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Messages - pimathbrainiac
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422
« on: June 09, 2014, 01:40:25 am »
The Net Neutrality issue got me thinking about something that I find a bit more intriguing: Press Neutrality. The freedom of the press is one of the most ambiguous parts of the Bill of Rights. Colloquially, it means that the press can say what ever it desires, so far as it does not break from the truth or break the law in finding the truth (with the exception of specifically marked opinion shows and newspaper editorials). That ambiguity leads to the bending of the truth to forward an agenda, be it conservative or liberal, Democrat, Republican, or Libertarian. This bending of the truth and the tendency for news sources, both right and left sided, to be one sided makes me wonder what was meant by "freedom of the press." After careful thought, I reached this conclusion: freedom of the press means the freedom to give an uncensored truth, free from government tampering and censorship. It does not mean that the press can say what ever it desires, so long as part of the truth is told (with the exception of explicitly marked opinions). The press should remain neutral in matters, giving the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, as far as its entire research can show. Sadly, this is not the case, and all press outlets are biased, be it the WSJ, the New York Times, CNN, NBC, Fox News, National Review, etc. That said, one thing that should not happen is government controlling any part of the press, as this is very far from the press being neutral. The problem with the press is the one-sidedness all the outlets have. Even those that claim to be "fair and balanced" are biased one way or another. The way bias happens is by mixing partial truths with opinions, and calling it fact. How does one get to the whole truth, with as little opinion as possible? The answer, as readers/watchers/listeners of the press, is simple sounding but not so simple. The answer is to balance your outlets. For every CNN story you watch or read, you should watch or read the equivalent Fox News story. For every NPR story, an opposing version. For every New York Times story, an opposing version. This is a hard way to become informed, and sometimes one does not want to hear the other side, but it is important that one hears all the sides, whether there are two or two hundred. It shouldn't be this way. News outlets should be neutral by obligation. They should remain neutral, and tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth. One should be able to get the same, unbiased, story from every outlet. But the freedom of the press should never be infringed.
423
« on: June 08, 2014, 11:42:35 pm »
Be careful about fanfics, though. Sometimes you randomly run into adult ones 
What sucks is that MLP's target is kids. I don't like how there even is MLP pr0n and adult fanfiction. Kids sometimes randomly find it.
424
« on: June 08, 2014, 11:28:06 pm »
If I may say so, this is the most awesome first major project I've seen in a while. Even though some people still have doubts about the CSE and Basic in general, I think that this project proves a lot of that wrong. When you upload the final version to ticalc, be sure to ask for a feature. I think this will deserve one.
425
« on: June 08, 2014, 10:08:14 pm »
I never knew, so I'm sorry for saying that. I only know what FIRST says
426
« on: June 08, 2014, 09:11:05 pm »
You should learn 1st trumpet to Maynard's version of "Birdland" next.
427
« on: June 08, 2014, 04:50:28 pm »
428
« on: June 08, 2014, 04:44:51 pm »
You can always improve at anything. The blues scale is not the only scale you need to know. As for counting while improvising, that comes with time.
429
« on: June 08, 2014, 04:04:21 pm »
Al Gore's a Democrat  Also: The internet was made as a communication network with DARPA and several universities in it. Al Gore was never involved.
430
« on: June 08, 2014, 04:02:37 pm »
I don't, sadly. I play piano in my HS's top big band. My suggestion: practice your parts, and make sure to practice style. Style is the most important thing in jazz.
431
« on: June 08, 2014, 09:31:44 am »
If there's a CPU, there's asm.
As I said. There is no supported assembly language for the cRIO. There are no assemblers, and the processor is proprietary (National Instruments). You can't program it in asm, even if you wanted to.
432
« on: June 07, 2014, 08:26:06 pm »
Well, you can't program a cRIO-controlled robot in asm. There is no existing assembly language for the cRIO. EDIT:  'd And flyingfisch, you don't have a choice. You program the robots in whatever your team says you program them in. For me, it's Java. For him, it's LabView. He also doesn't program C.
433
« on: June 07, 2014, 08:21:58 pm »
There are only 3 languages you are allowed to program FRC robots in: Java, C, and Labview.
434
« on: June 07, 2014, 08:11:35 pm »
You can't write FRC-legal code in Python  EDIT: 100 moar posts until I'm 1337!
435
« on: June 07, 2014, 11:27:58 am »
GMail is what I use, because it has the best spam filters. I know that you probably don't want it because it's Google, so in that case, use one of the ones thunderbird defaults to, perhaps.
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