
    Maize is an imported crop. As are most vegetables.
    Ergo there is no 'traditional african cooking' per se.
    Just an ox on a bonfire.




    --
    "What do you think about Gay Marriage?"
    "I don't."
    "Don't what?"
    "Think about Gay Marriage."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 20:13:28 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:15:01 +0100, D wrote:

    I use either regular butter for cooking (and on my bread), or olive oil.
    I like the taste of high quality olive oil.

    Perhaps it's the diminished senses from aging but I've never figured out
    those olive oil tasting deals. I recently saw a comparison of the Kirkland types and the one I get is one of the better options but I settled on it
    by chance.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 20:21:32 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:07:00 +0100, D wrote:


    This is the truth! In Stockholm there was one Ethiopian restaurant. I
    went there once, and it was ok, but nothing spectacular. This must have
    been about 20 years ago or so. Then it closed, and a new one has opened
    close to my father, but it never seems to be full.

    There was one African restaurant in Boston. I think it might have been Ethiopian but I can't remember or what I ate. I didn't go back. It didn't
    last long and that's a city that loves its ethnic food.

    iirc the Masai shoot their cattle with hollow arrows to gather the blood
    and then prepare a delicacy with ashes and cow urine. I don't think it
    will catch on. Like the American Indians when they move to town and switch
    to a carbohydrate based diet it does them no good compared to blood, milk, butter, and the odd tuber they evolved to eat.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Mon Dec 30 20:26:31 2024
    On 30/12/2024 20:21, rbowman wrote:
    Like the American Indians when they move to town and switch
    to a carbohydrate based diet it does them no good compared to blood, milk, butter, and the odd tuber they evolved to eat.
    No one does well on carbohydrates who isn't active all their waking hours

    --
    "When one man dies it's a tragedy. When thousands die it's statistics."

    Josef Stalin

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 20:32:48 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:08:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Very sad, I'm sorry to hear it. =( Yes, many blue collar people I
    imagine see work as work, and would be happy living retired. I think
    that blue collar lifestyle choices might sometimes cut their lifes a bit shorter than normal.

    Cynically the US Social Security scheme assumed most people would die
    before getting much money back.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 20:30:41 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:04:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Beavers are cute too, but they have no concept of respect for others
    private property!

    A group purchased a tract of nearby land next to the river and set up a challenge course. Part of the course was sort of a zip line strung between
    two trees about 20' off the ground. A beaver had industriously gnawed his
    way through a good sized cottonwood but his plan was thwarted when it hung
    up on the zip line. I could picture an irate beaver looking up at all the tender leaves and branches and saying WTF?

    I've seen a few otters. They seem to enjoy themselves more than a lot of wildlife that is all business.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 30 20:44:15 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:51:07 +0100, D wrote:

    A doctor criticized it for being unreliable, and saying that you'll
    always get some kind of alarm or trigger, and that having loads of these cabinets will overflow the healthcare system by anxious millionaires and billionaires for what in the end turned out to be nothing.

    Many dentists have started taking the patient's blood pressure as part of
    the exam. For convenience they use the cuffs that go around your wrist
    that are very prone to reading high. My doctor says she gets referrals
    from dentists that have perfectly normal BP.

    I got a Fitbit last year and it's fairly useful for keeping track of my
    walks but I don't pay much attention to the rest of the features. On the
    fitbit subreddit there are a surprising number of people that head to the emergency room every time a $100 device has a glitch. For example it has
    an ECG function. I get random results, normal sinus rhythm, inconclusive,
    or atrial fibrillation. Somehow I trust the type with all the patches
    stuck to your chest hair to holding both sides of a glorified wristwatch between your thumb and forefinger.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Mon Dec 30 20:51:03 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:33:29 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Today we have crystal therapy, aroma therapy, lots of massage...one
    yearns for the days of a snort of charlie and a damn good shag...

