As IBM breaks out the bad news, causing chip R&D departments of competitors to halt research into graphene, IBM releases a new 500GHz processor next year.
One time when I was parking my car, I click the button to lock&arm and immediately an old car down the road w/ an alarm system(?) starts honking erratically. Just to check my sanity that it was a coincidence I click again. The other car starts honking - it was almost like it was signaling out morse code. All of my buttons seemed to conjure up a different pattern...
There are several bugs in their conversion functions (data integrity)- apparently they don't bother fixing them unless it does something like take down a server.
Conductive thread isn't solid metal or it would just simply be wire; its usually a silver-coated nylon. If you don't want to puncture the gloves you can just as easily sew the thread through the seam(s) on the fingertips without increasing any exposure.
You'd probably need some fancy 11tybillion-decimal-place thermometer to detect any change in heat loss from the thread.
Put a mirror finish/coating the inside of the white glass. This will block light and create an epic glow (enhance the whiteness) that apple fanboys can pray to.
It uses pieces of HTML standard, just as *.softwarepantent uses parts of *.hardware's instruction standard. The patent claims appear to be describing hierarchial popup/expanding menus that while being hovered over displayed content in a pane or popup (helptext?) elsewhere, also being able to drill down the structure without having to keep the menu open.
But I only skimmed to claim 30 or so, too much bullshit after. This was filed in '90, granted '93, i'm thinking compuserve or AOL may have prior art in that area but I wasn't on the internets until '94:(
Speaking of hidden in plain sight: OnStar systems. I disconnected the one in my car as I have no use for it and I'm paranoid about how it could be abused. It has a wireless modem, GPS/satellite receiver - supposed "law enforcement engine cutoff" and other scary things. I'm not sure if it disables itself without an active subscription - I see the "subscription" as just a flag for OnStar on whether they will answer the device or not.
Only if you make it obvious, such as by breaking seals (e.g. scored stickers) or using non-OEM parts. And apparently there are no seals. Fried of mine shattered his iphone digitizer glass that applecare would not cover without $$$, got the kit from ifixit to replace it and change it all himself. Later the new digitizer stopped working on one edge so he brought it back into applecare and they replaced the digitizer, no questions.
Darn tootin'!
or
?
Perhaps this software? http://psl1ght.com/
With this? http://cl.ly/3yVX
If only I had mod points to burn, I'd waste then on this.
Many times you need strife to attain peace.
New version of NoScript to install on every single FF launch FTL
As IBM breaks out the bad news, causing chip R&D departments of competitors to halt research into graphene, IBM releases a new 500GHz processor next year.
With penises and demotivational captions added in.
One time when I was parking my car, I click the button to lock&arm and immediately an old car down the road w/ an alarm system(?) starts honking erratically. Just to check my sanity that it was a coincidence I click again. The other car starts honking - it was almost like it was signaling out morse code. All of my buttons seemed to conjure up a different pattern...
There are several bugs in their conversion functions (data integrity)- apparently they don't bother fixing them unless it does something like take down a server.
erk: C0 CE FE 84 C2 27 F7 5B D0 7A 7E B8 46 50 9F 93 B2 38 E7 70 DA CB 9F F4 A3 88 F8 12 48 2B E2 1B
riv: 47 EE 74 54 E4 77 4C C9 B8 96 0C 7B 59 F4 C1 4D
pub: C2 D4 AA F3 19 35 50 19 AF 99 D4 4E 2B 58 CA 29 25 2C 89 12 3D 11 D6 21 8F 40 B1 38 CA B2 9B 71 01 F3 AE B7 2A 97 50 19
R: 80 6E 07 8F A1 52 97 90 CE 1A AE 02 BA DD 6F AA A6 AF 74 17
n: E1 3A 7E BC 3A CC EB 1C B5 6C C8 60 FC AB DB 6A 04 8C 55 E1
K: BA 90 55 91 68 61 B9 77 ED CB ED 92 00 50 92 F6 6C 7A 3D 8D
Da: C5 B2 BF A1 A4 13 DD 16 F2 6D 31 C0 F2 ED 47 20 DC FB 06 70
(geohot.com)
is obvious
If you don't mind bad science but a decent story, check out Deception Point by Dan Brown.
tldr; NASA fakes ET for more funding.
Terrorized State of America
"But mommy, you said I should scream and call the police when I get touched there."
Conductive thread isn't solid metal or it would just simply be wire; its usually a silver-coated nylon. If you don't want to puncture the gloves you can just as easily sew the thread through the seam(s) on the fingertips without increasing any exposure.
You'd probably need some fancy 11tybillion-decimal-place thermometer to detect any change in heat loss from the thread.
Conductive thread usually is silver.
404: You dropped the "L" in HTML
Watching the video, the speed looks to be limited by horizontal resolution/motor feeding the recording film under the laser
a) Apple
b) Hmm, perhaps
http://www.geocities.ws/ has been doing it for a while already.
Put a mirror finish/coating the inside of the white glass. This will block light and create an epic glow (enhance the whiteness) that apple fanboys can pray to.
It uses pieces of HTML standard, just as *.softwarepantent uses parts of *.hardware's instruction standard.
The patent claims appear to be describing hierarchial popup/expanding menus that while being hovered over displayed content in a pane or popup (helptext?) elsewhere, also being able to drill down the structure without having to keep the menu open.
But I only skimmed to claim 30 or so, too much bullshit after. :(
This was filed in '90, granted '93, i'm thinking compuserve or AOL may have prior art in that area but I wasn't on the internets until '94
Speaking of hidden in plain sight: OnStar systems.
I disconnected the one in my car as I have no use for it and I'm paranoid about how it could be abused. It has a wireless modem, GPS/satellite receiver - supposed "law enforcement engine cutoff" and other scary things. I'm not sure if it disables itself without an active subscription - I see the "subscription" as just a flag for OnStar on whether they will answer the device or not.
e.g. the Nike step thingy that's been there since basically v1 (?)
Only if you make it obvious, such as by breaking seals (e.g. scored stickers) or using non-OEM parts. And apparently there are no seals.
Fried of mine shattered his iphone digitizer glass that applecare would not cover without $$$, got the kit from ifixit to replace it and change it all himself. Later the new digitizer stopped working on one edge so he brought it back into applecare and they replaced the digitizer, no questions.