IC Failures Linked to Resin Series? 284
MEW writes "According to this article, 'the semiconductor industry began using red phosphorus as a flame retardant instead of the Br-based compound it had used for years,' due to environmental concerns. By July 2002, 1000 tons of the stuff was used for about a billion chips, when they stopped due to high component failures. In particular Sumitomo Bakelite caused rampant failures in Fujitsu disk drives. There's still a lot of Sumitomo Bakelite out there, and we may see the worst of it soon, as components start to fail prematurely. This was posted by Spaceman on Macintouch who says that the bad material accounts for 'half the world's supply of 'IC Plastics'' and can result in 'sudden or premature end of life.'"
red phoshorous??? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:red phoshorous??? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:red phoshorous??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:red phoshorous??? (Score:4, Informative)
here [sigmaaldrich.com] is a link to a chemicals supplier. notice the risk statements: R11 = Highly flammable, R16 = Explosive when mixed with oxidizing substances
Re:red phoshorous??? (Score:5, Funny)
I can see the results here, oddly enough. (Score:5, Funny)
On the plus side to this premature failure, Slashdot now looks extremely trippy... Those green bars keep blinking magenta!
The down side is the contrast for text is really bad...
Re:I can see the results here, oddly enough. (Score:5, Funny)
Is it going my way?
Then it all works, doesn't it... (Score:2, Funny)
The content of the text isn't that great either.
Is this why... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not that I'm defending the reduction in warranty, of course. I'm mad as hell that I've had many drives go bad in less than two years of service.
Re:Is this why... (Score:4, Insightful)
With Wal-Mart they tend to employ a fraction of the people that a similarly sized retailer would, at a much lower wage. They also tend to drive other local retailers out of business, thus fewer people are employed for less money, lowering the Domestic Product for that community. In the case of a SuperWalmart, they also tend to depress the spending power of SEVERAL communities.
In this case hard drives have become so "cheap" that we end up buying them at twice or 3 times the rate. Add it up, are we saving that much money?
Re:Is this why... (Score:2)
Re:Is this why... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is this why... (Score:5, Insightful)
Wal-Mart's practices are there because they need them to retain their low price leadership in an economy that has adapted to WM's first round of low price wars.
You also don't mention the biggest key to WM's forced price lowering
However, even that is not the -cause-. The cause is the willingness of most Americans to sacrifice their community retailers and specialty chains for lower prices and "all under one roof" shopping, even if as a whole the selection of products is lower. That short sighted view in the end causes the community as a whole to lose value (monetarily as well as socially), making Wal-Mart the ONLY long-term winner in that situation.
The answer is as simple as telling an overweight person to diet and exercise
BTW, yes it is true that K-Mart and Target -started- the concepts on a nationwide scale. However they never abuse their position (possibly because they never attained a position as strong as WM) like WM has.
Economics will eventually right the situation, but the damage that will have been done by that point (which won't occur until WM has completely exhausted it's growth capacity AND product development has stagnated due to lack of competition) will be horrendous to everyone's standard of living.
BTW, if you shop at "Sam's", you shop at Wal-Mart. Got a Costco or similar non-Sam's wholesaler? Go there.
Re:Is this why... (data storage requirements) (Score:2)
2:1 backup to a 2nd disk (10Gb+10Gb), protection against corruption, accidental/malicious deletion/changes or primary disk failure, but requires rebuild of the system.
2.2:1 RAID5 and backup to a 2nd disk (2Gbx6+10Gb), protection against disk failure, still no protection ag
Re:It's Not "Good", It's A Race To The Bottom (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, come on. Thrifty shopping does not harm the economy. If I save $5 by finding a better deal at Walmart or anywhere else, I now have $5 left over which I'll either spend on something else or invest. Your argument is one of the many forms of the broken window fallacy [wikipedia.org].
Re:It's Not "Good", It's A Race To The Bottom (Score:3, Informative)
Broken window fallacy: some kid throws a rock through my window. I pay $100 to have it repaired. This is good for the economy because the window repairman makes an additional $100.
Walmart-is-bad theory: I buy a widget at Walmart for $10. This hurts the economy, because if I'd bought from the local Steve's Sprockets for $15 then Steve would have made an additional $5.
