I was going to say, "the Tomorrowland that's still in general release?"
To base the overall profitability on the first two weekends and call it a stumble when it made 3/4 of what tron made at the same time (with a huge build up and cult following of the original), while there are several other major summer blockbusters going head to head with it. (note: I haven't seen tomorrowland)
Sounds like an excuse to me. And thank goodness, imho. We definitely don't need another Tron.
With blackberry and MS having a negligible portion of the smartphone market, I would be surprised if it *wasn't* android.
About 15% of smartphone users who by a Samsung (Android) handset come from iOS users. A higher percentage of iOS users are previous Android users (about 2:1 vs those switching from iOS to Android), but there are more Android users overall, so I'm not certain that there's a net loss in the Android userbase. For example: there were about 200 million iOS devices sold in 2014, and about 1 billion Android devices. If 20% of new iOS users are former Android users, that's 40 Million switching to iOS. If 5% of Android users are former iOS users, that's 50 Million switching to Android. That's a net +10M for Android.
Jony Ive, who is really a 12 year old girl, has convinced all the hipsters that 1960 is cool, retro is in, and flat, neon colors are the ebst thing in the world. And since hipsters buy everything for 3-10x what it's actually worth for the aesthetic, everyone wants to sell to them.
Man requests video footage via FOIA, earns job categorizing and sanitizing video footage to allow release to public in compliance with both FOIA and privacy laws. System ends up better off and expects to work in a transparent manner.
There's nothing wrong with that, but it doesn't really apply to everyone. And the cost of data security is dimissively low. For the typical Android handset, the simple blow of a hammer instead of trying to recover less than $100 on ebay or craigslist will guarantee security of your old data. Heck, that $100 is less than the differential between an android handset and an equivalent iOS device in most cases.
I'll remember this when selling my device which I store TS-SCI rated data on.
FTFA, "Individuals buying devices on auction websites such as eBay are possible attackers. They need to spend a nonnegligible time to bid and follow up on auctions. Furthermore, they have to pay a few dollars for commission and shipping fees for each device. So low-value data like contacts and email addresses do not seem profitable. Recovery and analysis of conversations and images (to blackmail victims) would generally require human intervention or more advanced tools..."
So you're looking at someone putting finds an time into low level analysis of your phone in hopes of gleaning some data which would either allow them to compromise your financial resources or offer blackmail opportunities. I'm sorry, but the intersection of buyer and financially valuable data which has a payback rate greater than that of acquisition and recovery is small enough that I'm really having a hard time worrying about it.
Copyright goes to the creator/composer of the image, not the participants or the venue, by default. Unless there is a prior agreement in place, they belong to him. There are special niche cases (photography of an art work, or of an event staged as a creative endeavor - i.e. not a sport or contest).
Fluff piece for clicks. Perhaps non-intuitive, but not really useful from a practical sense as the applications where such precision is necessary are not really dependent on cocktail party conversation starters.
FWIW, The gravitational field of the earth has been fairly well characterized. It can be done very accurately from low earth orbit using a passive mass with a retroreflector following a lead craft and taking measurements of the distance between them using a high frequency pulsed laser. I worked on part of the design for just such an instrument back in the early 90s.
I'm a democrat, I intend to vote several times in several different jurisdictions. I plan on cancelling out quite a few votes for whomever beats Rand Paul in the primaries.
Those are some miraculous tubes. At a meter long, that's 6cm in diameter.
At 5076psi, I get 22,700 pounds of axial tension plus 12,000 pounds transverse tension (per inch of length). Checking a section of the pipe yields 3060 pounds axial and 6000 pounds transverse on an inch by inch element. That's 6735 pli rotated 63 degrees from the axis. Using rational factors of safety (usu ~4 for CF composites, 1.6-2.0 for isotropics), I get 1/4" wall 7075-T651 high strength aluminum or 5/32" wall carbon fiber in an optimally oriented weave - not including the matrix/weave thickness or containment (CF vessels for HCs are almost always aluminum lined, I presume H2 would be also). That's 80 cubic inches of aluminum per tube (about 16lbs total) or 10-11lbs of top-quality carbon fiber. They're out of margin for everything else in their 5KG vehicle.
I suspect that their product is paper based (i.e. the numbers work if you assume the best case for everything), but will be exceptionally difficult to make actually meet products. I expect to park a Moller air car in my driveway before they make this project work as proposed.
