Except you aren't describing Socialism. Socialism is about the collectivization of the economy, functionally amounting to nationalizing virtually every sector. It's a welfare state you're talking about, and this is a distinction that we really need to make a lot more clear. A welfare state is perfectly compatible with a capitalist economy and free enterprise, socialism is an alternative to this. As much as the word welfare has itself become something of an epithet, the whole thing is still a hell of a lot more palatable to most people than true socialism.
Consider the degree to which railroads have moved to remote control engines in major yards. The harbour pilot like truck driver doesn't even really need a cab, the sort of driving s/he's needed for is if anything easier done from outside the vehicle, especially since the "driving" can quite easily be much more instructing the computer on where to put the truck than physically handling the controls.
This is one I've been wondering for a while...
Of course it helps a lot that ships tend to get their crews from the developing world at very low wages, but reducing ship crews to one or two people would seem to be possible with 1980s technology.
"What? That is a lie."
No. It isn't.
There's some subtleties to it, but the essence of stop loss is in fact extending enlistment terms unilaterally. Legally speaking it's a matter of involuntarily converting time in the ready reserve to active duty. No, it isn't illegal or technically a change to the contract, but for essentially all intents and purposes it's an extension of the enlistment.
Meh. Assuming you AREN'T using the command line to install it's a mostly fair comment. Yes, the various GUIs for package managers WORK, but I have never seen one I would call polished.
Ultimately UI feel matter a lot to non technical users and doesn't have a whole lot to do with how well, or not, the system may work underneath the graphics.
Can anyone confirm or deny if the supply of them is limited? I've heard a couple times that there's no real possibility of Orbital Sciences getting more. How many Antares launches can we actually get? As much as Orbital Sciences has done some impressive things I have some real doubts about the usefulness of this system.
Basically because they wouldn't allow the ship anywhere near the space station as is, and the Antares/Cygnus stack just isn't useful for much other than station resupply. If there's anything like the confidence that there was in SpaceX they might be allowed to dock on the next launch, and almost certainly on the third. Whether they deserve that confidence could be argued both ways, but I tend to think they'll get it.
For that matter, automating main line railways has some real potential, and doing it without requiring the equivalent of total grade separation and full in cab signalling makes it a lot more practical for the kinds of place, like the northeast corridor, that it could do the most good in).
Streetcars.
In all seriousness, the technology that we are very close to being able to realistically automate is rail in less than fully separated environments. The nature of operating on rails eliminates the sort of unpredictable ad-hoc problem solving that is going to be a problem for truly autonomous vehicles, and while the application is fairly specialized it is significant enough that there could be real money on it. Realistically the two use cases boil down to being able to get all the sort of operational cost benefits that go with light metro like systems (think Vancouver, or what's being built in Honolulu) that are automated and as such very frequent but have the kind of capacity more associated with light rail without the cost of full grade separation, and being able to automate more typical transit routes with less than full grade seperated routes (i.e. streetcar systems like in Seattle or Portland suddenly have a big advantage over buses beyond capacity and aesthetics - they can be driverless, a change that eliminates upwards of 60% of operating cost). For that matter trolleybuses might even be close enough to fixed guideway to solve a lot of the sort of problems that full automated cars would encounter, though this is more complicated and possibly introduces some more liability (there are legal advantages to being a train rather than a motor vehicle in most jurisdictions).
I quite like this evaluation actually. The smaller devices may well end up more common, and potentially more useful, but remember when the iPad launched? As is the thing was seen by a lot of people as an oversized iPad. For creating the market bigger was probably the sensible way to go, and it's not as if the large size has proven to have a small market.
Honestly this is more perceptive than you might think. IMO full VR doesn't make much sense for games, but consider how much real world difference there is between a head tracking system combined traditional 3D glasses, and maybe a second or third screen. Simpler to implement, more flexible in terms of what the system can do and the only real loss is the retention of peripheral vision and the head tracking not having 1:1 ratio of head to camera movement (and lets face it, in a gaming environment 1:1 is going to cause more problems than it solves).
And what's the problem with this? The system is intended for serious discussion, and when it becomes so easy for stupid shit to get through why NOT raise the threshold? It's not as if answering these things doesn't take significant time and effort.
