You only need to print the lower receiver for an AR-15, and currently it'll take some filing and drilling to clean it up before installing the pins and trigger group. Everything else is available unrestricted over the counter or can be ordered legally online without using an FFL dealer. And polymer based lower receivers are already common. So it just depends how strong the 3D-printer filament is compared to the cast or CNC polymer that's already being used.
FTA:
"The ZKZM-500 has plenty of Chinese predecessors in directed energy weapons. Chinese police and soldiers have long been equipped with 'dazzler' laser rifles. These include PY132A, WGJ-2002 and BBQ-905, which are designed to target the optical imagers and sensors on enemy vehicles, aircraft and drones (since China's signed the United Nations Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, which bans the use of laser weapons that cause permanent damage to human eyes)."
This may be a new policy for staff but it isn't new for visitors. During my last visit to the west wing I was instructed to keep my personal phone in my pocket at all times and that it would be confiscated if I removed it during any part of the visit, with the exception of the press room where personal devices and pictures are allowed.
Most of the west wing isn't a SCIF, with the exception of the situation room, which isn't opened to uncleared visitors. Any outside electronic devices are likely prohibited from the SCIF. I can't speak to the polices of the oval office while the president is present.
It rose earlier this year and then fell sharply due to increased currency trading and mining activity in China. When China started cracking down on exchanges and talking about regulation it fell. It then surged again in anticipation of upcoming changes to Bitcoin and related forks. Since anyone that holds Bitcoin when the fork occurs, essentially doubles their number of coins by now continuing to own Bitcoin and also owning the new cloned currency, in this case Bitcoin Gold, everyone is investing before the fork or consolidating their alt-coins (Litecoin, Etherium, Zcash, etc) to Bitcoin to get the free money. This happened earlier in the year with Bitcoin Cash as well.
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/ar...
I'm curious what the measure of cell phone radiation exposure is in bananas?
From wikipedia:
"""
Many foods are naturally radioactive, and bananas are particularly so, due to the radioactive potassium-40 they contain. The banana equivalent dose is the radiation exposure received by eating a single banana. Radiation leaks from nuclear plants are often measured in extraordinarily small units (the picocurie, a millionth of a millionth of a curie, is typical). By comparing the exposure from these events to a banana equivalent dose, a more realistic assessment of the actual risk can sometimes be obtained.
The average radiologic profile of bananas is 3520 picocuries per kg, or roughly 520 picocuries per 150g banana. The equivalent dose for 365 bananas (one per day for a year) is 3.6 millirems.
"""
This is absolutely correct. In the US there are very few things you are required to tell the police and if you are a suspect of a crime it is in your best interest not to get chatty with them. You can be perfectly innocent and say things that you think are safe to say but they can still use those things against you to make you appear guilty enough to convict. You have 5th amendment rights for a reason.
It may annoy the officer but he knows the less you give him to work with, the harder his job of arresting an innocent person is going to be. No matter how wrong he is, don't argue with him and don't resist. State that you don't consent to searches and that you wish to reserve your right to remain silent. If he does place you under arrest ask for an attorney and don't answer any questions.
We need one lane for transit/commerce/utility, one lane for personal motorized transport, one for muscle powered, and one for pedestrians.
I agree that we need actual lanes for cyclists. Currently the roads are designed for cars and the sidewalks for pedestrians. This leaves the cyclists in a tough spot because no matter where they ride, they're a hazard to the lane they're trying to share. They take up too much space and move too fast for sidewalks, putting pedestrians in danger. They're too hard to see and move too slow for car lanes, causing traffic accidents.
I would love to have a safe place for cyclists to ride and I'm happy to blame urban planners, but in the meantime I'm not going to pretend that the cyclists that are trying to use the road that's not designed for them now, and get their own safe lane later, aren't the problem.
Why does nudity offend you? Have you thought about it? I understand Christians are told to find nudity offensive, but is that your only reason?
I find it ridiculous that people are offended by nudity. That seams about as natural as being offending by looking a tree or mountain that isn't wearing any clothes.
I understand the harm in violence but also don't believe it should be censored. Why let people pretend violence doesn't exist? If it offends them maybe they'll be motivated to lead less violent lives. Maybe they'll be less likely to join a military after highschool that only invades other countries and murders people in the name of "security".
All modern advertising seams manipulative. We can teach our children to be critical thinkers and not fall victim to advertising. Hiding it from them until their older may only make things worse.
If "mindless" means lack of critical though, you can also call it "faith". I would include Christian traditions under the label of mindless culture. How much mindless culture could be the result of sheltered people who are subject to so much censorship and propaganda?