Both are wrong, and for exactly the same reason; they fail to account for what I would have do
Re:It's Not "Good", It's A Broken Window (Score:3, Informative)
And I'm saying that's not the case. The money saved by consumers by shopping at Walmart doesn't just disappear; it's spent on other stuff or invested.
I've switched to RAID (Score:2)
I did this to my wife's win2k box a year ago, and she groused at me for monkeying around with her computer... until the Western Digital drive I purchased to put in that RAID (slightly over a year ago, heh...) noisily died yesterday. When I explained that we would have lost everything if not for the RAID I'd installed, she immediately became much more understanding.
But... that's the state of data stora
Intentional or Accidental? (Score:3, Interesting)
You cant believe that this wasn't tested before it was decided upon. They must have known the devices would fail prematurely, just after warranties expire.. If they didn't, then the engineers were not doing their jobs.
Great way to get people to have to upgrade, when their existing equipment goes up in smoke in front of them.
Re:Intentional or Accidental? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Intentional or Accidental? (Score:2)
Seriously, Ford, GM, Chrysler, they've all put out some real stinkers. And yet, suckers (myself included) go back for more.
Sure, things like the tap-the-rear-end-and-we-explode Pontiac Fiero hurt the bottom line short-term, but does anyone think about that today?
Of course not
Re:Intentional or Accidental? (Score:2)
My sister had a Fiero back in the day (her husband worked for EDS when it was part of GM). I didn't fit into it.
I bought a 1995 red Saturn SC-2 for my (now ex-) wife. Zippy little car. After the divorce and me finishing up paying off the loan (what a sap I was), she traded it in on a Ford Explorer.
Re:Intentional or Accidental? (Score:5, Insightful)
Conspiracy theories are by nature unassailable. However, according to the article there is a simple reason why it wasn't tested, and that is that it was an unexpected effect, for which there was no test:
Re:Intentional or Accidental? (Score:2)
"It's something that cannot be detected by existing reliability tests."
You try to expect the unexpected, but I guess some slip by.
The article doesn't explain enough for me to form an opinion.
Re:They should add a moderation option. (Score:2)
Red Phosphorous... (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps I need one of those heat-sink thingies.
Re:Red Phosphorous... (Score:4, Funny)
Any diode can be a light-emitting diode at least once.
Damn the irony! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm just waiting for the new lead-free solder which will be mandatory in the EU from 2005 on... It's already known to cause cold solder spots more likely to happen.
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:2)
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:4, Informative)
And really, boiling down the two shuttle failures to material replacements? Perhaps a more important factor is its design [spaceref.com].
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:2)
To the point where the "environmentally friendly" version might even
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:2)
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:3, Informative)
True, but CFCs are fundamentally different: they are a gas. You open the can, and up they fly. Can't say that from IC packages or solder. There you need some serious washing-out going on, which doesn't happen if people return their electronics for proper recycling or at least professional waste disposal instead of throwing them into the backyard letting them rot
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:2, Insightful)
Methane does not damage the ozone layer, perhaps you are thinking of global warming? The main damage to the ozone layer is still caused by chlorine. CFCs last for about 50 years in the atmosphere and it is still being emitted from old fridges etc. There will be plenty
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:4, Interesting)
Because R-134a isn't as efficient as R-12, devices that use it use more power to achieve the same effect. Your car gets its mileage and performance reduced further when you switch on the A/C and your fridge uses more electricity. Between this and the questionable "science" surrounding CFCs and ozone, I'm not convinced that the switch to R-134a was a Good Thing.
Re:Adverse effects (Score:2)
BOTH sealing putties contained asbestos. See here [sepp.org]. It wasn't the presence or absence of asbestos that was the problem.
Re:Damn the irony! (Score:2)
I believe that's one of Limbaugh's things, Liberalism (including environmentalism) always causes the opposite of its intended objective.
LK
sh*t (Score:5, Informative)
Re:sh*t (Score:3, Informative)
Re:sh*t (Score:2)
Not surprising (Score:3, Redundant)
So, now it seems like one of them was using some cheaper/environmentally friendlier crap in the manufacturing process and it's coming back to bite everyone's butts. Surprise surprise!
Warranties? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Warranties? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Warranties? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
The hilarious irony (Score:2, Funny)
This is almost as funny as all those dimbulbs who choose paper over plastic "to protect the enviroment" even though their paper probably used chemicals that polluted water, and the paper probably came from some asian rainforest.