This is exactly the point I think. The OEM price is not going to be anything like the $25 range the annual upgrades would be. They will probably have to drop the price somewhat, but at the end of the day it doesn't take much for $25 a year to work out at more than ~$100 every five or so. The really interesting thing here will be seeing what they do to push people to upgrading regularly since uptake on new Windows editions is never that great without new hardware and it really will become business critical with this model. The main thing that makes me nervous is how aggressive they might get about pushing people away from using older additions, but really I'm pretty enthusiastic about the idea of more regular significant updates given how little they've done in the way of service packs since Vista.
Strictly yes, but Steam is pretty clearly a DRM system in itself, or just bloody restrictive. Official Steam DRM or no you can't just go in and run the.exe steam installs, nor can you run it without being logged in or successfully turning on offline mode. Mind it or not this is a pretty big difference from Ubuntu Software Center, and one of the core things that differentiate Steam from being purely a package management system.
Think Ubuntu Software Center, combined with a launcher and some DRM. Software doesn't strictly have to be launched from the Steam client, but the client does need to be running for stuff purchased through it to run (not always online DRM, but definitely DRM, albeit about as unobtrusive as it can get). Software gets installed into Steam's directory, but with it's own file structure, and I'd guess what will happen is that there will be a recreation of the usual Linux directory structure inside the Steam folder. Of course this may also change drastically if they go crazy and do something like roll a WINE implementation into that version of the client, but I have my doubts that's happening.
Aside from all the comments about Word having comparison and revision control this is where Google Docs really shines. Sure it won't do your final formatting, but for most things I that both need heavy collaboration and much formatting desktop publishing of some sort is probably a better choice anyway.
Except you aren't describing Socialism. Socialism is about the collectivization of the economy, functionally amounting to nationalizing virtually every sector. It's a welfare state you're talking about, and this is a distinction that we really need to make a lot more clear. A welfare state is perfectly compatible with a capitalist economy and free enterprise, socialism is an alternative to this. As much as the word welfare has itself become something of an epithet, the whole thing is still a hell of a lot more palatable to most people than true socialism.
Consider the degree to which railroads have moved to remote control engines in major yards. The harbour pilot like truck driver doesn't even really need a cab, the sort of driving s/he's needed for is if anything easier done from outside the vehicle, especially since the "driving" can quite easily be much more instructing the computer on where to put the truck than physically handling the controls.
This is one I've been wondering for a while... Of course it helps a lot that ships tend to get their crews from the developing world at very low wages, but reducing ship crews to one or two people would seem to be possible with 1980s technology.
Speaking as a social democrat, you can go fuck yourself if you feel the need to spout absolute nonsense about my beliefs.
"What? That is a lie." No. It isn't. There's some subtleties to it, but the essence of stop loss is in fact extending enlistment terms unilaterally. Legally speaking it's a matter of involuntarily converting time in the ready reserve to active duty. No, it isn't illegal or technically a change to the contract, but for essentially all intents and purposes it's an extension of the enlistment.
Meh. Assuming you AREN'T using the command line to install it's a mostly fair comment. Yes, the various GUIs for package managers WORK, but I have never seen one I would call polished. Ultimately UI feel matter a lot to non technical users and doesn't have a whole lot to do with how well, or not, the system may work underneath the graphics.
And if it works who is this bad for?
Can anyone confirm or deny if the supply of them is limited? I've heard a couple times that there's no real possibility of Orbital Sciences getting more. How many Antares launches can we actually get? As much as Orbital Sciences has done some impressive things I have some real doubts about the usefulness of this system.
Basically because they wouldn't allow the ship anywhere near the space station as is, and the Antares/Cygnus stack just isn't useful for much other than station resupply. If there's anything like the confidence that there was in SpaceX they might be allowed to dock on the next launch, and almost certainly on the third. Whether they deserve that confidence could be argued both ways, but I tend to think they'll get it.
For that matter, automating main line railways has some real potential, and doing it without requiring the equivalent of total grade separation and full in cab signalling makes it a lot more practical for the kinds of place, like the northeast corridor, that it could do the most good in).
