Personally I would much rather have one device that can do everything well, than two cheap devices that together can't even run PowerPoint decently.
But is the Surface Pro 2 that device? Is it thinner and lighter than Surface Pro? It seemed like the technology wasn't quite there for an X86 tablet, but Haswell may complete the picture, by running on a smaller battery.
Given they also have a new CPU, longer battery, and double the RAM, it just seems like trolling to emphasize the kickstand, as if they were leading with that. In saying this I am mainly criticizing the slashdot summary, although I was also interested to see how many commenters would fall for it.
I have never seen really stable frame-rates in video replay without hardware acceleration, even if CPU load is only a few percent. And this is only more true with higher resolution and tighter compression. Is H.265 basically similar enough to H.264 that the hardware acceleration in our GPUs can be applied to it?
No. The reaper has an operational altitude of 50,000 feet. You might somehow get a hobbyist RC plane more than half that high, but to then chase down and hit the reaper? No way, forget it. Even a Stinger missile can only get around half that high.
It's not just the purchase price; the F-22, for example, costs $68,362 per hour to fly. That's $4M every 60 hours. Even the relatively lowly F16 is over $20K per hour to fly. The Reaper by comparison is $3.6K/hr. Now consider how many hours they rack up with the types of missions that drones have enabled. That is how they are cheap.
I would love to see what just a 1080p TV signal actually looks like. As far as I know there is no way to get, say, a football game (which really would benefit from fine detail with fast motion) in 1080p. I watch on a DVR and boy, you can really see the compression artifacts and combing on a freeze-frame.
On my set, "motionflow" (interpolating frames in post-processing) is useless because it looks glassy smooth for a few frames and then judders for a few.
Here is an article with a good snapshot of tractor automation as it currently exists in commercial implementations. It sounds pretty modest - a tractor pulling a grain cart autonomously follows alongside a combine. One vendor mentions safety, and none mention regulation as an issue.
Okay, from what I'm reading here, this sounds like a gross over-reaction and a lot of rich old people taking shit way, way, way too seriously --
Have you heard about the covenants in gated communities? (Hope you don't want to ride a scooter!) You are talking about a bunch of rich guys. Their self-appointed function in life is to tell other people what to do, because they know better. The Augusta National golf club just started admitting blacks in 1990 and women just last year. Let us ponder on that for a moment.
PS: "The report found that even when foreign, state, and local taxes were included, the tax rate of large companies rose only to 16.9 percent of total income, still well below the official 35 percent." From the same link.
Well, I am going to defend Stack Overflow here, because I think it fills a very useful niche, which is "what is the best way to do X." There is no way that a "single-source" documentation, such as the API documentation or a book, can foresee all those specific questions. I do not go to stackoverflow to search for information, but very often when I use google to search, stackoverflow has the first useful information. As opposed to a straight wiki, what makes it useful is the (slashdot-like) moderation system.
It must be a digital display, because you can clearly see when a needle (like a speedometer) is pinned.
I think there is a real takehome lesson for designing instrumentation here. A device should not show the value "100" for "everything greater than 100." Under overload it should just show a row of hyphens or something. Even my cheap little digital kitchen scale does this.
...burns twice as long? Having a lower metabolism sounds like it would just be life in slow motion. Granted the increase in muscle strength seems contrary to this and is surprising. But still, a lower metabolism must mean less energy and vigor.
You just need to learn to love work that puts bread on the table. Electrical engineering is good at that.
It was, but is becoming less so. Would you feel entirely comfortable steering your kids towards a shrinking field? Read the following:
Computerworld - The number of electrical engineers in the workforce has declined over the last decade. It's not a steady decline, and it moves up and down, but the overall trend is not positive.
In 2002 the U.S. had 385,000 employed electrical engineers; in 2004, post dot.com bubble, it was at 343,000. It reached 382,000 in 2006, but has not risen above 350,000 since then, according to U.S. Labor Data.
There's also been some concern about the data coming out this year. In the first quarter of this year, unemployment for electrical engineers reached 6.5%, a figure the IEEE-USA, at the time, called "alarming."
It's not just law enforcement that has taken note of this. Retail outlets such as Macys, Babys âRâ(TM) Us, and CVS have installed systems in some of their stores that can spot shoppers who do unusual thingsâ"such as remove many items from a shelf at once, open a case that is normally locked, or walk suspiciously through the aisles.
In general it is good to make people accountable for the costs of their own actions. In the case of global warming, many of the people who burned much of the fossil fuel will be dead by the time the consequences occur, and in addition it's a global cause.
I wonder if we wouldn't just be better off writing some laws now that say, "look, don't come crying to us when your expensive beach-front property goes underwater. Factor that into the price before you buy."
We need a carbon tax just to speed the transition to less less-polluting energy sources; if we instead use that money to repair thousands of miles of coastline and keep burning fossil fuel, we solve nothing.
"You can set the specified minimum distance for DISTRONIC PLUS by varying the time span between one and two seconds. With this function, you can set the minimum distance that DISTRONIC PLUS keeps to the vehicle in front, dependent on vehicle speed. You can see this distance in the multifunction display
WARNING
It is up to the driver to exercise discretion to select the appropriate setting given road conditions, traffic, driver's preferred driving style and applicable laws and driving recommendations for safe following distance."
Even today, there are places that use lots of narrow vehicles and don't worry too much about lanes. Being in traffic there, it does feel like they are flowing around you, like water, or fish. (I'm not saying this is superior, or the way of the future... even just converting to electric scooters would revolutionize the ambience of the place, which has the constant droning of a million small-displacement engines).
The "brilliant" comment was obviously not in specific reference to the sentence that was placed before it in the slashdot summary. If he did anything especially clever, I would guess they are not publicizing the details.
