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User: Hadlock

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  1. Re:Still too expensive on Aiming To Beat Tesla's "3", Chevy Tests and Teases a Cheaper 200-Mile Electric Car · · Score: 1

    Jackies Brickhouse. I guess they're technically in Kemah but there's about 10 cities that wrap around Clear Lake. And yes technically it's not coastal, thanks for being a fucking pedant about that. I sail offshore a couple times a year I'm aware, but for 99% of america, as far as they know, Houston is a port city on the coast of Texas so I just roll with it. Sorry to get your panties in a wad.

  2. Re:Still too expensive on Aiming To Beat Tesla's "3", Chevy Tests and Teases a Cheaper 200-Mile Electric Car · · Score: 2

    Slightly snarky but true: a lot of cities have special provisions for cars/vehicles that don't exceed 35mph and are banned from highways. They look like overgrown golf carts. There's a taxi service here in Dallas that operates a fleet of electric golf carts that seat between six and nine people, and a couple of bars in the Clear Lake (distant costal suburb of Houston) that operate a private (and free) electric car taxi service.
     
    With a battery pack cosing about $7000 still, I don't think you can expect to make a highway legal chassis for $3000 with engine and tires. $10,000 is a nice round number but inflation is a thing so that number is probably closer to $12,000-15,000.

  3. Re:Security team on Ask Slashdot: Are Post-Install Windows Slowdowns Inevitable? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You can just remove the shutdown option on the start menu either locally with the windows registry or remotely using AD. We did this for a bunch of our key servers at work because a couple of people kept fat fingering the servers.

  4. Re:Soo..... on Anti-Uber Taxi Protest Blocks Access To Airports In France · · Score: 1

    No, just an extremely satisfied customer who lives in a walkable neighborhood and also lives just a $5 uber ride from the office. Since parking downtown is $5 and the rail station nearest to my house is 80% equidistant to downtown, once you factor in gas, insurance and maintenance, uber comes out ahead in price for me. Also it's super convenient for going to concerts downtown, etc. Taxis in Dallas won't pick up short distance fares and calling for a taxi usually results in a 45 minute wait. With uber I rarely have to wait more than 5 minutes for a car to arrive, just enough time to feed and water my cats in the morning.

  5. Re:Soo..... on Anti-Uber Taxi Protest Blocks Access To Airports In France · · Score: 1

    Then I'm sure you'll be able to find a bunch of articles that say "Uber driver spends a week in jail, Uber refuses to bail out their drivers"? It looks like you're here to spread a bunch of FUD.

  6. Re:Soo..... on Anti-Uber Taxi Protest Blocks Access To Airports In France · · Score: 1

    Uber just pays the fine/bail and the driver is out in 90 minutes or less. This is a non-event everywhere where uber is "illegal". Personally I'm in favor of Uber over Taxis, if Uber stopped operating in my city, I would just buy a car and stop using ride services. Because Taxis are awful.
     
    You have a lot of posts in this thread already.

  7. Re:This will NOT half the cost of batteries on New Manufacturing Technique Halves Cost of Lithium-Ion Batteries · · Score: 2

    Raw lithium is wildly abundant, supply greatly outstrips demand.

  8. Re:Cathodes and Annodes on 3D Printed Supercar Chassis Unveiled · · Score: 1

    It happens specifically when the material is aluminum.

  9. Cathodes and Annodes on 3D Printed Supercar Chassis Unveiled · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem with metal nodes and Carbon Fiber (CF) tubes, as the Bicycle industry is now learning, is that if you have direct contact between the CF and metal nodes (as the first "Carbon Fiber" bicycles were made, back in the early 1990's), the CF will react with the metal, and given 15 years, become a rolling death trap. Lots of old "Carbon Fiber" bikes on Craigslist now as owners are seeing them fall apart during normal use due to corrosion.
     
    That said, there's no reason why they can't build latticework connecting members that are 3D printed, rather than CF tubes which are not optimized to be dimensionally stable in the direction(s) they'll be loaded the most.

  10. Re:Yes, it's called redundancy on 1 In 3 Data Center Servers Is a Zombie · · Score: 1

    In our case, about 20% of our servers are outdated and not kept as well maintained, as they used to host some important service, but their new replacement was built and that service was migrated, but nobody's 100% sure if there were any other latent, less important services running on that machine. So it stays on because everybody has more important things to do than find out what else is running on there, and perhaps more importantly, nobody wants to be the guy who shuts down the server that's still running some process someone relies on. So one or two servers of each type stays on, indefinitely, or until extended support finally ends. And yeah we have some physical redundant servers but for the most part everything is a VM now and we just have a one or two redundant VM hosts at our DR site. And an idle old server doesn't consume much of anything besides a gig or two of ram.

  11. Re:Secure Skype Replacement? on Two Years After Snowden Leaks, Encryption Tools Are Gaining Users · · Score: 2

    In theory you could run a mumble server on a private VPS. When I did it I used a VPS of the most minimal specs I could purchase at the time (1cpu, 1GB ram, linux) for about $7/month. I ran a mumble server for a community of about 3000 users for a couple of years and we would have 200 concurrent users with no latency issues. Voice and chat go over TLS. Mumble does not offer video chat however.

  12. Re:Bill Hadley is going to be disappointed on Illinois Supreme Court: Comcast Must Identify Anonymous Internet Commenter · · Score: 1

    I would imagine that the number of 11 year olds who review past Illinois Supreme Court decisions in their spare time is vanishingly, vanishingly small.

