They don't know how to read these articles and understand the words that aren't directly-related to the vehicle itself. They are essentially board-level grease monkeys, not component-level grease monkeys. And this type of reporting demonstrates it very clearly.
Actually some nickel chemistries have great promise, the problem is their whiskering tendency, which makes them have utterly shit charge/discharge cycle counts.
10 second charge, 2 minute operation time on an inductive motor. That's not bad. Micro-drones would fucking LOVE this. LED lights would fucking LOVE this.
"If you can find a mine that produces any of these in pure elemental form, then I suggest you lay claim and get rich damn quick."
Yea, it ain't that simple, really. Even if it's sitting on the surface as float, the gathering and processing itself can get pricey VERY quickly. *stares at roughly 5 tons of minerals on the patio and scattered about the living room and office and kitchen and bathrooms.*
To boot, nickel and cobalt? Pfft. Lithium batteries demand either brine water extraction or extraction from lepidolite and pink tourmaline for the lithium, and silicon is ungodly abundant. We also tend to use more manganese, which is quite often found right alongside lepidolite and the associated tourmaline pockets which it tends to contain.
More like they're sniffing through your shit so they can use it to improve their shit, and lock you out of your shit by patenting it. It's clearly written right there in their ToS. As evidenced by "The rights you grant in this license are for the limited purpose of operating, promoting, and improving our services, and to develop new ones."
You have a paper on energy efficiency in programs and Google sees it and suspends your account, and then a couple weeks later something similar to what you were working on surfaces from them.
I guarantee Google is doing this. There've been too many accounts suspended wherein the people that own them are in fields very close to what Google does.
"I could probably manage it in Beijing or Tokyo, because I'm 6'7" and 300 lb. All I have to do is dress up and look mean and small people part like Pee-Wee's haircut."
Actually, you'd be such an oddity that people would crowd around you and you'd have even LESS personal space. At a mere 6' tall, Chinese swarmed around me to get pictures with the 'Tall American With Long Hair.'
" On the other hand, if I look jovial I'll probably have 'em all trying to rub my belly or grab my dick or something, from what I've heard."
Nope, in fact it's the opposite. Welcome to the world of cultural differences. What you think is harmless here is often seen as a sign of potential dishonesty elsewhere.
"People don't have the right to touch you in public"
Yea, I want to see you ATTEMPT to walk through New York, or Beijing, or Los Angeles, or Tokyo without being in direct shoulder-to-shoulder contact with other people at some point and time.
You obviously spend way too much time behind the keyboard.
Too bad your education ended in the 3rd grade, otherwise you'd see this is entirely about public spaces, in which you have no personal space at all, dipshit.
Almost everything I buy on Pricewatch just so happens to come from about 20 miles away (City of Industry) so I can just drive over to return something that is broken after the RMA goes through.
It is absolutely one of the basics, because if you don't know the basics of your commodity, you're practically guaranteed to fail.
See, economists aren't very smart. They think they can put numbers to human behavior when the opposite is the reality - it's human behavior that runs the numbers.
The fact you trust economists who have already run the global economy into the ground a couple times in the past couple of decades shows you don't understand much about true basic economics.
"No currency has innate value, including gold. If "innate value" determined the price of an object, then people would be paying a lot for air, because it's as valuable as life itself."
Uhh, who never took an economics class, here? Oxygen bars do in fact fucking exist, and the prices are indeed quite exorbitant. Perhaps you should leave the basement and spend more time in the real world, instead of your internet economic fantasies. You failed to learn the basics of supply and demand, and you also failed one of the basic economic principles - do not discuss a commodity unless you know the entirety of its uses. Atmospheric oxygen is everywhere, requires no real energy expense to harvest, and requires no expensive equipment to harvest. Pure oxygen for breathing, on the other hand, is not very common, does require knowledge and skill and technology to acquire and dispense, and does cost infinitely much more in comparison to atmospheric oxygen.
There are plenty of other concerns with OLED. The RGB elements degrade at different rates, so your color shift gets worse over time, and calibration tools can't fix physical pixel degradation. The actual viewing angle is generally worse than a comparable S-IPS LCD. Color gamut is nice at first but then that OLED degradation starts kicking you in the ass and that goes away pretty rapidly. CRTs have better longevity.
Practically every store has them, many of them in such a location and angle as to be able to see some portion of the outside. Usually focused on the front door. They're so cheap and easy to install that even junk-ass Harbor Freight has 4-camera systems for $200 now days. People are installing Nest cameras and such on their property monitoring the front door - many of those are angled well and can see clearly down the street for good couple hundred yards. It's how were getting recent videos of mail/FedEx/UPS/Amazon/DHL and more THROWING your deliveries.
"If that it true then there should be some hard evidence, i.e. documentation of the reason he was fired."
The whole purpose of HR is to lie and act as a cover-up entity for corporations. Good luck finding hard evidence there unless the HR people are just seriously incompetent.
"there is no absolute guarantee that all malware has been removed"
You might have slipped in a few pieces of spyware of your own, you mean.
They don't know how to read these articles and understand the words that aren't directly-related to the vehicle itself. They are essentially board-level grease monkeys, not component-level grease monkeys. And this type of reporting demonstrates it very clearly.
Actually some nickel chemistries have great promise, the problem is their whiskering tendency, which makes them have utterly shit charge/discharge cycle counts.
10 second charge, 2 minute operation time on an inductive motor. That's not bad. Micro-drones would fucking LOVE this. LED lights would fucking LOVE this.
"If you can find a mine that produces any of these in pure elemental form, then I suggest you lay claim and get rich damn quick."