Classic Case: McDonalds (Score:4, Informative)
"In November 1990 the McDonald's Corporation, largely in response to pressure from the public and from environmental groups, made the decision to replace Styrofoam "clamshell" hamburger containers with paperboard boxes."
Not to mention the paper box insulates poorly, requiring more heat-lamp energy; and because paper has to be treated to repel grease, it decomposes slower than normal paper, and could not be recycled like the plastic-based styrofoam could.
Re:The hilarious irony (Score:3, Insightful)
Act with knowledge of the consequences of your actions.
Still a good point though (Score:2)
The problem is, of course, the ignorance, not the environmentalism, but it goes to show that being aware of just the "environment" isn't enough to make decisions on.
Sam
Re:The hilarious irony (Score:4, Insightful)
Has there ever been a 'politically correct' movement of substantial size? Unlikely.
The expression was appopriated as a lazy and hollow (but effective) smear against anything the right wing don't like.
Want to gain easy points? Accuse your opponent/the thing you dislike of being 'politically incorrect' and for *absolutely no cost* you get to become the heroic figure making a lone stand against the forces of communism, or whatever.
It's clever, because you don't have to debate the specifics of your argument. There's a good bit about this technique here [paulgraham.com] (see 'Viso Sciolto').
However, since it permeated the mainstream so extensively, 'Politically Correct' has tended to be used by people who are lazy and/or stupid, like the celebrity chef who was cooking something with cream, and pointed out that "I know it's politically incorrect, but.. yadda yadda".
No, it's your choice. If you want to guzzle 5 pints of cream a day, and die of obesity or whatever, that's your problem.
Of course, then you can sue the cream makers. Genius! You get to play the "don't tell me what I can and can't do" card for years, and when the consequences of your actions hit, you can whine and blame the food-makers for not protecting you.
Personally, I'd rather see junk-food manufacturers sued for advertising shitty food to kids or making misleading claims.
Re:The hilarious irony (Score:2)
I never said "politically correct movement"
Your quote is actually quoting a response to me.
It is politically correct to use "enviromentally friendly" chemicals in manufacturing. However often the original chemicals chosen were chosen for a specific reason and that the replacements are inferior or unacceptable for the purpose...
just like the enviromental choice of using thinner toilet paper to save the enviroment only to find out a) you have to use more to achieve the same amount o
Red Phosphorus in action (Score:3, Interesting)
Just remember that everything carries a cost (Score:4, Insightful)
propagating the myth (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:propagating the myth (Score:2, Insightful)
The planet as a ball of rock is safe, for now. We don't have the means to apply enough energy to force a significant portion of its mass out of the local area in one punch.
The planet, as a biological construct, is at risk. I'm not saying we could wipe off every bacterium on Earth, but we could certainly disrupt the biol
Re:propagating the myth (Score:2)
Yeah, that is pretty egotistical.
Re:Just remember that everything carries a cost (Score:5, Insightful)
As does radical industrialism. Polluting the planet willy-nilly just so someone can make a buck has a huge cost but, unfortunately, that cost is not included in the price of the manufactured goods. The manufacturer has thus found a way to privatize the profits while he socializes the cost. It's one of the ways that our form of capitalism has become distorted from a sustainable form of capitalism. All costs should be included in the price of the product or it's not really capitalism.
Re:Just remember that everything carries a cost (Score:5, Insightful)
* Disclaimer: I used to do this for a living.
Re:Just remember that everything carries a cost (Score:2)
Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:5, Insightful)
If this problem is as pervasive as it seems, exactly WHAT components are effected? I mean, think about this, how many of these plastics have found their way into things like Ventilators, internal defibrillators, external defibrillators like the LifePak series that is so prevalant on ambulances and in hospitals world wide?
What about the machines that control your money in the bank (if you use such a thing as quaint as a bank
Vehicle computers? or even... ACK, my PS2 and GameCube?!?!?!?
Anyway, beyond hard disk controllers, I got the idea that there were a lot of different ICs effected here, which could explain a lot of problems, and could cause some pretty bad problems as well.
