That isn't the way things generally work in "free" nations. Call him an asshole for not helping, or any number of other things, but there is something horribly wrong with forcing someone to become a science project.
Physical contact is considered battery, not assault. The Fry's employee committed battery against the customer, which was met with force. The customer was within his rights to respond with reasonable force.
Second generation, actually. The 6135 came first, and was truly one of the forerunners to the modern smartphone. That said, it was B&W, bulky, and seemed difficult to use. Though not nearly as much as the one that came before it (can't even remember the name...).
That said, I use a 7135 also, and love it. Can't wait to see what comes out next.
This might have something to do with some hardware platforms (not your usual x86 ilk) that support multiple processors, and can cope with the loss of a processor rather well (gee, a cpu died...guess I'll just stop using that one), and by extension support removing said processor, putting a replacement in, and having the OS start using that processor again.
This is useful in the "mission critical" market where you're dealing with machines with hot-swap everything (even CPUs!), redundant memory, and the like.
For the price, the ER-6 isn't bad either. You can be a little less picky about requiring a headphone amp, too (though when practical I always advise using one).
1) There is a security flaw in the doors at a self-storage facility. 2) You leave a note for the management company informing them so. 3) 6 months pass. You now slip a note under each door so each customer can see that this flaw exists. 4) Go directly to jail. Do not pass go. Do not collect $200.
I'll second that suggestion. Both my girlfriend and I each have a set of Etymotic ER-6 headphones, available from the above link. The sound quality is much better than most headphones. The benefit/disadvantage (depending on your perspective) is that you can't hear anything else when using them. Great on a plane, not so great if you need to hear your environment. I still love 'em.
I must still be asleep; component-video runs over three coaxial cables. Just thought I'd point that out before someone else did.
Additionally, I saw an interesting DVI cable that actually had fiber-optic tranceivers built into the plugs on either end of the cable and used fiber as the transit in the cable for a virtually flawless picture even at very long cable runs. Cool.
What the hell, may I ask, is "component optical output"? Component video is still an analog signal over a normal coaxial cable, though at the resolution of a DVD it is true, as you said, that it is more than adequate. Optical cables are sometimes used for the audio connection, though you can use a high-bandwidth coax instead.
So yes, DVI is not needed at the current resolutions except for copying (where you want to avoid first-gen,second-gen, etc...). I don't forsee this likely to change even when HD-DVD becomes popular, because you're still only looking at a 1024i signal, which any good component-video equipment should be able to handle just fine.
That's awesome. Oddly enough, my girlfriend also has a slide rule that she has no idea how to use...her grandpa gave it to her a couple years back.
That isn't the way things generally work in "free" nations. Call him an asshole for not helping, or any number of other things, but there is something horribly wrong with forcing someone to become a science project.
Physical contact is considered battery, not assault. The Fry's employee committed battery against the customer, which was met with force. The customer was within his rights to respond with reasonable force.
How exactly would the operating system have any bearing on whether or not a hardware keylogger was effective?
To an aerial antenna, yes. To the same one, no. FM antennas and microwave antennas are significantly different wavelengths.
Mod parent up, he speaks the truth.
Great pants; They're made be a company by the name of Royal Robins, and were originally intended for climbers.
http://www.royalrobbins.com/
http://www.511tactical.com/
Thank you for stating the truth that apparently isn't obvious to many readers.
Bizarre...perhaps he is confused, and is thinking of the interference between the 800Mhz public safety bands and Nextel phones?
Very true. I cary a tac light on me all the time. Nice and bright, but it has a 60-minute lifetime. Or, if I swapped in the brighter bulb, 20-minutes.
Second generation, actually. The 6135 came first, and was truly one of the forerunners to the modern smartphone. That said, it was B&W, bulky, and seemed difficult to use. Though not nearly as much as the one that came before it (can't even remember the name...).
That said, I use a 7135 also, and love it. Can't wait to see what comes out next.
You'll retain DVI-A, but not DVI-D.
Ah, the old infinite loop approach.
I agree...my girlfriend runs several miles every morning with her 1st-gen ipod, and has never had issues with it.
60MHz, actually. The 6100/66 replaced the 6100/60 about 6 months down the road, I believe.
Never mind the fact that if the equipment is that vulnerable, the jammer will affect is as well.
TUG? Wow, small world. One of my coworkers does quite a bit of work on TUG publications.
You'd sync the timecodes from the various cameras, of course. Same way they do multi-camera shoots of real movies and the like.
This might have something to do with some hardware platforms (not your usual x86 ilk) that support multiple processors, and can cope with the loss of a processor rather well (gee, a cpu died...guess I'll just stop using that one), and by extension support removing said processor, putting a replacement in, and having the OS start using that processor again.
This is useful in the "mission critical" market where you're dealing with machines with hot-swap everything (even CPUs!), redundant memory, and the like.
Wow...that sounds like some seriously rought training. Glad I don't need to use GroupWare anytime soon.
For the price, the ER-6 isn't bad either. You can be a little less picky about requiring a headphone amp, too (though when practical I always advise using one).
I believe this would be a better analogy:
1) There is a security flaw in the doors at a self-storage facility.
2) You leave a note for the management company informing them so.
3) 6 months pass. You now slip a note under each door so each customer can see that this flaw exists.
4) Go directly to jail. Do not pass go. Do not collect $200.
I'll second that suggestion. Both my girlfriend and I each have a set of Etymotic ER-6 headphones, available from the above link. The sound quality is much better than most headphones. The benefit/disadvantage (depending on your perspective) is that you can't hear anything else when using them. Great on a plane, not so great if you need to hear your environment. I still love 'em.
I must still be asleep; component-video runs over three coaxial cables. Just thought I'd point that out before someone else did.
Additionally, I saw an interesting DVI cable that actually had fiber-optic tranceivers built into the plugs on either end of the cable and used fiber as the transit in the cable for a virtually flawless picture even at very long cable runs. Cool.
What the hell, may I ask, is "component optical output"? Component video is still an analog signal over a normal coaxial cable, though at the resolution of a DVD it is true, as you said, that it is more than adequate. Optical cables are sometimes used for the audio connection, though you can use a high-bandwidth coax instead.
So yes, DVI is not needed at the current resolutions except for copying (where you want to avoid first-gen,second-gen, etc...). I don't forsee this likely to change even when HD-DVD becomes popular, because you're still only looking at a 1024i signal, which any good component-video equipment should be able to handle just fine.