Another reason to use WPA isn't to keep them out of your network, but to protect your privacy. WEP keys are easy to crack and you can decrypt any packet with the same key, you don't need to sniff the entire session. WPA keys are much harder to crack and (afaik) you need to sniff from the beginning of the session to decrypt any part of it.
Using WEP or no encryption at all lets your neighbors and anyone in the area (or far away with the right antenna) watch your traffic. SSL will only help you so much since they can also potentially MITM any of your connections with ARP poisoning.
That's unfortunate. So you don't even have to use BT, if a tracker happens to generate your IP as one of the fakes you might still get sued. At what point do they believe you when you say you're innocent? before or after the search warrant is served?
That's because they compensate for how the size of the theater and the glasses reduce the light and colors.
"Creative decisions involving light levels also led to additional versions. 3D projection and glasses cut down the light the viewer sees, so "Avatar" also had separate color grades at different light levels, which are measured in foot lamberts."
"If we had just sent out one version of the movie, it would have been very dark (in the larger theaters)," Barnett says. "We had a very big flow chart with all of the different steps, so we could send the right media to the right theater."
I'm willing to bet the passengers on any of the airplanes that have been subject to terrorist attacks in the past few years would have been willing to undergo a full body scan if it meant the bad guy couldn't get on the plane with them. Full body scanners also don't care what country you're from, if that means anything.
I think you're confused. By agreeing to the body scan, you aren't trading privacy for security. You are trading privacy for a lack of privacy and a security theater performance. The body scanners don't find the "bad guys" or the tools that the bad guys allegedly use. They do grossly invade personal privacy, violate constitutional rights and further inconvenience innocent civilians. Just like removing your shoes, pat downs and bag searches.
I like how you understand that fear can be used to motivate passengers to give up their rights. Even if they're statistically safer flying than anything else they'll do this year. Successful terrorist attacks on aircraft are scary and make the news companies lots of money, but they're also so rare they're practically non-existent.
Any effort spent trying to stop the terrorists that already successfully made it as far as the airport security screeners is a waste. They could just as easily attack the security checkpoint, the bus they road to the airport in, the school, mall or library on the way to the airport, or any other target.
There are far fewer terrorists in the world than you would like to believe. There aren't enough resources to guard every possible target against every possible attack. Guarding anything less than everything is ineffective because a terrorist can just attack whatever is left. Guarding only against attack strategies that have already happened, or arbitrary imaginary ones from the movies is also ineffective, because a terrorist can just come up with a new strategy at very little cost, while the cost of protecting against each thing is huge.
If you want to protect against an invisible enemy that can attack anywhere, at any time, through an means, you have to do it proactively and logically. You have to identify the enemy, their source and motivations before they plan and implement an attack. You don't want to waste resources and burn freedoms trying to guard against them after they're armed and at the gate.
Even if you could guard every target against every possible attack. Is that police state one you want to live in?
I'm not saying you aren't a "damned good driver", but I am ready to question to claim to having driven "literally" millions of miles.
Assuming you drive an average of 30 miles every day, including weekends and holidays, for 50 years.
30 * 365 * 50 = 547,500 miles
Let's add a 2000 mile trip each year into that estimate.
2000 * 50 = 100,000
Still not at even one million.
Also, there have been multiplestudies that suggest there is a cognitive bias that causes people to overestimate their positive qualities and abilities and to underestimate their negative qualities, relative to others when it comes to driving.
In both studies in the US over 80% of people ranked themselves in the top 50% of drivers.
There could be historical value in something such as an article on competition between the VHS and Betamax formats. The details could be interesting to someone who wasn't around at the time to have personal experience with the subject. It could also be of interest to someone who was. It may be valuable to compare that format competition with older and newer format competitions. Lessons may have been learned in VHS vs Betamax that could be valuable in Blueray vs HD-DVD.
Information about television shows may also be valuable to fans of those shows. Even if you have no personal interest in "Kim Possible" or "Star Trek", someone else may still appreciate them as art or entertainment. That person may want to study every detail of the show and contribute to a collection of knowledge about its plot or characters.
I find it disappointing that an article can be classified as "non-notable" just because it isn't of personal interest to the person making the classification.
Being seen to care has been labelled "virtue signalling"
You only need to print the lower receiver for an AR-15, and currently it'll take some filing and drilling to clean it up before installing the pins and trigger group. Everything else is available unrestricted over the counter or can be ordered legally online without using an FFL dealer. And polymer based lower receivers are already common. So it just depends how strong the 3D-printer filament is compared to the cast or CNC polymer that's already being used.
China has signed the United Nations Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, which bans the use of laser weapons that cause permanent damage to human eyes.
