Who wants to live in compact cities? I like that my children play in grass/woods outside my window. I like deer, fox etc etc as neighbors. I like owning my home. A few acres and some pine tree's make good neighbors. I am in NYC in 90 minutes, if they would put in high speed rail that could be 20.
Sure they can be fun as a childless 20 something. Quickly you figure out that a condo in NYC costs 10x what a house in the burbs/rural does and lacks major amenities for families.
Common knowledge questions or basic math word problems off the top of my head. How many gov web sites need to allow psudo-anonymous comments?
Computer not great as solving the classic: Johnny has a dozen apples, he eats one. Johnny has 10 class mates he is friends with 6 of them. He gives an apple to every classmate does he have any left for his teacher?
If a government site needs more than elinks to access it's broken. WTF could they possibly need a plugin for? Auth nope that is baseline. Forms again been here forever.
We need a deaf blind QA tester core if they can not easily use the site it's broken.
That is not a solution, municipal fiber is the fix for the last mile. Comcast could use is as well as anybody else that cares to, either colocating gear in the muni co or just running a fiber trunk. CWDM is cheap, simple, and requires no active (powered) components at the muni level. Macsec and similar can keep the muni from tapping into the traffic. The only thing they need to do over the fiber is keep track of what colors are in use for a given run so they can assign unused ones.
From a homeowner perspective one fiber gets them everything.
Business get the same plus intown point to points for less than the cost of a couple phone lines.
The muni gets a network to connect itself with (I know many that pay absurd amounts for DS3 etc). If the muni chooses to put a L2 network in they could resell that to small providers etc etc, while giving lifeline internet access and a universal service (think the town services, schools, library's state and federal level gov probably expand it via a review process to medical facilities serving the area etc etc. Muni's are also in it for the long haul so the cost of buried fiber can be justified with it's less frequent outage and more aesthetically pleasing nature.
Other cable/internet/phone providers could come in and compete as the build out costs to the muni CO are pretty trivial.
As this grows providers will bridge muni co to muni co, the muni's may well cross connect to the towns bordering them.
Go one further, they do a great job of providing the heat for desalination. They do have a small amount of coastline on the Gulf of Aqaba and the city of Aqaba is reasonably large.
That requires change, our politicians seem to hate that. Almonds produced in CA would be expensive and not able to compete in the global market. So pretty much they would go under, now now we can not have rational change.
There are many broadcasts with time embedded into them. They are not exactly secure as authenticating the time is far harder than receiving it.
For IoT really you have two times the local time that needs to be taken of faith to be right (served from a local trusted source) this is your clock display etc etc etc, it keeps the complexity and recently ever changing timezone bits out of IoT devices. You then have a unix clock few IoT devices should need this level of accuracy or complexity, when they do they should always use a local reference as IoT devices should not expect nor require they have any internet access to function NTP seems to fit this role well. I'm not sure NTP levels of time accuracy and complexity will be needed for many IoT objects alarm systems about all that comes to mind.
Whats so wrong with ubermenchen??? If it's the parents choice coupled with a strong prohibition on government or business use of DNA should be reasonable.
The system did not work, the warrant should have never been issued it was a fishing expedition wrapped up in "science". To start the used a commercial DNA database aka someplace that sucker innocents into submitting DNA samples (ancestry.com) for genealogical purposes with promises of anonymity and control. The first warrant broke that anonymity and led to the guys father even though they knew he was not a suspect. They then got a warrant to forcibly sample the son with the extra info of apparently he had friends on facebook near the crime and directed horror flicks.
So the first person they invaded the privacy of, they knew had no connection to the crime and based on a commercial database that was created under false pretenses. They then forced a person to submit DNA (that will stay in the system forever). This was all fishing with no evidence.
If this is left to stand sooner or later the police will be able to match everybodys DNA as sequencing is becoming the norm. Companies like Quest Diag etc will put some clause 13 pages into a form you have to sign to get a lab test done saying it's ok for them to sell your sequence anonymously. Then a partial match is grounds enough to get a warrant to break that anonymity without giving the persona a chance to fight it.
Sure the genie is out of the bottle our DNA is becoming easier to sequence and we know more and more by looking at that sequence. This has important medical benefits. Would you be ok with the police being able to search everybody's medical records looking for a white male with a cleft palate since they had a suspect with that medical condition. We need to keep the bar far higher for the police to access medical records.
Disagreeing with a law is never moot, this is exactly the sort of things jurors can choose to refuse to convict on, in effect society's power to pardon the wrongly accused.
We are making laws to get politicians elected, this does not make our society better. It's why we have the second highest percentage of people in jail in the world (with only a tiny island nation of 90k higher than us). People seem to forget we need the minimum amount of laws for us to live reasonably happily together not a special snowflake law for everything that might piss us off.
I see resume's for people with less than 5 years experience with "expert" level knowledge in 200+ things. Meaning that they saw it once.
