Joe: You're taking that comment out of context. The issue of the care of unwanted children, like you so well proved is quite a loaded and emotionally charged topic, and it's not something most people in polite company would like to discuss because it'd be very easy to get into an extremely heated argument about it. So for the sake of keeping the peace, and keeping relevant to the blog itself (since it is a tech blog, not one of human ethics), that's why the comment was made. It speaks of the blog, not the writer themselves.
I for one like the idea. If only we had something similar implanted in the US, we'd have far less cases of babies being abandoned in the cold, or worse, thrown in dumpsters.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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Joe:
You're taking that comment out of context. The issue of the care of unwanted children, like you so well proved is quite a loaded and emotionally charged topic, and it's not something most people in polite company would like to discuss because it'd be very easy to get into an extremely heated argument about it. So for the sake of keeping the peace, and keeping relevant to the blog itself (since it is a tech blog, not one of human ethics), that's why the comment was made. It speaks of the blog, not the writer themselves.
I for one like the idea. If only we had something similar implanted in the US, we'd have far less cases of babies being abandoned in the cold, or worse, thrown in dumpsters.