And you've never seen the requirement for a #2 pencil? Did you know that the manufacturers who created the #1 pencil were put out of business by the systematic collusion to allow only #2 pencils? #3 pencils, when they were invented, couldn't get a foothold the monopoly was so strong. It's a goddamned racket.;-)
At 5000mph, a projectile 100 miles out will have 66 seconds to respond. Closer in, far less. Still, for an enemy craft width of, say, 300 feet would need to move 150' to avoid collision. At 0.1g lateral acceleration, fairly trivial, you could move an H-4 Hercules out of the line of fire in just over 3 seconds. That's a 5 mile range for the largest (wingspan) plane in the world. And from 6 miles out, the EM signature from a rail gun would be pretty obvious. That's very practical if the target is equipped with an automatic avoidance system.
Now if the projectile is active it does make things more interesting.
There are exclusions and exemptions for existing structures where accessibility is not feasible.
Paying a single lawyer for a single case is not going to do any good if you look like a money machine to other lawyers. Now, if the structure was built after the law was enacted and you did the work yourself (or you designer and contractor are outside of the statue of repose for their services), then it could be fantastically expensive to fix. It's still probably cheaper than multiple lawsuits, though, and the building would be worthless to a new buyer unless upgraded.
I disagree with the premise of the article, as there are quite a few things about automobiles which are independent of the OS the in-vehicle entertainment and nav console - much more than a beige box pc.
However, it's worth noting that people over 25 are dying. Old people (over 25) as a market segment will change dramatically over then next 30 years as nearly everyone over 50 will no longer be in the market for an automobile. The "money" demographic will shift to those who are just now getting their driver's licenses.
I do find it depressing that, in an age where interactivity with personal devices can be done in an agnostic way, more and more interfaces are becoming OS specific.
Oh, I though he was talking about something where you put a cat in an lowered a handle to create two large punctures so you could drink the liquid that came out the bottom.
Probably for the best, as I didn't expect that would turn out to be a terribly popular product.
I was going to say, "the Tomorrowland that's still in general release?"
To base the overall profitability on the first two weekends and call it a stumble when it made 3/4 of what tron made at the same time (with a huge build up and cult following of the original), while there are several other major summer blockbusters going head to head with it. (note: I haven't seen tomorrowland)
Sounds like an excuse to me. And thank goodness, imho. We definitely don't need another Tron.
"Do you think missiles get stuffed full of crisp new $100 dollar bills and then get fired into rock piles in the desert?"
Of course not. They'd be far cheaper to make if they were full of $100 bills.
Somebody had to say it.
Call me when you figure out how to run a house air conditioner or full sized refrigerator off of 5v@1A
With blackberry and MS having a negligible portion of the smartphone market, I would be surprised if it *wasn't* android.
About 15% of smartphone users who by a Samsung (Android) handset come from iOS users. A higher percentage of iOS users are previous Android users (about 2:1 vs those switching from iOS to Android), but there are more Android users overall, so I'm not certain that there's a net loss in the Android userbase. For example: there were about 200 million iOS devices sold in 2014, and about 1 billion Android devices. If 20% of new iOS users are former Android users, that's 40 Million switching to iOS. If 5% of Android users are former iOS users, that's 50 Million switching to Android. That's a net +10M for Android.
(some stats: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sci...)
Jony Ive, who is really a 12 year old girl, has convinced all the hipsters that 1960 is cool, retro is in, and flat, neon colors are the ebst thing in the world. And since hipsters buy everything for 3-10x what it's actually worth for the aesthetic, everyone wants to sell to them.
Man requests video footage via FOIA, earns job categorizing and sanitizing video footage to allow release to public in compliance with both FOIA and privacy laws. System ends up better off and expects to work in a transparent manner.
Move along...
You win one internet.
This sounds more like the work of a master villain than regular global warming!
There's nothing wrong with that, but it doesn't really apply to everyone. And the cost of data security is dimissively low. For the typical Android handset, the simple blow of a hammer instead of trying to recover less than $100 on ebay or craigslist will guarantee security of your old data. Heck, that $100 is less than the differential between an android handset and an equivalent iOS device in most cases.
I'll remember this when selling my device which I store TS-SCI rated data on.
FTFA, "Individuals buying devices on auction websites such as
eBay are possible attackers. They need to spend a nonnegligible
time to bid and follow up on auctions. Furthermore,
they have to pay a few dollars for commission
and shipping fees for each device. So low-value data
like contacts and email addresses do not seem profitable.
Recovery and analysis of conversations and images (to
blackmail victims) would generally require human intervention
or more advanced tools..."
