Non-IT News Thread
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@NerdyDad said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller So...what does that mean in American terms? PM getting impeached?
It's a gap in American political system. Everyone has it but us. It's not for when the PM does something illegal, it's for when they are simply incompetent.
There are two forms of this in the UK. The one now is that the party (Tories) of the PM have lost faith in her to lead the party and feel she needs to be tested.
The other is if parliament (the house) feel that the government has failed and need to remove it (lawmakers forcing a new vote.)
The second has been held off in the UK because the opposition party loves watching the primary party go at each other.
In the US, incompetence is not considered a reason to remove a government.
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So impeachment is the closest thing that we have, but it's not related. Impeachment opens a president to a legal attack. But a no confidence is a direct means of removing someone all in one fell swoop.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
In the US, incompetence is not considered a reason to remove a government.
Which has never been more obvious the last couple years.
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@Obsolesce said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
In the US, incompetence is not considered a reason to remove a government.
Which has never been more obvious the last couple years.
Indeed.
Or the WW administration. Or LBJ. There have been some real winners in the past.
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Doctor Who wraps a solid season with its first female Time Lord
New showrunner Chris Chibnall made some bold choices to set his Doctor apart.
Ratings-wise, Whittaker's incarnation has been a smashing success. Nearly 11 million people worldwide watched the premiere episode ("The Woman Who Fell to Earth"), the largest audience for the series since 2013's Christmas special, "The Time of the Doctor," marked the transition from Matt Smith's 11th Doctor to Peter Capaldi's 12th. The new series as a whole averaged more than 8 million viewers per episode. And the reviews have been almost universally positive.
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we have a 4 year election cycle. That is our equivalent, though only in purpose. Presidents may get only 1 term if they are incompetent. In the UK, the governments can last for as long as the majority holds.
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@Donahue said in Non-IT News Thread:
we have a 4 year election cycle. That is our equivalent, though only in purpose. Presidents may get only 1 term if they are incompetent. In the UK, the governments can last for as long as the majority holds.
That's not very different. In the US it is always four years, in the UK it is no more than five years. In reality, I think UK elections are as often, or more often, than US ones. So the US doesn't solve anything in that way, it's actually just about the same.
We have two term maximums, but many argue that that undermines competence and makes things worse, rather than better, because it makes finding someone truly good less useful and by the time a good person has learned the job, they are gone.
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@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Doctor Who wraps a solid season with its first female Time Lord
New showrunner Chris Chibnall made some bold choices to set his Doctor apart.
Ratings-wise, Whittaker's incarnation has been a smashing success. Nearly 11 million people worldwide watched the premiere episode ("The Woman Who Fell to Earth"), the largest audience for the series since 2013's Christmas special, "The Time of the Doctor," marked the transition from Matt Smith's 11th Doctor to Peter Capaldi's 12th. The new series as a whole averaged more than 8 million viewers per episode. And the reviews have been almost universally positive.
They have all been original, but I cannot say that they have been spectacular. There are many things that definitely sets this doctor apart from the others:
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Obviously the first reason is that this is a female doctor on screen. There have been references to previous iterations being a female doctor, but this is the first time that the doctor, as a whole character, has been a female.
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No consistent story thread followed throughout any of the episodes the entire season, except for the loss of a spouse/grandmother shared by 2 companions that more or less ties episodes 1,2, and the last one together.
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No old villains ever appeared in these episodes. No daleks, no cybermen, no weeping angels (those still scare me), no intelligence, and no Master.
But I think they missed a big opportunity with a villain opportunity in the Rosa Parks episode. That could have been a great series (no spoilers).
According to my wife (who is the official whovian of the family) is hearing rumors that, if the current showrunner (Chibnall) and doctor (Whitaker) stay, it could be 2020 before we get another series, besides the New Years special. We've already waited ALL of 2017 and half of 2018 to forget Capaldi and the travesty he did as a doctor. Its beginning to become unfair to the whovian fans to wait another year for another season. We barely got 10 episodes out of this one (while American shows usually gets about 20 episodes a season). </rant>
EDIT: Forgot to add to the rant that some of the episodes were basic bashing on America on a political view, such as where the spiders occupied the hotel <not giving any spoilers, go watch it to see what I'm talking about>.
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@NerdyDad said in Non-IT News Thread:
- Obviously the first reason is that this is a female doctor on screen. There have been references to previous iterations being a female doctor, but this is the first time that the doctor, as a whole character, has been a female.