    Several years ago I thought tai chi might be a good way to maintain
    flexibility and enrolled in a class. Amazing what a bunch of New Agers can
    make out of simple movements. Of course the Asians added their own
    mysticism.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 11:14:17 2024
    On 30/12/2024 20:51, rbowman wrote:
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:33:29 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Today we have crystal therapy, aroma therapy, lots of massage...one
    yearns for the days of a snort of charlie and a damn good shag...

    Several years ago I thought tai chi might be a good way to maintain flexibility and enrolled in a class. Amazing what a bunch of New Agers can make out of simple movements. Of course the Asians added their own
    mysticism.
    Indeed. I am enrolled in an NHS sponsored guided gym course to try and
    get a bit fit after a major operation.

    No mystical bollocks at all. Just plan exercising and pushing various
    muscle groups, and the lungs and heart to reasonable limits

    I've never found any merit in NewAgeBollocks™ at all.


    --
    Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's
    too dark to read.

    Groucho Marx

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 11:11:28 2024
    On 30/12/2024 20:44, rbowman wrote:
    Somehow I trust the type with all the patches
    stuck to your chest hair to holding both sides of a glorified wristwatch between your thumb and forefinger.

    Whenever I get strapped into one of those they take several goes to get
    a stable reading. They are trying to measure microvolts in a noise rich environment

    --
    Climate is what you expect but weather is what you get.
    Mark Twain

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 31 12:34:20 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:


    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the >>>> Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for
    procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the
    husband. ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:42:57 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:15:01 +0100, D wrote:

    I use either regular butter for cooking (and on my bread), or olive oil.
    I like the taste of high quality olive oil.

    Perhaps it's the diminished senses from aging but I've never figured out those olive oil tasting deals. I recently saw a comparison of the Kirkland types and the one I get is one of the better options but I settled on it
    by chance.

    Maybe, maybe not. Or maybe it was the quality? Many oils I do not taste a difference, but from time to time, I do get an oil that has a nice flowery taste. Sweden or eastern europe is not prime hunting ground for that type
    of oil, but when I go to spain, it is usually not difficult to get good
    olive oil. =)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:44:21 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:07:00 +0100, D wrote:


    This is the truth! In Stockholm there was one Ethiopian restaurant. I
    went there once, and it was ok, but nothing spectacular. This must have
    been about 20 years ago or so. Then it closed, and a new one has opened
    close to my father, but it never seems to be full.

    There was one African restaurant in Boston. I think it might have been Ethiopian but I can't remember or what I ate. I didn't go back. It didn't last long and that's a city that loves its ethnic food.

    iirc the Masai shoot their cattle with hollow arrows to gather the blood
    and then prepare a delicacy with ashes and cow urine. I don't think it
    will catch on. Like the American Indians when they move to town and switch
    to a carbohydrate based diet it does them no good compared to blood, milk, butter, and the odd tuber they evolved to eat.

    Ahh... but if the public doesn't like the dish, they can always claim
    racism, and get government money for support! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:45:47 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:04:29 +0100, D wrote:

    Beavers are cute too, but they have no concept of respect for others
    private property!

    A group purchased a tract of nearby land next to the river and set up a challenge course. Part of the course was sort of a zip line strung between two trees about 20' off the ground. A beaver had industriously gnawed his
    way through a good sized cottonwood but his plan was thwarted when it hung
    up on the zip line. I could picture an irate beaver looking up at all the tender leaves and branches and saying WTF?

    I've seen a few otters. They seem to enjoy themselves more than a lot of wildlife that is all business.


    Yes... otters are smart creatures. If man goes extinct, forget monkeys,
    I'm sure otters will be the next master race!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:46:56 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:08:17 +0100, D wrote:

    Very sad, I'm sorry to hear it. =( Yes, many blue collar people I
    imagine see work as work, and would be happy living retired. I think
    that blue collar lifestyle choices might sometimes cut their lifes a bit
    shorter than normal.

    Cynically the US Social Security scheme assumed most people would die
    before getting much money back.


