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User: tnyquist83

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  1. Not a Rubber Ducky, but a LAN Turtle built by the same people. While a Rubber Ducky is a microcontroller in a USB case that poses as a HID, the LAN Turtle is a SoC running openwrt crammed into a USB-Ethernet case.

  2. Re:Whiny Fanboy... but he has a point on Suicide Squad Fan Suing Studio For 'False Advertising' Over Lack of Joker Scenes (independent.co.uk) · · Score: 2

    It makes sense to use different music. Many adds use a single song for the entire ad while showing clips from the entire movie. A fight scene may be edited heavily for inclusion in an add, to the point where the original soundtrack may not match up properly.

    To use the most recent Star Wars as an example, they played the familiar theme song through large portions of some ads. I can reasonably expect that this song will not be playing through the entire movie. What this person alleges they did with Suicide Squad would be the equivalent of cutting scenes of Kylo Ren and his triple-ended light saber, despite using that image heavily in the promotional material.

  3. Re:Numerous bits of ignorance. on Why Are We Spending Billions and Tons of Fossil Fuel On Search of Lost Planes? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Iridium has 66 sats in low polar orbits, giving them 100% coverage of the Earth's surface, Inmarsat used geostationary orbits and has coverage of most of the Earth within ~80 degrees of the equator. In the MH370 case, the last communications received were from the Inmarsat terminal on the plane. The problem is that the signals didn't have location data, and the services that would provide locations were disabled.

    As most countries migrate to ADS-B, there will be more planes regularly transmitting their current location. There is also an ongoing effort to add ADS-B reception to the Iridium network so they don't have to rely on ground stations.

    The only real changes that are needed now is to make sure transponders can't be turned off in flight.

  4. Re:Why only to police? on Every Weapon, Armored Truck, and Plane the Pentagon Gave To Local Police · · Score: 1

    Not only do I want some, I want some for those prices! They value the rifles at $150-$200 a piece when those would easily pull in $1000+ on the civilian market.

  5. Re:$1000 Flashlights? on Every Weapon, Armored Truck, and Plane the Pentagon Gave To Local Police · · Score: 1

    It could be that the "radar evading" camo net system was acquired because that's what was available for camo netting. Also, while I was in the Army all of our nets had small metal rings in them to scatter the return for ground surveillance radars, thus making the net with a couple trucks under it indistinguishable from the surrounding terrain.

    They most likely just wanted some camo nets (they make a great sunshade) and all that was available were the "radar evading" type.

  6. Re:Score for Florence! on Every Weapon, Armored Truck, and Plane the Pentagon Gave To Local Police · · Score: 1

    I've seen it listed elsewhere as a "Kawasaki Mule", which would be a side-by-side ATV.

  7. Re:Rouge planet on Probable Rogue Planet Spotted · · Score: 1

    It's a planet without a cause!

  8. Re:oblig on Self-Assembling Robots Using Flying Drones · · Score: 2

    I, for one, welcome them.

  9. Amazing on Self-Assembling Robots Using Flying Drones · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So this is how it all begins... Although I did get a little chuckle when the first robot attempting the hill climb took a tumble, this is amazing and I can't wait to see this technology applied to the real world. The future really does seem to be an interesting place...

  10. Re:Pretty sure on How To Build a Supercomputer In 24 Hours · · Score: 0, Troll

    You also have to remember that the human brain also has to handle all of those useless background process like "breathing" and "heartbeats". If you only took into account the user-taskable portion of the brain, then computers have surpassed that level a loooooong time ago.

  11. Re:Why trust touchscreens? on Why Does a Voting Machine Need Calibration? · · Score: 1

    I think 2 columns of 10 rows would cover most situations (except for maybe the 2003 California recall). If there are more than 20 candidates, maybe have a message stating there are multiple pages that you need to acknowledge before making a choice?

  12. Re:Touchscreens... on Why Does a Voting Machine Need Calibration? · · Score: 2

    Most of these machines are close to a decade old, so they do use older designs that were new at the time. And it seems so me that making it strikingly clear which option was selected would be common sense, but then again people have been having problems with paper ballots for decades as well.

    For the ATM, is it possible that the screen was re-calibrated each time they restocked the cash?

  13. Why trust touchscreens? on Why Does a Voting Machine Need Calibration? · · Score: 2

    As soon as I read the title, I knew this had something to do with touchscreens. My question is, or something as important as voting in an election, why would anyone trust something as inaccurate as a touchscreen? Wouldn't it make more sense to just list the names with a physical button next to each, similar to what you'd see on many ATM's?

    As for many people here saying they never need to re-calibrate their modern phones and tablets, is it possible that they do some type of self-calibration upon startup? I have an old, old Nexus One and on occasion the touchscreen will begin behaving erratically. Simply pressing the power button to lock the screen, then unlocking again resolves the issue.

  14. Re:Ha ha ha... on The Most Detailed Images of Uranus' Atmosphere Ever · · Score: 2

    From what I hear, unless you add a "liked" page to an interest list, it won't show up in the main feed. Unless they pay to promote a post. I just happened to catch this one in that little side stalker feed that shows people's comments and likes as they happen. It's a result of FB's efforts to "clean up" the main news feed by only showing you the stuff you don't care about, but FB thinks you should see.

  15. Re:If they can demote Pluto ... on The Most Detailed Images of Uranus' Atmosphere Ever · · Score: 1

    I vote for Pazuzu.

  16. Ha ha ha... on The Most Detailed Images of Uranus' Atmosphere Ever · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can't lie, as soon as I saw the headline "Most detailed image of Uranus..." on my FB feed, I began chuckling to myself. I know, I'm a child.

  17. Re:Odd... on Judge Rules Sniffing Open Wi-Fi Networks Is Not Wiretapping · · Score: 2

    By your logic, if someone has a public conversation in Chinese, it should be illegal to listen to them since proficiency in the Chinese language is "special knowledge".

    If you chose to send your personal information via Wi-Fi, cell phone, or other radio signal, you are sending that information as far as the signal will carry it to whomever is in range. If you were having a loud argument in your apartment, would you expect your neighbors to not listen in? If you send your personal information through someone else's private domain, or through the public domain (whether it is via sound wave, electromagnetic wave, or whatever), you have no reasonable expectation that people within range to receive that information aren't listening to it.

    Hardline telephones are completely different as the lines themselves belong to the telecoms. If someone taps a phone line, they are tapping the phone company's private property. If you decide to broadcast to everyone in range, that's your problem.