Go ahead if you don't care about quality and consider engineers to be commodity items. In fact why not just shift your engineering department to India, save a few bucks at the same time.
All good engineers care about how their products are used, because it's vital to understand the use cases to make a good product. Some small subset will have no ethical qualms too, but that's a pretty shallow talent pool to hire from.
To be fair to Nintendo their Virtual Console emulators are generally thought to be some of the best, in terms of accuracy. Compared to a lot of other commercial offerings they are top tier.
Raw video from the camera is much larger than the final encoded output. If he shot in 4k it could be close to 400GB/hour. Even in 1080p BluRay isn't really practical for storing 500 hours of raw video, you need a file server and maybe some cloud storage if you have a fast internet connection.
The standard of proof is only "balance of probabilities", so all he really needs is some receipts showing he travelled to the places he shot the footage, equipment rental, that sort of thing. He could also show any prior video work he had done as evidence that it was his job and he was actively creating it.
He says he lost 500 hours of video. At 4k you need about 318GB per hour of raw captured video, so his collection could have been up to 160 TB. A 500TB storage server would be around $10k so if his work really is with $250k it seems pretty reasonable to invest that much in backing everything up.
There is also insurance for this kind of thing. Most contractors have insurance against liability for their mistakes, for example. It's not all that expensive.
USB 3.0 or Thunderbolt for external drives gives near native SATA performance. A lot of people with Macs that can't be upgraded use external drives for video editing that way, and some big YouTube channels (e.g. Linus Tech Tips) use 10G ethernet to a fileserver.
That's one reason why Adobe Premiere uses a cache, the idea being that you can use slower drives for the original files. Although these days slow is a relative term.
His voice was also perfect for that character. So exquisitely calm and confident. He sounded like modern machine generated speech, synthetic emotion that you are not quite sure isn't just projection.
Kona has AP, it's lane following is better than Tesla's. The Niro is a step above that, with Highway Mode that allows you to take your hands off the wheel for extended periods of time like Tesla used to. The Kona can already read road signs, including variable speed limits.
Tesla's level 5 is already said it need a hardware upgrade and even Musk doesn't think it will be available until 2020, from an original projection of 2017. They don't even sell it any more.
The Model 3 does not have level 4. Level 4 is FSD on limited roads, which requires that the driver can take a nap while it works. Tesla require you to keep your hands applying torque to the wheel the whole time.
While you are correct that the M3 does offer headed/cooled seats, they bump the price difference up even further. As for the entertainment system it's a question of preference but Tesla uses Google services for mapping anyway and more importantly you are stuck with whatever they provide, where as Android Auto gives you a choice of apps.
Other ways in which the Kona exceeds the M3 is range (again this is assuming they ever release the $35k model, otherwise the price gap for the same range is even bigger), cross traffic sensors, HUD, speed limiter, one pedal driving, auto dip side mirrors, cornering lights, auto defog, keyless entry, utility mode (camper mode only operates AC), a flat entry boot area, wireless charging... Does the M3 have a heated wheel option these days?
GTA was a product of Rockstar North, which used to be called DMA Design back when they made games for the Amiga. Classics like Blood Money, Lemmings, Walker, Hired Guns... They are the ones who generated all that money.
BMG weren't really all that involved with them... They went through a few different publishers over the years but BMG were only every very peripheral to their operation I think.
It's not really long lived. You can have one GUID per server, and can select how long you want it to persist for. The longer the lower the overhead when you request more data from that server, because the connection is already active and doesn't need to be re-started. This is similar to how HTTP/2 allows very long lived sessions.
But you can also change it as often as you like (with small overhead), use different ones for different servers, that sort of thing.
IPv6 is a similar issues, the usual solution to be to generate a new address every 15 minutes. In that sense QUIC is actually better.
If we just assumed that everything will stay exactly the same no matter what we would not make much progress.
It seems very likely that once adopted the internet backbone and transit providers will make an effort to properly support it, being an IETF standard and all.
The fact that you are able to use Wireshark to do that kind of traffic analysis makes me want to multiplex all my traffic into an encrypted VPN, for privacy reasons.
The same argument could be made about any new protocol that is selected for HTTP/3.
And we do need something new. The current tech is widely abused to improve performance by subverting the TCP bandwidth estimation that slowly ramps up, making sites load slowly.
QUIC makes a real difference, especially on mobile connections. Since it's based on UDP and other existing standards most of the security stuff has been resolved already. And it's optional, HTTP/2 and TCP are not going to go away for a very long time.
When you're trying to secure a device against hardware attack, the integrity of the components is critical
If you are relying on the integrity of components then you are doing it wrong and are completely screwed anyway.
The scenario you describe where the attacker replaces components in the machine is both far fetched and wouldn't be prevented by the T2 chip, because they could simply replace the T2 chip itself as well. EM sniffing is movie plot stuff - you would have to get the probes in the machine while the victim is authenticating themselves, good luck with that.
Other manufacturers produce secure machines, certified for government use, and don't go to these lengths.
Every individual. It's not some legal definition that needs to be universally agreed on or dictated from up on high.
Go ahead if you don't care about quality and consider engineers to be commodity items. In fact why not just shift your engineering department to India, save a few bucks at the same time.
All good engineers care about how their products are used, because it's vital to understand the use cases to make a good product. Some small subset will have no ethical qualms too, but that's a pretty shallow talent pool to hire from.
To be fair to Nintendo their Virtual Console emulators are generally thought to be some of the best, in terms of accuracy. Compared to a lot of other commercial offerings they are top tier.
Patents would have expired long ago. They prefer copyright because it's practically forever.
