There's the possibility of non-fraud. Take a drop of blood. Put it in a 1l jug of water. Agitate. Separate into 100 containers. run a mass spectrometer against some number of them, compare the results to the reference outputs. Re-test on the remaining samples to eliminate false positives.
That's not what they did. That's not an answer. But that's one possible way to do what they claimed without being a fraud. What was missing before was the machine learning to get good reference outputs. So the entire thing was plausible, which is why they were always so close.
I expect they were expecting to make the breakthrough before anyone knew they didn't have anything.
Im not part of the community. You are the only one desperate to hear how smart you are. I see evidence for both sides, and weigh it up. That you can't doesn't mean nobody else can.
You can record on the small device and playback on a larger one. I play from a 5" screen to a 50"+ screen all the time. Much better than reformatting a video for each device it's on.
SD cards do not mostly "stay put" except to people who don't understand their intended usage.
In phones with removable batteries, the SD card is generally hidden next to the SIM and requires moving the battery to get to it. So you can't swap while the phone is usable at all. Most find that inconvenient, and don't do it because it's too much trouble. Same for the ones with the non-swappable battery. You have to pull the SIM to get to the SD card. So your "phone" isn't, so long as the SD card is out.
Compare that to a camera/PC setup. The camera ejects the SD card easily while powered up. All features, except storage, still work. Hot swap into and out of the PC, and pop back in the camera that's still working. Though, for anyone doing that much movement of data, they use a cable, rather than a card. So the card stays in place.
At this point, it looks like SD cards move quite rarely. Single load of your music collection, then pop it in and leave it for a few years.
I was indeed astonished to see that the S6 Edge+ didn't have an SD card slot, given the size of the phone, the awesome quality of the camera (you don't want to store everything on Google reduced-quality cloud) and... the price !
Then you are dumb. It wasn't about features or users. It was about Kies. No SD forces you to use Kies daily. Samsung realized nobody was using their shitty store or apps. So they tried a move to force everyone to use it. They realized they don't have the pull in the market they hoped for.
TouchWiz sucks, and makes things worse for the user, not better. But to force to use their apps, they removed features to leave their apps as the only way to do things. It backfired, and they are now a "market leader" only when it comes to price.
You don't need to store at low res in Google if you store on your PC and sync daily with Kies Samsung was pushing their own failed apps over Google's successful ones. Samsung is dumb. Rather than riding Google's success, they attacked Google while using Google. The confusing stance caused a massive loss in market share. Did I mention TouchWiz sucks.
They sell more outside the US than in. The US market is perverted with great cellular coverage at high prices. The rest of the world has more metered data. People still use sneakernet a lot. Also, you don't have kids. Load 3-5 favorite movies on a mobile device, and have it around for trips and long waits. There's no reason to even have a cellular plan if you have WiFi at home and sufficient on-board storage.
Your narrow world view is the exception, not the norm. Even if 90% of your tiny circle of friends think the same as you.
There's no evidence a "mistake" was made. Those outraged over another dead innocent are throwing anger at Facebook for a 'technical glitch" in a new feature. Facebook has indicated it was a "technical" error, and not a censorship error.
But, in the conservative groups, like Slashdot, the row over the inaccessibility of the video gets covered more than the dead guy shown in it.
Reality has a liberal bias, so the conservatives fled Facebook because they are unhappy with reality. They went to actual walled gardens to hide from the truth, and Facebook, recognizing the users left, displayed a "bias" towards their customers.
I'm sorry if the modern definition of "OEM" doesn't fit what you think it does, but that's how it is now. If you disagree, I invite you to email the owners of all these auto parts sites and argue with them about it.
Then go edit Wikipedia. I quoted them, and you called me wrong. I'm not wrong. I'm just the messenger.
And your site doesn't sell "OEM parts. They sell "genuine Mazda parts" They say so themselves. They just name themselves OEM for the idiots that don't know the difference. you have been told. You refuse to listen. Ignorant is curable. Stupid isn't.
I'm sure that was part of the "hack". Having the person hacked wear the watch while typing a script for hours. Just like in the wild.
When I was using a known-compromised computer, I typed in my password in a way that the keylogger didn't catch it. "ass" click before the first a "P" click after the last s "word". Sure, someone could have a good start at guessing it, but the keylogger didn't catch it directly.
I also expect the test script is not a strong password. "I have a dream" or something like that. They also map only the one hand, so a 2-handed word is pure guesswork. ,br.They did mention they train it on themselves. But no word on the accuracy of applying the training across people. No mention of accuracy at all.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
When referring to auto parts, OEM refers to the manufacturer of the original equipment, that is, the parts assembled and installed during the construction of a new vehicle. In contrast, aftermarket parts are those made by companies other than the OEM, that might be installed as replacements after the car comes out of the factory. For example, if Ford used Autolite spark plugs, Exide batteries, Bosch fuel injectors, and Ford's own engine blocks and heads when building a car, then car restorers and collectors consider those to be the OEM parts.
