Most advertising works by having you correlate a service or something positive with the advertised product. Commercials between your favorite shows, contextualized ads on websites, previews before movies etc.
Tests aren't positive for most people. In fact I am pretty sure most people don't like tests. Works as well as advertising space on barf bags.
This portion of brain-melting hell brought to you by Joe's Honeywagon!
I've worked with test benches running the OS and hardware that is going on the 787.
If it's the same thing, it's going to be interesting seeing something like windows or linux run on it.
It has different processing areas, and each of the areas run on a different piece of hardware. So you basically had one computer running datalink to ground stations and other aircraft and another computer doing navigational computations (and several other computers doing various other tasks).
If windows were the same way it would be like.. having a different set of ram and a different processor running network tasks from ones running hard drive communication tasks.
Then again the OS that connects all of these together might be more flexible than I imagine, I only work on a small piece of software that runs on one of the aforementioned.
The "pygame" library in Python has a surfarray class that allows you to parse images as arrays.
Convert the image to black and white, with a tolerance level above the black of the circle and below the black of the dials.
Then you'll just have dials, so do a vertical scan then a horizontal scan.. whichever point has the least black pixels in common between both scans is the tip of the dial. Whichever has the most black points in common is the center of the dial.
Draw a line between those two points, measure the angle. Gotcha.
Prolly to complicated but i'd do it.. it would be a fun project.
"The Stirling cycle is notable for its perfect theoretical efficiency; however this as yet unrealized ideal remains an immense engineering challenge. Nevertheless, current designs are useful and versatile."
Before this ends up in a 007 movie. Then a game. Then, instead of slappers only, you end up with.. binary storage solutions only.. *no sound of impact, it's silenced* duh nuh nuh nuh... duhhhhnn...
Yes, I would qualify parsing someone's file system into file sized chunks and processing them bit by bit and feeding that data into a hashing algorithm as searching.
Don't know if DotA would be considered a mod or not, but it is such a heavily modified version of Warcraft III that I don't know what else to call it.
Huge amounts of fun derived from that.
And I didn't see Counterstrike mentioned, which I believe is the most successful mod of all time. Next to Windows Vista.
What percentage of the web is even frequently visited?
I'd say that the average user uses 1% of the internet (or less), the question is how much of that 1% coincides among people; then you might see that a much much larger percentage of websites that are actually relevant will be standards compliant.
Me (libertarian), and my family (all Republicans), keep very very very messy living spaces.
Our rooms are, in general, decorated with dirty laundry, dirty dishes, computers, beds, dressers and occasionally curtains (sometimes windows accompanying these).
We have racks and racks of books about various mechanical devices, several complete sets of various encyclopedias and religious books (along with various other fictional works). (In my own home,.. I have a kindle.)
So uh, no. I don't think this is even a little true, at least not in my experience. My only liberal relative keeps the cleanest house in the (hundreds strong) family.
As a professional creator of scam (3 phds, 4 bachelors and 3 time ignobel prize laureate), I call bullshit.
The fact that I am a professional should boost your opinion of my opinion; but this fact is merely a side note to my remarkably slashdotty ability to refute professional scientific research and experimentation with words alone. (fear my power)
The first assumption made by the article is that smaller particles make for faster combustion. The fact that this happens to be a correct assumption does not lend credibility to the argument.
The second assumption is that something that is non-ferrous and non-polarized can be affected by an electric field. Wait what? You tell me that the experiment says that it is imparting a negative charge to the diesel particles and as a result they repel each other and increase atomization thereby causing the fuel to combust more efficiently?
False, It says his subscriptions stopped working.
You pay for those monthly for publications such as the New York Times etc.
Why would he continue to get those delivered if he can no longer pay for them?
The books he BOUGHT already will continue to work, nowhere in here does it say that they will not.
In fact in TFA it says he can put books onto the device by other means, implying that the books will continue to work.
Poking holes in condoms would probably be an effective terrorist attack then.. hmm..
Course, you might also wonder what logical justification there could be for harming one life to (maybe) help another.
Bad analogy. Midol works for headaches.
Most advertising works by having you correlate a service or something positive with the advertised product. Commercials between your favorite shows, contextualized ads on websites, previews before movies etc.
Tests aren't positive for most people. In fact I am pretty sure most people don't like tests. Works as well as advertising space on barf bags.
