Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | crypto-jeronimo's commentslogin

The following excerpts score quite high on my BS meter:

- "Although the purpose and meaning of the manuscript had eluded scholars for over a century, it took Research Associate Dr. Gerard Cheshire two weeks,"

- ""I experienced a series of 'eureka' moments whilst deciphering the code"

These two alone much more to discredit the "preliminary" claims than any of the remaining arguments in favor of the "discovery".


It amuses me that this passed the editor and the peer review process:

"So, from De Rosa’s manuscript we understand just why manuscript MS408 is so dominated by female issues, activities and adventures and why so few images of men appear. The only males in the citadel were the abbot, celibate monks and young boys, leaving the women and girls sexually and emotionally frustrated, so they amused and distracted themselves whilst they waited and yearned for male attention to return. They must have jumped at the chance of an adventure when the volcano erupted in 1444, as the citadel would have felt like a gilded cage by then."


Might as well throw this quote on the pile of things that sets off the BS meter, too: "...using a combination of lateral thinking and ingenuity..."



Upvoted - thanks for the reference!


Yes, that's very much correct - thank you!

The correct link is: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-46885828

I'm afraid I don't have the privileges to edit the URL (I can update just the title).


Sounds interesting. If it wasn't a sarcastic comment, could you elaborate a bit, please?


> Uuuh, while your algorithm isn't racist, if a person is using an algorithm to be racist, then it could be concluded that what is happening is... racism.

This is an extremely weak "argument".

Practically, anything can be used as a murder weapon by a murderer. Then "what is happening is ..." murder.


Thanks for the answer! The question was a bit more general though - not only pertaining to the GM-related side.


Isn't there a Java equivalent to Python's `zip`?


Yes, that's what the question was in reference to - thanks!


The current UK rules state a maximum of 400 feet (120 m), AFAIK. Also, speaking of EU, most urban areas of France are off limits, and the not-so-urban ones allow at most 30m/50m (depending on distance from urban areas).


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: