there's no way to interpolate in an unblurred fashion.
Actually, there is, but it takes more processing power than a TV is capable of doing in realtime at the moment.
Besides 48+ fps at 4K resolution, it would be nice to have expanded dynamic range (10,000:1 contrast ratio instead of only 256:1) and wide gamut color.
Watching Once Upon a Time in the West, I noticed how the dynamic range in the outdoor scenes was compressed in order to get both shadows and highlights to display on film. Higher contrast ratio displays, and media formats that support them, would allow us to "decompress" these scenes and make them look more lifelike. Sadly, I don't think we could recover lost color gamut in the same way.
Make the reservation transferrable, and suddenly it would create a market, eliminating the shortage of reservation slots. To get a reservation, just go to eBay. Of course, if you can find it on eBay and the restaurant isn't the seller, it's a sign that the restaurant charged too little (below the market clearing rate) for the reservation in the first place.
License plate trackers have no way of knowing where you are, only where your car is. It's strange how people in the USA forget that cars aren't people.
Anyway, if you don't want your car to be tracked, then stop operating deadly machinery on public roads. Should we stop tracking aircraft?
This is why we need separate bicycle paths and lanes separated from other traffic by barriers
It's pretty expensive to fully grade-separate a bicycle path. Anything less than full grade separation is hardly an improvement in safety, especially for experienced bicyclists, because being hit from behind is relatively rare.
You bring up a good point. NYC is replacing the word "accident" with "collision" because "In the past, the term 'accident' has sometimes given the inaccurate impression or connotation that there is no fault or liability associated with a specific event."
We should all think twice before using the word "accident." Because driver negligence is the number one cause of crashes, more often than not the word "accident" when used in the context of automobile collisions is imprecise at best, and deceptive at worst. And isn't it just easier to say "crash"?
Of course you can choose whether to pay rent. Many people choose the alternative of paying a mortgage. Others live in their parent's basement, or they lower their rent by renting just a room.
You can also choose whether to have children.
You can also choose to live in an area with a lot of employers or with only a few employers. It might cost more to live close to employment centers, but if that lets you get rid of an extra car, you would have an extra $9,122 per year that you could pay towards rent or a mortgage.
There's no such thing as a perfectly free market, but that shouldn't stop us from trying to make the market as efficient and equitable as possible.
The average commute in the USA is 16 miles, which would take just a little over an hour by bike. So it appears to be entirely possible for most of the population to remain employed without driving privileges.
If he made a joke about drunk driving, do you think his driving privileges should be permanently revoked too?
In both cases, a psychological exam might be prudent.
In the USA, driving privileges are rarely revoked permanently. You might get them taken away for a year or two, but then you're automatically eligible to be relicensed. In Germany, if you're convicted of an extreme DUI, your license is permanently revoked until you can prove, through a battery of physical and chemical tests, that you no longer have a drinking problem.
Identification on your car tracks where your car is, not where you are. Remember, car != person. A lot of people get the two confused.
In many cases, one may be a good proxy for the other, so if you don't like it, stop operating deadly machinery in the presence of others. Should the FAA stop tracking airplanes?
Someday these will be completely automated. Insert in eye, it does a thorough inspection, figures out what's wrong, and fixes it.
Maybe these can also help attach severed nerves and arteries. With the help of someone (or a robot) to hold the pieces together, a syringe full of these could swarm the body of someone who's just been blown to bits and put him back together again before the brain runs out of oxygen.
Surely food stamps for the few who need them is better for the economy than distorting the entire market for energy.
One external cost of energy is the cost of air pollution, up to $1,600 per person annually in health care costs, missed work, and so on. A market cannot work efficiently as long as these costs are shifted away from those who are directly involved in the transaction (the buyer and seller) and towards others (people who breath air) who neither sold nor consumed the energy but had to breathe the dirty air from it.
You can have a market completely free from government regulation or one that's as efficient as possible, but not both at the same time. Which do you choose?
The earth is mostly covered with water and most of the land is desert
And it takes just one straw to break the camel's back (or one wafer-thin mint to explode Mr. Creosote).
Radiation is related to the square of the temperature difference.
Unfortunately, we're melting the ice caps (which reflect radiation back into space), and water vapor creates a temperature feedback. That means as the earth warms, the warming will accelerate.
Having to pay much more for electricity will mean having less money left over for food...
That problem is already solved with food stamps.
high energy consumers, such as, you know, factories, will have to cut down production
Or put up solar panels. Maybe some of them will even build solar panels! That's good for the economy.
artificially inflating the cost of energy.
Actually, the price of energy has always been artificially low. Internalizing an external cost fixes a market failure, and making the market more efficient is good for the economy.
I love my Obihai OBi110 adapter. But after hearing the excellent call quality on Skype, I really wish wideband audio (a.k.a. HD Voice a.k.a. G.722) were available on Obihai+GV. Wideband audio is the future, and Google should try to keep up with it.
Hit them with confiscatory peak rates so bad that the most vulnerable will have to retreat to caves.
