I see that the discussion here is based on a sketchy summary from the originally Japanese press conference. More coherent information is available if you could read Japanese but I know it's too much to ask for...
Here is the latest update of the on-going investigation from the JTSB issued 20 Feb, 2013; this mentions the mis-wiring:
According to this article, the mis-wiring was in the original specs/design, and the design had been corrected. The aircraft in question was manufactured in accordance to the earlier specs but no modification was made to comply with the new ones. One can infer that the bug was considered insignificant to compromise the safety of the aircraft. The JTSB currently does not think this mis-wiring was the cause of the battery incident although they will keep looking into it as a potential cause of anomalous voltage readings.
I might have to call this one bullshit. I briefly checked Asahi, Mainichi and Yomiuri, the three major newspapers in Japan. Only Mainichi has this news. And the reporter, as far as I can gather, seems stationed in the vicinity of the Edwards AFB and seems quite a bit fascinated by the Global Hawk. So, what she reported may not be completely untrue, but can be that some facts are twisted. The report at least does not seem to be based on a press release. So, the US Air Force may, in principle, have agreed to provide the data from the drone, but it could go anywhere.
The operation at the Fukushima 1 plant involves various organization: TEPCO, JSDF, various Fire Departments, some sort of atomic watchdog most likely reporting to some kind of ministry, and probably some organization reporting to the cabinet. I still have not figured out who is ultimately in charge. My vague impression is that the TEPCO plans, _asks_ any of the above organization that they think fit to do that job, and the said organization does the job. Not very efficient. This may be partially the reason why they seem to take so long to perform a next step.
So, the data from the US Air Force may be given to someone in Japan, someone in the government. But I can imagine the person who was (being) given the data might not even know to whom to forward it. It may be being forwarded to the people on the ground and used for planning, assessment, etc., but they may not even think to use the footage in the next press conference; they may want to have a written warrant saying it is OK to release it, and so on. Every morning (Japan time), two organizations (TEPCO and something akin to IAEA but Japan domestic) and the cabinet spokesman are having press conferences to report on the power plant and I have yet to understand who is ultimately responsible for the operation.
What I'm trying to say is that the reason we have not seen the footage from the Global Hawk has more to do with the complexity of the operation than some intention to hide something from the public.
As a postscript, in the past ten days or so, I have learned to read information coming from Japan very carefully. Often even major newspapers make blatant faulty statements, often having the effect of instilling fear in the public. I find it distasteful. Yet I find hope in the Japanese netizens: when they encounter a bald statement, it has become their custom to ask for the source, a la Wikipedia, and when the source cannot be shown, the statement is determined a hoax and not further propagated. They seem to have learned the danger of hoaxes and misinformation...for most part.
You seem to be correct. But what were we, who live in Germany (I'm not a German by the way), doing today??? I even had a dentist appointment and they were there! All my co-workers were in the office, too... I didn't know it was a holiday till I read your post:-O
Besides, my iPhone 4's alarm went off one hour late. I first thought I slept through the alarm when I woke up on my own...
What are you talking about? That's in Japan where most popular (admittedly very anecdotal) drinks they buy from those machines is green tea without sugar. The second popular would be water. The video mostly showed different kinds of teas (again no sugar), some waters, a couple of vitamin drinks (somewhat sugary), one or two energy drinks, a couple of canned coffee (pretty sugary, but in small containers), and the infamous Pocari Sweat (Gatorade-like but less sugary). I saw exactly one sugary carbonated water (Mitsuya Cider).
Perhaps you could have mentioned that NeXT was Jobs' creation as well as the "fact" that NeXT pretty much swallowed Apple after being bought by them. The poster you were responding seems to have no knowledge of history.
Does Verizon also refuse email addresses to those who have such last names like: Takeshita, Fukuoka (common Japanese names), Dikshit (common Indian name). There must be more unfortunate names.
People will come up with just about any rationalization for their own stupidity.
This is off-topic, I know, but are you right-handed? I, as a left-handed person, if Apple introduces right-handed-minded implementation of mouse/trackpad, I will stop using computers. They are the only computer system manufacturer which is handedness-neutral. You, along with many right-handed people, are the self-centered person who don't know what it's like to live among those who couldn't care about the others. Try using your two-button mouse with your buttons mapped reverse.
