You can't currently charge a Nissan Leaf at a Tesla supercharger. The Nissan leaf uses the japanese CHAdeMO charging standard for DC fast charging. Teslas can also use CHAdeMO chargers with an adaptor. Teslas don't charge as fast on a CHAdeMO charger.
Elon Musk has spoken about opening up the Tesla charging stations to other models of EV in the future once a billing mechanism was in place. This was the motivation behind his release of Tesla patents so that other manufacturers can use them at no cost. He wants to other car makers to build Tesla charger compatibility into their cars. As yet there are no signs of any other manufacturer doing this. Japanese manufacturers have put a lot of investment in CHAdeMO over many years.
Musk could also convert his charging stations to support multiple charging standards. At the moment there seems to be an impasse when it comes to charging compatibiltiy.
> Yes, the pilot claimed 200 feet - but that's past the effective 40 yard range of most shotguns.
Effective range depends on what effect you are trying to achieve. In hunting terms, effective range is the distance at which you can expect a humane kill of the creature you are hunting. Quadcopters are fragile things so I would expect the effective range to take one down to be much higher than the quoted range for hunting birds.
The corporate office where I work has many meeting rooms with projectors or TV screens. Typically there are two connectors wireed to the meeting room table - VGA d-sub and HDMI. I will never get the time back which I have spent watching presenters faff around with getting their display working.
More generally, the problem for the device owner is to have a connecting cable which will work with any foreign display they need to present on. I'd rather use DisplayPort myself, but the most commonly available digital port is HDMI. The sad reality is that USB-C HDMI output is going to be the most frequently used display output from next generation devices.
MHL uses the same physical connector as HDMI (at the display end) and the average punter isn't going to know if a given display supports MHL. I forsee that in the future, people will have the same problem with USB-c connections. They same physical port supports so many display standards that people who don't read the manual are going to become frustrated figuring out which ones are suppoted on a given device.
Ideally, I would like to see some sort of wireless display standard that's easy to pair and widely adopted, but that's not happening any time soon.
If the cell is General format rather than Text, excel can interpert what is typed in as a date or numeric format it it matches certain patterns.
When using the import wizard, to import text files, you can chose how Excel interprets each column (General, Text, Date or Skip) on the third step of the wizard. If you click Finish on the second step excel will default to general and perform conversions.
absolutely NO ONE outside of 1 Infinite Loop REALLY knows
Assuming Apple is sticking with it's regular September release cycle, there will be workers in a Chinese factory making the phones right now who will have a strong suspicion. Also people in the supply chain who may or may not have received their annual order of 3.5mm components.
Of course Apple might test the waters by having only one new model without the 3.5mm jack. Regardless, when it comes to the iphone7, the decision would have been made months if not years ago,
The term security by obscurity does not refer to any system that relies on secrecy - it refers to schemes that are flawed by being trivially easy to compromise once a secret is revealed.
Requiring a key to unlock a door is not security by obscurity, even though the pattern of the key is the secret. Hiding the key under the doormat is security by obscurity.
Hereditary peers no longer have a right to vote in the House of Lords. The overwhelming majority of the House of Lords are life peers with only 92 selected hereditary peers being members.
There are already XQD cards that seem to meet your criteria. Nikon has the interface on their higher end carmeras. The are bigger than SD cards, but more robust looking and still smaller than the old CF cards.
XQD uses PCI express to transfer data so the interface shouln't be a bootleneck at the moment.
My understanding is that SD had a controller on board to be easily imeplemented on portable devices which didn't have a PCIe bus.
What's telling is that she chose to present her viewpoint on a tech site. If she had conviction, she would present it on a forum with an audience of lawyers where she would face the criticism of her profession.
The judge (William Alsup) did rule that the java API were not copyrightable in the earlier case. The appeals court overturned this ruling. Hence the current case which was started on the basis that the API was copyrighted and the open question was about fair use.
The help command showed that there was a clone command.
"Tridge concluded that perhaps the clone command could be utilized to obtain a clone of a repository. Sure enough, it returned a large volume of output. Even better, that output was a simple series of SCCS files. At that point, the "reverse engineering" task is essentially complete. There was not a whole lot to it. "
I think they are no more deliberate than the SpaceX failures. What they are attempting is not easy. The fact that North Korea is testing these missiles in earnest is of concern.
> It's very likely that Apple knew the FBI could break in...
Apple implied this in court when they stated that no other government body had ever requested similar access.
It's pretty clear that the FBI's motive was not this particular case - they wanted Apple to create software to allow them to have routine access to iphones without effort.
Apple's intention was to keep the bar to access high enough to hope that their phones will only be broken in the worst cases, not routinely and without a warrant by any FBI officer who cares to do so.