FTA: "The ZKZM-500 has plenty of Chinese predecessors in directed energy weapons. Chinese police and soldiers have long been equipped with 'dazzler' laser rifles. These include PY132A, WGJ-2002 and BBQ-905, which are designed to target the optical imagers and sensors on enemy vehicles, aircraft and drones (since China's signed the United Nations Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, which bans the use of laser weapons that cause permanent damage to human eyes)."
This may be a new policy for staff but it isn't new for visitors. During my last visit to the west wing I was instructed to keep my personal phone in my pocket at all times and that it would be confiscated if I removed it during any part of the visit, with the exception of the press room where personal devices and pictures are allowed. Most of the west wing isn't a SCIF, with the exception of the situation room, which isn't opened to uncleared visitors. Any outside electronic devices are likely prohibited from the SCIF. I can't speak to the polices of the oval office while the president is present.
It rose earlier this year and then fell sharply due to increased currency trading and mining activity in China. When China started cracking down on exchanges and talking about regulation it fell. It then surged again in anticipation of upcoming changes to Bitcoin and related forks. Since anyone that holds Bitcoin when the fork occurs, essentially doubles their number of coins by now continuing to own Bitcoin and also owning the new cloned currency, in this case Bitcoin Gold, everyone is investing before the fork or consolidating their alt-coins (Litecoin, Etherium, Zcash, etc) to Bitcoin to get the free money. This happened earlier in the year with Bitcoin Cash as well. https://bitcoinmagazine.com/ar...
All who drank poison did so under duress, and more than a third of victims (304) were minors. Citations at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
This is a game changer for air travel, I've had to depend on rentals from Google or Amazon, now I can cache Netflix? Nice.
Since the link in the summary goes to an unrelated article, you might want this instead: http://www.zdnet.com/article/a...
I'm curious what the measure of cell phone radiation exposure is in bananas?
From wikipedia:
"""
Many foods are naturally radioactive, and bananas are particularly so, due to the radioactive potassium-40 they contain. The banana equivalent dose is the radiation exposure received by eating a single banana. Radiation leaks from nuclear plants are often measured in extraordinarily small units (the picocurie, a millionth of a millionth of a curie, is typical). By comparing the exposure from these events to a banana equivalent dose, a more realistic assessment of the actual risk can sometimes be obtained.
The average radiologic profile of bananas is 3520 picocuries per kg, or roughly 520 picocuries per 150g banana. The equivalent dose for 365 bananas (one per day for a year) is 3.6 millirems.
"""
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_equivalent_dose
This is absolutely correct. In the US there are very few things you are required to tell the police and if you are a suspect of a crime it is in your best interest not to get chatty with them. You can be perfectly innocent and say things that you think are safe to say but they can still use those things against you to make you appear guilty enough to convict. You have 5th amendment rights for a reason.
It may annoy the officer but he knows the less you give him to work with, the harder his job of arresting an innocent person is going to be. No matter how wrong he is, don't argue with him and don't resist. State that you don't consent to searches and that you wish to reserve your right to remain silent. If he does place you under arrest ask for an attorney and don't answer any questions.
We need one lane for transit/commerce/utility, one lane for personal motorized transport, one for muscle powered, and one for pedestrians.
I agree that we need actual lanes for cyclists. Currently the roads are designed for cars and the sidewalks for pedestrians. This leaves the cyclists in a tough spot because no matter where they ride, they're a hazard to the lane they're trying to share. They take up too much space and move too fast for sidewalks, putting pedestrians in danger. They're too hard to see and move too slow for car lanes, causing traffic accidents.
I would love to have a safe place for cyclists to ride and I'm happy to blame urban planners, but in the meantime I'm not going to pretend that the cyclists that are trying to use the road that's not designed for them now, and get their own safe lane later, aren't the problem.
Why is the parent being modded down? The GP is an ignorant troll and this is an informed response.
Why does nudity offend you? Have you thought about it? I understand Christians are told to find nudity offensive, but is that your only reason?
I find it ridiculous that people are offended by nudity. That seams about as natural as being offending by looking a tree or mountain that isn't wearing any clothes.
I understand the harm in violence but also don't believe it should be censored. Why let people pretend violence doesn't exist? If it offends them maybe they'll be motivated to lead less violent lives. Maybe they'll be less likely to join a military after highschool that only invades other countries and murders people in the name of "security".
All modern advertising seams manipulative. We can teach our children to be critical thinkers and not fall victim to advertising. Hiding it from them until their older may only make things worse.
If "mindless" means lack of critical though, you can also call it "faith". I would include Christian traditions under the label of mindless culture.
How much mindless culture could be the result of sheltered people who are subject to so much censorship and propaganda?
