Bringing Giant Tortoises Back From Extinction 125
fizzysister writes "The BBC reports that scientists at Yale are intending to resurrect an extinct species of Galapagos tortoise, the Geochelone elephantopus. Unfortunately, not in the style of Jurassic Park, so no tortoise-based theme parks just yet. They will, however, be using genetic profiling of living tortoises that carry some of the elephantopus genes, to select the most appropriate of these to mate and thus eventually (after a century or more) create a generation of 'pure' Geochelone elephantopus individuals."
TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
Re:TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
any plans on training these resurrected giant tortoises in the art of Ninjitsu.
Dude, those giant turtles are scary enough without Ninjitsu.
In fact, one of them is so huge and powerful that four elephants couldn't manage to keep it down, unless they in turn were weighed down by a huge disk-shaped rock.
CJ
Re:TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
There's where you're wrong, it isn't just one turtle.
Re:TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
There's where you're wrong, it isn't just one turtle.
That's right! It's turtles all the way down!
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Actually, no...
The current theory is that Great A'Tuin is travelling through the universe in search of a mate.
When this happens, a cataclysmic event (colloquially known as the "Big Bang") will occur.
That is why so many sages have tried to find out Great A'Tuins gender...
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Is this from one of the books? If so, I must not have gotten to that one yet. If not, you have a masterly grasp of the humor style. I'd take my hat off, but I'm using it to wipe my monitor off . . .
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The plans are right here. You just need plenty of radioactive waste to finish the job. :-)
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And a rat to train them. Don't forget the rat.
The Book of Secrets (Score:3, Funny)
Re:TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
"What a gip."
It's "gyp", derived from "Gypsies". Please get your culturally insensitive references correct or the PC police will run out of work, and we don't want that, now do we? Otherwise they might get involved in more important things, like changing housing policy to provide loans to unqualified applicants.
Oh, wait...
(This offtopic flamebait brought to you by the letter Y and the number "I paid off my fucking loans why can't everybody else?!")
Re:TFA doesn't mention (Score:5, Funny)
The original poster may have been referring to the fact that Ronald Reagan, the original Gipper, also failed to fund the U.S. Ninja/Giant Tortoise Defense Initiative.
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[1885â"90, Amer.; back formation from GYPSY]
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They haven't figured out a way of training a giant rat to teach the tortoises.
This could redefine the term species (Score:2, Informative)
If this interbreeding of existing species is successful, it begs the question:
Are the existing species really separate species, or are the merely subspecies or even just breeds of the same species?
The answer depends on the definition of species.
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Fuck biologists. If they don't have enough goddamn sense not to crap up the language they use to do science in, well, let's just say that explains a lot about the general lack of advancement in all the "life sciences". Some biology text books now spend nearly a whole chapter just explaining the definition of "species".
Hey, fuck you too! Anyway, we have to change our theories based on evidence. A lot of times we're wrong. Terminology changes to reflect reality, not vice versa. If we say a species is one morphology of animals that can breed together, then find that what are clearly two seperate species can productively breed, we're not going to be able to insist that they can't breed, we're going to say we were wrong and species actually means something else.
When it comes down to it, the whole concept of species is rea
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Back to these turtles. The recovery of the sub-species or varitype or race or whatever you want to call it, [...] But by using the word "species" there, you making it confusing to discuss some very interesting questions.
We don't know yet whether the product of this cross-breeding program will produce genetically viable offspring with other members of the parent breed. The most you can say is that we don't know if these are separate species. How quickly can genetic recombination produce incompatible species? An unprovement to out understanding of that question could be an interesting byproduct of this project....
HAL.
Re:This could redefine the term species (Score:5, Funny)
I thought the definition rested on the the ability of the offspring to procreate successfully.
Which, I am told, does happen occasionally for jack-asses.
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"Which, I am told, does happen occasionally for jack-asses."
Occasionally? With the amount of jackasses in the world, how could they NOT be breeding amongst themselves and multiplying?
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begs the question
I do not think those words mean what you think they mean.
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I do not think that language works the way you think it works.
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The only purpose of language is communication. If one is able to communicate, nothing they do to the language is incorrect.
