Except that there is more then enough room for the bike to pass. Knowing these kinds of streets, they are about 2.5 car wide. You can also see that the driver stops as soon as he notices that he bike isn't noticing the car and moving properly to the side of the road, instead of trying to make a full pass.
Actually, it's even easier then that. You can create a firearm that has less chance of exploding in your hands with a few bits and pieces from the hardware store. It's also quicker, and cheaper. So if you want a firearm, printing is the worst of all your options. It's just attention whoring.
And still, you need to get the ammo from somewhere.
Unmodifiable early boot rom is very common. The Wii also had it. The Wii also had a bug in it that they fixed in a later hardware version. See http://wiibrew.org/wiki/BootMi...
The reason for it not being EEPROM is simple. They don't want anyone to modify it, as it's the start of the secure boot process. Allowing modifications on it would defeat the goal of this ROM.
As someone who was active in the homebrew Wii scene. Let me tell you this. The nr 1 use of homebrew on the Wii was piracy. The nr 2 use was emulators, which is usually a different form of piracy. Even if this wasn't the intention of the people who opened it up. It's the reality. Other homebrew applications where much less used. The video player saw some use, but performance wise wasn't great. Fully custom applications/games, very few actual users.
I don't know for the US. But speed cameras in The Netherlands are usually certified up to 250km/h, but some are 350km/h now. If you go over that, the camera is not allowed to give you a ticket as it is not certified at those speeds.
But, if you go over 250 at most of our speed camera locations, you have other problems that involve death.
Makerbot pushed too soon and too hard. Their machines where not up to the expectations set by marketing.
However, wood? That was years ago. We've progressed a lot. I'm not saying it's "one click and 100% reliability". But it's not as error prone as it was 3 years ago.
I work for Ultimaker, and the Ultimaker 2+ (while a bit older) is still selling very strong due it's reliability. Prototyping, showcase models and jig&fixtures are the main markets where we see sales.
I work at R&D, we have CNC machines next to our fleet of 3D printers to prototype as well, but they require a lot more expert knowledge, we have a full time operator on that. Unlike the 3D printers, that are even used by our reception desk, provide little to no noise, and no dust.
I think you missed my point. I did that, and all the other hoops you need to go trough when updates fail. It's the frequency and the amount of different hoops I had to jump trough that caused me to say "screw this".
Well, I never cared too much about those. But I did disable all updates about a month ago on my Windows7 and my GF Windows10 laptops. Why? They repeatedly fail to installed. Causing a loop of "using 100% CPU for about an hour, reboot, fail to install, reboot to roll back, and then using 100% CPU again the next day trying to install the update again."
After repeatedly fixing those updates, I gave up and just disabled all updates. (which was easy on Windows 7 and a pain in the ass on Windows 10)
You do know that every single attempted suicide survivor regrets his/her decision?
Or, if you do not like the human angle, pick one: a) Yes, society invested in this person, and you want the highest return on investment. b) Do not kill yourself by causing a shitload of damage to society. The train conductor now has been traumatized. And the train is delayed. Both causing economic damage to society.
No, you are not free to do whatever the fuck you want. Because a lot of things you do influence other people as well. You litter? That means someone needs to clean that up, and we all need to pay for that someone. And thus, you should not litter.
I think the implementation of said DRM has much more to do with it then the actual DRM.
My steam library has 208 games. It's easy, it's cheap, it's quick, and it never caused problems.
Our (shared with my girlfriend) e-reader has no bought e-books anymore. Why? First off, it's expensive. My girlfriend goes trough about 2 books a week, as ebooks costs just as much as a paperback, that's about 20 euro a week. For some digital copies of something that gives a few hours of medium entertainment. (These are not top notch books, it's easy to read stuff) It's also clumsy, buying a book is more effort then torrenting it. You still need to transfer it, you have different DRM schemes to deal with. Our local library does offer an assortment of ebooks for rent. Great idea, horrible implementation, as it requires tons of effort to use. Seach->select->download->load in different application->store it there in a library->convert->transfer resulting file->hope everything went properly->have your PC invaded by the application that manages the rental library. (From Sony, no surprises there) Reports every once in a while that ebooks go "poof".
Compare that to steam, where I can buy in 2 clicks, I get to use the game everywhere, with easy downloads and no hassle. (And recently, even easy refunds if the game fails to work)
I will tell you. There no single printer you can buy that will do Lego level of quality. The precision of lego is just beyond of what current 3D print tech can do. The molds Lego uses to make their bricks are already on the extreme level.
Now, if you want to replace 1 brick. You most likely can get away with any printer, as 1 imprecise brick in a build isn't an issue. But 5 in a row are.
Your best bet would most likely be a small SLA printer. Like the a Formlabs or a Autodesk Amber.
If you don't want the dirty bits of SLA. You're stuck with an FDM printer. Not the best option for what you are looking for. But no chemicals. I would look at an option that has a 0.25mm nozzle option. There are a few. Our latest iteration has it. But that's most certainly not the cheapest machine.
Depends. I backed 9 kickstarters. 2 delivered on time. 1 is 2 years after schedule But that is still going. But I didn't research this properly beforehand, as his goals where too ambitious for the time period. Most projects are just a few weeks late.
