They'll either have to be slightly revisionist, or come up with a side-effect of plasma burns that would eliminate a computer from being able to assist in producing spoken language.
They could also conceivably do a movie on the events leading up to World War III. While taking into account modern developments like a Russian democracy, China (by then) being a primarily capitalist economy, the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. Darn, there's a lot of neat things to speculate on how history could turn out to push us to WW III.
I'm expecting it to be based on Enterprise. However, a movie following Kirk through the Acadamy would be neat to see. Especially for the "no win" scenario test.
The BBS(Cyberspace BBS) I frequented here in the Grand Rapids area has always been (and still is) very careful about only allowing shareware and freeware software into the file libraries people can download from.
The original owner's wife's ex-husband called the FBI and told them Cyber had pirated software and child pornography available for download. So the FBI raided. AFAIK, they didn't damage anything, and left once it was demonstrated that the file libraries were clean.
"The rules this year are designed to make the competition simulate more of a 24-hour operation, despite the reality that "Taps" still sounds at 2330 (11:30 p.m.) and cadets are required to be in bed with lights out by then. Overnight, the enemy can prey upon any network vulnerabilities with impunity."
Sleep? Yeah, right. They're going to be laying awake all night in a cold sweat.
He compared a typical ruggedized laptop with a consumer model. The ruggedized laptops were running UNIX, while the Dell machines were probably running something else.
I concede your point about energy density issues with Hydrogen.
However, notice that as long as electricity from the fuel cell is used to propel the vehicle, it becomes rediculously easy to implement recapturing of your kinetic energy through using dynamos instead of friction brakes.
Hell, why bother having an EPA, or an FDA? If you choose to eat from a company that sells you tainted meat, well, just buy from a different supplier next time.
To expand on your point for those who didn't get it:
That meat could kill you. Or get you an elected official who's difficult to remove from office.
There's also the terrible political repercussions of using nuclear weapons. I can gaurantee that any administration that uses nuclear weapons in response to a non-nuclear attack will not get re-elected.
Organizations like Al-Qaida know this, so it lessens the use of nuclear weapons as a deterrant.
If you look at India or Pakistan, though, I don't think you'll find as much local potential political fallout. However, there would be sanctions by western countries.
Worse, imho, is the fact that they hired a person who is in charge of the group setting future C++ standards. Hopefully there are no evil strings attached to this, the only reason might be getting someone with great C++ knowledge in house, but it is still a bit worrying.
I can't see anyone successfully keeping those two jobs apart. On one hand, he's going to have Microsoft pushing him to leak the latest thoughts and theories, and to push their technology into C++. On the other hand, he's probably going to have a task force assigned to him to let his imagination run wild.
Me, I was on 128K ISDN at the time. It took a while for me to understand why everyone was using macros that said "LPB! LPB! LPB! LPB! LPB!" five times per second.
I'm pleased that they do it because it's self serving. It shows that there are business benefits to adding to the code available under the GPL license.
And as long as those benefits can be seen, the practice will continue. Possibly even spread.
IIRC, the first person to discover nitroglycerin's explosive properties immediately abandoned all further research into that chemical. He didn't want his work to be used for military purposes.
Of course, someone later came along and marketed several nitroglycerin products culminating in dynamite.
They'll either have to be slightly revisionist, or come up with a side-effect of plasma burns that would eliminate a computer from being able to assist in producing spoken language.
They could also conceivably do a movie on the events leading up to World War III. While taking into account modern developments like a Russian democracy, China (by then) being a primarily capitalist economy, the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. Darn, there's a lot of neat things to speculate on how history could turn out to push us to WW III.
And the best part is, it can be done with less expensive props.
If you stipulate that the knowledge for genetic engineering would be privately developed outside of the public eye, then it could work.
I'm expecting it to be based on Enterprise. However, a movie following Kirk through the Acadamy would be neat to see. Especially for the "no win" scenario test.
The BBS(Cyberspace BBS) I frequented here in the Grand Rapids area has always been (and still is) very careful about only allowing shareware and freeware software into the file libraries people can download from.