  13. Bill Hadley is going to be disappointed on Illinois Supreme Court: Comcast Must Identify Anonymous Internet Commenter · · Score: 1

    When he finds out the commenter was an 11 year old middle-schooler on his lunch break in the library, and not the great political adversary that he's making it out to be.
     
    Not only that, but it's exceedingly difficult to make an example out of an 11 year old, to other 11 year olds, and not looking like an out of touch politician who's been expertly trolled by someone one fifth his age. This seems like a huge waste of resources, politically and judicially.
     

  14. Re:Nervous about upgrading on Windows 10 Will Be Free To Users Who Test It · · Score: 1

    If you pay full price for Win 10 you still get the full ownership experience. This option will always exist as they have to support enterprise users who require that kind of control over the machine. I have Win 8.1 pro running classic shell and I still have full control over my PC without having some crazy hotmail login, why would that change for Win 10?

  15. Re:15 years in the embassy on Julian Assange To Be Interviewed In London After All · · Score: 1

    He's avoiding imprisonment in Sweden because Sweden has an extradition Treaty with the US, and once he walks out the front door of that embassy and walks on that plane to sweden, it's about 50/50 odds he ends up in US custody.
     
    That said, thanks for the tip on Jozsef Mindszenty, I am going to have to read up on that.

  16. Re:Compatibility List on Microsoft Announces Xbox One Backward Compatibility · · Score: 1, Interesting

    That list is about 100 titles shorter than I would have expected

  17. Re:Investing in a good PC pays off on Ask Slashdot: What Hardware Is In Your Primary Computer? · · Score: 1

    I plan in 2015 to build a computer that I will use at least until 2022.

     
    Absolutely. I'm rocking an i5-750 on my desktop from about the same era (early 2010) and I'll be replacing it with an i7-skylake when they come out this fall, which I expect to ride until the end of western civilization.

  18. Re:Internet signals to all parts of the globe, on SpaceX Wants Permission To Test Satellite Internet · · Score: 1

    Well they do in California, which is where the uplink and downlink would be happening. So there's that.

  19. Re:Completely irrelevant on G7 Vows To Phase Out Fossil Fuels By 2100 · · Score: 1

    Wind and Solar are already lightyears cheaper than fossil fuels in remote areas like islands and the third world. Remember how we skipped providing land lines to Africa, and everyone there got cell phones instead? How Facebook has a mobile app specifically directed towards those mobile users in Africa? Solar and Wind will come from the bottom up (Africa, SE Asia) and from the top down (Germany, Netherlands, Sweden). As capacity increases and price decreases you'll start seeing middle-tier economies like the United States and Canada finally adopt them. Taking a train through the countryside you'll see hundreds of houses with solar panels on their roofs already. While the legislative push isn't needed, it will help move other countries in that direction, as the G7 acts as a leader and weathervane for countries worldwide.
     
    TL;DR Solar and Wind will drive the price of fossil fuels in to the ground in 20 years, anyways.

  20. Re:I call shenanigans on Chinese Doctor Performs Head Transplants On Mice · · Score: 1

    If you can dump your 80 year old brain in a healthy 18 year old body, I would imagine a good number of people would take that option over death, at least until they sort out the whole "connecting the brain to the central nervous system" problem.

  21. Re:Radiation not a problem, an opportunity on How To Die On Mars · · Score: 1

    Mars' gravity is well less than half of Earth's gravity. It's not a lot larger than the Moon. To put the same stress on your skeleton on Mars that an obese person does to their own in Earth gravity, you'd need to add about 250 to 350 pounds of radiation shielding.

  22. Re:it's not "slow and calculated torture" on Greece Is Running Out of Money, Cannot Make June IMF Repayment · · Score: 1

    Argentina was a special case where an investor rolled the dice on buying up all their debt and then somehow taking them to court in the US and winning a judgement that crippled them financially. Previous to that, Argentina has had a long track record of failing to pay back their debt going back decades without repercussion. So do most other countries outside of western europe. Spain and Greece are two of the biggest examples of what happens when you join a currency union and your economy is not in sync with the strongest players.

  23. Re:"Only" 40 Kilobytes ?! on Software Patch Fixes Mars Curiosity Rover's Auto-focus Glitch · · Score: 1

    Yeah I was going to say, I wrote a crude flight simulator, including the display drivers for my Arduino and SSD1306 OLED display, that weighs in at 31KB. A piece of code to focus a laser should be less than that.

  24. Re:Teddy Ruxpin wasn't considered creepy on Cute Or Creepy? Google's Plan For a Sci-Fi Teddy Bear · · Score: 1

    I think the thing about Teddy Ruxpin was that he had always moved. If you have an inanimate object for a lifetime, and then suddenly it springs to life but without facial features or moving eyes, yes that is creepy. But if it's advertised as a moving device from the start, it's not creepy as that's expected behavior. It's when things suddenly spring to life that it triggers stalking predator alarm bells in your brain. If your houseplant started talking to you that would be freaky, but if it said hello and goodbye to you every day when you go to work, and helped you keep track of where you put your car keys or to remember to pick up milk on the way home, that's just another family member. Digital assistants will head in that direction eventually. The British series "Black Mirror" had an episode like this, where the AI was held in an "egg".

  25. Re:Distinct lack of SATA ports on Rate These 53 Sub-$200 Hacker SBCs, Win 1 of 20 · · Score: 1

    At least 7 of those boards have SATA ports, and one has mSATA support. Just do a ctrl+F for 'SATA'...