Additionally, the fact that an ROV couldn't engage the BOP using its onboard HPU (the so-called "hot stab") also casts doubt on the claim that an acoustic trigger would've done any good.
I checked out the specs on Mail from Apple's website. The only reference to Exchange I could find was support for NTLM v2 authentication. Being able to natively authenticate and being able to talk Direct Push or do RPC over HTTPS with Exchange are two very different things.
I love how everyone is claiming that Apple has captured the cell/pda market today. The truth is, there aren't any businesses larger than 10 people (hint: the majority of the mobile communication market) going near this anytime soon without better integration. Yahoo! Mail and IMAP/POP polling aren't going to cut it for e-mail notification, and I doubt Apple's going to support Exchange's Direct Push or BlackBerry's Enterprise Server anytime soon.
Perhaps you're right, but isn't a little presumptuous to say that in response to a story that completely defies our current understanding of the human brain?
Actually, SIP is only a signaling protocol. It has nothing to do with voice quality. Voice quality is determined by the compression codec. Most SIP systems in North America use G.711 uLaw for maximum interoperability with public telephone systems.
Additionally, the fact that an ROV couldn't engage the BOP using its onboard HPU (the so-called "hot stab") also casts doubt on the claim that an acoustic trigger would've done any good.
I checked out the specs on Mail from Apple's website. The only reference to Exchange I could find was support for NTLM v2 authentication. Being able to natively authenticate and being able to talk Direct Push or do RPC over HTTPS with Exchange are two very different things.
I love how everyone is claiming that Apple has captured the cell/pda market today. The truth is, there aren't any businesses larger than 10 people (hint: the majority of the mobile communication market) going near this anytime soon without better integration. Yahoo! Mail and IMAP/POP polling aren't going to cut it for e-mail notification, and I doubt Apple's going to support Exchange's Direct Push or BlackBerry's Enterprise Server anytime soon.
Why wouldn't they just do a single inspection before the race, and then do a pre- and post-checksum comparison for each car?
Perhaps you're right, but isn't a little presumptuous to say that in response to a story that completely defies our current understanding of the human brain?
Actually, SIP is only a signaling protocol. It has nothing to do with voice quality. Voice quality is determined by the compression codec. Most SIP systems in North America use G.711 uLaw for maximum interoperability with public telephone systems.