If you want the OEM spark plugs, you buy Autolite. You can buy them from Ford, but they are the same, at a higher cost.
Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) is a company that makes a part or subsystem that is used in another company's end product.[1] For example, if Acme Manufacturing Co. makes power cords that are used on IBM computers, Acme is an OEM.
The point is, OEM means "not from the brand." OEM explicitly means "not Mazda" in this context. If it were a Mazda part, the correct wording would be "a Mazda part". An aftermarket part built to the original specifications (no better, no worse), is considered "OEM" where I'm from (Texas), and the maker of the part selling it is the actual OEM.
It took about 10,000 a year before they started to look into seatbelts. About the same 10,000 a year before DUI was cracked down on. So why a single one for Tesla? Oh yeah, the Luddites here hate Tesla or progress.
flying does not take the 3.5 hours listed in the article
How long does it take to get from the center of one city to the other if you fly? 30 minutes to the airport, 30 minutes through gates, check in and all that, 1 hour flight, 30 minutes to get out at the other end, and 30 minutes to get to the city center. Adjust the local times to match your area. I've seen the same elsewhere. Dallas and Houston may be connected with a high speed rail that used the same idea in calculating travel times.
It's an effort to compare the services with an obvious bias, but pretending to be valid.
Yes. In fact, many smart watches recommend it (though I only recall it specifically when reading the directions for a Fitbit Charge HR, I can't speak to any others, but step count is impacted by dominant-hand movements.
What I can't understand is how they can get keys from a wrist. My wrist is relatively still. I use a wrist rest, and I use my fingers to reach the keys, and moving my wrist is only when using numbers or symbols. And I touch-type, so I don't move my arms much at all, but my fingers are moving. I'd be amazed if they could sense the movement of the tendons in the wrist. If that's the case, you can measure pulse with them. My pulse makes my wrist move as well. So why are there no apps for that? Makes me think they aren't sensitive enough to have exploits work outside the lab.
OEM (at least where I've heard it) is used to mean "OEM" as in park manufacturer (not maker of the car). That is, if Delphi makes the radio, and you buy a replacement from Delphi, it's OEM, but you didn't buy it from the car manufacturer, which would be GM. OEM is used to mean "unbranded, but same quality as original" as opposed to "cheap", or "genuine". OEM is cheaper than dealer, and the same "quality", but not the same warranty.
The only person I knew with a car that old, took it out about twice a year, for parades. He rebuilt the engine every 5 years or so. When you count it, it wasn't too far off one engine rebuild every 10 miles. And I've heard people complain about changing spark plugs at 50,000 miles. My father was the same, remembering his first car he had for years, which was rebuilt many times.
Why haven't you been pushing for labeling of hybrids too?
I have been. Go look at the last article on here about it. Oh wait, there hasn't been one. So you assume from the lack of an off-topic disclaimer, that I'm something I'm not.
You aren't interested in sensible labeling of dangerous products, you are interested in labeling products to induce fear in people.
I'm about sensible and open labels. Your lies about what you'd like my position to be won't change it. Why do you hate the truth? The only thing I've said about GMO is that I hate the evil companies pushing it, and I want it labeled so I can ensure my money doesn't go to Monsanto's profit. It's the same reason we have "source" labels on clothing and such.
Or is that all racism?
There is no reason to label GMO products, they are perfectly safe.
So making a roundup resistant crop, you are 100% certain that it will be sprayed with roundup no more than any other crop? Then you are as stupid as you sound.
This isn't "may contain nuts", this is "may contain water".
Water is toxic, and has killed more people than marijuana. Most things are toxic, even air, in the right quantities. So lying and saying something toxic is "perfectly safe" is a lie, on all fronts. Not even water is perfectly safe.
I'm pro-GMO, and you are a lying sack of shit. Radiation wasn't used as you describe. You are lying about the facts, and lying about my opinion. I never said anything anti-GMO. So stop lying. Why do you hate the truth? Label the foods, and let people decide.
Because we are going to spend millions investigating Tesla for a single death. It's silly and a waste. We don't do that. There are 30,000+ deaths a year, if we investigated them all to the extent we are investigating the Tesla death, we'd bankrupt the country. So ask the question again, but without the blinders on.
No, there's not much significance, and even if there were, it wouldn't be valid. So far, with one death, there's not enough data to draw a valid conclusion. But at least it was more facts than the person I was responding to.
My cyanide is all natural.
There's the possibility of non-fraud. Take a drop of blood. Put it in a 1l jug of water. Agitate. Separate into 100 containers. run a mass spectrometer against some number of them, compare the results to the reference outputs. Re-test on the remaining samples to eliminate false positives.