This portion of brain-melting hell brought to you by Joe's Honeywagon!
I fail to see how mathematical deduction can prove the earth isn't the center of the universe.
I prefer my red herring with tartar sauce.
I've worked with test benches running the OS and hardware that is going on the 787.
If it's the same thing, it's going to be interesting seeing something like windows or linux run on it.
It has different processing areas, and each of the areas run on a different piece of hardware. So you basically had one computer running datalink to ground stations and other aircraft and another computer doing navigational computations (and several other computers doing various other tasks).
If windows were the same way it would be like.. having a different set of ram and a different processor running network tasks from ones running hard drive communication tasks.
Then again the OS that connects all of these together might be more flexible than I imagine, I only work on a small piece of software that runs on one of the aforementioned.
The "pygame" library in Python has a surfarray class that allows you to parse images as arrays.
Convert the image to black and white, with a tolerance level above the black of the circle and below the black of the dials.
Then you'll just have dials, so do a vertical scan then a horizontal scan.. whichever point has the least black pixels in common between both scans is the tip of the dial. Whichever has the most black points in common is the center of the dial.
Draw a line between those two points, measure the angle. Gotcha.
Prolly to complicated but i'd do it.. it would be a fun project.
AIDS is people too.
"The Stirling cycle is notable for its perfect theoretical efficiency; however this as yet unrealized ideal remains an immense engineering challenge. Nevertheless, current designs are useful and versatile."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stirling_engine
That I'll need to be 21 to buy my wedding ring? Damn.
Before this ends up in a 007 movie.
Then a game.
Then, instead of slappers only, you end up with.. binary storage solutions only..
*no sound of impact, it's silenced*
duh nuh nuh nuh... duhhhhnn...
They should have children do it. They are pure and sinless, and it wouldn't scar them for life.
You know that's probably why they made the md5's? Because they didn't want to actually store the porn?
Otherwise they would just do a binary comparison.
Yes, I would qualify parsing someone's file system into file sized chunks and processing them bit by bit and feeding that data into a hashing algorithm as searching.
Uh.. he's talking like a (select next candidate) button and a (vote for currently selected candidate) button.
It would work.
First of two, there is a neat range of stuff at
http://www.robotmarketplace.com/
Second of two, you can do nifty things with just steam and pistons, but I assume you'll be doing that anyway.. =p
Don't know if DotA would be considered a mod or not, but it is such a heavily modified version of Warcraft III that I don't know what else to call it. Huge amounts of fun derived from that. And I didn't see Counterstrike mentioned, which I believe is the most successful mod of all time. Next to Windows Vista.
What percentage of the web is even frequently visited? I'd say that the average user uses 1% of the internet (or less), the question is how much of that 1% coincides among people; then you might see that a much much larger percentage of websites that are actually relevant will be standards compliant.
Me (libertarian), and my family (all Republicans), keep very very very messy living spaces. Our rooms are, in general, decorated with dirty laundry, dirty dishes, computers, beds, dressers and occasionally curtains (sometimes windows accompanying these). We have racks and racks of books about various mechanical devices, several complete sets of various encyclopedias and religious books (along with various other fictional works). (In my own home, .. I have a kindle.)
So uh, no. I don't think this is even a little true, at least not in my experience. My only liberal relative keeps the cleanest house in the (hundreds strong) family.
You might notice that he said WoW is extremely Linux-friendly, internally.
Internally means not externally, by the way.
Don't let your cynicism blind you into not reading what they wrote.
You know, some people who use computers (and wireless networks) a lot like the DARK. FYI.
The RFTA was intentional.
As a professional creator of scam (3 phds, 4 bachelors and 3 time ignobel prize laureate), I call bullshit.
The fact that I am a professional should boost your opinion of my opinion; but this fact is merely a side note to my remarkably slashdotty ability to refute professional scientific research and experimentation with words alone. (fear my power)
The first assumption made by the article is that smaller particles make for faster combustion. The fact that this happens to be a correct assumption does not lend credibility to the argument.
The second assumption is that something that is non-ferrous and non-polarized can be affected by an electric field. Wait what? You tell me that the experiment says that it is imparting a negative charge to the diesel particles and as a result they repel each other and increase atomization thereby causing the fuel to combust more efficiently?
RFTA