Or they'll stay downstairs where it's cooler, or close off unneeded rooms, or turn on the swamp cooler, or hang wet sheets in the open windows, or wear chilly pads, or turn off the A/C and visit a friend or go to the mall or the movie theater. Trust me, wonderful things happen when you remove price ceilings and allow the market to work.
But when the AC comes back on, it has to work harder because now the room is warmer... No energy has been saved in the long run...
No, that's just a myth. You can save 10% by turning the thermostat up 7-10 degrees during the day.
a tall thin peak of energy consumption has been flattened and made wider.
Electricity has been saved during the time of day when it's the most expensive to generate, because to save money, utilities fire up their cheapest sources of power first, and wait for periods of high demand before they fire up their more expensive sources of power. This is how smart meters save us money.
Smart meters help with peak power on a grid which can't handle the demand... It's a cheap way of dealing with a failure to invest in essential infrastructure.
"Can't handle the demand" is another way of saying demand is greater than supply--a shortage. A shortage occurs when the price is set below the going rate determined by supply and demand. A price that's too low encourages overconsumption and discourages investing in essential infrastructure.
we should let those who are willing to a pay a premium to crank their AC whenever they feel like it do that and use the money to improve the grid and build the infrastructure that's necessary to deliver that supply.
Some choice. The flat rate price of electricity will naturally rise to the peak hour price, and here's why. As customers move from flat rates to variable rates to save electricity, those who are left will naturally be those who wouldn't save money by switching--in other words, the ones who use most of their electricity during peak usage times. Because these customers will be using most of their electricity when it costs the utility the most to generate and deliver it, their rates must go up to pay their fair share. Eventually those few customers who are left will be the ones using 100% of their electricity during the most expensive periods, and therefore they will be paying the peak hour rate. At that point, there will be no incentive even for them to stay on the flat rate plan, because nobody who uses electricity during the cheaper hours will be left to subsidize them.
We can do better than turning off the AC when it gets hot.
Yes, we can install solar panels, which coincidentally work best when the sun is shining, to reduce the burden on the grid during the time it costs the electricity company the most to deliver electricity. But flat electricity rates don't provide the right incentive to do this.
if you are being antisocial to the grid by installing solar at your house, they can pay you less for the electricity you are generating than they charge you for the electricity you are consuming
This is only a problem when you produce more than you consume, which doesn't happen in price-conscious households with properly sized PV systems.
they can charge you less for electricity when you aren't there during the day to use it
Actually, they charge more during the day, when air conditioners are running and businesses are operating.
Coincidentally, this is also the time when solar energy is most productive. But flat rates counterproductively discourage people from putting up solar panels and reducing the strain on the grid.
even with huge storage capacity, there's no way you are going to be able to recharge your car while you are asleep
When solar makes up close to 100% of daily energy production, you will have a point.
Actually, there is, but it takes more processing power than a TV is capable of doing in realtime at the moment.
Besides 48+ fps at 4K resolution, it would be nice to have expanded dynamic range (10,000:1 contrast ratio instead of only 256:1) and wide gamut color.
Watching Once Upon a Time in the West, I noticed how the dynamic range in the outdoor scenes was compressed in order to get both shadows and highlights to display on film. Higher contrast ratio displays, and media formats that support them, would allow us to "decompress" these scenes and make them look more lifelike. Sadly, I don't think we could recover lost color gamut in the same way.
Make the reservation transferrable, and suddenly it would create a market, eliminating the shortage of reservation slots. To get a reservation, just go to eBay. Of course, if you can find it on eBay and the restaurant isn't the seller, it's a sign that the restaurant charged too little (below the market clearing rate) for the reservation in the first place.
So we built a computer that figured out the answer. Now we just need to build an even bigger computer to figure out the question!
License plate trackers have no way of knowing where you are, only where your car is. It's strange how people in the USA forget that cars aren't people.
Anyway, if you don't want your car to be tracked, then stop operating deadly machinery on public roads. Should we stop tracking aircraft?
Sounds like the implementation is a case of in-band signaling.
When your argument contains a logical fallacy, it's time to consider the possibility that you're on the wrong side of the truth.
The world needs more people on both sides of every argument pointing out these kinds of reasoning flaws.
It's pretty expensive to fully grade-separate a bicycle path. Anything less than full grade separation is hardly an improvement in safety, especially for experienced bicyclists, because being hit from behind is relatively rare.
You bring up a good point. NYC is replacing the word "accident" with "collision" because "In the past, the term 'accident' has sometimes given the inaccurate impression or connotation that there is no fault or liability associated with a specific event."
We should all think twice before using the word "accident." Because driver negligence is the number one cause of crashes, more often than not the word "accident" when used in the context of automobile collisions is imprecise at best, and deceptive at worst. And isn't it just easier to say "crash"?
Of course you can choose whether to pay rent. Many people choose the alternative of paying a mortgage. Others live in their parent's basement, or they lower their rent by renting just a room.
You can also choose whether to have children.