What I invested is a small amount of money. Because if a bit of research and common sense ("if it looks to good to be true, it is") I have a high return of unique products, that would normally not see the market.
Only 1 of the projects I backed made more then 1mil. As I think making a lot more money then your goal is also a risk.
So, yes, there is a chance I get nothing. But then I'm only out of $10-$100.
Backing a sub $300 3D printer, that's stupid for example. Just in raw materials you need $150 for any printer (electronics, hotend, motion parts). Add production, shipping, R&D, and you'll go over that.
Got no experience with OneDrive. But I have used dropbox and GDrive. Dropbox functioned way superior in this case, never really caused issues. GDrive on the other hand once deleted ALL data by mistake of an syncing error (yes, could be recovered, but that was shitloads of work), and you shit yourself when you see all your files disappear. I've also had a few times that GDrive refused to sync at all, without a clear cause. It just kept refusing. The web interface can be dog slow when you have 1000+ files in a folder.
"we should send an agent to interview person X, who disappeared in Syria for two years and now bought four drones and a little bit of fertilizer..."
So, someone who went to seria, discovered that they have an agriculture problem there, and is looking into fertilizing land by the use of drones to spread the fertilizer is a someone that should be on a watch list?
(Not sure why you would want to use a drone as a bomb delivery mechanism. There are cheaper, more silent, larger range, more reliable options)
Actually, compiling for pentium 4 or better already gets you most of these. Which is hardware that everyone has these days. But 64bit (system/OS) has only about a 70% market right now (for my application that is, which is a general desktop application)
Imagine the look on the guys face. Walk up to a shady car dealers shop. Ask of they can handle an "needs to go missing" vehicle. And then you turn up in your Boeing 777. No problem right?
1) Let a 777 go missing 2) Drive it to a chopshop 3)... 4) Profit.
qbittorrent is a great switch from utorrent. As it looks almost the same, without the crap. I switched my girlfriend torrent tool to qbittorent, and she didn't notice any real difference except for the lack of ads.
Except that there is more then enough room for the bike to pass. Knowing these kinds of streets, they are about 2.5 car wide. You can also see that the driver stops as soon as he notices that he bike isn't noticing the car and moving properly to the side of the road, instead of trying to make a full pass.
Actually, it's even easier then that. You can create a firearm that has less chance of exploding in your hands with a few bits and pieces from the hardware store. It's also quicker, and cheaper. So if you want a firearm, printing is the worst of all your options. It's just attention whoring.
And still, you need to get the ammo from somewhere.
Unmodifiable early boot rom is very common. The Wii also had it. The Wii also had a bug in it that they fixed in a later hardware version. See http://wiibrew.org/wiki/BootMi...
The reason for it not being EEPROM is simple. They don't want anyone to modify it, as it's the start of the secure boot process. Allowing modifications on it would defeat the goal of this ROM.
As someone who was active in the homebrew Wii scene. Let me tell you this. The nr 1 use of homebrew on the Wii was piracy. The nr 2 use was emulators, which is usually a different form of piracy.
Even if this wasn't the intention of the people who opened it up. It's the reality. Other homebrew applications where much less used. The video player saw some use, but performance wise wasn't great. Fully custom applications/games, very few actual users.
If you go fast enough. Yes.
I don't know for the US. But speed cameras in The Netherlands are usually certified up to 250km/h, but some are 350km/h now. If you go over that, the camera is not allowed to give you a ticket as it is not certified at those speeds.
But, if you go over 250 at most of our speed camera locations, you have other problems that involve death.
I've made this mistake, deleted all attachments on a life system once.
After this, I made all the prompts for critical servers a different color:
export PS1='\e[41m\u@\h:\w\$\e[49m'
Makerbot pushed too soon and too hard. Their machines where not up to the expectations set by marketing.
However, wood? That was years ago. We've progressed a lot. I'm not saying it's "one click and 100% reliability". But it's not as error prone as it was 3 years ago.
I work for Ultimaker, and the Ultimaker 2+ (while a bit older) is still selling very strong due it's reliability. Prototyping, showcase models and jig&fixtures are the main markets where we see sales.
I work at R&D, we have CNC machines next to our fleet of 3D printers to prototype as well, but they require a lot more expert knowledge, we have a full time operator on that. Unlike the 3D printers, that are even used by our reception desk, provide little to no noise, and no dust.
I think you missed my point. I did that, and all the other hoops you need to go trough when updates fail. It's the frequency and the amount of different hoops I had to jump trough that caused me to say "screw this".
Well, I never cared too much about those. But I did disable all updates about a month ago on my Windows7 and my GF Windows10 laptops. Why? They repeatedly fail to installed. Causing a loop of "using 100% CPU for about an hour, reboot, fail to install, reboot to roll back, and then using 100% CPU again the next day trying to install the update again."
After repeatedly fixing those updates, I gave up and just disabled all updates. (which was easy on Windows 7 and a pain in the ass on Windows 10)
The label comes from the article, it is even in the article headline.
It's fine. But it's not that there is nothing wrong with.