Streetcars. In all seriousness, the technology that we are very close to being able to realistically automate is rail in less than fully separated environments. The nature of operating on rails eliminates the sort of unpredictable ad-hoc problem solving that is going to be a problem for truly autonomous vehicles, and while the application is fairly specialized it is significant enough that there could be real money on it. Realistically the two use cases boil down to being able to get all the sort of operational cost benefits that go with light metro like systems (think Vancouver, or what's being built in Honolulu) that are automated and as such very frequent but have the kind of capacity more associated with light rail without the cost of full grade separation, and being able to automate more typical transit routes with less than full grade seperated routes (i.e. streetcar systems like in Seattle or Portland suddenly have a big advantage over buses beyond capacity and aesthetics - they can be driverless, a change that eliminates upwards of 60% of operating cost). For that matter trolleybuses might even be close enough to fixed guideway to solve a lot of the sort of problems that full automated cars would encounter, though this is more complicated and possibly introduces some more liability (there are legal advantages to being a train rather than a motor vehicle in most jurisdictions).
One hopes they do that next. It might actually be enough to provoke the perjury charges they are supposed to be liable for on bad notices.
If an R/C aircraft isn't a UAV what is? Even the Predator is pretty limited in terms of true autonomy.
I quite like this evaluation actually. The smaller devices may well end up more common, and potentially more useful, but remember when the iPad launched? As is the thing was seen by a lot of people as an oversized iPad. For creating the market bigger was probably the sensible way to go, and it's not as if the large size has proven to have a small market.
Honestly this is more perceptive than you might think. IMO full VR doesn't make much sense for games, but consider how much real world difference there is between a head tracking system combined traditional 3D glasses, and maybe a second or third screen. Simpler to implement, more flexible in terms of what the system can do and the only real loss is the retention of peripheral vision and the head tracking not having 1:1 ratio of head to camera movement (and lets face it, in a gaming environment 1:1 is going to cause more problems than it solves).
Pretty much hits it on the head. Microsoft really has no idea what it's doing with anything consumer targeted.
Moreover, by definition Civil Disobedience involves breaking the law.
And what's the problem with this? The system is intended for serious discussion, and when it becomes so easy for stupid shit to get through why NOT raise the threshold? It's not as if answering these things doesn't take significant time and effort.
What in the hell are you talking about? Ground effect is an increase in aerodynamic lift near the ground. No aerodynamic lift here.
So this isn't even FOSS puritanism anymore so much as you wanting a system that barely works and is a pain in the arse to keep that way? Seriously?
http://www.vatsim.net/ FS is really about the one thing this isn't a problem for.
This is exactly the point I think. The OEM price is not going to be anything like the $25 range the annual upgrades would be. They will probably have to drop the price somewhat, but at the end of the day it doesn't take much for $25 a year to work out at more than ~$100 every five or so. The really interesting thing here will be seeing what they do to push people to upgrading regularly since uptake on new Windows editions is never that great without new hardware and it really will become business critical with this model. The main thing that makes me nervous is how aggressive they might get about pushing people away from using older additions, but really I'm pretty enthusiastic about the idea of more regular significant updates given how little they've done in the way of service packs since Vista.
Strictly yes, but Steam is pretty clearly a DRM system in itself, or just bloody restrictive. Official Steam DRM or no you can't just go in and run the .exe steam installs, nor can you run it without being logged in or successfully turning on offline mode. Mind it or not this is a pretty big difference from Ubuntu Software Center, and one of the core things that differentiate Steam from being purely a package management system.
Think Ubuntu Software Center, combined with a launcher and some DRM. Software doesn't strictly have to be launched from the Steam client, but the client does need to be running for stuff purchased through it to run (not always online DRM, but definitely DRM, albeit about as unobtrusive as it can get). Software gets installed into Steam's directory, but with it's own file structure, and I'd guess what will happen is that there will be a recreation of the usual Linux directory structure inside the Steam folder. Of course this may also change drastically if they go crazy and do something like roll a WINE implementation into that version of the client, but I have my doubts that's happening.
Aside from all the comments about Word having comparison and revision control this is where Google Docs really shines. Sure it won't do your final formatting, but for most things I that both need heavy collaboration and much formatting desktop publishing of some sort is probably a better choice anyway.