The history of cryptography has shown that almost any cyrptosystem can be broken with enough time and effort.
The FBI chose to use this case as a pretext to demand that Apple provide them which what is effectively a master key to break into any iphone with negligible time or effort.
Apple's contention was that the master key solution was not warranted and they have been proven correct.
Sony could have made a PS4 console that was twice as powerful, but it would have been twice the size to accommodate the larger heat sinks and cost twice as much. They would not have sold 36 million PS4's if that was the case.
Consoles are built to a price point and that price point gets lower over the lifespan of the console. It's quantity over quality.
Even disregarding the community aspect, Odroid runs a weirdo/old software stack.
Ubuntu 16.04 is "weirdo/old"?
You are talking about the top of the software stack. He was talking about the bottom of the software stack - the firmware/binary blobs and the non-mainstream kernel drivers that you need to run on the odroid.
The reason I'd avoid it is because I' m trying to use one of their XU4s to run a GigE camera, and under Ubuntu 15.4 it appears to have issues handling jumbo frames...
Like he said - "weird/old software stack". It sounds like Hardkernel are doing hacks in the kernel source to get things partly working, but contributing them back to the mainline kernel (which is where QA happens in the linux world).
Riders normally have their bikes customised to to suit their preference. Wheels, stem, handlebar, saddle, chainrings and cassette are all set up by team mechanics.
"As to why someone would bring an obviously illegal bike into the pits, even if not to be used, is inexplicable. It’s not much different than inviting an EPO user to bring vials over to your trailer that you don’t plan to use."
You can also use Bluetooth keyboards and mice with most Android devices.
Ars Technica article discusses using Android as a desktop. While it just works in many cases, they point out that mouse drags are interpreted inconsistently. Sometimes they are like finger drags and sometimes they can highlight text as on a desktop.
You can't currently charge a Nissan Leaf at a Tesla supercharger. The Nissan leaf uses the japanese CHAdeMO charging standard for DC fast charging. Teslas can also use CHAdeMO chargers with an adaptor. Teslas don't charge as fast on a CHAdeMO charger.
Elon Musk has spoken about opening up the Tesla charging stations to other models of EV in the future once a billing mechanism was in place. This was the motivation behind his release of Tesla patents so that other manufacturers can use them at no cost. He wants to other car makers to build Tesla charger compatibility into their cars. As yet there are no signs of any other manufacturer doing this. Japanese manufacturers have put a lot of investment in CHAdeMO over many years.
Musk could also convert his charging stations to support multiple charging standards. At the moment there seems to be an impasse when it comes to charging compatibiltiy.
> Yes, the pilot claimed 200 feet - but that's past the effective 40 yard range of most shotguns.
Effective range depends on what effect you are trying to achieve. In hunting terms, effective range is the distance at which you can expect a humane kill of the creature you are hunting. Quadcopters are fragile things so I would expect the effective range to take one down to be much higher than the quoted range for hunting birds.
WW2 was also beneficial to financial elites.
See for example: Ford and GM Scrutinized for Alleged Nazi Collaboration
and IBM and the Holocaust
The corporate office where I work has many meeting rooms with projectors or TV screens. Typically there are two connectors wireed to the meeting room table - VGA d-sub and HDMI. I will never get the time back which I have spent watching presenters faff around with getting their display working.
More generally, the problem for the device owner is to have a connecting cable which will work with any foreign display they need to present on. I'd rather use DisplayPort myself, but the most commonly available digital port is HDMI. The sad reality is that USB-C HDMI output is going to be the most frequently used display output from next generation devices.
MHL uses the same physical connector as HDMI (at the display end) and the average punter isn't going to know if a given display supports MHL. I forsee that in the future, people will have the same problem with USB-c connections. They same physical port supports so many display standards that people who don't read the manual are going to become frustrated figuring out which ones are suppoted on a given device.
Ideally, I would like to see some sort of wireless display standard that's easy to pair and widely adopted, but that's not happening any time soon.
It could be either.
If the cell is General format rather than Text, excel can interpert what is typed in as a date or numeric format it it matches certain patterns.
When using the import wizard, to import text files, you can chose how Excel interprets each column (General, Text, Date or Skip) on the third step of the wizard. If you click Finish on the second step excel will default to general and perform conversions.
The US could apply to have the foreign citizen extradited to face trial. It would depend on the extradition treaty the two nations have in place.
e.g. Australian Silk Road employee Peter Nash was extradited from Queensland to face trial in the US.