Not technically, Joanna Lumley (from Are You Being Served?) was on screen as a doctor during a special decades ago.
Many of us have pulled for her over the years to get a few seasons of the main show. She has always been a great actress and would have rocked it.
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/b1/82/ff/b182ff6171c822c0d0adb674b299f319.jpg
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@NerdyDad to be fair, many of us waited way, way longer than the "newvians" who waited a year and a half. Sixteen years we waited during my Dr. Who days. So 18 months is nothing.
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@scottalanmiller True, but I'm talking about being a doctor for the entire season. There was also a time with David Tennant when Donna was a pseudo-doctor because some of the doctor's regeneration energy left the hand and healed Donna, then went and saved the doctor from the daleks. But, again, just a special.
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@scottalanmiller Yup, I've heard about the Great Whovian Depression, which resulted in the reboot. My only complaint is that, if they want to keep viewers interest into the show, then they are going have to close the gap between seasons. Doctor Who can be a HUGE many maker for BBC, but they have to close that gap.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
So impeachment is the closest thing that we have, but it's not related. Impeachment opens a president to a legal attack. But a no confidence is a direct means of removing someone all in one fell swoop.
It is not even close. I am not sure how close the British PM position is t the Japanese PM position, but in Japan, the PM is not an elected position like the Presidency in the US.
The PM is elected by the politicians that were elected. Obviously, the party leader that will be elected PM by the politicians is "known" going into an election cycle. But it is not a position elected by the people.
That is why the PM can change with a mechnism like a no confidence vote.
The PM, is still a politician. Simply no longer the leader of their party and no longer the PM. Some one else is voted to lead the party and thus become PM.
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@JaredBusch said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
So impeachment is the closest thing that we have, but it's not related. Impeachment opens a president to a legal attack. But a no confidence is a direct means of removing someone all in one fell swoop.
It is not even close. I am not sure how close the British PM position is t the Japanese PM position, but in Japan, the PM is not an elected position like the Presidency in the US.
The PM is elected by the politicians that were elected. Obviously, the party leader that will be elected PM by the politicians is "known" going into an election cycle. But it is not a position elected by the people.
That is why the PM can change with a mechnism like a no confidence vote.
The PM, is still a politician. Simply no longer the leader of their party and no longer the PM. Some one else is voted to lead the party and thus become PM.
Correct, PM is not elected directly in the UK either. It's elected by the elected.
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What’s eating this 400-year-old painting? A whole ecosystem of microbes
Microbes are everywhere, even between layers of paint on classic works of art
A new study describes the complex ecosystems of bacteria and fungi that live and feast on a 17th-century painting—and how other species of bacteria may one day help art conservators fight back.
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Epic opens Fortnite’s cross-platform services for free to other devs
Online services SDK will roll out slowly through 2019.
Epic says its newly announced Online Services SDK will offer "cross-platform login, friends, presence, profile, and entitlements" across PC, Mac, iOS, Android, PlayStation, Xbox, and Switch "to the full extent each platform allows per-title." The service is planned for launch on PC sometime in the second or third quarter of 2019, with support for other platforms planned "throughout 2019."
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
UK PM to face vote of no confidence later today.
She's survived the vote.
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@DustinB3403 said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
UK PM to face vote of no confidence later today.
She's survived the vote.
But with horrible results. She's much weaker now than this morning.
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12 cylinders, 11,000rpm: Aston Martin’s new engine is a monster
Cosworth Engineering is responsible for the V12, and it should be very special.
The world of ultra-high-performance cars is an odd one. Stratospheric prices and tiny production runs mean few people will ever see one on the move; fewer still will experience one from the driver's seat. The relentless march of progress pushes their specs further and further to the edge; 400hp might have seemed more than you'd ever need in the 1970s but would now be barely adequate in a sporting sedan. And these cars often act as harbingers for impending global catastrophe—just look at the timing of the Ferrari Daytona or McLaren F1.
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Oakland official: “We want to get Americans out of their cars and solve racism”
Oakland is just one of many cities across America that is trying to sort out how it will manage the rapid influx of shared electric scooters on its streets.
These companies—Lime and Bird being the largest among them—seem to be repeating the same business tactic that Uber and Lyft pioneered years ago. The startups are flooding cities with cheap rides, dominating the market, and making their presence unstoppable.