Re:Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:4, Informative)
Any equipment, from a single transistor to a microprocessor, that is used in life-support systems have a whole different qualification process, and the parameters are much stricter. I know that space-qualified chips often have their own fabrication process that is different than normal chips to make them radiation-hardened; I wouldn't be suprised if chips that are meant to be put into someone's body are fabricated using an older, more stable process, which wouldn't have had this change in the first place.
And anything that doesn't make money when it's not available (like an ATM machine) will have scads of redundancy built in. If chips are dying in the field, odds are it's only resulting in more service calls, and perhaps marginally more downtime.
I would think that some of the newer chips for game systems and PCs would be the first to show any ill effects from this problem, since they're likely to be in the newest processes to get the best transistor density. But it all depends on who fabbed the chip (which in all likelihood is different than who's logo appears on it), and whether they were using this process change at the time.
Re:Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:2)
Most other devices are like that too. They die completely rather than risk giving you a bogus answer.
With any luck the part will fail while the product is still
Re:Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean, think about this, how many of these plastics have found their way into things like Ventilators, internal defibrillators, external defibrillators like the LifePak series that is so prevalant on ambulances and in hospitals world wide?
Then think about the people who lived in the areas where those manufacturing plants dump their wastes who contracted hideous diseases from them and needed these kinds of devices but had no access to them because they're typically in poor countries without advanced he
Re:Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:2)
No kidding. My atari 2600 is still alive and kicking. Hope I can say the same about my dreamcast in 20 years, though I'm not too hopeful. What does one expect from a console with moving parts. Fortunately it's not hard to find backup units for cheap. (I love failed systems
Re:Premature component failure in healthcare... (Score:2)
"sudden or premature end of life" (Score:4, Interesting)
Here's an idea, rather than trying to sound like a lawyer, just say "chips stop working years before they're supposed to."
Lovely. (Score:3, Insightful)
So now we not only need to deal with bad components and stupid designs, but even the components of the components are bad.
This really has to say something about society. A lot like the light bulbs in Forward the Foundation. Just how much useless, broken crap does the world need?
Is that for the warranty issue? (Score:2, Interesting)
By the way, I got it fixed afterwards. I'm not too much into technical details when it comes to microelectronics, but it cost me close to nothing compared with the cost of a new drive. I still bought a new one, actually, just to be sure, and I occasionally use my old Fujitsu drive to m
Great... (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh wait, we don't manufacture anything in the US anymore. Well, bully for everyone else.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
whether to save money for later, or spend it now. The sum of those decisions has massive effects on the economy, by varying demand for consumer goods and supply of investment capital. The efforts of the economy to adjust to that demand involve hiring and firing people, building or not building infrastructure and so on, which has (at least) two effects:
1. It may make people more, or less, inclined to spend rather than save
2. It effec
Environmental Deception? (Score:2, Insightful)
Peeps, I understand that there is a lot of hysteria and piss-poor science out there about the impact we have. For instance, the crying about beer bottles and 'littering' of that sort. Guess what? A bottle is just a funny-shaped rock, to nature.
OTOH, there are impacts we have on the environment that have real dangers attached to them - specifically
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2)
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2)
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2)
Yes, all it would take is one costal factory dumping some unknown magical substance that somehow can kill all of the phytoplankton on the entire planet.
Also, if a group of space-traveling fairies decided to take off with our sun, things could get pretty bad.
What substance, exactly, did you have in mind which could do such a thing?
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2, Funny)
Guess what? A bottle is just a funny-shaped rock, to nature.
Wow, I'd really never thought of it like that before. You're so right! I mean, short of some large, heavy, soft-footed creature (say, a human) stepping on it, a bottle is a rather harmless object. Made of one of our most inert materials, as well.
Wish I had some mod points. Your post needs to be seen (and not just for the bottle comment, you make another good point).
Re:Environmental Deception? (Score:2)
Red Phosphorus Components Never Die (Score:2)
Motivations (Score:5, Insightful)
If I break it, it's an accident.
If you break it, you're a moron.
If a corporation breaks it, it's a conspiracy.
New material (Score:2)
Hold on there, cowboy... (Score:5, Interesting)
First of all, the reason many European countries have limited or banned the use of certain flame retardants is that these chemicals are not released only in fires, but in everyday use of electronics. They show up in the blood of office workers, and especially high concentrations in people working with electronic recycling, and they also show up in nature:
http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/members/199
Note that the article ends by saying not that the industry will go back to using the old materials, but that they will try to develop other alternatives than this failed one.
