Have you looked at the US Space Program? I don't mean looking at our historic achievements, I mean looking at where we are today. While we were celebrating our wins, we allowed our Aerospace Industry to drive the cost of space so high that it strangled our ability to explore. Here's a news flash; Apollo 11's landing was 49.5 years ago. Most people who saw the it are retired or getting ready to retire.
It's worse. Most NASA badges are currently drawing unemployment, and the few that are showing up to work aren't getting paid. We haven't had manned spaceflight capability in almost a decade, and the only reason we're on the ISS is because the Russians choose to let us ride along. With the current electile dysfunction there is a good chance we miss the window for the 2020 rover launch too.
There are times for swinging your "My country is better than yours!" stick around; this isn't one.
This experiment has been performed with Lunar Soil Simulant (JSC-1) here on earth. Plants were able to grew, poorly, in it directly. Adding organic matter and fertilizer improved growth significantly as expected.
It proves that, as of today, there is life on one other rock in this Universe. It's not sustainable life and it didn't evolve independently, but it's life on something other than Earth.
As to who suggested what, that is irrelevant. Until a thing is experimentally demonstrated there is always the chance that it might not be possible. If you can't see how awesome this is then I can't help you.
Yes, we have enough Uranium and Thorium. The best place to store waste that we've thought up so far is in deep horizontal wells under the plants that created the waste. It's close, retrievable if necessary, in a monitored location, and a viable solution for about 80%* of US reactors.
The Nimbys will despise this idea because they don't understand the idea of "impermeable strata" and that water wells stop kilometers above the target storage zone for storage.
* A small percentage of reactors don't have suitable geographic strata beneath them within a feasibly reachable distance.
You're right about auto plants being a big deal here. The combination of low taxes (there is no state income tax) and relatively cheap real estate have helped us attract a lot of business.
That Saturn plant is still open and making the Cadillac XT4 and GMC Acadias. The bigger story is all of the suppliers for those plants. We've got over 800 parts manufacturing facilities that make stuff to go into those and other vehicles.
I've done this, automating a half-dozen data entry people out of jobs by using clever work* to connect Great Plains to our case management system.
* More specifically using VBScript to read invoice data from our sql database, import the customer and invoice data with Integration manager, and a separate process to record success or failure back to the CMS.
Most of them moved to doing other more interesting work, and a few left the company. I do sometimes feel bad about it, but the work was drudgery. No-one should have to endure years of copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste. That's a long slow death.
My spouse is a happy iPhone user, and I've done a bunch of repairs on it. I'd love to buy a new iPhone to replace the 6, but I refuse to buy one without a headphone jack.
Bluetooth is crap, and I don't want to carry dongles.
Our species will die if we remain only on this rock.
Look at our neighbors if you don't believe it. Uranus was smacked so hard by a space rock that it rotated almost perpendicular to the Sun's accretion disk. Mars southern hemisphere took a hit so hard that it set of volcanoes on half the planet. Our own planet bears the scars of a mass extinction space rock impact, and our moon is a trophy of an even larger impact before that.
I mean no disrespect, but the Apollo guys were the face and leaders of NASA when the decisions were made that trapped us in LEO for two generations. They were there with the administrators. They were there talking to Congress and the Senate. They let the shuttle program become what it did. They failed us then, and they have no business getting in the way now.
As well as a lot of people who think "e" == Internet and will not use another browser.
Microsoft tried to help with this. They hide the ie icon, make Edge the default browser, and try to schlep you back into Edge if/when you launch IE.
Enterprises are the primary users of IE now because of fear of breaking things, custom, or real application compatibility requirements.
P.s. if you have real application compatibility requirements, take a look at Enterprise Mode. One of its features is you can use Edge and have it drop back to IE only for specific sites. Chrome has an add-in that does this too. It's called 'legacy browser support'.
(Full disclosure: I work as a PFE for Microsoft. Yes, I realize that makes my opinion invalid.)
TFS indicates the cost of the mile long tunnel at ~10 million dollars, and TBCP (The Boring Company Presentation) used the same number and noted that this was their first tunnel.
Unless there is some funny math there, a serious possibility, the noobs did it for ~1/4th the cost of the pros on their first try.
The canceled project was the Sepulveda Boulevard tunnel. The backstory on that was that LA gave them an preliminary exemption from a (possible multi-year) environmental impact study. The fine folks of the Brentwood Residents Coalition took offense to that and sued.
That's the name to remember when you are baking on the 405. 'Brentwood Residents Coalition'
If you look at military spending as percent of GDP [worldbank.org], the U.S. doesn't even make the top 20.
This data doesn't feel right. The 2017 US federal spending on defense was 821.6 Billion on a GDP of 19.3 Trillion. That's 4.2% for federal spending alone and does not include money spent by the individual states on defense. E.g. my state, Tennessee, spends over 100 million on its National guard.