The original owner's wife's ex-husband called the FBI and told them Cyber had pirated software and child pornography available for download. So the FBI raided. AFAIK, they didn't damage anything, and left once it was demonstrated that the file libraries were clean.
I'd be worried about being one of the rocket men left behind. I don't know how hot that flame is.
And stacking them? I'm not sure I can describe the aftermath.
191.2KJ/mol, and the molar mass H2O2 is 34.04 g/mol
However, that's assuming you're forming the H2O2 from H2 and O2 gas. Difficult, but that's thermodynamics for you.
"The rules this year are designed to make the competition simulate more of a 24-hour operation, despite the reality that "Taps" still sounds at 2330 (11:30 p.m.) and cadets are required to be in bed with lights out by then. Overnight, the enemy can prey upon any network vulnerabilities with impunity."
Sleep? Yeah, right. They're going to be laying awake all night in a cold sweat.
He compared a typical ruggedized laptop with a consumer model. The ruggedized laptops were running UNIX, while the Dell machines were probably running something else.
I'll aggree: not valid justification.
You can play God with the world, but the computer just wants to play Chess...
I concede your point about energy density issues with Hydrogen.
However, notice that as long as electricity from the fuel cell is used to propel the vehicle, it becomes rediculously easy to implement recapturing of your kinetic energy through using dynamos instead of friction brakes.
So you get much better efficiency.
Hell, why bother having an EPA, or an FDA? If you choose to eat from a company that sells you tainted meat, well, just buy from a different supplier next time.
To expand on your point for those who didn't get it:
That meat could kill you. Or get you an elected official who's difficult to remove from office.
Well, it's certainly a show of force.
That brings to mind the less-used definition of a gamer as someone who reacts to a changing situation in an attempt to reach a goal.
And that doesn't have to include entertainment. Polititians fall under that definition as well.
There's also the terrible political repercussions of using nuclear weapons. I can gaurantee that any administration that uses nuclear weapons in response to a non-nuclear attack will not get re-elected.
Organizations like Al-Qaida know this, so it lessens the use of nuclear weapons as a deterrant.
If you look at India or Pakistan, though, I don't think you'll find as much local potential political fallout. However, there would be sanctions by western countries.
It's only expensive if your family doesn't own the ISP. I was actually in middle school, but I still manned the phones for tech support.
So keep an eye on the latency from one end of the pipe to the other. If it increases, you know you've got a man in the middle.
That's because it was developed during the Vietnam war as a quick way of stitching a wound.
Worse, imho, is the fact that they hired a person who is in charge of the group setting future C++ standards. Hopefully there are no evil strings attached to this, the only reason might be getting someone with great C++ knowledge in house, but it is still a bit worrying.
I can't see anyone successfully keeping those two jobs apart. On one hand, he's going to have Microsoft pushing him to leak the latest thoughts and theories, and to push their technology into C++. On the other hand, he's probably going to have a task force assigned to him to let his imagination run wild.
I don't see it as a good mix.
Me, I was on 128K ISDN at the time. It took a while for me to understand why everyone was using macros that said "LPB! LPB! LPB! LPB! LPB!" five times per second.
Alas, now my only internet connection is at work.
I'm pleased that they do it because it's self serving. It shows that there are business benefits to adding to the code available under the GPL license.
And as long as those benefits can be seen, the practice will continue. Possibly even spread.
Uh, that'd be QuakeWorld, not Quake. Quake could handle up to 16 players, and that was with a dedicated server.
If you had a beefy enough box, you could comfortably run a four-player game (yourself included) without a dedicated server.
I don't recall when QuakeWorld came out, though.
The problem that occured to me was that your physical bit size is going to be limited by the longest wavelength of light you use...
IIRC, the first person to discover nitroglycerin's explosive properties immediately abandoned all further research into that chemical. He didn't want his work to be used for military purposes.
Of course, someone later came along and marketed several nitroglycerin products culminating in dynamite.
Does that include contractors? I expect the add-ons to Linux were done by a company such as Mitre or Lockheed-Martin.