It really seems that it's the HR departments that are using this stuff as checkbox gatekeepers. In a perfect world I want to see some of your code but thats nearly always locked up under contracts. But as long as the list of checkboxes gets longer so does the list of lies.
Hate speech laws are broken as they make nonviolent speech a crime. They do not require that it was intended to cause panic (the classic shouting fire in a crowded theater) or instruct others to do harm. It makes a crime of failing to use PC speech.
In your example neither should be more than defacing public property.
And thus you demonstrate why hate speech laws are broken by design. I dont have to like it but people have the right to be idiots and assholes, until they do something tangible.
Just as a safe, they are free to use whatever means they can to access it.
Compelling a person to give them information that would incriminate them, hurt there reputation or put them / others in harm is broken. If a law says you have to it's still broken and morally wrong and thus should not be followed.
Problems how often and how sever are a design issue. In current Gen IV you have GFR's that use helium as a coolant, it floats and is unable to stay radioactive for long, Compare to a Gen II with water it stays radioactive for a long time. Gen IV plants can use previous gens waste as fuel, some of the design are fairly proliferation resistant and that is a HUGE issue with helping the third world skip the industrial use of fossil fuels for power and heat.
The point is we got stuck on gen II plants, Gen III has come and gone and were just starting to see ground broke on gen IV plants.
Insurance is about the hype, fact is you get more exposure being downwind from a coal plant sure people are scared but thats because others told them to be.
They still should not be compelled to reveal the password. Even blanket immunity should not allow them to force you since it still might ruin your life or worse reasonably fear for your life and safety and ones close to you.
The plant you cited is a boondoggle of an outdated design, would expect it got built by highly motivated politicians. In general fission power is expensive due to excessive regulation, put there with the intent to make it expensive. Idiotic bits like things less radioactive than humans, being treated like deady contaminated objects.
A wireless standard that nobody integrates is not that useful. Qi is on a lot of devices now, the low end supports 5w of power and medium 120w. People are already hacking qi charging stations into their keyboards and desks. You can add qi charging into nearly anything with a USB port and a flat space.
Now that said something in the 10-20w range would be nice.
The competitors standard relies on bluetooth and thus generally the ability to communicate with the device CPU. Do you trust a random wireless charging station?
Who wants to live in compact cities? I like that my children play in grass/woods outside my window. I like deer, fox etc etc as neighbors. I like owning my home. A few acres and some pine tree's make good neighbors. I am in NYC in 90 minutes, if they would put in high speed rail that could be 20.
Sure they can be fun as a childless 20 something. Quickly you figure out that a condo in NYC costs 10x what a house in the burbs/rural does and lacks major amenities for families.
Common knowledge questions or basic math word problems off the top of my head. How many gov web sites need to allow psudo-anonymous comments?
Computer not great as solving the classic:
Johnny has a dozen apples, he eats one. Johnny has 10 class mates he is friends with 6 of them. He gives an apple to every classmate does he have any left for his teacher?
Or you could pick up them for 3 bucks at costco and see a savings in a few months.
Where are you shopping? CT Costco with the subsidies still about 3 a bulb.
Still even without the subsidies dimmable led bulbs are nowhere near 22 at your local costco.
If a government site needs more than elinks to access it's broken. WTF could they possibly need a plugin for? Auth nope that is baseline. Forms again been here forever.
We need a deaf blind QA tester core if they can not easily use the site it's broken.
That is not a solution, municipal fiber is the fix for the last mile. Comcast could use is as well as anybody else that cares to, either colocating gear in the muni co or just running a fiber trunk. CWDM is cheap, simple, and requires no active (powered) components at the muni level. Macsec and similar can keep the muni from tapping into the traffic. The only thing they need to do over the fiber is keep track of what colors are in use for a given run so they can assign unused ones.
From a homeowner perspective one fiber gets them everything.
Business get the same plus intown point to points for less than the cost of a couple phone lines.
The muni gets a network to connect itself with (I know many that pay absurd amounts for DS3 etc). If the muni chooses to put a L2 network in they could resell that to small providers etc etc, while giving lifeline internet access and a universal service (think the town services, schools, library's state and federal level gov probably expand it via a review process to medical facilities serving the area etc etc. Muni's are also in it for the long haul so the cost of buried fiber can be justified with it's less frequent outage and more aesthetically pleasing nature.
Other cable/internet/phone providers could come in and compete as the build out costs to the muni CO are pretty trivial.
As this grows providers will bridge muni co to muni co, the muni's may well cross connect to the towns bordering them.
Because putting a rfid tag on all the more expensive stuff would be hard?
Go one further, they do a great job of providing the heat for desalination. They do have a small amount of coastline on the Gulf of Aqaba and the city of Aqaba is reasonably large.
Modern nerds they need a arduino and a wiki page.
That requires change, our politicians seem to hate that. Almonds produced in CA would be expensive and not able to compete in the global market. So pretty much they would go under, now now we can not have rational change.