Simple example. Arrays start at 0, or 1, depending on where you found it.
You do know that every single attempted suicide survivor regrets his/her decision?
Or, if you do not like the human angle, pick one:
a) Yes, society invested in this person, and you want the highest return on investment.
b) Do not kill yourself by causing a shitload of damage to society. The train conductor now has been traumatized. And the train is delayed. Both causing economic damage to society.
No, you are not free to do whatever the fuck you want. Because a lot of things you do influence other people as well. You litter? That means someone needs to clean that up, and we all need to pay for that someone. And thus, you should not litter.
Depends, if it keeps working the same, if it keeps doing the same, if nothing else changes but the owner. I'm fine.
If not, we would pirate the shit out everything again, just like we did in the 90s and 00s
I think the implementation of said DRM has much more to do with it then the actual DRM.
My steam library has 208 games. It's easy, it's cheap, it's quick, and it never caused problems.
Our (shared with my girlfriend) e-reader has no bought e-books anymore. Why?
First off, it's expensive. My girlfriend goes trough about 2 books a week, as ebooks costs just as much as a paperback, that's about 20 euro a week. For some digital copies of something that gives a few hours of medium entertainment. (These are not top notch books, it's easy to read stuff)
It's also clumsy, buying a book is more effort then torrenting it. You still need to transfer it, you have different DRM schemes to deal with.
Our local library does offer an assortment of ebooks for rent. Great idea, horrible implementation, as it requires tons of effort to use. Seach->select->download->load in different application->store it there in a library->convert->transfer resulting file->hope everything went properly->have your PC invaded by the application that manages the rental library. (From Sony, no surprises there)
Reports every once in a while that ebooks go "poof".
Compare that to steam, where I can buy in 2 clicks, I get to use the game everywhere, with easy downloads and no hassle. (And recently, even easy refunds if the game fails to work)
As someone in this industry (Ultimaker)
I will tell you. There no single printer you can buy that will do Lego level of quality. The precision of lego is just beyond of what current 3D print tech can do. The molds Lego uses to make their bricks are already on the extreme level.
Now, if you want to replace 1 brick. You most likely can get away with any printer, as 1 imprecise brick in a build isn't an issue. But 5 in a row are.
Your best bet would most likely be a small SLA printer. Like the a Formlabs or a Autodesk Amber.
If you don't want the dirty bits of SLA. You're stuck with an FDM printer. Not the best option for what you are looking for. But no chemicals. I would look at an option that has a 0.25mm nozzle option. There are a few. Our latest iteration has it. But that's most certainly not the cheapest machine.
stderr is send to the logging facilities by default. Which makes debugging issues easier instead of harder...
Depends. I backed 9 kickstarters. 2 delivered on time. 1 is 2 years after schedule But that is still going. But I didn't research this properly beforehand, as his goals where too ambitious for the time period. Most projects are just a few weeks late.
What I invested is a small amount of money. Because if a bit of research and common sense ("if it looks to good to be true, it is") I have a high return of unique products, that would normally not see the market.
Only 1 of the projects I backed made more then 1mil. As I think making a lot more money then your goal is also a risk.
So, yes, there is a chance I get nothing. But then I'm only out of $10-$100.
Backing a sub $300 3D printer, that's stupid for example. Just in raw materials you need $150 for any printer (electronics, hotend, motion parts). Add production, shipping, R&D, and you'll go over that.
Got no experience with OneDrive. But I have used dropbox and GDrive. Dropbox functioned way superior in this case, never really caused issues.
GDrive on the other hand once deleted ALL data by mistake of an syncing error (yes, could be recovered, but that was shitloads of work), and you shit yourself when you see all your files disappear.
I've also had a few times that GDrive refused to sync at all, without a clear cause. It just kept refusing.
The web interface can be dog slow when you have 1000+ files in a folder.
"we should send an agent to interview person X, who disappeared in Syria for two years and now bought four drones and a little bit of fertilizer..."
So, someone who went to seria, discovered that they have an agriculture problem there, and is looking into fertilizing land by the use of drones to spread the fertilizer is a someone that should be on a watch list?
(Not sure why you would want to use a drone as a bomb delivery mechanism. There are cheaper, more silent, larger range, more reliable options)
Actually, compiling for pentium 4 or better already gets you most of these. Which is hardware that everyone has these days. But 64bit (system/OS) has only about a 70% market right now (for my application that is, which is a general desktop application)
dropped at a chopshop? where?
Imagine the look on the guys face. Walk up to a shady car dealers shop. Ask of they can handle an "needs to go missing" vehicle. And then you turn up in your Boeing 777. No problem right?
1) Let a 777 go missing ...
2) Drive it to a chopshop
3)
4) Profit.
qbittorrent is a great switch from utorrent. As it looks almost the same, without the crap. I switched my girlfriend torrent tool to qbittorent, and she didn't notice any real difference except for the lack of ads.
Because those are utterly crap. They provide a long arm and that's what causing the connector to break off quite easy at the PCB side.
Try blind mating an DVI connector. You'll find that USB is a charm compared to that.
I mean, it works in the same way, as in, it does not really work for anything but a tech demo.