    Ahh... but this game is being played in europe a well. I think my
    generation is expected to work until 71 or 73 until the sweet, sweet, retirement money starts to flow. I think I might be able to withdraw my
    private pension at 55, but I'm far from sure.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:48:35 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:51:07 +0100, D wrote:

    A doctor criticized it for being unreliable, and saying that you'll
    always get some kind of alarm or trigger, and that having loads of these
    cabinets will overflow the healthcare system by anxious millionaires and
    billionaires for what in the end turned out to be nothing.

    Many dentists have started taking the patient's blood pressure as part of
    the exam. For convenience they use the cuffs that go around your wrist
    that are very prone to reading high. My doctor says she gets referrals
    from dentists that have perfectly normal BP.

    I got a Fitbit last year and it's fairly useful for keeping track of my
    walks but I don't pay much attention to the rest of the features. On the fitbit subreddit there are a surprising number of people that head to the emergency room every time a $100 device has a glitch. For example it has
    an ECG function. I get random results, normal sinus rhythm, inconclusive,
    or atrial fibrillation. Somehow I trust the type with all the patches
    stuck to your chest hair to holding both sides of a glorified wristwatch between your thumb and forefinger.

    This is very wise! If the health care system becomes more socialized, it
    is important to reduce unnecessary visits or eventually the system will
    grind to a halt completely.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Tue Dec 31 12:53:02 2024
    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:33:29 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    Today we have crystal therapy, aroma therapy, lots of massage...one
    yearns for the days of a snort of charlie and a damn good shag...

    Several years ago I thought tai chi might be a good way to maintain flexibility and enrolled in a class. Amazing what a bunch of New Agers can make out of simple movements. Of course the Asians added their own
    mysticism.


    Here you go:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjObalYKTHE

    If it worked for the nazis, it will work for anyone! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 31 11:39:04 2024
    On 31/12/2024 11:34, D wrote:


    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:


    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know
    the
    Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for >>>>> procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the husband. ;)

    Not really. Hormones are pretty unstoppable. But it can mean social excommunication.



    --
    "Nature does not give up the winter because people dislike the cold."

    ― Confucius

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 31 12:36:34 2024
    This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
    while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:51, D wrote:
    But that's what you get for having a social scientist as father... you end >> up in IT. 😉

    Either that or in therapy.

    ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Tue Dec 31 20:40:05 2024
    On 2024-12-31, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 31/12/2024 11:34, D wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:

    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know >>>>>> the Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be
    used for procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the
    husband. ;)

    Not really. Hormones are pretty unstoppable. But it can mean social excommunication.

    It's ironic that the people who mandate the tents are basically
    admitting that it's their own hormones that are unstoppable.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 31 20:44:30 2024
    On Tue, 31 Dec 2024 12:53:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Here you go:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjObalYKTHE

    If it worked for the nazis, it will work for anyone!

    I don't think their emphasis on fresh air and physical fitness was
    entirely a bad thing. They were building on Jahn.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Ludwig_Jahn

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wandervogel

    The Wandervogel got pulled into the HJ and BDM.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Tue Dec 31 22:29:56 2024
    On 31/12/2024 20:40, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
    On 2024-12-31, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 31/12/2024 11:34, D wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:

    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know >>>>>>> the Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be >>>>>>> used for procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the
    husband. ;)

    Not really. Hormones are pretty unstoppable. But it can mean social
    excommunication.

    It's ironic that the people who mandate the tents are basically
    admitting that it's their own hormones that are unstoppable.

    Well its all about keeping sex as a thing not to get bored with.

    So the birthrate stays high

    --
    Renewable energy: Expensive solutions that don't work to a problem that
    doesn't exist instituted by self legalising protection rackets that
    don't protect, masquerading as public servants who don't serve the public.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pH@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Jan 1 05:15:54 2025
    On 2024-12-28, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:
    On Sat, 28 Dec 2024 00:02:09 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    I'm sure JFK Jr was convinced he had the coast in sight and was
    maintaining level flight - right up until the belly hit a wave
    .......

    The Buddy Holly wreck looked lke the pilot flew it into the ground. That's hard to do in Iowa unless you're seriously confused.

