Depending on how long you're staying, you could send your phone via courier to meet you at your destination. Of course, then you have to trust the courier company and the customs agents handling the package.
Sure, except that Google is (slowly) killing Hangouts, thanks to Allo and Duo: http://betanews.com/2017/01/07... - As goeth the API, so goeth the service.
It's not "Countless". Wind turbines kill between 214,000 and 368,000 birds annually - a small fraction compared with the estimated 6.8 million fatalities from collisions with cell and radio towers and the 1.4 billion to 3.7 billion deaths from cats. So if it's really migratory birds you're so worried about, you'd better ditch your cellphone. And/or kill your cat.
Indeed there is. The milk they use for Hershey chocolate is partially lipolyzed, producing butyric acid, which stabilizes the milk from further fermentation.
I know my parents' bank in the UK doesn't allow you (technically, I believe you still can, but it's discouraged) to use the numbers on the card to make online purchases. They provide an application that runs on your desktop, connected to the internet, that generates a unique credit card/CCV/expiry number for each session (I believe it technically has access to a not insignificant pool of numbers at the bank, so there is the possibility of re-use but only after a very large number of session requests has taken place), so even if the details are stolen (which is unlikely) or the merchant is malicious, the transactions can be isolated and reversed very easily.
Because if audio signals get crossed, the worst that happens is an annoying buzz. When you insert a barrel jack, it connects to each conductor in turn until it's seated - bad news for things like data transfer, where crossed wires have large consequences.
So they have to procure an amine in the pure form,
Correct.
mix it with purified water,
Right again
heat it to 125 to 165 oC (a lot of energy, also under pressure),
Partially Correct - there was no mention of it being under pressure.
bubble the air through it (requiring at least the same pressure as the solution so there wouldn't be backflow)
1.001 Atmosphere of pressure, yes.
then recover the product using distillation (energy intensive).
Correct. Though as the solution was originally at 125-165C, the methanol would most likely be in vapour form, so condensation would be a relatively simple matter.
It's good chemistry and interesting catalysis, but I don't see how it will be cost-effective.
My guess is it would be cheaper to let a tree reduce the CO2, chop it down, and make the wood alcohol from that.
Oh, of course. Though that is a process that requires considerably more time than this one, it seems.
Most (If not all) PC Bios' have a "Power State on AC" option, with the choices typically being "Off", "On", or "Last State". Switch this to "On" and the PC will automatically start up when the power comes back.
How about something smaller than Intel's NUC, more powerful, fanless and reasonably cheap. Something like the fitlet for example. And VESA Mountable too.
As I understand it, early consoles (NES, SNES, Genesis) were so simple they didn't HAVE an on-board OS. Everything was on the cart, and they relied on the fact that physical carts were next-to-impossible to duplicate for the average Joe. I do know that some of the more advanced systems, Sega CD and 32X, for example, did have an on-board ROM and "OS", mainly because they had to come up to a stable and working state before data was loaded from the media, whereas regular carts were literally wired directly into the memory space.
No, actually, it doesn't. You could, for example, use a device like this as a system debugger. And Nintendo's problem is that you "have" to use a copied ROM for emulation, which is also incorrect, as you can play games directly from the ROM.
I am aware of that, but it doesn't stop my point (that no HUMAN is playing the game) is still correct. It also shows that Tool-Assisted Speedruns do not require emulators.
Watch the (for example) TASBot Runs from AGDQ - There are hands that aren't human playing video games. Namely TASBot's hands: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Also, considering how simple EVs are: Batteries -> Controller -> Motor -> (Gearbox, optional ->) Differential -> Wheels
I mean, Watch KiwiEV's buildlog videos on youtube - A guy with no mechanical experience whatsoever takes an ICE car and converts it to electric in his spare time.
Depending on how long you're staying, you could send your phone via courier to meet you at your destination. Of course, then you have to trust the courier company and the customs agents handling the package.
Sure, except that Google is (slowly) killing Hangouts, thanks to Allo and Duo: http://betanews.com/2017/01/07... - As goeth the API, so goeth the service.
It's not "Countless". Wind turbines kill between 214,000 and 368,000 birds annually - a small fraction compared with the estimated 6.8 million fatalities from collisions with cell and radio towers and the 1.4 billion to 3.7 billion deaths from cats. So if it's really migratory birds you're so worried about, you'd better ditch your cellphone. And/or kill your cat.