Silk Road member Peter Nash avoids further US prison time
absolutely NO ONE outside of 1 Infinite Loop REALLY knows
Assuming Apple is sticking with it's regular September release cycle, there will be workers in a Chinese factory making the phones right now who will have a strong suspicion. Also people in the supply chain who may or may not have received their annual order of 3.5mm components.
Of course Apple might test the waters by having only one new model without the 3.5mm jack. Regardless, when it comes to the iphone7, the decision would have been made months if not years ago,
Try re-reading that post with a view towards comprehension. Once you understand it, you will realise how stupid you sound.
The term security by obscurity does not refer to any system that relies on secrecy - it refers to schemes that are flawed by being trivially easy to compromise once a secret is revealed.
Requiring a key to unlock a door is not security by obscurity, even though the pattern of the key is the secret.
Hiding the key under the doormat is security by obscurity.
Hereditary peers no longer have a right to vote in the House of Lords. The overwhelming majority of the House of Lords are life peers with only 92 selected hereditary peers being members.
There are already XQD cards that seem to meet your criteria. Nikon has the interface on their higher end carmeras. The are bigger than SD cards, but more robust looking and still smaller than the old CF cards.
XQD uses PCI express to transfer data so the interface shouln't be a bootleneck at the moment.
My understanding is that SD had a controller on board to be easily imeplemented on portable devices which didn't have a PCIe bus.
What's telling is that she chose to present her viewpoint on a tech site. If she had conviction, she would present it on a forum with an audience of lawyers where she would face the criticism of her profession.
The judge (William Alsup) did rule that the java API were not copyrightable in the earlier case. The appeals court overturned this ruling. Hence the current case which was started on the basis that the API was copyrighted and the open question was about fair use.
Spirit duplicators used alcohol based solvents and smelled good, much better than mimeograph prints. Spirit duplicators typically used purple ink.
Here is a contemporary account based on Tridge's talk at linux.conf.au in 2005
The help command showed that there was a clone command.
"Tridge concluded that perhaps the clone command could be utilized to obtain a clone of a repository. Sure enough, it returned a large volume of output. Even better, that output was a simple series of SCCS files. At that point, the "reverse engineering" task is essentially complete. There was not a whole lot to it. "
I think they are no more deliberate than the SpaceX failures. What they are attempting is not easy. The fact that North Korea is testing these missiles in earnest is of concern.
> It's very likely that Apple knew the FBI could break in ...
Apple implied this in court when they stated that no other government body had ever requested similar access.
It's pretty clear that the FBI's motive was not this particular case - they wanted Apple to create software to allow them to have routine access to iphones without effort.
Apple's intention was to keep the bar to access high enough to hope that their phones will only be broken in the worst cases, not routinely and without a warrant by any FBI officer who cares to do so.
The history of cryptography has shown that almost any cyrptosystem can be broken with enough time and effort.
The FBI chose to use this case as a pretext to demand that Apple provide them which what is effectively a master key to break into any iphone with negligible time or effort.
Apple's contention was that the master key solution was not warranted and they have been proven correct.
Sony could have made a PS4 console that was twice as powerful, but it would have been twice the size to accommodate the larger heat sinks and cost twice as much. They would not have sold 36 million PS4's if that was the case.
Consoles are built to a price point and that price point gets lower over the lifespan of the console. It's quantity over quality.
Even disregarding the community aspect, Odroid runs a weirdo/old software stack.
Ubuntu 16.04 is "weirdo/old"?
You are talking about the top of the software stack. He was talking about the bottom of the software stack - the firmware/binary blobs and the non-mainstream kernel drivers that you need to run on the odroid.
The reason I'd avoid it is because I' m trying to use one of their XU4s to run a GigE camera, and under Ubuntu 15.4 it appears to have issues handling jumbo frames ...
Like he said - "weird/old software stack". It sounds like Hardkernel are doing hacks in the kernel source to get things partly working, but contributing them back to the mainline kernel (which is where QA happens in the linux world).
Riders normally have their bikes customised to to suit their preference. Wheels, stem, handlebar, saddle, chainrings and cassette are all set up by team mechanics.
The CX Magazine article said it best:
"As to why someone would bring an obviously illegal bike into the pits, even if not to be used, is inexplicable. It’s not much different than inviting an EPO user to bring vials over to your trailer that you don’t plan to use."
Flagship phones released last year should all have hardware HVEC decoders.
You can also use Bluetooth keyboards and mice with most Android devices.
Ars Technica article discusses using Android as a desktop. While it just works in many cases, they point out that mouse drags are interpreted inconsistently. Sometimes they are like finger drags and sometimes they can highlight text as on a desktop.
How do you handle backwards compatibility with devices or chargers that can't follow the new communications protocol?
Perhaps you think you are smarter than the engineers that designed USB-C and USB 3.1, but I do not.