    A youtuber named Alec Joshua Ibay does aircraft accident reconstructions/play-by-plays and did cover the Buddy Holly crash.

    I like his stuff.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3gZ-Qw_HDY


    pH in Aptos

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 03:23:31 2025
    On 12/31/24 6:48 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:51:07 +0100, D wrote:

    A doctor criticized it for being unreliable, and saying that you'll
    always get some kind of alarm or trigger, and that having loads of these >>> cabinets will overflow the healthcare system by anxious millionaires and >>> billionaires for what in the end turned out to be nothing.

    Many dentists have started taking the patient's blood pressure as part of
    the exam. For convenience they use the cuffs that go around your wrist
    that are very prone to reading high. My doctor says she gets referrals
    from dentists that have perfectly normal BP.

    I got a Fitbit last year and it's fairly useful for keeping track of my
    walks but I don't pay much attention to the rest of the features. On the
    fitbit subreddit there are a surprising number of people that head to the
    emergency room every time a $100 device has a glitch. For example it has
    an ECG function. I get random results, normal sinus rhythm, inconclusive,
    or atrial fibrillation. Somehow I trust the type with all the patches
    stuck to your chest hair to holding both sides of a glorified wristwatch
    between your thumb and forefinger.

    This is very wise! If the health care system becomes more socialized, it
    is important to reduce unnecessary visits or eventually the system will
    grind to a halt completely.


    The UK figured it out ... just leave patients on a gurney
    for about 24 hours and hopefully half of them will just die ...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Wed Jan 1 12:37:07 2025
    On Tue, 31 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 31/12/2024 11:34, D wrote:


    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:


    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:
    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know the >>>>>> Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be used for >>>>>> procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the
    husband. ;)

    Not really. Hormones are pretty unstoppable. But it can mean social excommunication.

    Or getting killed. In Sweden, there have been a few cases where women have
    been thrown out of buildings after some relationship issues surfaced
    within the arabian family.

    I think the offending man getting thrown out of a building would not be
    that much of a stretch of the imagination.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Wed Jan 1 12:47:40 2025
    On Tue, 31 Dec 2024, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2024-12-31, The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:

    On 31/12/2024 11:34, D wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 30/12/2024 11:38, D wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 29/12/2024 07:24, rbowman wrote:

    The interest is necessary for the survival of humans. The Gods know >>>>>>> the Christians tried to stamp it out by saying it should only be >>>>>>> used for procreation and you weren't supposed to have fun.

    Catholic and Islamic girls are absolutely the hottest.

    Islamic? Don't they walk around in tents all the time? ;)

    Ah, but when they take the tents off...:-)

    Oh dear... I think that's a death sentence for you, unless you're the
    husband. ;)

    Not really. Hormones are pretty unstoppable. But it can mean social
    excommunication.

    It's ironic that the people who mandate the tents are basically
    admitting that it's their own hormones that are unstoppable.

    It's an evil, medieval superstition that should be eradicated from this
    planet. I saw on the news yesterday that the talibans have outlawed
    windows facing areas where women move or perform work. The reason is that
    it can create thoughts of sin in men.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Wed Jan 1 12:52:40 2025
    On Tue, 31 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Tue, 31 Dec 2024 12:53:02 +0100, D wrote:

    Here you go:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjObalYKTHE

    If it worked for the nazis, it will work for anyone!

    I don't think their emphasis on fresh air and physical fitness was
    entirely a bad thing. They were building on Jahn.

    I think it is good.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Ludwig_Jahn

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wandervogel

    The Wandervogel got pulled into the HJ and BDM.

    There is more!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pehr_Henrik_Ling

    Embrace the Ling-system and prosper!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Wed Jan 1 12:58:28 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:

    On 12/31/24 6:48 AM, D wrote:


    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024, rbowman wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Dec 2024 12:51:07 +0100, D wrote:

    A doctor criticized it for being unreliable, and saying that you'll
    always get some kind of alarm or trigger, and that having loads of these >>>> cabinets will overflow the healthcare system by anxious millionaires and >>>> billionaires for what in the end turned out to be nothing.

