It *already is* presumed consent. When you opt out I hope you enjoy being on Camerons naughty-filthy-dog-buggering-and-political-extremism-terrorist list.
Encryption. Lots of it. It's almost the only way to be sure:-/
All the/. experts come out of their caves to debunk a paper by a guy that brought us internet payments, commercial space travel, and luxury electric cars.
When Glass devices become available as prescription glasses, I don't see how they can implement a ban. Are they going to start controlling what type of spectacles people wear when they drive?
You seem to have entirely missed the point of this device. It's not for your LAN, it's for your mobile remote devices. It just happens to be connected to the net via your LAN. Try reading the funding drive again.
We can all see the obvious, that's it's a Bifferboard under the cover. What you should do is read the funding drive. The real magic is in the software, where it intercepts all local storage requests and makes access to your remote disks entirely transparent, and doesn't consume local storage unless you configure it to cache specific items.
Surely this should have been discovered during the route survey, rather than during the engineering works? Typical of BT maybe? What's a route survey??
Whilst the original comment is wrong in that it's not "much bigger", Wikipedia also states that you are, unfortunately, wrong as well. USA @ 3,794,101 sq mi vs Europe @ 3,930,000 sq mi
Either way, they're both big enough to have vastly different cultures and lifestyles depending on where you visit.
It'll do all the tuning, and basically takes a LNB on the input, and a network switch as the output. You pick your channels from the M3U playlist, and it does the rest - like magic. Works with MythTV, XBMC, VLC, etc. Fabulous kit
3D is a passing fad generated by the media companies to try and push more units. Consumers haven't picked up on it as they hoped, and the web is unlikely to do so either. The real future is in higher definitions and larger screens.
I hope the administrators of this fund have a good long hard look through http://data.gov.uk/ for inspiration and partners to work with, and that we as users and techs can help push them to make the right choices.
I've already emailed a few relevant parties. Have you?
I can't help but think this is what happens when you don't look after your walled garden... Sure, there's a variety of other factors at play, but app choice and quality is certainly a big factor too.
It's comical and a bit sad to think that the board fell for it. The very act of VMware signing up and sitting there to play devils advocate is causing confusion for potential customers. Either way, VMware wins.
Maybe I just didn't get the message, but what draws heat away from the die itself? This setup probably does away with thermal paste and similar junctions...
From the video... there's a normal heatsink, and the fan draws the heat from the heatsink through the air bearing.
The other thing is that hydrodynamic bearings are only self-supporting and quasi-frictionless after a threshold RPM is reached. Before the whole setup is spinning fast enough for hydrodynamic effects to take over, it's going to grind against the chip die, and unless they came up with something good, it's going to destroy it on startup...
"At one time not all that long ago, cars had a warning light..."
I remember the days that cars didn't have warning lights, and you had to use intuition and your senses. Now, though, everything has to be pointed out to you. It's a sad state of affairs that we've gotten ourselves into.
FTA "but had to become an American to realize her full potential."
Where others might say "had to leave Iran to realize her full potential" ...
It *already is* presumed consent. When you opt out I hope you enjoy being on Camerons naughty-filthy-dog-buggering-and-political-extremism-terrorist list.
Encryption. Lots of it. It's almost the only way to be sure :-/
Did you actually read the original paper? It addresses the land problem.
All the /. experts come out of their caves to debunk a paper by a guy that brought us internet payments, commercial space travel, and luxury electric cars.
The article explicitly states that the tube does not hold a vacuum, and thus greatly reduces costs.
When Glass devices become available as prescription glasses, I don't see how they can implement a ban. Are they going to start controlling what type of spectacles people wear when they drive?
You seem to have entirely missed the point of this device. It's not for your LAN, it's for your mobile remote devices. It just happens to be connected to the net via your LAN. Try reading the funding drive again.
You've clearly missed the bit where it says "Plug is not yet-another-memory" - try reading it again.
I hardly think that's gong to be an issue for your mobile device over a GPRS/3G/EDGE/LTE/etc link
We can all see the obvious, that's it's a Bifferboard under the cover. What you should do is read the funding drive. The real magic is in the software, where it intercepts all local storage requests and makes access to your remote disks entirely transparent, and doesn't consume local storage unless you configure it to cache specific items.
Only if your target market is the East coast and you don't foresee the need to test against such scenarios...
Surely this should have been discovered during the route survey, rather than during the engineering works? Typical of BT maybe? What's a route survey??
Whilst the original comment is wrong in that it's not "much bigger", Wikipedia also states that you are, unfortunately, wrong as well. USA @ 3,794,101 sq mi vs Europe @ 3,930,000 sq mi
Either way, they're both big enough to have vastly different cultures and lifestyles depending on where you visit.
Get a FreeSat package, put up the dish and cabling, and ditch the receiver, and get an Elgato Netstream Sat from http://www.elgato.com/elgato/int/mainmenu/products/tuner/netstreamsat/product1.en.html
It'll do all the tuning, and basically takes a LNB on the input, and a network switch as the output. You pick your channels from the M3U playlist, and it does the rest - like magic. Works with MythTV, XBMC, VLC, etc. Fabulous kit
3D is a passing fad generated by the media companies to try and push more units. Consumers haven't picked up on it as they hoped, and the web is unlikely to do so either. The real future is in higher definitions and larger screens.
And anyway, who needs 3D when you've got this? https://github.com/404.html
And this is where integration with existing projects should come first, lest we end up reinventing the wheel. http://www.fixmystreet.com/ http://www.opentraintimes.com/ http://www.openstreetmap.org/ http://www.flightradar24.com/ the 45MB/min MIDAS Gold DATEX traffic information service from http://www.tih.org.uk/ - and many more. And by far not just travel related either, but lets not allow Glasgow to 'create' new apps and datasources that just replicate ideas and services that are already out there.
I hope the administrators of this fund have a good long hard look through http://data.gov.uk/ for inspiration and partners to work with, and that we as users and techs can help push them to make the right choices.
I've already emailed a few relevant parties. Have you?
FTFA, "National", and from the summary, USA & Canada. What about the 6 billion other people you forgot?
I can't help but think this is what happens when you don't look after your walled garden... Sure, there's a variety of other factors at play, but app choice and quality is certainly a big factor too.
It's comical and a bit sad to think that the board fell for it. The very act of VMware signing up and sitting there to play devils advocate is causing confusion for potential customers. Either way, VMware wins.
There's no need for responsible disclosure when it's been around for months on Github.
Just check https://github.com/venomous0x/WhatsAPI/blob/63639eafc9a08fd308df72458f1381ec8899940d/README.md and you'll see.
It's almost as if they didn't bother reading the fscking article. Oh no, it's the editors that ignore minor details like that!
Maybe I just didn't get the message, but what draws heat away from the die itself? This setup probably does away with thermal paste and similar junctions...
From the video... there's a normal heatsink, and the fan draws the heat from the heatsink through the air bearing.
The other thing is that hydrodynamic bearings are only self-supporting and quasi-frictionless after a threshold RPM is reached. Before the whole setup is spinning fast enough for hydrodynamic effects to take over, it's going to grind against the chip die, and unless they came up with something good, it's going to destroy it on startup...
It's Sandia... I'm sure they've thought of that.
I wondered where he went! Him and his triple aggregated GPRS connected car and other such nonsense. Best of luck to those that fall for his tricks!
"At one time not all that long ago, cars had a warning light..."
I remember the days that cars didn't have warning lights, and you had to use intuition and your senses. Now, though, everything has to be pointed out to you. It's a sad state of affairs that we've gotten ourselves into.
It's not your meat...