I tend to agree about GEB despite the praise it gets. I also found it pretentious as well as being pedantic and excessively verbose. I've made several attempts to read it, but just can't will myself past the first few chapters. That being said, there's clearly a large audience it appeals to. Maybe check it out from the library and save yourself some cash (I regret buying it).
It's more difficult than you might think. Without GPS, maintaining it's position with only video and other sensors is a tough problem. Image processing is computationally intensive, so making it work with limited hardware that can fit in a drone doesn't make it any easier.
I do agree that it is kind of lame though. I'm not a big fan of a bunch of little drones floating around everywhere.
According to this: "He will keep his majority stake in Facebook, and thus voting control, for the foreseeable future." I doubt there will be much change anytime soon.
Not sure if that was sarcastic, but OP is correct (with the addition of synthetic materials). I live by the ocean where the UV index is almost always extreme. Rash guards/wetsuits can cover most of your body and really are the best way to protect against the sun if you spend any amount of time in the water. It doesn't wash off and you don't miss spots (it's also it's better for the environment for those that care about it).
Registration is free and there is no email verification (FAQ from AM). So yeah, someone could register you without your knowledge. However, it's the credit card transactions (for male users only?) that's getting people caught with their hand in the cookie jar. Without the CC transactions, there does't seem to be anyway to definitively prove someone was actively using the site.
I don't know about China, but I doubt it will make much of a difference in the US. Americans have no problem going into debt for cars, toys, and gadgets. Guess we'll see.
AI is how you get Skynet; not HPC. HPC and AI are different problems. While it would be reasonable to assume an AI could leverage the compute power from an exascale platform, it's not necessarily a requirement in achieving it.
Undoubtedly, the free market will ultimately decide these things. However, I'd prefer that someone I care about NOT be the collateral damage that helps determine this. Many corporations lack values beyond profits. The idea of regulations and penalties (ignoring how effective it actually is) is to prevent unnecessary injury, death, etc by compelling these companies to behave by imposing monetary fines (the only thing they really understand or care about). Granted, as already posted by others, this fine is probably chump change.
I think my reasonable expectation is: I'd rather not be the pilot of a helicopter carrying tons of water to be the one that finds out what happens.
"...or you suck it up and figure out a way to keep your personnel safe." - this is what the legislation is providing - a way to keep personal safe by allowing them to remove unnecessary hazards from an already extremely dangerous situation.
It's reasonable to assume "restricted air space" takes on a different meaning in the context of wildfires. The water buckets are sometimes filled from the closest source of water available. I lived in Colorado during a couple of the major fires a few years ago. The helicopters were filling buckets from a reservoir next to a golf course (maybe 1500 yards from the office I was working in) with trails that people run/walk by all the time. It seems like common sense that one should consider this area as restricted air space and stay out of the way.
I don't think you can necessarily extrapolate a drone flight time of 20 minutes from the details in the article. Of the "15-20 minutes" flights were suspended, I'm sure some of that time was used for communication and visual verification drones were no longer present. There was also nothing stating that all 5 drones were airborne simultaneously.
Me thinks "descubes" has a vested interest in the language being the poster and responding to posts in an inquisitive manner. The quote "Defining if-then-else is literally a couple of lines of code." is silly (as already mentioned). Is there a formal language definition? The documentation for the language seems to be lacking.
This Mythbusters episode might help you with the turd polishing problem.
"and even a good president"...seriously? We haven't had a decent president, let alone a "good" one, for decades.
There's no reason for the simulation to be game-oriented...it could be part of a AI project or who knows what else.
I tend to agree about GEB despite the praise it gets. I also found it pretentious as well as being pedantic and excessively verbose. I've made several attempts to read it, but just can't will myself past the first few chapters. That being said, there's clearly a large audience it appeals to. Maybe check it out from the library and save yourself some cash (I regret buying it).
It's more difficult than you might think. Without GPS, maintaining it's position with only video and other sensors is a tough problem. Image processing is computationally intensive, so making it work with limited hardware that can fit in a drone doesn't make it any easier. I do agree that it is kind of lame though. I'm not a big fan of a bunch of little drones floating around everywhere.
Murphy's Law.
Not that it really matters, but it's Tommy Lee Jones....
According to this: "He will keep his majority stake in Facebook, and thus voting control, for the foreseeable future." I doubt there will be much change anytime soon.
So, you're a "glass half-full" type of person then?
No kidding, but probably because the word "Facebook" appeared in the article.
At least one satellite was lost. It was developed by the University of Hawaii @ Manoa (see this article).
Not sure if that was sarcastic, but OP is correct (with the addition of synthetic materials). I live by the ocean where the UV index is almost always extreme. Rash guards/wetsuits can cover most of your body and really are the best way to protect against the sun if you spend any amount of time in the water. It doesn't wash off and you don't miss spots (it's also it's better for the environment for those that care about it).
Not sure where you live, but I hardly see how an extra $10-20/mo would cover half of the rent provided by a roommate...
Registration is free and there is no email verification (FAQ from AM). So yeah, someone could register you without your knowledge. However, it's the credit card transactions (for male users only?) that's getting people caught with their hand in the cookie jar. Without the CC transactions, there does't seem to be anyway to definitively prove someone was actively using the site.
I don't know about China, but I doubt it will make much of a difference in the US. Americans have no problem going into debt for cars, toys, and gadgets. Guess we'll see.
AI is how you get Skynet; not HPC. HPC and AI are different problems. While it would be reasonable to assume an AI could leverage the compute power from an exascale platform, it's not necessarily a requirement in achieving it.
Undoubtedly, the free market will ultimately decide these things. However, I'd prefer that someone I care about NOT be the collateral damage that helps determine this. Many corporations lack values beyond profits. The idea of regulations and penalties (ignoring how effective it actually is) is to prevent unnecessary injury, death, etc by compelling these companies to behave by imposing monetary fines (the only thing they really understand or care about). Granted, as already posted by others, this fine is probably chump change.
I think my reasonable expectation is: I'd rather not be the pilot of a helicopter carrying tons of water to be the one that finds out what happens.
"...or you suck it up and figure out a way to keep your personnel safe." - this is what the legislation is providing - a way to keep personal safe by allowing them to remove unnecessary hazards from an already extremely dangerous situation.
It's reasonable to assume "restricted air space" takes on a different meaning in the context of wildfires. The water buckets are sometimes filled from the closest source of water available. I lived in Colorado during a couple of the major fires a few years ago. The helicopters were filling buckets from a reservoir next to a golf course (maybe 1500 yards from the office I was working in) with trails that people run/walk by all the time. It seems like common sense that one should consider this area as restricted air space and stay out of the way.
I don't think you can necessarily extrapolate a drone flight time of 20 minutes from the details in the article. Of the "15-20 minutes" flights were suspended, I'm sure some of that time was used for communication and visual verification drones were no longer present. There was also nothing stating that all 5 drones were airborne simultaneously.
FYI..."husbandry" is "the cultivation and production of edible crops or of animals for food; agriculture; farming." (Dictionary.com).
Yup...well for anyone old enough to remember them anyway :)
Anyone know if there's anything worth reading? If it's like Netflix (i.e.: 95% crap), I wouldn't be too impressed.
"right out of the bat"? I think you meant "box".
Me thinks "descubes" has a vested interest in the language being the poster and responding to posts in an inquisitive manner. The quote "Defining if-then-else is literally a couple of lines of code." is silly (as already mentioned). Is there a formal language definition? The documentation for the language seems to be lacking.
Never heard of that site, but thought I'd go take a looksie.
The most recent article: "Escape from Microsoft Word"