    Many dentists have started taking the patient's blood pressure as part of >>> the exam. For convenience they use the cuffs that go around your wrist
    that are very prone to reading high. My doctor says she gets referrals
    from dentists that have perfectly normal BP.

    I got a Fitbit last year and it's fairly useful for keeping track of my
    walks but I don't pay much attention to the rest of the features. On the >>> fitbit subreddit there are a surprising number of people that head to the >>> emergency room every time a $100 device has a glitch. For example it has >>> an ECG function. I get random results, normal sinus rhythm, inconclusive, >>> or atrial fibrillation. Somehow I trust the type with all the patches
    stuck to your chest hair to holding both sides of a glorified wristwatch >>> between your thumb and forefinger.

    This is very wise! If the health care system becomes more socialized, it is >> important to reduce unnecessary visits or eventually the system will grind >> to a halt completely.


    The UK figured it out ... just leave patients on a gurney
    for about 24 hours and hopefully half of them will just die ...


    I think this has been tried in sweden as well. Sweden also started to
    charge a minimum fee of around 20 EUR or so to get rid of old people who
    just went to the doctor to socialize when it was free.

    In eastern europe where I live now, they have solved it by making it
    impossible to get a time within the public system. On the very rare
    occasions that I go to the doctor, I always go to a private one, so I can
    book a time within a day or two.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 12:26:19 2025
    On 01/01/2025 11:47, D wrote:
    It's an evil, medieval superstition that should be eradicated from this planet. I saw on the news yesterday that the talibans have outlawed
    windows facing areas where women move or perform work. The reason is
    that it can create thoughts of sin in men.

    Well so it can. The Islamic system of keeping men and women completely
    apart and ignorant until safely married and regarding all men as
    incapable of suppressing their urges works at the level of the society
    it exists in.

    It just doesn't gel well with the Western lifestyle, which allows lots
    of sex before, during, in and out of marriage, because fundamentally we
    have antibiotics, birth control pills and condoms etc.


    --
    “The fundamental cause of the trouble in the modern world today is that
    the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt."

    - Bertrand Russell

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 22:10:02 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:52:40 +0100, D wrote:

    There is more!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pehr_Henrik_Ling

    Embrace the Ling-system and prosper!

    The suggestion that he may have influenced eastern methods is interesting. Those long genealogies of the schools never impressed me. The class I
    enrolled in use southern Wu and the instructor went on at length about the lineage. My suspicion was he chose it for its obscurity. Job security.

    https://todaystaichi.com/index.php/tai-chi-kung-10-form/

    It's sometimes called 8 form since the opening and closing forms aren't
    very interesting. As far as I can see the 108 form is more of the same,
    except rather than returning to a home position you need a lot more area.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 21:45:01 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:37:07 +0100, D wrote:

    I think the offending man getting thrown out of a building would not be
    that much of a stretch of the imagination.

    It could be worse than defenestration.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_and_Lorena_Bobbitt

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 22:14:29 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:58:28 +0100, D wrote:

    I think this has been tried in sweden as well. Sweden also started to
    charge a minimum fee of around 20 EUR or so to get rid of old people who
    just went to the doctor to socialize when it was free.

    But you meet the nicest people. When I checked in for last year's exam the receptionist led me to an exam room which sort of surprised me since
    there's usually a short wait. When I walked in my doctor and the woman in
    the room were rather surprised too.

    It turned out the receptionist had been told her husband was going to pick
    her up and the first old fart through the door would do as her husband.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Jan 2 12:16:20 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:52:40 +0100, D wrote:

    There is more!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pehr_Henrik_Ling

    Embrace the Ling-system and prosper!

    The suggestion that he may have influenced eastern methods is interesting.

    Yes, I heard about it, but I think it will probably forever remain a
    theory. Would be fun if true, though!

