Six seconds is pushing the brake to the floor and being at a complete stop, with plenty of room to spare; even more time to slightly turn the wheel to avoid hitting something 150m away and not moving.
Better yet, another story is saying that the man has noticed autopilot having a problem at this particular stretch of road In the past - if you've seen it trying to send you into a k-rail at that bit a few times, what the fuck are you doing letting it drive on that bit, and not paying attention when it tells you to? Did he fall asleep or something?
I sure as shit wouldn't be using it there if I've gone so far as to take it to the service center to have them look at it for trying to drive into exactly that barrier in the past...
Man: Hey Doc, when I shove my head up my ass, I have problems breathing! Doctor: then pull your head out of your ass, and stop shoving it up there!
Is it just me, or does this seem fairly petty and petulant? Yeah, sure, the UK won't be in the Eurozone any more, but all you're doing is (in the best case) generating revenue by making all those domain owners re-register with addresses in continental Europe, and inviting a land rush for speculators and scammers in the worst case.
What, you don't want to lug around and power a completely redundant set of hardware inside your laptop for no better security (and a much bigger pain in the ass for usability) than a VM with a VPN connection?
Myself, I go for the open sauce solution. Sometimes new jars are way too hard to open, and you have to bang them against the counter to break the seal, etc.
I'm pretty sure Nvidia, Intel, and AMD have something to say about that.
AOMedia has the math working, and a published spec. Now they go over the code and make it faster, and work with the hardware guys. With the general hate for MPEG-LA out there, I wouldn't be surprised if in three years we look back on H.264 the way we look at MPEG-2 today. Man, that was a great standard back in the day, but the files are HUGE compared to AC-1!
Who cares when Apple joined, as long as they did. That's a big pool of patents that they've owned for a long time that became available to the group, and some very deep pockets that can help defend (or at least won't sue).
With Apple, Microsoft, Google, Intel, Nvidia, AMD on board, it's a done deal. In 18 months it will be difficult to find a shipping device that doesn't support AV1 at some level.
Fuck MPEG-LA. Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of assholes.
Using a lot of Novell NetWare these days? Remember when NT4 had their NetWare compatibility services, that allowed people to wholesale switch their servers overnight without even reinstalling a single piece of client software?
I'd bet that little piece of software would run afoul of the precedent set by this appeal...
Granted, Novell tripped on their own dicks enough to crash that ecosystem themselves, but Microsoft was pretty proud of how they fucked Novell back in the day.
Yeah, but Microsoft hangs on to projects far longer than Google does.
Past Microsoft would replace a product with something completely incompatible with no notice, leaving their "partners" twisting in the wind. Example: PlaysForSure that wouldn't play on Microsoft's own player hardware. It's unclear if this trait has been jettisoned from "Current Microsoft"
If you have so many web servers that it takes you two weeks to do this, you should spend the two weeks looking into infrastructure automation like Chef or Ansible.
This config change should take 5 minutes, not two weeks.
There's still many different ciphers and hashes available without the brand new - they are retiring age-old stuff that is on the edge of being broken, as well as ciphers and hashes that have known collisions and attacks.
If you're still using these 10+ year old ciphers for security, you aren't secure to begin with - your TLS client may as well tell you so outright.
What other reason would content publishers have for displaying advertisement? And what alternate means would you have for paying the bills for site hosting? Servers and data connection isn't cost-free.
Sorry, the days of running a hobby site and expecting for it to stay alive if you actually have content people want to see are long over. The real world uses load balancers, caching servers, content delivery networks, DDOS protection, multiple back-end servers, high throughput connections; and these all cost, even if you are using "the cloud".
Plus, if it's in the open, it can be regulated and taxed. And then the "vendors" could form guilds / unions to collectively pool for health insurance making the entire enterprise that much safer.
But all of those things (sex, taxes, unions, health insurance) are things this Republican Party are against.... so good luck with that.
I guess I'm shocked that people are just now coming to the revelation that anything they post on the Internet can be found and used by other people.
If the financial bureaus can't even keep your shit secure, why would a company that literally makes their money by productizing other people's information?
Berth 240 (the property mentioned in the article) also has rail access. I don't think something this big could ship on rail, but Boeing has (and continues to?) ship 737 fuselages by rail...
Six seconds is pushing the brake to the floor and being at a complete stop, with plenty of room to spare; even more time to slightly turn the wheel to avoid hitting something 150m away and not moving.
Driver not paying attention AT ALL.
Better yet, another story is saying that the man has noticed autopilot having a problem at this particular stretch of road In the past - if you've seen it trying to send you into a k-rail at that bit a few times, what the fuck are you doing letting it drive on that bit, and not paying attention when it tells you to? Did he fall asleep or something?
I sure as shit wouldn't be using it there if I've gone so far as to take it to the service center to have them look at it for trying to drive into exactly that barrier in the past...
Man: Hey Doc, when I shove my head up my ass, I have problems breathing!