You can also choose to live in an area with a lot of employers or with only a few employers. It might cost more to live close to employment centers, but if that lets you get rid of an extra car, you would have an extra $9,122 per year that you could pay towards rent or a mortgage.
There's no such thing as a perfectly free market, but that shouldn't stop us from trying to make the market as efficient and equitable as possible.
The average commute in the USA is 16 miles, which would take just a little over an hour by bike. So it appears to be entirely possible for most of the population to remain employed without driving privileges.
In both cases, a psychological exam might be prudent.
In the USA, driving privileges are rarely revoked permanently. You might get them taken away for a year or two, but then you're automatically eligible to be relicensed. In Germany, if you're convicted of an extreme DUI, your license is permanently revoked until you can prove, through a battery of physical and chemical tests, that you no longer have a drinking problem.
Yes, you have a right to drive on private property, even without a license. Driving on public roads is a different matter, for good reason.
Identification on your car tracks where your car is, not where you are. Remember, car != person. A lot of people get the two confused.
In many cases, one may be a good proxy for the other, so if you don't like it, stop operating deadly machinery in the presence of others. Should the FAA stop tracking airplanes?
Someday these will be completely automated. Insert in eye, it does a thorough inspection, figures out what's wrong, and fixes it.
Maybe these can also help attach severed nerves and arteries. With the help of someone (or a robot) to hold the pieces together, a syringe full of these could swarm the body of someone who's just been blown to bits and put him back together again before the brain runs out of oxygen.
Government regulation reduced acid rain, the hole in the ozone layer, smog, the dust bowl, etc. And it can do so again with global warming.
Surely food stamps for the few who need them is better for the economy than distorting the entire market for energy.
One external cost of energy is the cost of air pollution, up to $1,600 per person annually in health care costs, missed work, and so on. A market cannot work efficiently as long as these costs are shifted away from those who are directly involved in the transaction (the buyer and seller) and towards others (people who breath air) who neither sold nor consumed the energy but had to breathe the dirty air from it.
You can have a market completely free from government regulation or one that's as efficient as possible, but not both at the same time. Which do you choose?
False, and also false.
That was a local phenomenon, not global.
And it takes just one straw to break the camel's back (or one wafer-thin mint to explode Mr. Creosote).
Unfortunately, we're melting the ice caps (which reflect radiation back into space), and water vapor creates a temperature feedback. That means as the earth warms, the warming will accelerate.
Changes in the orbit of the earth.
False.
That problem is already solved with food stamps.
Or put up solar panels. Maybe some of them will even build solar panels! That's good for the economy.
Actually, the price of energy has always been artificially low. Internalizing an external cost fixes a market failure, and making the market more efficient is good for the economy.
Skype works much better for me than either GrooveIP or Talkatone. I hope Google Voice's audio quality improves enough to match.
I love my Obihai OBi110 adapter. But after hearing the excellent call quality on Skype, I really wish wideband audio (a.k.a. HD Voice a.k.a. G.722) were available on Obihai+GV. Wideband audio is the future, and Google should try to keep up with it.
Or they'll stay downstairs where it's cooler, or close off unneeded rooms, or turn on the swamp cooler, or hang wet sheets in the open windows, or wear chilly pads, or turn off the A/C and visit a friend or go to the mall or the movie theater. Trust me, wonderful things happen when you remove price ceilings and allow the market to work.
No, that's just a myth. You can save 10% by turning the thermostat up 7-10 degrees during the day.
Electricity has been saved during the time of day when it's the most expensive to generate, because to save money, utilities fire up their cheapest sources of power first, and wait for periods of high demand before they fire up their more expensive sources of power. This is how smart meters save us money.
"Can't handle the demand" is another way of saying demand is greater than supply--a shortage. A shortage occurs when the price is set below the going rate determined by supply and demand. A price that's too low encourages overconsumption and discourages investing in essential infrastructure.
Some choice. The flat rate price of electricity will naturally rise to the peak hour price, and here's why. As customers move from flat rates to variable rates to save electricity, those who are left will naturally be those who wouldn't save money by switching--in other words, the ones who use most of their electricity during peak usage times. Because these customers will be using most of their electricity when it costs the utility the most to generate and deliver it, their rates must go up to pay their fair share. Eventually those few customers who are left will be the ones using 100% of their electricity during the most expensive periods, and therefore they will be paying the peak hour rate. At that point, there will be no incentive even for them to stay on the flat rate plan, because nobody who uses electricity during the cheaper hours will be left to subsidize them.
Yes, we can install solar panels, which coincidentally work best when the sun is shining, to reduce the burden on the grid during the time it costs the electricity company the most to deliver electricity. But flat electricity rates don't provide the right incentive to do this.
This is only a problem when you produce more than you consume, which doesn't happen in price-conscious households with properly sized PV systems.
Actually, they charge more during the day, when air conditioners are running and businesses are operating.
Coincidentally, this is also the time when solar energy is most productive. But flat rates counterproductively discourage people from putting up solar panels and reducing the strain on the grid.
When solar makes up close to 100% of daily energy production, you will have a point.