    Those long genealogies of the schools never impressed me. The class I enrolled in use southern Wu and the instructor went on at length about the lineage. My suspicion was he chose it for its obscurity. Job security.

    https://todaystaichi.com/index.php/tai-chi-kung-10-form/

    This is the truth! In the past 10 years or so there has been a crisis
    within traditional chinese martial arts. It turned out, when MMA/Boxer/Wrestlers started to challenge the old masters, that they were
    more or less worthless at fighting.

    This led to a lot of soul searching and wringing of hands by the communist party since this destroyed the self-image of chinese martial arts, and in
    the end they accepted that there can be no alternative to sparring and
    actual fighting, no matter how many forms you learn, and china hs slowly
    been moving towards embracing MMA & Co.

    It's sometimes called 8 form since the opening and closing forms aren't
    very interesting. As far as I can see the 108 form is more of the same, except rather than returning to a home position you need a lot more area.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Thu Jan 2 12:17:18 2025
    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:58:28 +0100, D wrote:

    I think this has been tried in sweden as well. Sweden also started to
    charge a minimum fee of around 20 EUR or so to get rid of old people who
    just went to the doctor to socialize when it was free.

    But you meet the nicest people. When I checked in for last year's exam the receptionist led me to an exam room which sort of surprised me since
    there's usually a short wait. When I walked in my doctor and the woman in
    the room were rather surprised too.

    It turned out the receptionist had been told her husband was going to pick her up and the first old fart through the door would do as her husband.

    Brilliant! And you are now happily living together I assume? ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 2 20:29:58 2025
    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025 12:16:20 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! In the past 10 years or so there has been a crisis
    within traditional chinese martial arts. It turned out, when MMA/Boxer/Wrestlers started to challenge the old masters, that they were
    more or less worthless at fighting.

    That's what happens when martial arts turn into an art form. Some people
    who were very proud of rank in the dojo found out the hard way it doesn't
    work like that in a barroom brawl. 'Monkey Shakes Fist At Sky' might be graceful but it doesn't match 'Boot In The Balls'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 2 20:36:11 2025
    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025 12:17:18 +0100, D wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:58:28 +0100, D wrote:

    I think this has been tried in sweden as well. Sweden also started to
    charge a minimum fee of around 20 EUR or so to get rid of old people
    who just went to the doctor to socialize when it was free.

    But you meet the nicest people. When I checked in for last year's exam
    the receptionist led me to an exam room which sort of surprised me
    since there's usually a short wait. When I walked in my doctor and the
    woman in the room were rather surprised too.

    It turned out the receptionist had been told her husband was going to
    pick her up and the first old fart through the door would do as her
    husband.

    Brilliant! And you are now happily living together I assume? ;)

    I get along well with my ex on the phone. She's about 2000 miles away and
    it's better that way. It may say something about our personalities that
    neither of us remarried.

    A few years after his wife died my brother remarried. I think that was something he needed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Jan 3 00:58:31 2025
    On 1/2/25 3:29 PM, rbowman wrote:
    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025 12:16:20 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! In the past 10 years or so there has been a crisis
    within traditional chinese martial arts. It turned out, when
    MMA/Boxer/Wrestlers started to challenge the old masters, that they were
    more or less worthless at fighting.

    That's what happens when martial arts turn into an art form. Some people
    who were very proud of rank in the dojo found out the hard way it doesn't work like that in a barroom brawl. 'Monkey Shakes Fist At Sky' might be graceful but it doesn't match 'Boot In The Balls'.


    What eastern martial arts have devolved into - closer
    to 'dance' than real-world fighting. LOOKS good though ...

    You might want to look at "Kajukenbo" - that's much
    more commando.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to 186282@ud0s4.net on Fri Jan 3 08:36:52 2025
    On Fri, 3 Jan 2025 00:58:31 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:


    You might want to look at "Kajukenbo" - that's much more commando.

    I'm too old for that stuff. You know that Harrison Ford movie where some
    guy goes through a bunch of flourishes before Ford draws his revolver and shoots him? That's more like it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Jan 3 12:25:38 2025
    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025 12:17:18 +0100, D wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Wed, 1 Jan 2025 12:58:28 +0100, D wrote:

    I think this has been tried in sweden as well. Sweden also started to
    charge a minimum fee of around 20 EUR or so to get rid of old people
    who just went to the doctor to socialize when it was free.