Doctor: then pull your head out of your ass, and stop shoving it up there!
Is it just me, or does this seem fairly petty and petulant? Yeah, sure, the UK won't be in the Eurozone any more, but all you're doing is (in the best case) generating revenue by making all those domain owners re-register with addresses in continental Europe, and inviting a land rush for speculators and scammers in the worst case.
Seems pretty stupid.
What, you don't want to lug around and power a completely redundant set of hardware inside your laptop for no better security (and a much bigger pain in the ass for usability) than a VM with a VPN connection?
Myself, I go for the open sauce solution. Sometimes new jars are way too hard to open, and you have to bang them against the counter to break the seal, etc.
crawl -> walk -> run
I'm pretty sure Nvidia, Intel, and AMD have something to say about that.
AOMedia has the math working, and a published spec. Now they go over the code and make it faster, and work with the hardware guys. With the general hate for MPEG-LA out there, I wouldn't be surprised if in three years we look back on H.264 the way we look at MPEG-2 today. Man, that was a great standard back in the day, but the files are HUGE compared to AC-1!
Who cares when Apple joined, as long as they did. That's a big pool of patents that they've owned for a long time that became available to the group, and some very deep pockets that can help defend (or at least won't sue).
With Apple, Microsoft, Google, Intel, Nvidia, AMD on board, it's a done deal. In 18 months it will be difficult to find a shipping device that doesn't support AV1 at some level.
Fuck MPEG-LA. Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of assholes.
Using a lot of Novell NetWare these days? Remember when NT4 had their NetWare compatibility services, that allowed people to wholesale switch their servers overnight without even reinstalling a single piece of client software?
I'd bet that little piece of software would run afoul of the precedent set by this appeal...
Granted, Novell tripped on their own dicks enough to crash that ecosystem themselves, but Microsoft was pretty proud of how they fucked Novell back in the day.
Yeah, but Microsoft hangs on to projects far longer than Google does.
Past Microsoft would replace a product with something completely incompatible with no notice, leaving their "partners" twisting in the wind. Example: PlaysForSure that wouldn't play on Microsoft's own player hardware. It's unclear if this trait has been jettisoned from "Current Microsoft"
People ever had goodwill towards Oracle?
News to me. Sun, sure; but they've left the building.
If you have so many web servers that it takes you two weeks to do this, you should spend the two weeks looking into infrastructure automation like Chef or Ansible.
This config change should take 5 minutes, not two weeks.
There's still many different ciphers and hashes available without the brand new - they are retiring age-old stuff that is on the edge of being broken, as well as ciphers and hashes that have known collisions and attacks.
If you're still using these 10+ year old ciphers for security, you aren't secure to begin with - your TLS client may as well tell you so outright.
What other reason would content publishers have for displaying advertisement? And what alternate means would you have for paying the bills for site hosting? Servers and data connection isn't cost-free.
Sorry, the days of running a hobby site and expecting for it to stay alive if you actually have content people want to see are long over. The real world uses load balancers, caching servers, content delivery networks, DDOS protection, multiple back-end servers, high throughput connections; and these all cost, even if you are using "the cloud".
If they're smart, Democrats nominate Barney the purple dinosaur before they give Hillary another go. I mean, she couldn't even win against Trump...
This is not limited to the liberals. There's plenty of "conservatives" that have issues with parts of the Bill of Rights as well.
Plus, if it's in the open, it can be regulated and taxed. And then the "vendors" could form guilds / unions to collectively pool for health insurance making the entire enterprise that much safer.
But all of those things (sex, taxes, unions, health insurance) are things this Republican Party are against.... so good luck with that.
It isn't real competition if everyone isn't already on it,
So you're saying that for Facebook to have competition, they already need to be Facebook?
Good luck with that.
I guess I'm shocked that people are just now coming to the revelation that anything they post on the Internet can be found and used by other people.
If the financial bureaus can't even keep your shit secure, why would a company that literally makes their money by productizing other people's information?
So much undue rage over the most obvious shit.
It's not the worst product they've ever put out. Not by a long shot. See: Windows ME.
At least Windows 10 is useable and functional at what it's designed to do. And yes, it's designed to spy.
You don't realize that MAC addresses don't go past layer-3 routers.
Pull power cable. Plug USB boot drive in. Boot from USB. Flash malicious code to hardware because I'm root on my boot stick.
No, these vulnerabilities are just fine, according to you.
You could also skip the floating platform and just launch directly from the water, such as the proposed "Sea Dragon" superheavy lifter vehicle designed in the 60s would. Note that this design was roughly 40% taller than the Saturn V.
Berth 240 (the property mentioned in the article) also has rail access. I don't think something this big could ship on rail, but Boeing has (and continues to?) ship 737 fuselages by rail...
or a NIC card!
and if they have some unintended motor shutdown or a payload shift, it could become a big flipping rocket.