So you're looking at someone putting finds an time into low level analysis of your phone in hopes of gleaning some data which would either allow them to compromise your financial resources or offer blackmail opportunities. I'm sorry, but the intersection of buyer and financially valuable data which has a payback rate greater than that of acquisition and recovery is small enough that I'm really having a hard time worrying about it.
Bad news: formatting your hard drive or reinstalling your OS (any consumer OS) doesn't, by default, actually erase your data either.
Why are we surprised?
Copyright goes to the creator/composer of the image, not the participants or the venue, by default. Unless there is a prior agreement in place, they belong to him. There are special niche cases (photography of an art work, or of an event staged as a creative endeavor - i.e. not a sport or contest).
Fluff piece for clicks. Perhaps non-intuitive, but not really useful from a practical sense as the applications where such precision is necessary are not really dependent on cocktail party conversation starters.
FWIW, The gravitational field of the earth has been fairly well characterized. It can be done very accurately from low earth orbit using a passive mass with a retroreflector following a lead craft and taking measurements of the distance between them using a high frequency pulsed laser. I worked on part of the design for just such an instrument back in the early 90s.
I'm a democrat, I intend to vote several times in several different jurisdictions. I plan on cancelling out quite a few votes for whomever beats Rand Paul in the primaries.
Those are some miraculous tubes. At a meter long, that's 6cm in diameter.
At 5076psi, I get 22,700 pounds of axial tension plus 12,000 pounds transverse tension (per inch of length). Checking a section of the pipe yields 3060 pounds axial and 6000 pounds transverse on an inch by inch element. That's 6735 pli rotated 63 degrees from the axis. Using rational factors of safety (usu ~4 for CF composites, 1.6-2.0 for isotropics), I get 1/4" wall 7075-T651 high strength aluminum or 5/32" wall carbon fiber in an optimally oriented weave - not including the matrix/weave thickness or containment (CF vessels for HCs are almost always aluminum lined, I presume H2 would be also). That's 80 cubic inches of aluminum per tube (about 16lbs total) or 10-11lbs of top-quality carbon fiber. They're out of margin for everything else in their 5KG vehicle.
I suspect that their product is paper based (i.e. the numbers work if you assume the best case for everything), but will be exceptionally difficult to make actually meet products. I expect to park a Moller air car in my driveway before they make this project work as proposed.
You forgot to add the *rimshot*
Have to factor in tire pressure, too. High pressure tires (which have high contact forces) do more damage, so you'd have to add that as a variable.
WTF r u tlkg abut? f u need me im w my bae ritng stupid SA for engl101.
And you've never seen the requirement for a #2 pencil? Did you know that the manufacturers who created the #1 pencil were put out of business by the systematic collusion to allow only #2 pencils? #3 pencils, when they were invented, couldn't get a foothold the monopoly was so strong. It's a goddamned racket. ;-)
At 5000mph, a projectile 100 miles out will have 66 seconds to respond. Closer in, far less. Still, for an enemy craft width of, say, 300 feet would need to move 150' to avoid collision. At 0.1g lateral acceleration, fairly trivial, you could move an H-4 Hercules out of the line of fire in just over 3 seconds. That's a 5 mile range for the largest (wingspan) plane in the world. And from 6 miles out, the EM signature from a rail gun would be pretty obvious. That's very practical if the target is equipped with an automatic avoidance system.
Now if the projectile is active it does make things more interesting.
I'm kind of sorry I commented elsewhere as I would mod you up if I could.
There are exclusions and exemptions for existing structures where accessibility is not feasible.
Paying a single lawyer for a single case is not going to do any good if you look like a money machine to other lawyers. Now, if the structure was built after the law was enacted and you did the work yourself (or you designer and contractor are outside of the statue of repose for their services), then it could be fantastically expensive to fix. It's still probably cheaper than multiple lawsuits, though, and the building would be worthless to a new buyer unless upgraded.
I disagree with the premise of the article, as there are quite a few things about automobiles which are independent of the OS the in-vehicle entertainment and nav console - much more than a beige box pc.
However, it's worth noting that people over 25 are dying. Old people (over 25) as a market segment will change dramatically over then next 30 years as nearly everyone over 50 will no longer be in the market for an automobile. The "money" demographic will shift to those who are just now getting their driver's licenses.
I do find it depressing that, in an age where interactivity with personal devices can be done in an agnostic way, more and more interfaces are becoming OS specific.
Oh, I though he was talking about something where you put a cat in an lowered a handle to create two large punctures so you could drink the liquid that came out the bottom.
Probably for the best, as I didn't expect that would turn out to be a terribly popular product.