And people DO "steer a tad away from there" all the time. That's why gay is now a slur instead of a compliment.
You are an idiot.
Re:This could redefine the term species (Score:5, Insightful)
Not everyone. I for one use the term properly, or I don't use it at all.
So is using "it's" as a genitive. So is the use of "loose" as an antonym of win. If the belief that the Moon is made of cheese was widespread, would it make it correct?
I've seen plenty of people shoot themselves in the foot, but you've plumbed new depths there.
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He was using it colloquially rather than technically. Get over it.
Using "Phrase XXX" which is an idiom is not comparable to a grammar or spelling mistake. Also, the rule for using "it's" vs "its", while useful, only exists because some linguist decided to eliminate the ambiguity.
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Using loose as an antonym of win is due to a misspelling of the word that was intended. It's not at all the same as giving or assuming a new definition for a word or phrase.
If you don't know the difference between the spelling of words and the meaning of words and how they relate to language, please stop posting.
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"Loose" isn't a misspelling of "lose", it's a different word with a different pronunciation.
It's just as bad, it's just as wrong, and it's equally good as a refutation of the "if someone uses it like that then that's how it is" argument.
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No, no it doesn't. Even ignoring the fact that you're misusing "beg the question", this issue is already pretty much shot by evolution. Exactly how do you define a species? A population that can interbreed?
Fine, lets define three populations, "A" "B" and "C" where all members of groups "A" are the same species by this definition, and all members of group "B" are the same species, and all members of group "C" are the same species, but members of group "A" and "C" aren't the same species. Now consider tha
Bene Gesserit @ Yale??? (Score:2, Funny)
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Well not to worry. Without the spice they really can't do much.
Now can anyone explain why I keep having these dreams about President Barack Obama sending a mission to Mars?
what's next? (Score:1, Troll)
are these same scientists trying to bring back the brick phone or black & white TV?
What is the point of this?
Brick phone (Score:1)
Too late, we already have the modern-day brick phone [google.com].
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The point? I'm going to guess that there are a few people that just simply would like to see these giant tortoises swimming around again. There are probably some people that would like to say "see, evolution DOES work"
There have been some hints that traits of those who survived past plagues could be used similarly, not through eugenics, but through gene therapy to improve mankind's overall situation with regard to retroviruses. Any experimentation in this regard could one day help to better mankind or repop
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I'm curious why they are going for traditional cross breeding techniques instead of using the start of the art genetic manipulation.
Very Cool (Score:4, Funny)
I want my own giant tortoise for a pet!
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You just need to wait until spring then pick one up. [warcraftpets.com]
Well that makes sense... (Score:2)
Playing God! (Score:4, Funny)
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In my view, you're only "Playing God" if you're talking velociraptors and making your own artificial creepy stuff.
I'm a talking velociraptor making my own artificial creepy stuff -- you insensitive clod!
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I'll tell Randall Munroe to bring his shotgun.
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Why not? Everybody else does.
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It's also worth pointing out that animal husbandry, which is what they're talking about, is something we've been doing for a very long time.
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Wouldn't charges of "Playing Darwin" or "Unnatural Selection" be more apropos?
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Oh, they can still rampage. It's just hard to notice since you can rebuild things as quickly as they can destroy them.
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Everybody, walk for your lives!
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hold it ... Geochelone elephantopus is NOT extinct (Score:5, Informative)
So just to clarify, several races are extinct and this discusses bringing them back to life. The species itself though is not extinct
+1 parent for informative (Score:1, Informative)
This must be why.. (Score:1)
it will not be concluding any time soon. A century ahead would be a fair bet.
Species definition and Galapagos restoration (Score:3, Informative)
The definition of species from your primary or secondary education about critters that can breed is a gross simplification. (I pity if you heard it in college also.) That is one basis for determining a species. Others are:
Location, meaning these individuals could procreate with those, but they never travel far enough to do so (like across an ocean). Sometimes called "populations."
Morphology, i.e. color, patterns, size.
Habits, i.e. where they rest or what they eat.