Another reason to use WPA isn't to keep them out of your network, but to protect your privacy. WEP keys are easy to crack and you can decrypt any packet with the same key, you don't need to sniff the entire session. WPA keys are much harder to crack and (afaik) you need to sniff from the beginning of the session to decrypt any part of it.
Using WEP or no encryption at all lets your neighbors and anyone in the area (or far away with the right antenna) watch your traffic. SSL will only help you so much since they can also potentially MITM any of your connections with ARP poisoning.
That's unfortunate. So you don't even have to use BT, if a tracker happens to generate your IP as one of the fakes you might still get sued. At what point do they believe you when you say you're innocent? before or after the search warrant is served?
Like the "Pilots Who Missed Airport By 150 Miles"?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/24/pilots-who-missed-airport_n_332461.html
That's because they compensate for how the size of the theater and the glasses reduce the light and colors.
"Creative decisions involving light levels also led to additional versions. 3D projection and glasses cut down the light the viewer sees, so "Avatar" also had separate color grades at different light levels, which are measured in foot lamberts."
"If we had just sent out one version of the movie, it would have been very dark (in the larger theaters)," Barnett says. "We had a very big flow chart with all of the different steps, so we could send the right media to the right theater."
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3i68c9747cd968ca8d5b27fcb8619d8b88
I think you're confused. By agreeing to the body scan, you aren't trading privacy for security. You are trading privacy for a lack of privacy and a security theater performance. The body scanners don't find the "bad guys" or the tools that the bad guys allegedly use. They do grossly invade personal privacy, violate constitutional rights and further inconvenience innocent civilians. Just like removing your shoes, pat downs and bag searches.
I like how you understand that fear can be used to motivate passengers to give up their rights. Even if they're statistically safer flying than anything else they'll do this year. Successful terrorist attacks on aircraft are scary and make the news companies lots of money, but they're also so rare they're practically non-existent.
Any effort spent trying to stop the terrorists that already successfully made it as far as the airport security screeners is a waste. They could just as easily attack the security checkpoint, the bus they road to the airport in, the school, mall or library on the way to the airport, or any other target.
There are far fewer terrorists in the world than you would like to believe. There aren't enough resources to guard every possible target against every possible attack. Guarding anything less than everything is ineffective because a terrorist can just attack whatever is left. Guarding only against attack strategies that have already happened, or arbitrary imaginary ones from the movies is also ineffective, because a terrorist can just come up with a new strategy at very little cost, while the cost of protecting against each thing is huge.
If you want to protect against an invisible enemy that can attack anywhere, at any time, through an means, you have to do it proactively and logically. You have to identify the enemy, their source and motivations before they plan and implement an attack. You don't want to waste resources and burn freedoms trying to guard against them after they're armed and at the gate.
Even if you could guard every target against every possible attack. Is that police state one you want to live in?
I'm not saying you aren't a "damned good driver", but I am ready to question to claim to having driven "literally" millions of miles.
Assuming you drive an average of 30 miles every day, including weekends and holidays, for 50 years.
30 * 365 * 50 = 547,500 miles
Let's add a 2000 mile trip each year into that estimate.
2000 * 50 = 100,000
Still not at even one million.
Also, there have been multiple studies that suggest there is a cognitive bias that causes people to overestimate their positive qualities and abilities and to underestimate their negative qualities, relative to others when it comes to driving.
In both studies in the US over 80% of people ranked themselves in the top 50% of drivers.
There could be historical value in something such as an article on competition between the VHS and Betamax formats. The details could be interesting to someone who wasn't around at the time to have personal experience with the subject. It could also be of interest to someone who was. It may be valuable to compare that format competition with older and newer format competitions. Lessons may have been learned in VHS vs Betamax that could be valuable in Blueray vs HD-DVD.
Information about television shows may also be valuable to fans of those shows. Even if you have no personal interest in "Kim Possible" or "Star Trek", someone else may still appreciate them as art or entertainment. That person may want to study every detail of the show and contribute to a collection of knowledge about its plot or characters.
I find it disappointing that an article can be classified as "non-notable" just because it isn't of personal interest to the person making the classification.
There's an article from 2007 about an LCD computer monitor that could take a direct shot from a crossbow without damage.
I agree. It's much easier to "burn" a pile of e-books.
The NSA also has an already existing and mature Information Assurance mission with experts publishing freely available cyber security guidance, configuration guides and software.
In my opinion the NSA already has the expertise and experience required. Not everyone working there is assigned to domestic espionage.
4 ATI 4870x2 cards in Quad Crossfire would require 1480 watts for just the cards.
http://www.guru3d.com/article/radeon-hd-4870-x2-review-crossfire/6