Raw video from the camera is much larger than the final encoded output. If he shot in 4k it could be close to 400GB/hour. Even in 1080p BluRay isn't really practical for storing 500 hours of raw video, you need a file server and maybe some cloud storage if you have a fast internet connection.
The standard of proof is only "balance of probabilities", so all he really needs is some receipts showing he travelled to the places he shot the footage, equipment rental, that sort of thing. He could also show any prior video work he had done as evidence that it was his job and he was actively creating it.
He says he lost 500 hours of video. At 4k you need about 318GB per hour of raw captured video, so his collection could have been up to 160 TB. A 500TB storage server would be around $10k so if his work really is with $250k it seems pretty reasonable to invest that much in backing everything up.
There is also insurance for this kind of thing. Most contractors have insurance against liability for their mistakes, for example. It's not all that expensive.
USB 3.0 or Thunderbolt for external drives gives near native SATA performance. A lot of people with Macs that can't be upgraded use external drives for video editing that way, and some big YouTube channels (e.g. Linus Tech Tips) use 10G ethernet to a fileserver.
That's one reason why Adobe Premiere uses a cache, the idea being that you can use slower drives for the original files. Although these days slow is a relative term.
Ryzen and Threadripper have more than just extra cores. More PCIe lanes, for example. Stuff that matters for workstations.
Wow, rightists have incredibly poor reading comprehension...
It is ironic how their vigorous pursuit of freedom of expression requires them to silence opposing views.
His voice was also perfect for that character. So exquisitely calm and confident. He sounded like modern machine generated speech, synthetic emotion that you are not quite sure isn't just projection.
The internet is someone else's network. Fortunately we have ways of doing stuff privately without having to trust the network.
They often have tatame mats, but the wider point is that suction power isn't great for carpets. What you need is a beater to release the dirt.
That's why a battery powered vacuum with beater head will do a much better job than a 2500W mains powered beast without one.
Kona has AP, it's lane following is better than Tesla's. The Niro is a step above that, with Highway Mode that allows you to take your hands off the wheel for extended periods of time like Tesla used to. The Kona can already read road signs, including variable speed limits.
Tesla's level 5 is already said it need a hardware upgrade and even Musk doesn't think it will be available until 2020, from an original projection of 2017. They don't even sell it any more.
The Model 3 does not have level 4. Level 4 is FSD on limited roads, which requires that the driver can take a nap while it works. Tesla require you to keep your hands applying torque to the wheel the whole time.
While you are correct that the M3 does offer headed/cooled seats, they bump the price difference up even further. As for the entertainment system it's a question of preference but Tesla uses Google services for mapping anyway and more importantly you are stuck with whatever they provide, where as Android Auto gives you a choice of apps.
Other ways in which the Kona exceeds the M3 is range (again this is assuming they ever release the $35k model, otherwise the price gap for the same range is even bigger), cross traffic sensors, HUD, speed limiter, one pedal driving, auto dip side mirrors, cornering lights, auto defog, keyless entry, utility mode (camper mode only operates AC), a flat entry boot area, wireless charging... Does the M3 have a heated wheel option these days?
GTA was a product of Rockstar North, which used to be called DMA Design back when they made games for the Amiga. Classics like Blood Money, Lemmings, Walker, Hired Guns... They are the ones who generated all that money.
BMG weren't really all that involved with them... They went through a few different publishers over the years but BMG were only every very peripheral to their operation I think.
What happens when your TCP/HTTPS connection is stolen or spoofed, you just know it will happen.
Yeah, it doesn't really make sense. TCP packets can be spoofed which is why HTTPS mitigates that possibility.
It's not really long lived. You can have one GUID per server, and can select how long you want it to persist for. The longer the lower the overhead when you request more data from that server, because the connection is already active and doesn't need to be re-started. This is similar to how HTTP/2 allows very long lived sessions.
But you can also change it as often as you like (with small overhead), use different ones for different servers, that sort of thing.
IPv6 is a similar issues, the usual solution to be to generate a new address every 15 minutes. In that sense QUIC is actually better.
If we just assumed that everything will stay exactly the same no matter what we would not make much progress.
It seems very likely that once adopted the internet backbone and transit providers will make an effort to properly support it, being an IETF standard and all.
The fact that you are able to use Wireshark to do that kind of traffic analysis makes me want to multiplex all my traffic into an encrypted VPN, for privacy reasons.
The same argument could be made about any new protocol that is selected for HTTP/3.
And we do need something new. The current tech is widely abused to improve performance by subverting the TCP bandwidth estimation that slowly ramps up, making sites load slowly.
QUIC makes a real difference, especially on mobile connections. Since it's based on UDP and other existing standards most of the security stuff has been resolved already. And it's optional, HTTP/2 and TCP are not going to go away for a very long time.
Don't people use the emergency shut down features of their phones? Hold the power button for a few seconds, or press it 5+ times on some models.
I guess you can buy equipment to bypass the lock for some devices, but not all.
When you're trying to secure a device against hardware attack, the integrity of the components is critical
If you are relying on the integrity of components then you are doing it wrong and are completely screwed anyway.
The scenario you describe where the attacker replaces components in the machine is both far fetched and wouldn't be prevented by the T2 chip, because they could simply replace the T2 chip itself as well. EM sniffing is movie plot stuff - you would have to get the probes in the machine while the victim is authenticating themselves, good luck with that.
Other manufacturers produce secure machines, certified for government use, and don't go to these lengths.
Poor triggered islamophobes...
Can you cite an example of 'I am woman hear me roar'?
I've seen every episode and don't recall any. In fact the only time it's been mentioned is as the odd one liner joke.