Mating preferences can be based on all of the above. An example: finches that rest in trees and eat small seeds from succulent bushes tend to prefer the same, even though they can mate with finches that rest in rocks and eat larger seeds from weeds. These groups may live intermingled, they just don't choose mates that way. New chicks learn patterns from their parents, act that way as they age, and hang out with (mate) those who are similar. This is akin to humans marrying only folks of the same social class. Studies on the finches in the Galapagos show that nearly any "species" CAN mate with the others, they just don't.
The other large reason to define species is funding. More folks will donate to help the "Floreana tortoise" if it is called its own species, even though it is identical to the "Isabela tortoise" except for 1) the island they were/are on, and 2) a few genes. The rallying cry, "Restore the Floreana tortoise" is catchier than, "Move some tortoises and manage their breeding based on DNA."
The article mentions how tortoises may have been moved from Floreana to Isabela, but they don't mention the real causes of the extinction in the first place. The same whaling ships left goats on the islands to breed and create a population they can harvest meat from next time they visit. The goat population exploded. These goats eat the same bushes the tortoises eat, depriving them of food. The ships also left rats which ate their eggs. Over the past 10 years, eradication campaigns have wiped out the goats from almost all of the islands, and have eliminated rats from some of them. Now that the main causes of the extinctions have been (are are being) removed, efforts to reclaim the populations are starting. This is just one.
For more information, see http://www.galapagos.org/2008/ [galapagos.org] or look up "Lonesome George."
Does same genome imply same organism? (Score:2)
Bear with me as I go a bit abstract, but /. is for nerds, right? Organisms are a kind of fixed point. a zygote with genome G implanted in an organism with womb (or egg, or, more generally, an environment of some sort) W gives rise to some organism O. O = f(G,W) where f is the 'development' function. But W is itself a function of the organism. So we really have O = f(G,W(O)). O is a fixed point of the function \x -> f(G,W(x)). But it's not at all clear this equation has unique solutions.
Just so you know I
how (Score:2)
how exactly do you get an extinct animal back by interbreeding its modern day ancestors, clearly you aren't going to get the exact same traits?
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My take is they're not looking for the exact same traits as that would be a humongous task. I figure we do something like this:
This has been done with the Quagga (Score:1)
useful study animal (Score:5, Interesting)
Can someone explain the value of these giant tortioses in objective, real terms?
There are a few things that would be useful about bringing back an extinct tortoise.
For one, it allows the animal to reclaim its place in the ecosystem. I don't have information on what caused the extinction of this tortoise, but I know of certain mammals that are fond of killing slow-moving things. If the tortoise went extinct not by natural selection, then it may have left a void in its natural ecosystem that could have downstream effects on stability of the same.
Though perhaps more tangible is that some of these tortoises could live 150+ years. If we want to study aging and what mechanisms could prolong a healthy life, then something that lives extraordinarily long would be quite valuable. Of course we could study old trees, but we have more in common with other vertebrates.
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What is behind your assumption that extinction by natural selection (as opposed, I assume, to human activity) is better for an ecosystem? Isn't evidence of ecological catastrophes of all sizes common in the fossil record?
Re:useful study animal (Score:5, Interesting)
What is behind your assumption that extinction by natural selection (as opposed, I assume, to human activity) is better for an ecosystem?
Generally natural selection takes out a species when it either no longer fills is niche in the ecosystem, or the niche no longer exists. If external forces (such as humans) knock a species out of existence, then the ecosystem is out of balance due to the loss of that species.
Isn't evidence of ecological catastrophes of all sizes common in the fossil record?
Ecological catastrophes are a good question. However, when something like that happens (be it asteroids, volcanoes, plate tectonics, etc), there are usually a very large number of species eliminated from an area at once. Yes, the ecosystem will come back, but it generally re-emerge with much different flora and fauna than what it had prior.
Catastrophes happen in the record, yes. But individual extinctions of species due to non-natural events are of a different scale and could have dramatic effects on a delicate, semi-isolated ecosystem such as the Galapagos.
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...the ecosystem is out of balance...
Please explain "out of balance" in objective terms. Is there only one "balance"? Or are there many? This "balance" concept seems to imply that a particular species is very important to the health of a particular ecosystem. How do we know when this is the case? Or are you saying it's always the case and that every single species is vitally important to every ecosystem it inhabits (or has ever inhabited)?