This study, being on the mtDNA, I wonder how much the causes you cite may apply. Did the Romans or the Anglo-Saxons or the Vikings come to England as family? Nonetheless, even though I am not a geneticist, the article mention "selection" as a possible cause of the loss of diversity in the female population. This is sort of amusing if I think about what it might mean. Doesn't that mean that there should be a lot less... er... undesirable females in England? This is counter-intuitive from what I hear from the Europeans from the continent...
After all, they've supposed detecting when there are two fingers for a while, how much harder can it be to detect the stretching and squeezing motions?
It does. Did you try "Zoom while holding..." option?
Since Leopard is resolution independent and iPhone runs Leopard, there is not really any reason to think MacBooks (even the current models) do not support Multi-touch in the iPhone sense. At the least, when you zoomed in the current method, characters and vector graphics should not get blurred in Leopard, as it does as of now.
I don't know if someone already has mentioned, but I think Safari is a smokescreen. Real intention might be to bring back OPENSTEP to Windows, or the Yellow Box on Windows. Just like Intel version of OS X was secretly maintained at Apple, it would appear that OPENSTEP was alive and well at Apple. That Safari runs on Windows implies that other Cocoa apps can run on Windows as well. I don't know what this means in grand scheme of things, but one benefit Apple could have is to attract third party developers.
One sure way I know to crash Safari is to hit the Back button after posting to/.. Did it happen to you after posting?
Another/. Safari offender is the Intel flash ad with those cheetahs (I see a German version, presumably because I'm in Germany. Do other people see something else?). It consumes 100% of my precious CPU cycles, and slows the system down, a lot.
I'll just have to make sure not to hit the back button after posting this.
Earth wasn't [sic] colonized, and dolphins (or something else, maybe cats or fleas) are the remains of it
I always felt insects are aliens who colonised earth. They seem too good (meaning well adopted to this planet; most of them can fly) to be true. If I were observing Earth from the space, the sheer number of insect individuals would make this planet look like this is a planet of insects.
Think of this as a favor on Walmart's side. They only want to suck money out of sackers who use IE. They spared FF/Safari users from their greed, so to say...
How many of FF/Safari users out there sincerely want to buy movies from Walmart? I don't even live in the States, so I wouldn't even try.
In fact the JTSB used the term BDM (Battery Diode Module), even in their Japanese press release.
I see that the discussion here is based on a sketchy summary from the originally Japanese press conference. More coherent information is available if you could read Japanese but I know it's too much to ask for...
Here is the latest update of the on-going investigation from the JTSB issued 20 Feb, 2013; this mentions the mis-wiring:
http://www.mlit.go.jp/jtsb/flash/JA804A_130116-130220.pdf
More in-depth information is given at
http://www.aviationwire.jp/archives/16032
According to this article, the mis-wiring was in the original specs/design, and the design had been corrected. The aircraft in question was manufactured in accordance to the earlier specs but no modification was made to comply with the new ones. One can infer that the bug was considered insignificant to compromise the safety of the aircraft. The JTSB currently does not think this mis-wiring was the cause of the battery incident although they will keep looking into it as a potential cause of anomalous voltage readings.
WordPerfect? I thought it's been dead for years.
Hm, this lady sounds more like schizophrenic...
And in those good old days there were still plenty of usernames with just two capitals... Or was it the fashion?
The irony is, T-Mobile/Telekom was the sole supplier of iPhone in their home country, Germany.
http://mainichi.jp/select/jiken/news/20110319ddm012040016000c.html
By the way, one of my elementary school teacher's name was same as your nick. Happen to be from Kumamoto?
I might have to call this one bullshit. I briefly checked Asahi, Mainichi and Yomiuri, the three major newspapers in Japan. Only Mainichi has this news. And the reporter, as far as I can gather, seems stationed in the vicinity of the Edwards AFB and seems quite a bit fascinated by the Global Hawk. So, what she reported may not be completely untrue, but can be that some facts are twisted. The report at least does not seem to be based on a press release. So, the US Air Force may, in principle, have agreed to provide the data from the drone, but it could go anywhere.
The operation at the Fukushima 1 plant involves various organization: TEPCO, JSDF, various Fire Departments, some sort of atomic watchdog most likely reporting to some kind of ministry, and probably some organization reporting to the cabinet. I still have not figured out who is ultimately in charge. My vague impression is that the TEPCO plans, _asks_ any of the above organization that they think fit to do that job, and the said organization does the job. Not very efficient. This may be partially the reason why they seem to take so long to perform a next step.