That's not what they did. That's not an answer. But that's one possible way to do what they claimed without being a fraud. What was missing before was the machine learning to get good reference outputs. So the entire thing was plausible, which is why they were always so close.
I expect they were expecting to make the breakthrough before anyone knew they didn't have anything.
Im not part of the community. You are the only one desperate to hear how smart you are. I see evidence for both sides, and weigh it up. That you can't doesn't mean nobody else can.
They pay me $1,000,000 per lie told in their support. $0 so far.
You can record on the small device and playback on a larger one. I play from a 5" screen to a 50"+ screen all the time. Much better than reformatting a video for each device it's on.
SD cards do not mostly "stay put" except to people who don't understand their intended usage.
In phones with removable batteries, the SD card is generally hidden next to the SIM and requires moving the battery to get to it. So you can't swap while the phone is usable at all. Most find that inconvenient, and don't do it because it's too much trouble. Same for the ones with the non-swappable battery. You have to pull the SIM to get to the SD card. So your "phone" isn't, so long as the SD card is out.
Compare that to a camera/PC setup. The camera ejects the SD card easily while powered up. All features, except storage, still work. Hot swap into and out of the PC, and pop back in the camera that's still working. Though, for anyone doing that much movement of data, they use a cable, rather than a card. So the card stays in place.
At this point, it looks like SD cards move quite rarely. Single load of your music collection, then pop it in and leave it for a few years.
I was indeed astonished to see that the S6 Edge+ didn't have an SD card slot, given the size of the phone, the awesome quality of the camera (you don't want to store everything on Google reduced-quality cloud) and ... the price !
Then you are dumb. It wasn't about features or users. It was about Kies. No SD forces you to use Kies daily. Samsung realized nobody was using their shitty store or apps. So they tried a move to force everyone to use it. They realized they don't have the pull in the market they hoped for.
TouchWiz sucks, and makes things worse for the user, not better. But to force to use their apps, they removed features to leave their apps as the only way to do things. It backfired, and they are now a "market leader" only when it comes to price.
You don't need to store at low res in Google if you store on your PC and sync daily with Kies Samsung was pushing their own failed apps over Google's successful ones. Samsung is dumb. Rather than riding Google's success, they attacked Google while using Google. The confusing stance caused a massive loss in market share. Did I mention TouchWiz sucks.
They sell more outside the US than in. The US market is perverted with great cellular coverage at high prices. The rest of the world has more metered data. People still use sneakernet a lot. Also, you don't have kids. Load 3-5 favorite movies on a mobile device, and have it around for trips and long waits. There's no reason to even have a cellular plan if you have WiFi at home and sufficient on-board storage.
Your narrow world view is the exception, not the norm. Even if 90% of your tiny circle of friends think the same as you.
There's no evidence a "mistake" was made. Those outraged over another dead innocent are throwing anger at Facebook for a 'technical glitch" in a new feature. Facebook has indicated it was a "technical" error, and not a censorship error.
But, in the conservative groups, like Slashdot, the row over the inaccessibility of the video gets covered more than the dead guy shown in it.
Reality has a liberal bias, so the conservatives fled Facebook because they are unhappy with reality. They went to actual walled gardens to hide from the truth, and Facebook, recognizing the users left, displayed a "bias" towards their customers.
You mean Rove/Cheney, right?
I'm sorry if the modern definition of "OEM" doesn't fit what you think it does, but that's how it is now. If you disagree, I invite you to email the owners of all these auto parts sites and argue with them about it.
Then go edit Wikipedia. I quoted them, and you called me wrong. I'm not wrong. I'm just the messenger.
And your site doesn't sell "OEM parts. They sell "genuine Mazda parts" They say so themselves. They just name themselves OEM for the idiots that don't know the difference. you have been told. You refuse to listen. Ignorant is curable. Stupid isn't.
I'm sure that was part of the "hack". Having the person hacked wear the watch while typing a script for hours. Just like in the wild.
When I was using a known-compromised computer, I typed in my password in a way that the keylogger didn't catch it. "ass" click before the first a "P" click after the last s "word". Sure, someone could have a good start at guessing it, but the keylogger didn't catch it directly.
I also expect the test script is not a strong password. "I have a dream" or something like that. They also map only the one hand, so a 2-handed word is pure guesswork.
,br.They did mention they train it on themselves. But no word on the accuracy of applying the training across people. No mention of accuracy at all.
But keyboards do.