I have seen "out of balance" seemingly used to mean "I don't prefer that outcome" -- an intentional
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For the record, I think the article points to a neat experiment. However, I can't let this nonsense pass:
"If external forces (such as humans) knock a species out of existence,..."
Humans are not external to "the ecosystem" - we all live on planet earth here. Furthermore, violent impulses are as natural as any other impulses - we have seen them throughout recorded history, and there is every bit of reason to believe they existed before records. Furthermore, violent impulses appear to help individual humans
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Humans are not external to "the ecosystem" - we all live on planet earth here
That statement is only valid if you view the entire planet as a single ecosystem. I would say that really the planet needs to be viewed as a collection of distinct ecosystems, some of which humans really ought to be considered external to.
What does "balance" mean in regards to an "ecosystem"?
Ever monitor the carbon cycle? How about the nitrogen and phosphorous cycles? Everything alive in an ecosystem (and some inert material as well) contributes to the cycles of an environment.
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on the theory that human activity is somehow unnatural. I would contend that human activity is perfectly natural
I would say that not all human activity is natural. Humans are on a very, very, short list of animals that kill just to kill. Look at the extinction of the dodo bird, for example. The dodo bird had a distinct niche in its own environment, until humans wiped it out. But how many of those birds were killed for anything other than enjoyment?
Also, if the giant tortoise was destroyed because it was slow moving (as someone above mentioned), wouldn't that mean its niche was gone?
People killed it because it was slow moving and easy to kill. Some people just have an urge to kill anything they can.
However, the slow moving lifestyle of the tor
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Bogus argument. Humans are part of nature and the natural world. Therefore human activity is as "natural" as a beaver dam. Any other definition of "natural" is... unnatural. ;-)
The notion that human activities can somehow create an "unnatural" ecosystem is equally bogus. The problem, really, is that our activities lower the _diversity_ of ecosystems. A less diverse ecosystem is no less natural than any other, but it is certainly less resilient. This may cause sustainability problems in the short term, evolu
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Bogus argument. Humans are part of nature and the natural world. Therefore human activity is as "natural" as a beaver dam. Any other definition of "natural" is... unnatural. ;-)
Sure but your definition leaves the word "natural" completely redundant and we would need another word to differentiate that which is done or caused by man/technology vs things that are not.
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But that's exactly the point. The idea that there is some kind of "natural" world that exists apart from and in contrast to humans and their works is rooted, I believe, in the belief that humans were created (and I use the term advisedly) as something distinct from the rest of the world. A dangerous idea, to my mind; if we don't recognise our participation in ecosystem, it is easy to rationalise away the effects of our behaviour. We do not have dominion over the planet and its lives - we are inextricably bo
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Artificial = made by hand. An artifact. One species killing off another may be shortsighted, sad, stupid, unnecessary, and a whole host of other adjectives, but it's a real stretch to call it artificial... and completely incorrect to call it unnatural.
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http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/artificial?jss=0
"made by hand" is a specific subset of "produced by humans". For instance, genocide isn't exactly "made by hand" but it is exclusively "produced by humans" and therefore is artificial, and therefore if you used "unnatural" as a synonym of "artificial" as a lot of people do (hence the point i was making) you can say that genocide is unnatural.
i would like to make clear that in general, and in this case, i don'
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I don't disagree with anything you're saying, I'm merely arguing that the natural/unnatural distinction is a dangerous one because it tends to change humanity (in the mind of the one making the distinction) from participant in the system to something outside the system. That's not so bad when you're talking about the disruptions humans cause, but it is part of the mindset that leads to those disruptions in the first place, I think.
My real issue lies, I think, with the very concept of "unnatural". It's a use
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Though perhaps more tangible is that some of these tortoises could live 150+ years. If we want to study aging and what mechanisms could prolong a healthy life, then something that lives extraordinarily long would be quite valuable. Of course we could study old trees, but we have more in common with other vertebrates.
Ever see William Hurt in the Dune miniseries? His acting was so wooden, he put trees to sleep.