I can't find it now, but there was a paper that described a solar thermal plus electrolysis process as an alternative to natgas for this. The waste product was CO2 or CO2 depending on the process temperature.
According to the now-unbingable paper it took less energy than calcining in a furnace and the CO process waste was usable as a feedstock for other processes.
The powershell command to remove a modern app is remove-appxpackage and it does work from shell access. If you want it to not be installed by default for new users the command is remove-appxprovisionedpackage.
If you are having to remove it every day, something is wrong and you might consider having a professional look into it. If Candy Crush specifically is appearing on your server operating system then you definitely need some help.
was actually able to arrest the roll just prior to splash down.
That should not be surprising.
I was extremely surprised at this, actually. I'll be dammed if I can figure out how a single engine on a gimbal induces roll on the axis in line with the centerline of the engine.
Did he explain why they artificially darkened the video they released of the crash? Fucking up the software is one thing. Pushing the limits to meet a deadline I can understand too.
Actively covering it up is where they crossed the line to evil and criminal.
According to data from the American Community Survey, from 2007 to 2016, about 5 million people moved to California from other states, while about 6 million left California. On net, the state lost 1 million residents to domestic migrationâ"about 2.5 percent of its total population
It is possible to get your certificate signed by a proper root CA.
With the utmost respect, you are incorrect. Per the CA/Browser Forum guidelines no publicly trusted CA should issue a certificate for an intranet name or IP address including both localhost and 127.0.0.1. Additionally, consider that your approach would have them use the same certificate on every machine that received the software. If that was the architectural decision then there would be no need to ship the root certificate public key to the machine at all.
you could have designed the setup differently.
I agree entirely. Why you'd want to shovel this desktop softphone application into a browser eludes me entirely.
As a precaution, Microsoft has updated the Certificate Trust List to remove user-mode trust for these certificates. Customers who have not installed Sennheiser HeadSetup software have no action to take to be protected. Customers who have installed Sennheiser HeadSetup software should update that software via the links above.
They did just what you ask, via the automatic Certificate Trust list Download. If you have the CTLD process download broken in your environment you can distribute it via script or group policy.
> Why does any app have the right, or the need, to install a root certificate?
This is addressed in the underlying paper.
The Sennheiser HeadSetup SDK supports the use of a locally connected headset by webbased softphones in a browser, loaded from a server web site via HTTPS. According to [Senn2018], the way HeadSetup supports this application scenario is by opening a local secure web socket (WSS) through which the headset can be accessed from within the browser. According to Sennheiser, the browser must be able to access this local web socket through a trusted HTTPS connection in order to bypass cross origin resource sharing (CORS) restrictions implemented by relevant browsers. Hence, the HeadSetup SDK needs a locally trusted TLS server certificate issued to the localhost IP address1 (127.0.0.1) and the associated private key.
Have you looked at the US Space Program? I don't mean looking at our historic achievements, I mean looking at where we are today. While we were celebrating our wins, we allowed our Aerospace Industry to drive the cost of space so high that it strangled our ability to explore. Here's a news flash; Apollo 11's landing was 49.5 years ago. Most people who saw the it are retired or getting ready to retire.
It's worse. Most NASA badges are currently drawing unemployment, and the few that are showing up to work aren't getting paid. We haven't had manned spaceflight capability in almost a decade, and the only reason we're on the ISS is because the Russians choose to let us ride along. With the current electile dysfunction there is a good chance we miss the window for the 2020 rover launch too.
There are times for swinging your "My country is better than yours!" stick around; this isn't one.
This experiment has been performed with Lunar Soil Simulant (JSC-1) here on earth. Plants were able to grew, poorly, in it directly. Adding organic matter and fertilizer improved growth significantly as expected.
https://journals.plos.org/plos...
It proves that, as of today, there is life on one other rock in this Universe. It's not sustainable life and it didn't evolve independently, but it's life on something other than Earth.
As to who suggested what, that is irrelevant. Until a thing is experimentally demonstrated there is always the chance that it might not be possible. If you can't see how awesome this is then I can't help you.
Yes, we have enough Uranium and Thorium.
The best place to store waste that we've thought up so far is in deep horizontal wells under the plants that created the waste. It's close, retrievable if necessary, in a monitored location, and a viable solution for about 80%* of US reactors.
The Nimbys will despise this idea because they don't understand the idea of "impermeable strata" and that water wells stop kilometers above the target storage zone for storage.
* A small percentage of reactors don't have suitable geographic strata beneath them within a feasibly reachable distance.
You're right about auto plants being a big deal here. The combination of low taxes (there is no state income tax) and relatively cheap real estate have helped us attract a lot of business.
That Saturn plant is still open and making the Cadillac XT4 and GMC Acadias. The bigger story is all of the suppliers for those plants. We've got over 800 parts manufacturing facilities that make stuff to go into those and other vehicles.
I've done this, automating a half-dozen data entry people out of jobs by using clever work* to connect Great Plains to our case management system.