Second, we don't know for sure that this "mass failure" of electronics will occur. Some of the right wingers who are screaming about the cost and are fond of quoting the junkscience site seem to be taking this mass failure as a fact, like it already happened. Who are jumping to conclusions now?
Third, even if the new material leads to product failure, why only blame environmentalists, how about Sumitomo developers?
Blood of office workers? (Score:2)
Heck, my blood is perpetually brown since that project where I lived for 3 months on espresso and sandwiches. And of course, office workers at SCO have green blood from breathing the same air as Demonic Darl.
hold on a second (Score:5, Interesting)
Very good memetic work. What are we to learn here? Listening to Environmental concerns lead to bad products. But wouldnt it be more correct to blame the industry's poor choice of substitute instead of trying to infer that making Environmentally necessary changes lead to failure?
using toxic substances in industry is not an option. The real problem is their bad solution to change.
Is there a list of products/manufacturers (Score:2)
It would be good to start collecting a list of known devices and models that are subject to this otherwise undetectable manufacturing defect.
What this is (Score:4, Informative)
Apparently red phospherus enables an internal short, probably by reacting with the resin to make a carbon channel. This is my best guess, given the info we have.
The majority of US chip companies these days are just design labs. They hire Asian chip foundries to actually render their designs to product, and it appears that they are the manufacturer. More and more the large chipmakers are doing this too -- farming out production. This new process would be used on commodity chips first, like logic and memory. Unlikely to be in high-end chips like processors, A/D, etc.
Some here deride the environmental reasoning for the change. It's pretty stupid to not care about dioxin, no matter where it is. These Exxon fascists would also say that global warming is a myth, because it's cold today... well it's warmer than it was 20 years ago. In about 30 years, you'll be paying for dikes to protect New York and Los Angeles from being flooded, ignorant bastard. Weather will be erratic and catastrophic. But that's not your problem today, now is it? Anti-environmental/anti-intellectual clods should be the ones who suffer for their short-sighted ignorant views, not the world as a whole. But unfortunately that's not how things work.
Re:What this is (Score:4, Informative)
The whole warming measured since the late 19 century, is only 1 degree Fahrenheit. (Among other sources, try EPA: http://yosemite.epa.gov/oar/globalwarming.nsf/cont ent/climateuncertainties.html ) That's it. 1 degree Fahrenheit in more than a _century_.
So if we're talking "warmer than it was 20 years ago", we're talking a difference so small that it won't even show up on your thermometer.
EPA's own site again says "IPCC projects further global warming of 2.2-10F (1.4-5.8C) by the year 2100." They also repeat several times that it's _"uncertainty"_, or "likely, but not certain". So even taking the most pessimistic figure there, you will _not_ need dams in 30 years.
What environmentalists conveniently forget to tell you, however, includes:
- Satellite data actually indicates a global _cooling_ over the last two decades. So there goes your "warmer than it was 20 years ago" myth.
- In fact, out of that scary "century of warming", about 70% of the warming happened before 1940. Go figure. So all this wasteful industry sprouting everywhere, actually _reduced_ the heating rate?
- There's plenty of evidence that weather has been even warmer before -- e.g., peaking around 1000 A.D. -- without any industrial emissions. And wouldn't you know it, back then, the ice caps did _not_ melt and submerge the world in water within 30 years, like in your horror story. It takes one helluva lot more time, and one helluva lot more heat to melt any signifficant portion of those.
- A century of data is a spit in the bucket on a planet where ice age vs warming cycles take 100,000 years. And where by any logical reasoning, we're stil on the rising phase from the last ice age which ended 16,000 years ago.
I.e., so far: You're taking data from 1/1000 or 0.1% of the cycle length, and whose amplitude is known to be less than the normal fluctuations over the last millenium (itself just 1% of the cycle.) I.e., you make a whole scare story based on the _noise_, not the signal.
But furthermore:
- There's strong evidence that the heating and cooling cycles actually follow changes in the sun's brightness. (E.g., see how the recent flares caused a warm winter. Now think smaller changes. Fractions of a percent per decade.) I.e., pay attention: it's getting warmer when and because the sun sends more warmth this way, not because of scary greenhouse gasses.