Wooden acting? (Score:2)
Ever see William Hurt in the Dune miniseries? His acting was so wooden, he put trees to sleep.
I haven't. Was it anything like Jonathan Taylor Thomas in that movie [wikipedia.org] or Seth Adkins in that TV movie [wikipedia.org] or (shudder) Roberto Benigni in still another movie [wikipedia.org]?
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If the tortoise went extinct not by natural selection, then it may have left a void in its natural ecosystem that could have downstream effects on stability of the same.
And how else would they go extinct? Humans are as much a part of natural selection as anything else. The very definition of natural selection dictates that some species will become extinct while others (humans for example) become obscenely populous.
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And how else would they go extinct?
Going extinct because something enjoys killing you is dramatically different than going extinct because you are not able to compete effectively for resources.
The giant tortoises seemed to be doing pretty well for resources in their environment, until a new animal showed up that enjoyed killing them.
Humans are as much a part of natural selection as anything else
Couldn't that reasoning be used to justify humans driving any animal to extinction that they don't like? What if I have something against timberwolves? Could I start killing them on sight and claim natural
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Couldn't that reasoning be used to justify humans driving any animal to extinction that they don't like? What if I have something against timberwolves? Could I start killing them on sight and claim natural selection?
Yep. Unless you have some explanation other than natural selection for how humans got to be advanced enough to do that.
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Couldn't that reasoning be used to justify humans driving any animal to extinction that they don't like? What if I have something against timberwolves? Could I start killing them on sight and claim natural selection?
Yep. Unless you have some explanation other than natural selection for how humans got to be advanced enough to do that.
Then I guess we differ in opinion of what mans' obligation is to the rest of the world.
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I was hoping this topic would come up. What do you believe is mankind's obligation to the rest of the world, and what is the source of this obligation?
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It's interesting how people confuse natural selection with a moral argument.
Is your body made like the Terminator, out of metal? If not then you are part of nature. Human choices of course effect our environment, but let's not confuse philosophy with science. Science doesn't care about morals, only about facts. And the fact is if something has been killed by another species and that species was naturally occurring then it was by all definitions "natural selection".
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if something has been killed by another species and that species was naturally occurring
The naturally occurring part is what I am trying to emphasize here. Were humans naturally occurring on the Galapagos islands?
Or what if we dropped off a population of grizzly bears there and they killed off the tortoises? Would that be natural?
We're talking about non-native species killing off the native species. You can call it natural selection if you want, though I disagree. Did the Galapagos tortoise have a natural predator on the islands before people found them and started killing them?
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Ah then I agree, we certainly could fall into the realm of invasive species in the cases you state and many others. I want to stress that I'm not taking the attitude "well it's natural and they could't adapt so F em". We have the brain to ponder our impact on the world around us, and in turn I would agree an obligation to not only the world around us, but in turn ourselves. After all we can't live without them.
I will care about non-native species arguments (Score:2)
I will care about non-native species arguments as soon as you exterminate all the pigeons and Rattus Norwegicus in North America and rabbits in Australia.
Thanks,
-- Terry
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I would have made a real reply, but these other two did so much better than I could have.
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You're getting in to Social Darwinism here.
Natural selection does not imply justness. Social Darwinists think that if one group can kill off/subdue another group, it is ok because it is "natural selection". The fact is natural order doesn't necessarily relate to morals at all. It is totally natural for Ethiopians to be starving to death, but that doesn't make it 'just'.
Cats kill for pleasure (although whether the killing part is intentional is up in the air). If some species of mole goes extinct due to this
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Nope, they don't run Linux, but they do have a shell [wikipedia.org] which in this case is a tortoise/atmosphere interface. OK so it's hardware rather than software but it's suprising how much a tortoise and a computer have in common. If you've got a tired old Celeron like me, you'll even find they 'run' about as fast!
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The portions of soup would be a lot smaller.
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Do they run Linux?
Well, they do have a shell.
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Dude, big turtles are slow as tar. It's obvious they use vista.
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They are working on porting Linux for Turtles to run on Tortoises.
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Why did you post that anonymously? You clearly believe you speak for everyone. What do you have to loose?
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"We don't even care that we don't care." /obscure?
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