You missed the best part: and can even reassemble emails as they are typed out by the user
How the fuck do they propose to do that without installing a trojan? Read that carefully and realize that that has NOTHING to do with packet inspection as no data is transmitted while you are TYPING the email.
You know, that would work but for the trick with slowing down once touched-down. Here, we use some parachutes to slow the shuttle down, and that is a HUUUGE runway... and that runway was a single concrete pour that lasted several years. And the air here is much denser, making those parachutes much more efficient than they would be on Mars.
The logistics alone in making that runway are impossible without getting people there first... and then what about the materials?
Congratulations - you are well on your way to winning the exploded-ego-award!
First strike: assuming you know more than someone because of a class that you haven't even finished. Second strike: assuming the students at Duke cannot hack a device.... one more strike and it's yours!
How about a large 'spiral' type antenna right behind the lid cover? big area, near the surface, and non-obtrusive. I imagine that a 1/8"-1/10" of plastic doesn't kill the signal TOO much...
To be worn in space, the BioSuit must deliver close to one-third the pressure exerted by Earth's atmosphere, or about 30 kPa (kilopascals). The current prototype suit exerts about 20 KPa consistently, and the researchers have gotten new models up to 25 to 30 KPa. This isn't just a proof-of-concept, this is a real prototype under testing.
Thanks for linking to the project webpage which redirects to a wiki. Next time link to the sf.net project page and let us choose to go to the homepage ourselves rather than fight with sf.net.
Take a look back for EMI around 1999-2001... notice that 2000 had a MUCH larger drop than they are having now, and notice that it rocketed right back up.
There is no way we can know if that will happen again... or at least that I know of. But I'm not even a novice when it comes to finances.
Well maybe they should consider something that doesn't suck*.
* The only reason that it sucks is RPM. I personally watched my 2x 2.66ghz, 1gb ram, 260gb 7200RPM HD system take 2 hours to get 37% through installing 300 updates after install. That's 2 hours for 100 package installs. Note that this is two hours after all the packages were downloaded.
By contrast, APT would have been done in 5 minutes, on this system.
Wow, that commend there made you appear to be a lot younger than I'm sure you are.
The very idea of rooting someone is that they don't know about it. So, you only know how many times they have failed to root you.
A healthy dose of paranoia is a good thing, as long as you don't get carried away.
---- ----
Myself, I have yet to try slackware. It seems I always end up moving back to Debian. I've tried lots: redhat, fedora, suse, and gentoo. I've even played with (and had running decently) FreeBSD.
Hope you don't want *nix support. Brother has some issues.
I use the HP LJ1020, which works great, however I have to use a funky driver layer called 'foo2zjs' and the damn thing needs the firmware uploaded every time it powers on.
OK, so the wing itself is flexible. What about the stuff IN and ON the wing? Fuel tanks? Control wires/cables? Hydraulics?
Think of this: something extraordinarily impossible happens and the plane bends its wings largely (think V shape, 45-60 degree up from the horizon) and the fuel tank ruptures - spraying jet fuel out from an irregular fissure at high pressure would atomize a good portion of it. That is bad as it is... but oh dang - the line feeding generated power to/from the engine (not sure which way it goes) also breaks and grounds against the chassis.
Sure, some packages are out of date... but they WORK and are STABLE. If I need something newer I can build that specific package myself. Usually 'apt-get build dep PACKAGE' shows me what I need to build the older one, which is usually close (if not the same) as the requirements for building the newer one.
Of course I should mention that I used to use Gentoo; I am not scared of the shell, of make, or of gcc.
Exactly. You are not changing hardware - only some bits stored in the hardware. You make a change to the microcode in some kind of volatile storage, and when the system is powered down the changes are lost and must be repatched next time the power comes back.
A lot of games use them, as if you were ever going to launch a game and connect to a server from your web browser .
The unreal series uses them, I know that.
You missed the best part: and can even reassemble emails as they are typed out by the user
How the fuck do they propose to do that without installing a trojan? Read that carefully and realize that that has NOTHING to do with packet inspection as no data is transmitted while you are TYPING the email.
The one closer to the motherboard, 90% of the time. The other 10%, just try it and see... not like it damages anything.
I would say the condom company.
Trojans (virus) have a lot in common with the Trojan Horse of mythology. What does Trojan Condoms have to do with Trojans? NOTHING. A BRAND AND LOGO.