* More specifically using VBScript to read invoice data from our sql database, import the customer and invoice data with Integration manager, and a separate process to record success or failure back to the CMS.
Most of them moved to doing other more interesting work, and a few left the company. I do sometimes feel bad about it, but the work was drudgery. No-one should have to endure years of copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste-copy-paste. That's a long slow death.
My spouse is a happy iPhone user, and I've done a bunch of repairs on it. I'd love to buy a new iPhone to replace the 6, but I refuse to buy one without a headphone jack.
Bluetooth is crap, and I don't want to carry dongles.
The anti-colonists have missed one obvious fact.
Our species will die if we remain only on this rock.
Look at our neighbors if you don't believe it. Uranus was smacked so hard by a space rock that it rotated almost perpendicular to the Sun's accretion disk. Mars southern hemisphere took a hit so hard that it set of volcanoes on half the planet. Our own planet bears the scars of a mass extinction space rock impact, and our moon is a trophy of an even larger impact before that.
I mean no disrespect, but the Apollo guys were the face and leaders of NASA when the decisions were made that trapped us in LEO for two generations. They were there with the administrators. They were there talking to Congress and the Senate. They let the shuttle program become what it did. They failed us then, and they have no business getting in the way now.
Microsoft tried to help with this. They hide the ie icon, make Edge the default browser, and try to schlep you back into Edge if/when you launch IE.
Enterprises are the primary users of IE now because of fear of breaking things, custom, or real application compatibility requirements.
P.s. if you have real application compatibility requirements, take a look at Enterprise Mode. One of its features is you can use Edge and have it drop back to IE only for specific sites. Chrome has an add-in that does this too. It's called 'legacy browser support'.
(Full disclosure: I work as a PFE for Microsoft. Yes, I realize that makes my opinion invalid.)
TFS indicates the cost of the mile long tunnel at ~10 million dollars, and TBCP (The Boring Company Presentation) used the same number and noted that this was their first tunnel.
Unless there is some funny math there, a serious possibility, the noobs did it for ~1/4th the cost of the pros on their first try.
The canceled project was the Sepulveda Boulevard tunnel. The backstory on that was that LA gave them an preliminary exemption from a (possible multi-year) environmental impact study. The fine folks of the Brentwood Residents Coalition took offense to that and sued.
That's the name to remember when you are baking on the 405. 'Brentwood Residents Coalition'
This data doesn't feel right. The 2017 US federal spending on defense was 821.6 Billion on a GDP of 19.3 Trillion. That's 4.2% for federal spending alone and does not include money spent by the individual states on defense. E.g. my state, Tennessee, spends over 100 million on its National guard.
Minor correction...
Not having 800 bases in the middle of nowhere filled with soldiers.
That's a real number. 800 bases in 70 countries.
I can't find it now, but there was a paper that described a solar thermal plus electrolysis process as an alternative to natgas for this. The waste product was CO2 or CO2 depending on the process temperature.
According to the now-unbingable paper it took less energy than calcining in a furnace and the CO process waste was usable as a feedstock for other processes.
The powershell command to remove a modern app is remove-appxpackage and it does work from shell access. If you want it to not be installed by default for new users the command is remove-appxprovisionedpackage.
If you are having to remove it every day, something is wrong and you might consider having a professional look into it. If Candy Crush specifically is appearing on your server operating system then you definitely need some help.
It's also worth noting that SpaceX is trying to land something with Parachutes, the fairings.
They have a crazy fast boat with a massive net that is supposed to slip under the fairings on the way down and still miss every time.
I was extremely surprised at this, actually. I'll be dammed if I can figure out how a single engine on a gimbal induces roll on the axis in line with the centerline of the engine.
It's an order of magnitude better than Yahoo Answers. You still have the occasional buffoon, but the signal to noise ratio is excellent.
NiNite has similar functionality. It's the first thing I run on a new PC.
Did he explain why they artificially darkened the video they released of the crash? Fucking up the software is one thing. Pushing the limits to meet a deadline I can understand too.
Actively covering it up is where they crossed the line to evil and criminal.
Source: https://lao.ca.gov/LAOEconTax/...
With the utmost respect, you are incorrect. Per the CA/Browser Forum guidelines no publicly trusted CA should issue a certificate for an intranet name or IP address including both localhost and 127.0.0.1. Additionally, consider that your approach would have them use the same certificate on every machine that received the software. If that was the architectural decision then there would be no need to ship the root certificate public key to the machine at all.
I agree entirely. Why you'd want to shovel this desktop softphone application into a browser eludes me entirely.
From the security advisory:
They did just what you ask, via the automatic Certificate Trust list Download. If you have the CTLD process download broken in your environment you can distribute it via script or group policy.
> Why does any app have the right, or the need, to install a root certificate?
This is addressed in the underlying paper.
Source: https://www.secorvo.de/publika...
The underlying paper is here:
https://www.secorvo.de/publika...
The CVE is here:
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/deta...