There are many broadcasts with time embedded into them. They are not exactly secure as authenticating the time is far harder than receiving it.
For IoT really you have two times the local time that needs to be taken of faith to be right (served from a local trusted source) this is your clock display etc etc etc, it keeps the complexity and recently ever changing timezone bits out of IoT devices. You then have a unix clock few IoT devices should need this level of accuracy or complexity, when they do they should always use a local reference as IoT devices should not expect nor require they have any internet access to function NTP seems to fit this role well. I'm not sure NTP levels of time accuracy and complexity will be needed for many IoT objects alarm systems about all that comes to mind.
Whats so wrong with ubermenchen??? If it's the parents choice coupled with a strong prohibition on government or business use of DNA should be reasonable.
You do realize these are self signed keys? They are trivial to generate and have no cost.
The system did not work, the warrant should have never been issued it was a fishing expedition wrapped up in "science". To start the used a commercial DNA database aka someplace that sucker innocents into submitting DNA samples (ancestry.com) for genealogical purposes with promises of anonymity and control. The first warrant broke that anonymity and led to the guys father even though they knew he was not a suspect. They then got a warrant to forcibly sample the son with the extra info of apparently he had friends on facebook near the crime and directed horror flicks.
So the first person they invaded the privacy of, they knew had no connection to the crime and based on a commercial database that was created under false pretenses. They then forced a person to submit DNA (that will stay in the system forever). This was all fishing with no evidence.
If this is left to stand sooner or later the police will be able to match everybodys DNA as sequencing is becoming the norm. Companies like Quest Diag etc will put some clause 13 pages into a form you have to sign to get a lab test done saying it's ok for them to sell your sequence anonymously. Then a partial match is grounds enough to get a warrant to break that anonymity without giving the persona a chance to fight it.
Sure the genie is out of the bottle our DNA is becoming easier to sequence and we know more and more by looking at that sequence. This has important medical benefits. Would you be ok with the police being able to search everybody's medical records looking for a white male with a cleft palate since they had a suspect with that medical condition. We need to keep the bar far higher for the police to access medical records.
Sure if you live someplace with a cost of living similar to India. Rent a coder etc have always been a race to the bottom with piles of overhead.
Disagreeing with a law is never moot, this is exactly the sort of things jurors can choose to refuse to convict on, in effect society's power to pardon the wrongly accused.
We are making laws to get politicians elected, this does not make our society better. It's why we have the second highest percentage of people in jail in the world (with only a tiny island nation of 90k higher than us). People seem to forget we need the minimum amount of laws for us to live reasonably happily together not a special snowflake law for everything that might piss us off.
I see resume's for people with less than 5 years experience with "expert" level knowledge in 200+ things. Meaning that they saw it once.
It really seems that it's the HR departments that are using this stuff as checkbox gatekeepers. In a perfect world I want to see some of your code but thats nearly always locked up under contracts. But as long as the list of checkboxes gets longer so does the list of lies.
Hate speech laws are broken as they make nonviolent speech a crime. They do not require that it was intended to cause panic (the classic shouting fire in a crowded theater) or instruct others to do harm. It makes a crime of failing to use PC speech.
In your example neither should be more than defacing public property.
And thus you demonstrate why hate speech laws are broken by design. I dont have to like it but people have the right to be idiots and assholes, until they do something tangible.
Just as a safe, they are free to use whatever means they can to access it.
Compelling a person to give them information that would incriminate them, hurt there reputation or put them / others in harm is broken. If a law says you have to it's still broken and morally wrong and thus should not be followed.
Problems how often and how sever are a design issue. In current Gen IV you have GFR's that use helium as a coolant, it floats and is unable to stay radioactive for long, Compare to a Gen II with water it stays radioactive for a long time. Gen IV plants can use previous gens waste as fuel, some of the design are fairly proliferation resistant and that is a HUGE issue with helping the third world skip the industrial use of fossil fuels for power and heat.
The point is we got stuck on gen II plants, Gen III has come and gone and were just starting to see ground broke on gen IV plants.
Insurance is about the hype, fact is you get more exposure being downwind from a coal plant sure people are scared but thats because others told them to be.
They still should not be compelled to reveal the password. Even blanket immunity should not allow them to force you since it still might ruin your life or worse reasonably fear for your life and safety and ones close to you.
The plant you cited is a boondoggle of an outdated design, would expect it got built by highly motivated politicians. In general fission power is expensive due to excessive regulation, put there with the intent to make it expensive. Idiotic bits like things less radioactive than humans, being treated like deady contaminated objects.
A wireless standard that nobody integrates is not that useful. Qi is on a lot of devices now, the low end supports 5w of power and medium 120w. People are already hacking qi charging stations into their keyboards and desks. You can add qi charging into nearly anything with a USB port and a flat space.
Now that said something in the 10-20w range would be nice.
The competitors standard relies on bluetooth and thus generally the ability to communicate with the device CPU. Do you trust a random wireless charging station?