"Last year, a research group showed that a watch's sensors can reveal keystrokes on a computer keyboard."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
When referring to auto parts, OEM refers to the manufacturer of the original equipment, that is, the parts assembled and installed during the construction of a new vehicle. In contrast, aftermarket parts are those made by companies other than the OEM, that might be installed as replacements after the car comes out of the factory. For example, if Ford used Autolite spark plugs, Exide batteries, Bosch fuel injectors, and Ford's own engine blocks and heads when building a car, then car restorers and collectors consider those to be the OEM parts.
If you want the OEM spark plugs, you buy Autolite. You can buy them from Ford, but they are the same, at a higher cost.
Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) is a company that makes a part or subsystem that is used in another company's end product.[1] For example, if Acme Manufacturing Co. makes power cords that are used on IBM computers, Acme is an OEM.
The point is, OEM means "not from the brand." OEM explicitly means "not Mazda" in this context. If it were a Mazda part, the correct wording would be "a Mazda part". An aftermarket part built to the original specifications (no better, no worse), is considered "OEM" where I'm from (Texas), and the maker of the part selling it is the actual OEM.
It took about 10,000 a year before they started to look into seatbelts. About the same 10,000 a year before DUI was cracked down on. So why a single one for Tesla? Oh yeah, the Luddites here hate Tesla or progress.
Carter. He wasn't corrupt, but wasn't particularly effective as a president, either.
flying does not take the 3.5 hours listed in the article
How long does it take to get from the center of one city to the other if you fly? 30 minutes to the airport, 30 minutes through gates, check in and all that, 1 hour flight, 30 minutes to get out at the other end, and 30 minutes to get to the city center. Adjust the local times to match your area. I've seen the same elsewhere. Dallas and Houston may be connected with a high speed rail that used the same idea in calculating travel times.
It's an effort to compare the services with an obvious bias, but pretending to be valid.
Yes. In fact, many smart watches recommend it (though I only recall it specifically when reading the directions for a Fitbit Charge HR, I can't speak to any others, but step count is impacted by dominant-hand movements.
What I can't understand is how they can get keys from a wrist. My wrist is relatively still. I use a wrist rest, and I use my fingers to reach the keys, and moving my wrist is only when using numbers or symbols. And I touch-type, so I don't move my arms much at all, but my fingers are moving. I'd be amazed if they could sense the movement of the tendons in the wrist. If that's the case, you can measure pulse with them. My pulse makes my wrist move as well. So why are there no apps for that? Makes me think they aren't sensitive enough to have exploits work outside the lab.
OEM (at least where I've heard it) is used to mean "OEM" as in park manufacturer (not maker of the car). That is, if Delphi makes the radio, and you buy a replacement from Delphi, it's OEM, but you didn't buy it from the car manufacturer, which would be GM. OEM is used to mean "unbranded, but same quality as original" as opposed to "cheap", or "genuine". OEM is cheaper than dealer, and the same "quality", but not the same warranty.
The only person I knew with a car that old, took it out about twice a year, for parades. He rebuilt the engine every 5 years or so. When you count it, it wasn't too far off one engine rebuild every 10 miles. And I've heard people complain about changing spark plugs at 50,000 miles. My father was the same, remembering his first car he had for years, which was rebuilt many times.
Why haven't you been pushing for labeling of hybrids too?
I have been. Go look at the last article on here about it. Oh wait, there hasn't been one. So you assume from the lack of an off-topic disclaimer, that I'm something I'm not.
You aren't interested in sensible labeling of dangerous products, you are interested in labeling products to induce fear in people.
I'm about sensible and open labels. Your lies about what you'd like my position to be won't change it. Why do you hate the truth? The only thing I've said about GMO is that I hate the evil companies pushing it, and I want it labeled so I can ensure my money doesn't go to Monsanto's profit. It's the same reason we have "source" labels on clothing and such.
Or is that all racism?
There is no reason to label GMO products, they are perfectly safe.
So making a roundup resistant crop, you are 100% certain that it will be sprayed with roundup no more than any other crop? Then you are as stupid as you sound.
This isn't "may contain nuts", this is "may contain water".
Water is toxic, and has killed more people than marijuana. Most things are toxic, even air, in the right quantities. So lying and saying something toxic is "perfectly safe" is a lie, on all fronts. Not even water is perfectly safe.
I'm pro-GMO, and you are a lying sack of shit. Radiation wasn't used as you describe. You are lying about the facts, and lying about my opinion. I never said anything anti-GMO. So stop lying. Why do you hate the truth? Label the foods, and let people decide.
Because we are going to spend millions investigating Tesla for a single death. It's silly and a waste. We don't do that. There are 30,000+ deaths a year, if we investigated them all to the extent we are investigating the Tesla death, we'd bankrupt the country. So ask the question again, but without the blinders on.
No, there's not much significance, and even if there were, it wouldn't be valid. So far, with one death, there's not enough data to draw a valid conclusion. But at least it was more facts than the person I was responding to.