TOR is a bad choice for bittorrent traffic, and the TOR folks would kindly ask that you not use bittorrent on their service. A torrent proxy service or full VPN is the solution. I use BTGuard, which IS designed for bittorrent traffic.
https://blog.torproject.org/blog/bittorrent-over-tor-isnt-good-idea
Your CPU will be a tracking chip. But you can always buy a CPU from someone other than Intel and AMD, and assuming there's a chip maker who doesn't make all of their chips Trusted Computing platforms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Computing
The fact that humans are stronger, smarter, more flexible, etc is the reason to do robotics missions -- robotics is the field which needs the scientific development. Robotics is the field where we need a new Manhattan Project. Robotic space exploration, mining, and manufacturing. The moon, and moreso the asteroid belt contains all the raw materials we will ever need (not to mention enough precious metals to completely crash the market for them). The sun provides 24 hour solar energy in space, not to mention there are probably uranium bearing asteroids, and the nuclear waste can be dropped into the sun or safely dumped on a cold rock in the middle of nowhere. Sufficiently advanced robotics which could mine the materials and build the fabs to replicate more smart robots, you've got unlimited labor. So what could we accomplish with unlimited labor, energy and raw materials? What couldn't we accomplish?
Anyway, all that is not going to happen overnight, but I say we develop advanced robotic missions to the moon, and go back in person once we have a fully functional robot-built moon base with life support systems and a big tank of rocket fuel standing by for the return trip. Everything we need to make that happen is up there, some assembly required.
It looks to me that we could use this technology to produce artificial gravity for say, a person. There are some minor limitations -- since the tech only works on very small particles, you'd have to use a very high energy Bessel beam or possibly a conventional laser to completely vaporize the person, and then the Bessel beam would be able to act on them, pulling their individual particles in the direction of the floor.
Vision has a way of making huge financial windfalls. If you can get to the point where you've got robot miners mining, smelting and manufacturing (more robots among other things) in space, using abundant solar power and the asteroids as raw materials... Well, lets just say that opens up some horizons.Robotics are improving, as are computer vision, environment modelling and AI, or at least the processing power to run it is getting cheaper. There's still a ways to go, but these guys are capturing the first mover advantage. They're doing the first step towards what I described above. It may be that in taking the first step, the next step will present itself to them.
At the very least, you probably want to consider that the value of the metal they mine will be more competitive with the prices of metals found on earth if you include the delivery fee to earth orbit or the moon for space ship/space station/moon base construction. It's probably cheaper to ship bulk quantities from the asteroid belt than it is from Houston, If you can build an asteroid belt branch office.
Certainly are a lot of CARS being piloted into buildings (and poles, trees, other cars with innocent people in them) as a result of alcohol. Alcohol, specifically drunk driving in the USA, had a much larger pile of bodies than terrorism EVEN IN 2001, and ever other year besides.
The best solution is a Windows 7 HTPC with a cablecard tuner. Look down on Windows all you like, but WMC is light years ahead of the proprietary cable company DVR software. You can use the 4 tuner Ceton tuner card to keep everything in one box, but I prefer the 3 tuner SiliconDust networked cablecard unit, which has the advantage of letting any PC on your network access the streams (unprotected streams on almost anything, encrypted only on Windows 7 Media Centers). While the SD tuner is another box, it lives in the basement where my cable comes in, and where my network switch also lives. Also, the SD card lets your HTPC box be smaller.
Anyway, the result is a 3 tuner DVR/HTPC with probably the slickest remote driven interface on the market, records protected high def content 3 channels at a time, has no monthly subscription fee, connects to my theater system with a single HDMI cable, plays Netflix (though I do this in the browser -- the WMC Netflix plugin has annoying frame judder), has full web browsing, runs Steam, etc. It works great, and is better in every way than my Comcast box ever was. It really wasn't even that difficult to set up, had I purchased a premade PC with Windows 7 it would have been almost trivial.
"since all of my goals outlined since my hire date have been met and exceeded, I have a lot of down time" + "The application would streamline a lot of processes and take a lot of the burden off my team" = they have more hands than work already and you're trying to make it more lopsided. At some point they're going to look at chopping some heads.
If anything US grain and consumer product shipments helped the Soviet economy stay afloat longer than it would have otherwise. The Soviet Union bankrupted itself with it's poor centralized planning and its unsustainable military spend rate -- to 'fight' an actual cold war. Not that that's doing anything to slow down our unsustainable military spend rate.
I agree, the world can use more dreamers from all countries.
But wait, cold war? With us? Damn them for shipping manufactured goods to us as fast as they can stuff them into the shipping containers! If the Chinese are at war with anyone, it's with their own people, and even then neither cold or war are really the right words. The term cold war doesn't seem to have any bearing.
I thought it was bad that the Blackberry tablet requires your phone to get email and function correctly. This Intel tablet requires a 32 core 'cloud' machine? Am I going to need a co-location service provider for my backend to ensure I can play a tablet based fps? Or is Intel planning to provide unlimited cloud capacity for each low power (and low cost) tablet processor they sell?
You miss Turbo Pascal? Commodore 64's flat, unprotected memory model? Clicky keyboards with the CTRL key where tab is now, because it's somehow impossible to hit one handed CTRL keystroke combinations with it in the lower left corner?
Since they're a Hong Kong airlines, the female stewardesses are looking to emulate Michelle Yeoh in the excellent movie Wing Chun. It may be difficult in an airliner -- the low ceiling leaves little room for a wire-fu harness.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111800/
This planet sounds like it will be separate but equally gay.