    But you meet the nicest people. When I checked in for last year's exam
    the receptionist led me to an exam room which sort of surprised me
    since there's usually a short wait. When I walked in my doctor and the
    woman in the room were rather surprised too.

    It turned out the receptionist had been told her husband was going to
    pick her up and the first old fart through the door would do as her
    husband.

    Brilliant! And you are now happily living together I assume? ;)

    I get along well with my ex on the phone. She's about 2000 miles away and it's better that way. It may say something about our personalities that neither of us remarried.

    A few years after his wife died my brother remarried. I think that was something he needed.


    Horses for courses! My brother and his partner went their separate ways
    and it has led to a complete change in his political ideas. With her, he
    was annoyingly woke, and without her, all of a sudden he has turned conservative with a pinch or two of racism. Very strange.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Fri Jan 3 12:23:39 2025
    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Thu, 2 Jan 2025 12:16:20 +0100, D wrote:

    This is the truth! In the past 10 years or so there has been a crisis
    within traditional chinese martial arts. It turned out, when
    MMA/Boxer/Wrestlers started to challenge the old masters, that they were
    more or less worthless at fighting.

    That's what happens when martial arts turn into an art form. Some people
    who were very proud of rank in the dojo found out the hard way it doesn't work like that in a barroom brawl. 'Monkey Shakes Fist At Sky' might be

    I will shamelessly steal Monkey Shakes Fist At Sky!

    graceful but it doesn't match 'Boot In The Balls'.

    Have you been in many bar fights? I've only been involved in one serious
    fight in my life, and my boxing skills served me well in an unexpected
    way. I was punched in the face, and the guy and his friends were very
    suprised when I did not shut up or pass out. Instead I got ready to
    retaliate, and when that happened the friend of the "fighter" aborted the
    fight fight.

    Apparently they were so used to people either collapsing or begging
    forgiveness when being punched in the face, that the fact that I raised my guard and got ready to play really confused them.

    Psychology is very important in fighting, and it seems to me that naughty people always love to attack when they are in superior numbers. Only once
    have I experienced a naughty boy trying to do something while one on one,
    but it didn't come to blows, and he didn't dare to accept my challenge.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 3 23:38:50 2025
    On Fri, 3 Jan 2025 12:23:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Have you been in many bar fights? I've only been involved in one serious fight in my life, and my boxing skills served me well in an unexpected
    way. I was punched in the face, and the guy and his friends were very suprised when I did not shut up or pass out. Instead I got ready to retaliate, and when that happened the friend of the "fighter" aborted
    the fight fight.

    A couple but I tried to avoid them. There was a strip in town with several
    bars mostly frequented by college kids. It was summer with a lot of
    overflow in the street. At the time the cops all went back to the station
    house at midnight. The next shift was there but were doing their briefings
    so there was a gap. We were minding our business when some nut decided to
    pick on my friend and had him backed up against the car. The friend was
    the definition of out of touch PHd so I jumped in. That started the whole melee. The nut was out of action so we left rapidly.

    The old wisdom is true. You're quietly sitting there having a beer and
    it's always some runt that wants to interrupt you.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 3 23:43:48 2025
    On Fri, 3 Jan 2025 12:25:38 +0100, D wrote:

    Horses for courses! My brother and his partner went their separate ways
    and it has led to a complete change in his political ideas. With her, he
    was annoyingly woke, and without her, all of a sudden he has turned conservative with a pinch or two of racism. Very strange.

    I think my ex is a bit to my right. I never listened to his show but she
    may have been one of Rush Limbaugh's three fans in NYC.