It is all a question of timing, but it is practically unavoidable fairly soon. Having shrunk from mainframes to minis to workstations, desktops, laptops, netbooks, now smartphones, the next size reduction must be a "wearable" of some sort, and Google seems to be getting a lot of resistance to Glass. My guess is an iPhone-tethered watch.
I saw somebody posted the link a few messages down. To me the specs look like they from about 4 years in the future, and I find it hard to believe it won't be very compromised in some way - battery life, size, or reception. It would be so fantastic if I'm dead wrong.
But is the Surface Pro 2 that device? Is it thinner and lighter than Surface Pro? It seemed like the technology wasn't quite there for an X86 tablet, but Haswell may complete the picture, by running on a smaller battery.
Given they also have a new CPU, longer battery, and double the RAM, it just seems like trolling to emphasize the kickstand, as if they were leading with that. In saying this I am mainly criticizing the slashdot summary, although I was also interested to see how many commenters would fall for it.
I have never seen really stable frame-rates in video replay without hardware acceleration, even if CPU load is only a few percent. And this is only more true with higher resolution and tighter compression. Is H.265 basically similar enough to H.264 that the hardware acceleration in our GPUs can be applied to it?
No. The reaper has an operational altitude of 50,000 feet. You might somehow get a hobbyist RC plane more than half that high, but to then chase down and hit the reaper? No way, forget it. Even a Stinger missile can only get around half that high.
It's not just the purchase price; the F-22, for example, costs $68,362 per hour to fly. That's $4M every 60 hours. Even the relatively lowly F16 is over $20K per hour to fly. The Reaper by comparison is $3.6K/hr. Now consider how many hours they rack up with the types of missions that drones have enabled. That is how they are cheap.
On my set, "motionflow" (interpolating frames in post-processing) is useless because it looks glassy smooth for a few frames and then judders for a few.
Here is an article with a good snapshot of tractor automation as it currently exists in commercial implementations. It sounds pretty modest - a tractor pulling a grain cart autonomously follows alongside a combine. One vendor mentions safety, and none mention regulation as an issue.
A "defensive" weapon. What does that even mean, when the context here is explicitly that of repelling a counter-attack to our first strike?
If it can carry 3,840 x 2,160 resolution video at 60fps, then it can carry 1080p at 240 fps.
Have you heard about the covenants in gated communities? (Hope you don't want to ride a scooter!) You are talking about a bunch of rich guys. Their self-appointed function in life is to tell other people what to do, because they know better. The Augusta National golf club just started admitting blacks in 1990 and women just last year . Let us ponder on that for a moment.
PS: "The report found that even when foreign, state, and local taxes were included, the tax rate of large companies rose only to 16.9 percent of total income, still well below the official 35 percent." From the same link.
Says who? The GAO says 12.6%. But keep spouting that nonsense that any big companies actually pay the sticker price.
Well, I am going to defend Stack Overflow here, because I think it fills a very useful niche, which is "what is the best way to do X." There is no way that a "single-source" documentation, such as the API documentation or a book, can foresee all those specific questions. I do not go to stackoverflow to search for information, but very often when I use google to search, stackoverflow has the first useful information. As opposed to a straight wiki, what makes it useful is the (slashdot-like) moderation system.
Or economies of scale will kick in and the batteries will get a lot cheaper.
I think there is a real takehome lesson for designing instrumentation here. A device should not show the value "100" for "everything greater than 100." Under overload it should just show a row of hyphens or something. Even my cheap little digital kitchen scale does this.
...burns twice as long? Having a lower metabolism sounds like it would just be life in slow motion. Granted the increase in muscle strength seems contrary to this and is surprising. But still, a lower metabolism must mean less energy and vigor.
It was, but is becoming less so. Would you feel entirely comfortable steering your kids towards a shrinking field? Read the following:
There's still a fairly low limit on how many video streams one person can attend to, especially if it's busy. Roving robots may not be useful, but what is happening is the cameras are getting smarter in where they look, and when to alert the operator:
I wonder if we wouldn't just be better off writing some laws now that say, "look, don't come crying to us when your expensive beach-front property goes underwater. Factor that into the price before you buy."
We need a carbon tax just to speed the transition to less less-polluting energy sources; if we instead use that money to repair thousands of miles of coastline and keep burning fossil fuel, we solve nothing.
"You can set the specified minimum distance for DISTRONIC PLUS by varying the time span between one and two seconds. With this function, you can set the minimum distance that DISTRONIC PLUS keeps to the vehicle in front, dependent on vehicle speed. You can see this distance in the multifunction display
WARNING
It is up to the driver to exercise discretion to select the appropriate setting given road conditions, traffic, driver's preferred driving style and applicable laws and driving recommendations for safe following distance."
Even today, there are places that use lots of narrow vehicles and don't worry too much about lanes. Being in traffic there, it does feel like they are flowing around you, like water, or fish. (I'm not saying this is superior, or the way of the future... even just converting to electric scooters would revolutionize the ambience of the place, which has the constant droning of a million small-displacement engines).
The "brilliant" comment was obviously not in specific reference to the sentence that was placed before it in the slashdot summary. If he did anything especially clever, I would guess they are not publicizing the details.
My experience with Amp'd some years back was not great. I paid $100-$200 (I forget) to get started and they went out of business a few weeks later.
It is all a question of timing, but it is practically unavoidable fairly soon. Having shrunk from mainframes to minis to workstations, desktops, laptops, netbooks, now smartphones, the next size reduction must be a "wearable" of some sort, and Google seems to be getting a lot of resistance to Glass. My guess is an iPhone-tethered watch.
I saw somebody posted the link a few messages down. To me the specs look like they from about 4 years in the future, and I find it hard to believe it won't be very compromised in some way - battery life, size, or reception. It would be so fantastic if I'm dead wrong.