Indeed there is. The milk they use for Hershey chocolate is partially lipolyzed, producing butyric acid, which stabilizes the milk from further fermentation.
I mean, a news outlet called "Telegraph"? I would never have thought of that before... Oh, wait...
I know my parents' bank in the UK doesn't allow you (technically, I believe you still can, but it's discouraged) to use the numbers on the card to make online purchases. They provide an application that runs on your desktop, connected to the internet, that generates a unique credit card/CCV/expiry number for each session (I believe it technically has access to a not insignificant pool of numbers at the bank, so there is the possibility of re-use but only after a very large number of session requests has taken place), so even if the details are stolen (which is unlikely) or the merchant is malicious, the transactions can be isolated and reversed very easily.
Oh, I'm not saying it wasn't awesome, but it was fragile as hell.
Because if audio signals get crossed, the worst that happens is an annoying buzz. When you insert a barrel jack, it connects to each conductor in turn until it's seated - bad news for things like data transfer, where crossed wires have large consequences.
The problem with those is that they blocked your use of your second PCMCIA port. And in pre-USB days that was 50% of your laptop's expandability gone.
Have a look at some of the shenanigans NIC makers had to do with PCMCIA cards: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It's hardly that big a shift. Tab Groups (Formerly Panorama) used to be an add-on called "Tab Candy" (IIRC).
FireFox has been re-written using one process per tab. It's called Electrolysis (E10s), and is standard in FF since about v40 IIRC.
So they have to procure an amine in the pure form,
Correct.
mix it with purified water,
Right again
heat it to 125 to 165 oC (a lot of energy, also under pressure),
Partially Correct - there was no mention of it being under pressure.
bubble the air through it (requiring at least the same pressure as the solution so there wouldn't be backflow)
1.001 Atmosphere of pressure, yes.
then recover the product using distillation (energy intensive).
Correct. Though as the solution was originally at 125-165C, the methanol would most likely be in vapour form, so condensation would be a relatively simple matter.
It's good chemistry and interesting catalysis, but I don't see how it will be cost-effective.
My guess is it would be cheaper to let a tree reduce the CO2, chop it down, and make the wood alcohol from that.
Oh, of course. Though that is a process that requires considerably more time than this one, it seems.
Most (If not all) PC Bios' have a "Power State on AC" option, with the choices typically being "Off", "On", or "Last State". Switch this to "On" and the PC will automatically start up when the power comes back.
Okay. http://www.fit-pc.com/web/prod...
Second on this. Provides a local (Bash-like) console, all the SSH features you can want, and X forwarding, all in a single package.
How about something smaller than Intel's NUC, more powerful, fanless and reasonably cheap. Something like the fitlet for example. And VESA Mountable too.
FlexGet -> Transmission -> Serviio -> Samsung D-series Plasma TV. Serves me quite well.
As I understand it, early consoles (NES, SNES, Genesis) were so simple they didn't HAVE an on-board OS. Everything was on the cart, and they relied on the fact that physical carts were next-to-impossible to duplicate for the average Joe. I do know that some of the more advanced systems, Sega CD and 32X, for example, did have an on-board ROM and "OS", mainly because they had to come up to a stable and working state before data was loaded from the media, whereas regular carts were literally wired directly into the memory space.
No, actually, it doesn't. You could, for example, use a device like this as a system debugger. And Nintendo's problem is that you "have" to use a copied ROM for emulation, which is also incorrect, as you can play games directly from the ROM.
I am aware of that, but it doesn't stop my point (that no HUMAN is playing the game) is still correct. It also shows that Tool-Assisted Speedruns do not require emulators.
Watch the (for example) TASBot Runs from AGDQ - There are hands that aren't human playing video games. Namely TASBot's hands: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Also, considering how simple EVs are: Batteries -> Controller -> Motor -> (Gearbox, optional ->) Differential -> Wheels
I mean, Watch KiwiEV's buildlog videos on youtube - A guy with no mechanical experience whatsoever takes an ICE car and converts it to electric in his spare time.
Clean(er) coal is still mostly an idea, not yet commercially implemented (at least when talking about carbon sequestration in the US).
There's one pretty close to you that is up and running right now, though.
It's still the reverse-engineered (Decompiled, technically) stand-in. The original Minecraft source is not in Bukkit anywhere.