- Only 2% of greenhouse gas emissions are from man-made sources. So even if the whole humanity stopped using cars, burning anything, and even breathing, it would still make buggerall difference.
- A lot of those "feel good" environmental measures actually use _more_ energy. (E.g., yes, melting a bottle, compared to melting sand to make a new one). A lot of those cause _more_ polution. (E.g., cleaning the used paper of ink.) They aren't there to save the planet, they're there just to make some retards feel good about themselves.
So what do we have here? You actually have no clue what you're talking about, you make some false predictions that aren's supported by any data (not even the environmentalists' handpicked set), and you call anyone who disagrees with something unproven "These Exxon fascists".
No, if there are "fascists" out there, it's self-appointed inquisitors like you. The ones who don't care about science, nor about the scientific process. Science is actually _supposed_ to question everything. You've got your dogma, and everyone who dares question it, is automatically a heretic who should suffer for his transgressions. (As spelled out in your message.)
Sorry, dude. That kind of attitude may have been all the rage in the 1600's, but today it's just sad.
Environmental impact isn't the only cost of this. (Score:3, Insightful)
To use the Fujitsu drives for example. Data lost on a failed drive has a value and may be non recoverable. Most places don't do daily backups, but even the changes in data over 24 hours can be significant and add the cost of the employee's salary in time in recreating the data. Replacement of drives known defective and not failed costs in time for data transfer and drive replacement in addition to purchase and validation of new drives. After the drive is replaced if it contains sensitive data it has to be disassembled and destroyed properly. After all that it makes it to the landfill.
Figure it this way:
$30 - 1 hour (failed) attempted data recovery
$60 - cost of replacement drive
$30 - 1 hour installation and reghosting of new drive
$100 - 4 hours recreating lost data
$15 - 30 min manual destruction of old drive
=$235
-$60 assume reimbursement for drive (not guaranteed)
=$175 because it was defective material!
Multiply that by the Fujitsu disaster (one and a half dumpster loads of drives after destruction, as I remember) and the cost gets up there. Remember, you may get the cost of the drive back, eventually, but never the cost of your labor.
Oh yeah, and you're still filling up the landfill.
Impressive (Score:2)
Horrible Industry Practices (Score:2)
This is at least the industry's second major embarrassment in as many years. Anyone remember the leaking capacitors [slashdot.org]? Widely deploying a new material without first testing it is akin to making major changes to a production piece of software and shipping it as soon as you get it to compile. Worse, even, because hardware isn't so easily "patched," and is much more likely to find its way into systems (i.e. automotive controllers) whose failure can actually kill people. If I were a buyer for an IC manufactur
Re:Horrible Industry Practices (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:heh - this will be new copout... (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah those damn peacenik hippi socialists that control the house, senate, supreme court, white house, wto, and all of those multi-national companies that are ruining this world or ours.
Re:heh - this will be new copout... (Score:2, Funny)
What worries me is that I can't figure out if this is meant to be funny or not. I'm sure there are people who genuinely believe this about the US government... well, maybe not the White House bit.
Re:heh - this will be new copout... (Score:2)
Re:Space Shuttle Blew up due to Environmental Conc (Score:5, Informative)
The foam on the last space shuttle was used because it was more environmentally friendly, even though it was inferior. At least that's what I read (just put 'space shuttle foam environment' into google).
I expect you read this [capmag.com] article in Capitalist Magazine [capmag.com]. The title of the article, "Earth Worshippers Cause Death in Space", really brings home the high levels of dispassionate reporting and journalistic integrity enjoyed by the magazine. Truly, everything they say must be true.
Re:You're just as bad (Score:2)
Because you have a different ideological slant, you attack the source rather than the points made. You're the other side of the same tiresome coin.
Rubbish. If a Columbian drug baron tells me that cocaine should be supplied to children, it is perfectly germane for me to question their motives for making the assertion, irrespective of whether the assertion has merit or not.
Re:You're just as bad (Score:2)
Constructing a straw man and attacking it hardly makes you look any better.
And confusing a straw man with an analogy hardly makes you look any more justified in your original accusation.
Re:Environmental concerns (Score:2)
Which, incidentally, is what happens to a large percentage of so-called "recycled" computers.