I want Spartan Condoms!
Please stand by as space-time folds in upon itself.
You know, that would work but for the trick with slowing down once touched-down. Here, we use some parachutes to slow the shuttle down, and that is a HUUUGE runway... and that runway was a single concrete pour that lasted several years. And the air here is much denser, making those parachutes much more efficient than they would be on Mars.
The logistics alone in making that runway are impossible without getting people there first... and then what about the materials?
Civil Disobedience
I agree with you.
Congratulations - you are well on your way to winning the exploded-ego-award!
... one more strike and it's yours!
First strike: assuming you know more than someone because of a class that you haven't even finished.
Second strike: assuming the students at Duke cannot hack a device.
How about a large 'spiral' type antenna right behind the lid cover? big area, near the surface, and non-obtrusive. I imagine that a 1/8"-1/10" of plastic doesn't kill the signal TOO much...
Thanks for linking to the project webpage which redirects to a wiki. Next time link to the sf.net project page and let us choose to go to the homepage ourselves rather than fight with sf.net.
Take a look back for EMI around 1999-2001... notice that 2000 had a MUCH larger drop than they are having now, and notice that it rocketed right back up.
There is no way we can know if that will happen again... or at least that I know of. But I'm not even a novice when it comes to finances.
And further down are links to other systems... most are working
Except that when you copy files from a computer you are doing just that: copying
People decrypt documents created with One Time Pads using "cribs" - assuming that a particular word is in the cyphertext somewhere.
If people can break documents explicitly coded to prevent reading, they can certainly reverse engineer a file format.
In a few hundred years, as you put it, I'm sure an AI will be able to do so extremely quickly.
Yes, see but your 2 hours included download time. The 2 hours above for 37% was after it had finished downloading.
Or at least that's what I'm reading from your post.
Well maybe they should consider something that doesn't suck*.
* The only reason that it sucks is RPM. I personally watched my 2x 2.66ghz, 1gb ram, 260gb 7200RPM HD system take 2 hours to get 37% through installing 300 updates after install. That's 2 hours for 100 package installs. Note that this is two hours after all the packages were downloaded.
By contrast, APT would have been done in 5 minutes, on this system.
Wow, that commend there made you appear to be a lot younger than I'm sure you are.
The very idea of rooting someone is that they don't know about it. So, you only know how many times they have failed to root you.
A healthy dose of paranoia is a good thing, as long as you don't get carried away.
---- ----
Myself, I have yet to try slackware. It seems I always end up moving back to Debian. I've tried lots: redhat, fedora, suse, and gentoo. I've even played with (and had running decently) FreeBSD.
No, I did that intentionally. Just like this :D
Fuck off! I don't think I am the only one who is already sick to death of "iPhone this, iPhone that", Well, iPhone your mom!
Sorry. Nothing personal, but I just needed to let the steam out and you were the first target to present itself.
Hope you don't want *nix support. Brother has some issues.
I use the HP LJ1020, which works great, however I have to use a funky driver layer called 'foo2zjs' and the damn thing needs the firmware uploaded every time it powers on.
OK, so the wing itself is flexible. What about the stuff IN and ON the wing? Fuel tanks? Control wires/cables? Hydraulics?
Think of this: something extraordinarily impossible happens and the plane bends its wings largely (think V shape, 45-60 degree up from the horizon) and the fuel tank ruptures - spraying jet fuel out from an irregular fissure at high pressure would atomize a good portion of it. That is bad as it is... but oh dang - the line feeding generated power to/from the engine (not sure which way it goes) also breaks and grounds against the chassis.
Sparks and atomized jet fuel don't mix very well.
You realize that USB is the most CPU-intensive bus around?
You would be better off assigning two IP addresses to two aliases on the device and using the one ethernet jack.
Solution: http://www.us.debian.org/distrib/
Sure, some packages are out of date... but they WORK and are STABLE. If I need something newer I can build that specific package myself. Usually 'apt-get build dep PACKAGE' shows me what I need to build the older one, which is usually close (if not the same) as the requirements for building the newer one.
Of course I should mention that I used to use Gentoo; I am not scared of the shell, of make, or of gcc.
Exactly. You are not changing hardware - only some bits stored in the hardware. You make a change to the microcode in some kind of volatile storage, and when the system is powered down the changes are lost and must be repatched next time the power comes back.