In before "Mark of the Beast"
TOR is a bad choice for bittorrent traffic, and the TOR folks would kindly ask that you not use bittorrent on their service. A torrent proxy service or full VPN is the solution. I use BTGuard, which IS designed for bittorrent traffic. https://blog.torproject.org/blog/bittorrent-over-tor-isnt-good-idea
Your CPU will be a tracking chip. But you can always buy a CPU from someone other than Intel and AMD, and assuming there's a chip maker who doesn't make all of their chips Trusted Computing platforms. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Computing
I think I saw a 2!
It's estimated that there are 5 times as many dark posts as regular productive ones.
Giving your dentist the ability to take naked photos of you with a scanner is probably better than the old where he used anesthetic.
The fact that humans are stronger, smarter, more flexible, etc is the reason to do robotics missions -- robotics is the field which needs the scientific development. Robotics is the field where we need a new Manhattan Project. Robotic space exploration, mining, and manufacturing. The moon, and moreso the asteroid belt contains all the raw materials we will ever need (not to mention enough precious metals to completely crash the market for them). The sun provides 24 hour solar energy in space, not to mention there are probably uranium bearing asteroids, and the nuclear waste can be dropped into the sun or safely dumped on a cold rock in the middle of nowhere. Sufficiently advanced robotics which could mine the materials and build the fabs to replicate more smart robots, you've got unlimited labor. So what could we accomplish with unlimited labor, energy and raw materials? What couldn't we accomplish?
Anyway, all that is not going to happen overnight, but I say we develop advanced robotic missions to the moon, and go back in person once we have a fully functional robot-built moon base with life support systems and a big tank of rocket fuel standing by for the return trip. Everything we need to make that happen is up there, some assembly required.
It looks to me that we could use this technology to produce artificial gravity for say, a person. There are some minor limitations -- since the tech only works on very small particles, you'd have to use a very high energy Bessel beam or possibly a conventional laser to completely vaporize the person, and then the Bessel beam would be able to act on them, pulling their individual particles in the direction of the floor.
Vision has a way of making huge financial windfalls. If you can get to the point where you've got robot miners mining, smelting and manufacturing (more robots among other things) in space, using abundant solar power and the asteroids as raw materials... Well, lets just say that opens up some horizons.Robotics are improving, as are computer vision, environment modelling and AI, or at least the processing power to run it is getting cheaper. There's still a ways to go, but these guys are capturing the first mover advantage. They're doing the first step towards what I described above. It may be that in taking the first step, the next step will present itself to them. At the very least, you probably want to consider that the value of the metal they mine will be more competitive with the prices of metals found on earth if you include the delivery fee to earth orbit or the moon for space ship/space station/moon base construction. It's probably cheaper to ship bulk quantities from the asteroid belt than it is from Houston, If you can build an asteroid belt branch office.
Certainly are a lot of CARS being piloted into buildings (and poles, trees, other cars with innocent people in them) as a result of alcohol. Alcohol, specifically drunk driving in the USA, had a much larger pile of bodies than terrorism EVEN IN 2001, and ever other year besides.
Anyway, the result is a 3 tuner DVR/HTPC with probably the slickest remote driven interface on the market, records protected high def content 3 channels at a time, has no monthly subscription fee, connects to my theater system with a single HDMI cable, plays Netflix (though I do this in the browser -- the WMC Netflix plugin has annoying frame judder), has full web browsing, runs Steam, etc. It works great, and is better in every way than my Comcast box ever was. It really wasn't even that difficult to set up, had I purchased a premade PC with Windows 7 it would have been almost trivial.
"since all of my goals outlined since my hire date have been met and exceeded, I have a lot of down time" + "The application would streamline a lot of processes and take a lot of the burden off my team" = they have more hands than work already and you're trying to make it more lopsided. At some point they're going to look at chopping some heads.
Everyone involved in distributing X-Men: Origins: Wolverine deserved a year in prison, not just the pirates.
It turns out Kevin Costner really is the Soviet sleeper agent. Looks like the remake will be shorter.
Can I use one of these to power my Moller volantor?
Swing by Tosche Station and pick up some power converters.
That doesn't seem like enough. What will you do when those two characters are killed brutally and unexpectedly?
If anything US grain and consumer product shipments helped the Soviet economy stay afloat longer than it would have otherwise. The Soviet Union bankrupted itself with it's poor centralized planning and its unsustainable military spend rate -- to 'fight' an actual cold war. Not that that's doing anything to slow down our unsustainable military spend rate.
I agree, the world can use more dreamers from all countries. But wait, cold war? With us? Damn them for shipping manufactured goods to us as fast as they can stuff them into the shipping containers! If the Chinese are at war with anyone, it's with their own people, and even then neither cold or war are really the right words. The term cold war doesn't seem to have any bearing.
I thought it was bad that the Blackberry tablet requires your phone to get email and function correctly. This Intel tablet requires a 32 core 'cloud' machine? Am I going to need a co-location service provider for my backend to ensure I can play a tablet based fps? Or is Intel planning to provide unlimited cloud capacity for each low power (and low cost) tablet processor they sell?
You miss Turbo Pascal? Commodore 64's flat, unprotected memory model? Clicky keyboards with the CTRL key where tab is now, because it's somehow impossible to hit one handed CTRL keystroke combinations with it in the lower left corner?
Was this written by Andy Rooney's sysadmin?
Since they're a Hong Kong airlines, the female stewardesses are looking to emulate Michelle Yeoh in the excellent movie Wing Chun. It may be difficult in an airliner -- the low ceiling leaves little room for a wire-fu harness. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111800/
Google's DNS servers at 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 are also good free, standards compliant DNS servers.
The worldwide road system, if counted as a country, would be the single largest emitter of CO2.