I have to disagree. I just left high school about six months ago to move on to Drexel University and when I left, one of the greatest things in our school was the US First Robotics competitions (http://www.usfirst.org). Many many people in our school were amazed by how the robot worked and many kids got involved in it. It's a great thing for high school students to do and they get to meet some really cool people in the process.
Now wait. Can I run this over SSH on my Red Hat server? Now that might slow down my hosting clients and they might yell but who cares?? It's Medal of Honor. No GUI, No Problem.
I have to agree. I think that NASA has to take a step back and look at what their current designs and protocols are. I spent an entire 1.5 hours today reading articles in 1 newspaper about all of the problems that can/did arise.
It seems that when people tell NASA something is wrong, they try some type of half-ass fix and send the astronauts on their way. Don't get me wrong, I think Space Exploration and NASA are great things, but they need to spend another 10-15 years with some R&D before they try to "advance" some more.
Staggering blow? This is awesome. All of the "1337 5cr1p7 k1dd135" will not have as many channels. It might drop to 56000 channels instead of the current 58000 warez channels.
The Sega Saturn and Sega Dreamcast both have two processors as well. It's a shame that the hyperthreading was never used to its full potential. It was too difficult for anyone to program it in assembly to make good use of it.
(yeh, grammer sux0rs)
Okay. I talked to someone at DoD. The main idea was that anything you can access on here is not a secret. They have a public accessible area for you to look at.
Anything that they don't want you to look at will not be available to you. He also made a point to say that, "I would not recommend trying to 'hack' into the site." I decided to just say okay and bye. Hmmm, what will Slashdot throw at me next?
OKay, I just wanna know one thing. If this is freely available online, do you really think that the government would come seek you out or that they would put potentially very secret documents right here on the web? I mean, they may not be the smartest, but they CAN think a little. Anyone?
I have to disagree. I just left high school about six months ago to move on to Drexel University and when I left, one of the greatest things in our school was the US First Robotics competitions (http://www.usfirst.org). Many many people in our school were amazed by how the robot worked and many kids got involved in it. It's a great thing for high school students to do and they get to meet some really cool people in the process.
Now wait. Can I run this over SSH on my Red Hat server? Now that might slow down my hosting clients and they might yell but who cares?? It's Medal of Honor. No GUI, No Problem.
Another interesting one that I have used many times is
http://www.chris.com/ascii/
Many categories and awesome design techniques.
Yes, the major question here is...
What are the other great uses for it?
-Boiling Water
-Cleaning the computer (without buying a can of air)
-Making the processor and other goodies SHINEY!
-Keeping the air moist
Ahh, there are sooo many more to choose from.
I have to agree. I think that NASA has to take a step back and look at what their current designs and protocols are. I spent an entire 1.5 hours today reading articles in 1 newspaper about all of the problems that can/did arise.
It seems that when people tell NASA something is wrong, they try some type of half-ass fix and send the astronauts on their way. Don't get me wrong, I think Space Exploration and NASA are great things, but they need to spend another 10-15 years with some R&D before they try to "advance" some more.
Staggering blow? This is awesome. All of the "1337 5cr1p7 k1dd135" will not have as many channels. It might drop to 56000 channels instead of the current 58000 warez channels.
Hurah for DalNET!
You are dumb. They didn't give out any passwords on the site. Nor did they have a place to create a password for it. :(
The Sega Saturn and Sega Dreamcast both have two processors as well. It's a shame that the hyperthreading was never used to its full potential. It was too difficult for anyone to program it in assembly to make good use of it. (yeh, grammer sux0rs)
Okay. I talked to someone at DoD. The main idea was that anything you can access on here is not a secret. They have a public accessible area for you to look at.
Anything that they don't want you to look at will not be available to you. He also made a point to say that, "I would not recommend trying to 'hack' into the site." I decided to just say okay and bye. Hmmm, what will Slashdot throw at me next?
OKay, I just wanna know one thing. If this is freely available online, do you really think that the government would come seek you out or that they would put potentially very secret documents right here on the web? I mean, they may not be the smartest, but they CAN think a little. Anyone?