So, the data from the US Air Force may be given to someone in Japan, someone in the government. But I can imagine the person who was (being) given the data might not even know to whom to forward it. It may be being forwarded to the people on the ground and used for planning, assessment, etc., but they may not even think to use the footage in the next press conference; they may want to have a written warrant saying it is OK to release it, and so on. Every morning (Japan time), two organizations (TEPCO and something akin to IAEA but Japan domestic) and the cabinet spokesman are having press conferences to report on the power plant and I have yet to understand who is ultimately responsible for the operation.
What I'm trying to say is that the reason we have not seen the footage from the Global Hawk has more to do with the complexity of the operation than some intention to hide something from the public.
As a postscript, in the past ten days or so, I have learned to read information coming from Japan very carefully. Often even major newspapers make blatant faulty statements, often having the effect of instilling fear in the public. I find it distasteful. Yet I find hope in the Japanese netizens: when they encounter a bald statement, it has become their custom to ask for the source, a la Wikipedia, and when the source cannot be shown, the statement is determined a hoax and not further propagated. They seem to have learned the danger of hoaxes and misinformation...for most part.
You seem to be correct. But what were we, who live in Germany (I'm not a German by the way), doing today??? I even had a dentist appointment and they were there! All my co-workers were in the office, too... I didn't know it was a holiday till I read your post :-O
Besides, my iPhone 4's alarm went off one hour late. I first thought I slept through the alarm when I woke up on my own...
What are you talking about? That's in Japan where most popular (admittedly very anecdotal) drinks they buy from those machines is green tea without sugar. The second popular would be water. The video mostly showed different kinds of teas (again no sugar), some waters, a couple of vitamin drinks (somewhat sugary), one or two energy drinks, a couple of canned coffee (pretty sugary, but in small containers), and the infamous Pocari Sweat (Gatorade-like but less sugary). I saw exactly one sugary carbonated water (Mitsuya Cider).
Clint Eastwood will steal it in no time...
Perhaps you could have mentioned that NeXT was Jobs' creation as well as the "fact" that NeXT pretty much swallowed Apple after being bought by them. The poster you were responding seems to have no knowledge of history.
Does Verizon also refuse email addresses to those who have such last names like: Takeshita, Fukuoka (common Japanese names), Dikshit (common Indian name). There must be more unfortunate names.
I sort of understand some Dutch, but what does "neeb evah dlouhs ti" mean? ognohin onamasakas etteros?
Regards,
This study, being on the mtDNA, I wonder how much the causes you cite may apply. Did the Romans or the Anglo-Saxons or the Vikings come to England as family? Nonetheless, even though I am not a geneticist, the article mention "selection" as a possible cause of the loss of diversity in the female population. This is sort of amusing if I think about what it might mean. Doesn't that mean that there should be a lot less... er... undesirable females in England? This is counter-intuitive from what I hear from the Europeans from the continent...
Did you forget that GNU is Not Unix?
It does. Did you try "Zoom while holding..." option?
Since Leopard is resolution independent and iPhone runs Leopard, there is not really any reason to think MacBooks (even the current models) do not support Multi-touch in the iPhone sense. At the least, when you zoomed in the current method, characters and vector graphics should not get blurred in Leopard, as it does as of now.
I don't know if someone already has mentioned, but I think Safari is a smokescreen. Real intention might be to bring back OPENSTEP to Windows, or the Yellow Box on Windows. Just like Intel version of OS X was secretly maintained at Apple, it would appear that OPENSTEP was alive and well at Apple. That Safari runs on Windows implies that other Cocoa apps can run on Windows as well. I don't know what this means in grand scheme of things, but one benefit Apple could have is to attract third party developers.
There were rumors and discussions on this since 2005.
One sure way I know to crash Safari is to hit the Back button after posting to /.. Did it happen to you after posting?
/. Safari offender is the Intel flash ad with those cheetahs (I see a German version, presumably because I'm in Germany. Do other people see something else?). It consumes 100% of my precious CPU cycles, and slows the system down, a lot.
Another
I'll just have to make sure not to hit the back button after posting this.
Think of this as a favor on Walmart's side. They only want to suck money out of sackers who use IE. They spared FF/Safari users from their greed, so to say...
How many of FF/Safari users out there sincerely want to buy movies from Walmart? I don't even live in the States, so I wouldn't even try.
Good point overall. Don't forget, however, that Jobs also represents content creator's side, viz., Disney.
Are you conveniently forgetting NeXT?