T-online states that the 95kB is the maximum size of a video and that this means about 8 to 15 seconds, depending on the dynamics of the scene.
Their three GPRS-rates are EUR 0.29 per 10kB for occasional use, EUR 10 for 1MB/month and EUR 40 for 20MB/month. So, this makes about EUR 0.02 to 0.26 per second of video.
The Nokia 7650 provides 3.6MB of RAM, but MMS size is limited to 100kB as has been pointed out already.
Life on our beloved and only planet has survived many impacts of big (let's say caliber >= 1km) and small size. The big bangs sometimes caused a fallout winter for a few human generations, occasionally, if ground zero contained it, including radioactive material, causing more mutations in the fauna and flora for some time. But that was about it. Life went on.
Today, however, a special kind of landmines endangers the continuity of any, let's say vertebrates, after the next big impact. Our nuclear facilities all over the planet are only safe as long as their cooling systems are working. The statics of these facilities are set to withstand the strongest 'natural' earthquakes.
Unfortunately an impact of an asteroid of decent size causes much stronger quakes. Depending on its energy, incoming angle, hit area etc. this will cause from just a few to complete worldwide nuclear meltdowns.
Any solution how to defuse this minefield should get you at least a Nobel prize.
Tervehdys Suomi ;-)
If there's a lesson to be learned from the article it's that business systems software isn't ever 'done'.
BTW: "maintainability of code is what counts most" - Guido van Rossum, author of Python.
from the article:
"The call was placed on April 11, 2002, by Christian Ganczarski, a 36-year-old Polish-born German Muslim [...]"
T-online states that the 95kB is the maximum size of a video and that this means about 8 to 15 seconds, depending on the dynamics of the scene.
Their three GPRS-rates are EUR 0.29 per 10kB for occasional use, EUR 10 for 1MB/month and EUR 40 for 20MB/month. So, this makes about EUR 0.02 to 0.26 per second of video.
The Nokia 7650 provides 3.6MB of RAM, but MMS size is limited to 100kB as has been pointed out already.
Life on our beloved and only planet has survived many impacts of big (let's say caliber >= 1km) and small size. The big bangs sometimes caused a fallout winter for a few human generations, occasionally, if ground zero contained it, including radioactive material, causing more mutations in the fauna and flora for some time. But that was about it. Life went on.
Today, however, a special kind of landmines endangers the continuity of any, let's say vertebrates, after the next big impact. Our nuclear facilities all over the planet are only safe as long as their cooling systems are working. The statics of these facilities are set to withstand the strongest 'natural' earthquakes.
Unfortunately an impact of an asteroid of decent size causes much stronger quakes. Depending on its energy, incoming angle, hit area etc. this will cause from just a few to complete worldwide nuclear meltdowns.
Any solution how to defuse this minefield should get you at least a Nobel prize.