Yea, it ain't that simple, really. Even if it's sitting on the surface as float, the gathering and processing itself can get pricey VERY quickly. *stares at roughly 5 tons of minerals on the patio and scattered about the living room and office and kitchen and bathrooms.*
To boot, nickel and cobalt? Pfft. Lithium batteries demand either brine water extraction or extraction from lepidolite and pink tourmaline for the lithium, and silicon is ungodly abundant. We also tend to use more manganese, which is quite often found right alongside lepidolite and the associated tourmaline pockets which it tends to contain.
More like they're sniffing through your shit so they can use it to improve their shit, and lock you out of your shit by patenting it. It's clearly written right there in their ToS. As evidenced by "The rights you grant in this license are for the limited purpose of operating, promoting, and improving our services, and to develop new ones."
You have a paper on energy efficiency in programs and Google sees it and suspends your account, and then a couple weeks later something similar to what you were working on surfaces from them.
I guarantee Google is doing this. There've been too many accounts suspended wherein the people that own them are in fields very close to what Google does.
Save some face before all these indictments drag you in, too, you complicit via negligence fucks.
Yea, guess what? Same shit was advertised with Cable TV - NO ADS!
I'm going to very pointedly put my finger in your face and laugh when history repeats itself with your precious online streaming services.
Which means HE KNOWS his shit's being used to do that, you fucking imbecile.
I see every hole in it because economics is a soft science based on other shitty soft sciences like psychology.
Which means it's nothing but a big logical hole in the first fucking place.
Much like your very-predictable usage of XKCD memes. Such a big gaping hole it's impossible to miss, even by random chance.
"I could probably manage it in Beijing or Tokyo, because I'm 6'7" and 300 lb. All I have to do is dress up and look mean and small people part like Pee-Wee's haircut."
Actually, you'd be such an oddity that people would crowd around you and you'd have even LESS personal space. At a mere 6' tall, Chinese swarmed around me to get pictures with the 'Tall American With Long Hair.'
" On the other hand, if I look jovial I'll probably have 'em all trying to rub my belly or grab my dick or something, from what I've heard."
Nope, in fact it's the opposite. Welcome to the world of cultural differences. What you think is harmless here is often seen as a sign of potential dishonesty elsewhere.
Keep critical systems off the internet. This way your only method of attack is an insider.
Human laziness enabled this mess - and the UK and USA are fucking hotbeds of laziness and useless bloat.
I say this as an American.
"People don't have the right to touch you in public"
Yea, I want to see you ATTEMPT to walk through New York, or Beijing, or Los Angeles, or Tokyo without being in direct shoulder-to-shoulder contact with other people at some point and time.
You obviously spend way too much time behind the keyboard.
Too bad your education ended in the 3rd grade, otherwise you'd see this is entirely about public spaces, in which you have no personal space at all, dipshit.
Go the fuck back to school.
Almost everything I buy on Pricewatch just so happens to come from about 20 miles away (City of Industry) so I can just drive over to return something that is broken after the RMA goes through.
It is absolutely one of the basics, because if you don't know the basics of your commodity, you're practically guaranteed to fail.
See, economists aren't very smart. They think they can put numbers to human behavior when the opposite is the reality - it's human behavior that runs the numbers.
The fact you trust economists who have already run the global economy into the ground a couple times in the past couple of decades shows you don't understand much about true basic economics.
It's even easier to go look on Pricewatch.com and find prices that beat Amazon's straight into the fucking ground.
"No currency has innate value, including gold. If "innate value" determined the price of an object, then people would be paying a lot for air, because it's as valuable as life itself."
Uhh, who never took an economics class, here? Oxygen bars do in fact fucking exist, and the prices are indeed quite exorbitant. Perhaps you should leave the basement and spend more time in the real world, instead of your internet economic fantasies. You failed to learn the basics of supply and demand, and you also failed one of the basic economic principles - do not discuss a commodity unless you know the entirety of its uses. Atmospheric oxygen is everywhere, requires no real energy expense to harvest, and requires no expensive equipment to harvest. Pure oxygen for breathing, on the other hand, is not very common, does require knowledge and skill and technology to acquire and dispense, and does cost infinitely much more in comparison to atmospheric oxygen.
Spoken like a basic 3rd grade n00b that doesn't even know what the petrodollar is.
There are plenty of other concerns with OLED. The RGB elements degrade at different rates, so your color shift gets worse over time, and calibration tools can't fix physical pixel degradation. The actual viewing angle is generally worse than a comparable S-IPS LCD. Color gamut is nice at first but then that OLED degradation starts kicking you in the ass and that goes away pretty rapidly. CRTs have better longevity.
Been there, worked that. Try again when you've left the basement and worked for a large corporate organization.
"There are very few CCTV cameras in the USA"
Practically every store has them, many of them in such a location and angle as to be able to see some portion of the outside. Usually focused on the front door. They're so cheap and easy to install that even junk-ass Harbor Freight has 4-camera systems for $200 now days. People are installing Nest cameras and such on their property monitoring the front door - many of those are angled well and can see clearly down the street for good couple hundred yards. It's how were getting recent videos of mail/FedEx/UPS/Amazon/DHL and more THROWING your deliveries.
Try again when you actually leave the basement.
"When I genuinely type "Vungle wikipedia" into Google, and the first search result does NOT come up with Wikipedia"
Your fucking fault for relying upon both Google and Wikipedia to think for you instead of having some actual search chops, sonny boy.
"If that it true then there should be some hard evidence, i.e. documentation of the reason he was fired."
The whole purpose of HR is to lie and act as a cover-up entity for corporations. Good luck finding hard evidence there unless the HR people are just seriously incompetent.
Yea, is that battery saver mode going to be smart enough to recognize a desktop system that has no fucking battery?