It's a solution to a problem that does exist, just not the problem you think it is.
It saves you having to store your plane (with attendant fees) and rent a car (more money) or arrange for a ride (more hassle) after flying halfway across the country. Just fold in the wings and drive from the airport to wherever you're actually going.
Now the question remains is how much this thing will cost and whether it will be within the price range of the above mentioned small aircraft pilot.
Then this could replace the credit card system as it currently stands.
Probably not. We've already got a replacement for the credit card systems called Interac. It's a direct debit transfer system with way lower fees than the credit card companies.
This would likely go in the niche currently partially occupied by Interac's Flash and e-transfer services, but be even simpler for small transactions.
When a city or state enacts draconian gun control laws - crime goes up. When a city or state relaxes gun control laws - crime goes down.
Awesome. It's not like the borders between states are wide fucking open. The USA isn't the USSR (other similarities notwithstanding) and there's no internal borders, so people can wander over to another state with no gun control laws worth being called such and take a truckload of guns back to their home state, dodging the laws of the latter. Gun control (or control of any other readily transportable good) is completely and totally pointless at any level below national.
But no, use a non-functional implementation to dismiss the entire concept, ignoring other countries, like the one directly north of you.
Yes, but you can't get one with a good screen size and a recent Android version. I am aware of precisely ONE Android phone with a keyboard that runs JB 4.1 and 0 that have 4.2.
I believe there's a grand total of 11 that even run ICS, and half of those are Sprint/Verizon CDMA2000 devices.
Given how close you need to get to do this, more like wargrinding.
Testing with my GS3 and Interac Flash-enabled debit card, the card needed to be in physical contact with the back of the phone to be read, despite their "4 inches" claim.
The spooks I knew used to spoke of "CRT-TV" as they could readily pickup the RF emissions of monitors outside the building where they were located, permitting the remote viewing of the monitor screens.
2.4GHz is not unregulated, it's unlicensed. There's significant amounts of regulation on how you're allowed to transmit on that band, including maximum power. Go read 47 CFR 15C.
That only applies if you're talking about tritiated water (water containing tritium rather than hydrogen). If it's water contaminated with radioactive materials (like Strontium-90 in this case) distilling will remove the contaminant like it would anything else.
If anyone knows a way -- either on Linux or Windows 7 -- to record a list of SSIDs which are visible over time, I'll run it on my bus ride and see how many unique networks are visible during the entire route.
InSSIDer might be what you're looking for. Also available for Android and Mac.
Your cell carrier doesn't count as an ISP for your smartphone? You don't get a publicly routable address on any cell network I've used.
It's a solution to a problem that does exist, just not the problem you think it is.
It saves you having to store your plane (with attendant fees) and rent a car (more money) or arrange for a ride (more hassle) after flying halfway across the country. Just fold in the wings and drive from the airport to wherever you're actually going.
Now the question remains is how much this thing will cost and whether it will be within the price range of the above mentioned small aircraft pilot.
Then this could replace the credit card system as it currently stands.
Probably not. We've already got a replacement for the credit card systems called Interac. It's a direct debit transfer system with way lower fees than the credit card companies.
This would likely go in the niche currently partially occupied by Interac's Flash and e-transfer services, but be even simpler for small transactions.
It might be worth pointing out that Lama Smith is opposed to abortion, and thus most likely anything to do with stem cell research.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamar_S._Smith#Tenure
Thankfully, research on those subjects probably falls under the NIH's umbrella, rather than the NSF.
When a city or state enacts draconian gun control laws - crime goes up. When a city or state relaxes gun control laws - crime goes down.
Awesome. It's not like the borders between states are wide fucking open. The USA isn't the USSR (other similarities notwithstanding) and there's no internal borders, so people can wander over to another state with no gun control laws worth being called such and take a truckload of guns back to their home state, dodging the laws of the latter. Gun control (or control of any other readily transportable good) is completely and totally pointless at any level below national.
But no, use a non-functional implementation to dismiss the entire concept, ignoring other countries, like the one directly north of you.
Yes, but you can't get one with a good screen size and a recent Android version. I am aware of precisely ONE Android phone with a keyboard that runs JB 4.1 and 0 that have 4.2.
I believe there's a grand total of 11 that even run ICS, and half of those are Sprint/Verizon CDMA2000 devices.
How fast does it read the card?
Using the TagInfo app from NXP (Who apparently made the NFC chip in my card), takes about 1.5 seconds to read it.
Is it impossible for someone to implement a way (even brute-force) to get those 3 (or 4) digit numbers?
Sure, you might even get 4 or 5 attempts before you get locked out.
Given how close you need to get to do this, more like wargrinding.
Testing with my GS3 and Interac Flash-enabled debit card, the card needed to be in physical contact with the back of the phone to be read, despite their "4 inches" claim.
The news is them being convicted. Your link is about them pressing charges.
An average nuclear reactor core (at least here in Canada) generates about 1000 MW
And the NPD reactor only produced 22MW. It's called a prototype. You generally make one before you start scaling something up.
then require that every person own a gun to protect their neighbor as well.
Add in mandatory semi-yearly safety and marksmanship training.
All the Thunderbolt rights, including trademark, belong to Intel. Apple registered the trademark initially, but then gave it to Intel sometime in 2011
What happens next?
The driving computer sees the 4 feet of water ahead using the cameras/radar and stops because it determines the water is too deep to ford?
It does look like they're starting to mend their ways on that. The One's source is already out with the actual device still more than a week away.
The spooks I knew used to spoke of "CRT-TV" as they could readily pickup the RF emissions of monitors outside the building where they were located, permitting the remote viewing of the monitor screens.
Yes, it's called Van Eck phreaking. It's not exactly new.
Speaking of which, I wonder if they will offer prescription Google Glass or if they expect the bespectacled amongst us to wear contact lenses.
Yes, there is a prescription lens version coming.
Compare
1. Soundproofing a building
2. Setting up a massive audio system to blast white noise at 194dB and drown out all other sounds.
The former is legal, the latter will get you cited for noise violations. The former only affects your property, the latter extends beyond it.
A cell jammer is exactly the same thing.
If the spectrum were truly open, it would be chaos; completely unusable for all but local communications.
Then how does Wifi work?
By not being truly open. WiFi is unlicensed, not unregulated.
Here's the regulations on unlicensed intentional radiators, such as WiFi equipment.
2.4GHz is not unregulated, it's unlicensed. There's significant amounts of regulation on how you're allowed to transmit on that band, including maximum power. Go read 47 CFR 15C.
His decision in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association is also one most here would agree with.
No, they use the American definition of "Fiscal conservative", which treats each word separately.
Conservative = "Favoring the maintenance of the status quo"
Fiscal status quo in the USA = "Deficits, Deficits, Deficits for the last 50+ years".
Researchers would debunk a claim like that in short order, I think.
When has a debunking ever stopped unscrupulous organizations from continuing the use the same bullshit, possibly under a different name?
That only applies if you're talking about tritiated water (water containing tritium rather than hydrogen). If it's water contaminated with radioactive materials (like Strontium-90 in this case) distilling will remove the contaminant like it would anything else.
If anyone knows a way -- either on Linux or Windows 7 -- to record a list of SSIDs which are visible over time, I'll run it on my bus ride and see how many unique networks are visible during the entire route.
InSSIDer might be what you're looking for. Also available for Android and Mac.