    I wouldn't call myself a conservative. To paraphrase the late Sam Francis "Conserve? There's nothing left to conserve!"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Jan 4 01:55:25 2025
    On Sat, 3 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 3 Jan 2025 12:25:38 +0100, D wrote:

    Horses for courses! My brother and his partner went their separate ways
    and it has led to a complete change in his political ideas. With her, he
    was annoyingly woke, and without her, all of a sudden he has turned
    conservative with a pinch or two of racism. Very strange.

    I think my ex is a bit to my right. I never listened to his show but she
    may have been one of Rush Limbaugh's three fans in NYC.

    I wouldn't call myself a conservative. To paraphrase the late Sam Francis "Conserve? There's nothing left to conserve!"


    Maybe you are a conservative libertarian? Or a libertarian nationalist? It
    is very fun to mix up isms! It always confuses people! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Jan 4 01:53:41 2025
    On Sat, 3 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Fri, 3 Jan 2025 12:23:39 +0100, D wrote:

    Have you been in many bar fights? I've only been involved in one serious
    fight in my life, and my boxing skills served me well in an unexpected
    way. I was punched in the face, and the guy and his friends were very
    suprised when I did not shut up or pass out. Instead I got ready to
    retaliate, and when that happened the friend of the "fighter" aborted
    the fight fight.

    A couple but I tried to avoid them. There was a strip in town with several bars mostly frequented by college kids. It was summer with a lot of
    overflow in the street. At the time the cops all went back to the station house at midnight. The next shift was there but were doing their briefings
    so there was a gap. We were minding our business when some nut decided to pick on my friend and had him backed up against the car. The friend was
    the definition of out of touch PHd so I jumped in. That started the whole melee. The nut was out of action so we left rapidly.

    The old wisdom is true. You're quietly sitting there having a beer and
    it's always some runt that wants to interrupt you.

    Maybe you have a victim look? ;) Fortunately for me, the times, except the above, people have tried to rob me or assault me, I always was able to
    verbally de-escalate the situation without having to hand over any
    property.

    I have no idea how I always managed to do that, but perhaps adrenalin also increases the power of your tongue! ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 4 06:57:59 2025
    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025 01:55:25 +0100, D wrote:

    Maybe you are a conservative libertarian? Or a libertarian nationalist?
    It is very fun to mix up isms! It always confuses people!

    Revolutionary nationalist? Libertarian socialist?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rbowman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 4 06:52:08 2025
    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025 01:53:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Maybe you have a victim look? Fortunately for me, the times, except the above, people have tried to rob me or assault me, I always was able to verbally de-escalate the situation without having to hand over any
    property.

    In my prime I had the cop look. It runs in the family. A couple of my
    cousins really were cops.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Gibbs@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Jan 4 07:29:45 2025
    On 2025-01-04, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025 01:55:25 +0100, D wrote:

    Maybe you are a conservative libertarian? Or a libertarian nationalist?
    It is very fun to mix up isms! It always confuses people!

    Revolutionary nationalist? Libertarian socialist?

    I call myself a radical moderate.

    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | Growth for the sake of
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | growth is the ideology
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | of the cancer cell.
    / \ if you read it the right way. | -- Edward Abbey

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to rbowman on Sat Jan 4 12:41:18 2025
    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025, rbowman wrote:

    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025 01:53:41 +0100, D wrote:

    Maybe you have a victim look? Fortunately for me, the times, except the
    above, people have tried to rob me or assault me, I always was able to
    verbally de-escalate the situation without having to hand over any
    property.

    In my prime I had the cop look. It runs in the family. A couple of my
    cousins really were cops.


    Hmm... maybe there is a happy medium? Too little cop look, bad, too much
    of a cop look (by yourself) bad. Average amount of cop look, good!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Charlie Gibbs on Sat Jan 4 12:42:08 2025
    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2025-01-04, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

    On Sat, 4 Jan 2025 01:55:25 +0100, D wrote:

    Maybe you are a conservative libertarian? Or a libertarian nationalist?
    It is very fun to mix up isms! It always confuses people!

    Revolutionary nationalist? Libertarian socialist?

    I call myself a radical moderate.

    Beautiful! Keep the poetry coming! =)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)