Soldered, nearly-impossible-to-upgrade memory. Check.
Non-standard difficult-to-upgrade SSD drive. Check.
Deep-six the other cooling fan. Check.
Deep-six the ethernet port. Check.
As hard to otherwise repair as their gluey, gluey phones. Check.
Over time, my '09 15" MBP has had most of its innards replaced. Even the logic board was pretty easy to swap out.
Until Apple goes back to making machines that can actually be serviced and upgraded by their owners, I wouldn't consider buying one. I'd switch to *nix if Adobe would run on it. Haven't touched 'doze except to fix someone else's machine in some years now, or when (under duress) doing something in VirtualBox.
They really need to remove the "B" off their supposedly "Professional" portables until they get their act together and remember why they were so "Insanely Great" to start with...
Someone on the radio yesterday suggested having three people in the cockpit at all times.
That's not going to work in all situations, but what could work is drawing three people from a pool of available onboard staff (taken from pilots, air marshals when they exist, and flight attendants).
In a situation such as the tragedy that happened to Germanwings, any two of the three would be able to override the door lock, and hopefully regain control of the plane before things became dire.
Pilots and air marshals (when available) would always be part of the pool. Flight attendants would be picked randomly per flight, if necessary (due to current level of airline/government paranoia) being informed of their additional "duty" from the tower just before takeoff.
And just how many legitimate small businesses run vpn over the open internet to connect their offices?
This is, alas the "guns don't kill people" argument all over again. The weapon (or in this case, technology) is in and of itself not the problem. It's the way it gets used by a small subset of those who employ it.
I know you're focusing on open source due to the high cost of Premiere, but these days you can get every Adobe app for $50/mo.
If in the past you had their products and upgraded when the new versions came out, you were looking at several hundred dollars or more depending on what you had; now that's all rolled into a much smaller monthly fee.
You can also get any single app for $20/mo.
Having used various Adobe apps for well over a decade, am used to the cost (which by going monthly is a smaller bite), and the tools (which keep improving).
It's not a Linksys, but since you're running Tomato I'd consider ASUS. Their RT-N66U is a good router, with a micro SD slot (have to pop the case though, so good-bye warranty), good for logs if you keep them and won't wear out the flash so fast.
The AC-66U adds AC support, and the newer AC-68U offers faster throughput than the AC-66U, though the spec hasn't quite settled yet so you may or may not actually be able to take advantage of it. Still, the AC-68U has been coming up the winner in several head-to-head router comparisons.
Plenty of memory and a fast CPU, pretty much a requirement these days for households with multiple streams going on.
You're looking at around $150 ~ $200 or so depending on model.
The Advanced Tomato - http://www.advancedtomato.com/ - firmware has been looking pretty good too, based on Shibby's mods but way-ajaxified, a good GUI design for when you have to get into it.
I believe California is building one of these in Arizona, and (at least the paperwork part of) another just got started in Texas. At a kilometer in height, one would generate around 250 megawatts.
Suppose any part of this will be for finally converting TB to maildir format?
No, wait, that would suppose it's still actually in development. Why they let such a promising cross-platform app wither on the vine is beyond comprehension.
As others have said, when written it was assumed every citizen would be part of the militia, thus the terse text in amendment II.
I've always thought a good way to enforce the spirit of the words would be to deny gun ownership to anyone who has not served their country.
It could be civil - postal worker (no 90's jokes please), firefighter or police, someone in the executive such as alderman, mayor, congressman - or active duty military.
This harks to the thinking of Robert Heinlein, who in Starship Troopers commented that if you wanted to vote, you needed to have served.
Having gone straight from high school to the Air Force, this has always seemed a sound principle.
Of course, certain individuals (the current NRA leader, for example, who claimed a nervous disorder to avoid the draft) may have different feelings on the matter...;)
I'm still wondering why Exxon, et. al don't get heavily into solar, tidal, etc. They've got to know what they're peddling will run out one day. Why not just corner the next market? They certainly have the resources.
Similarly, yes, folks will print more and more things on their own, but the end of the consumer chain is always the most expensive.
Today, printer ink is ridiculously higher in cost than petrol (try over $2,500 for a gallon of Black). For 3D, it's still pretty much all plastic filament. Five pounds of ABS white can run up to $50. Say, a couple of bookends if you're lucky.
Printers of tomorrow will be able to use many more raw ingredients as input. Right now it's all lamination, laying down layer after layer of the plastic filament until your object is complete; but down the road they'll act more like proteins, simply re-arranging supplied atoms into a new configuration and spitting them out the 'tray'.
Thus, the big winner will be the company that sells easy access to what you feed the printer.
And yes, DRM will creep into the hardware, ensuring the more-or-less law-abiding of us don't print bombs and such, though of course that will never stop the truly determined.
So sure, down the road you'll be able to print a house. But buying enough cartridges at the Depot will break you.
I concur on the ASUS (their RT-N66U is around $150, but plenty stable and strong, with three external antennas. It even has a micro-SD card which can be used for saving VPN logs or whatever (saving on the built-in flash). Of course popping the lid to install that voids your warranty, but I've installed a bunch of these things and have yet to have a problem.
Have pretty much switched over to Tomato these days; the Shibby build is quite good. Only downside is I wish he'd move the "Apply" button to the top of the screen, but you can use your own custom CSS to override that.
In Texas, our electronic voting machines do not require a paper trail, so there's no way to verify who really won.
While Governor and Federal Representative have been pretty much blue up until about 30 years ago, our Federal Senators have often been red.
This time around the Democratic Senatorial contender lost to a Tea Party candidate (the incumbent Republican retired), taking around 41% of the vote.
In Travis county, seat of the Texas government and Austin, any registered voter can now go to any polling place. Instead of the usual grade school, I chose the closest polling place, city hall of a small town of 500 surrounded by Austin's south side.
Walking in, there was no line, though all six booths were occupied. By the time I finished checking in, one booth was available. The entire ballot was around a half-dozen screens.
Except for the lack of an audit trail, that's how easy voting should be everywhere in this country.
Oh, not being a member of the Electoral College, I knew my vote for President would not truly matter. So, being pretty sure the state would go red, I felt obliged to enter a write-in for my favorite candidate, "Popular Vote".
For some years I used "PubicBroadcast" as id for the guest connection, partially to see if any neighbors would catch the typo, partially to annoy the extreme prude living across the street.
The WPA2 key of course was "IReallyShouldPayForMyOwnWiFi"
How lovely when the mob rules. No 1st amendment issue here!
Like most corporations today, the Chocolate Factory has forgotten what our Founders knew was vital to a well-functioning society: Gotta remember the little guy. He may be annoying at times, but lock him in his room just for being a PITA, then who knows when it'll be your turn to enjoy the same?
Let's see...
Soldered, nearly-impossible-to-upgrade memory. Check.
Non-standard difficult-to-upgrade SSD drive. Check.
Deep-six the other cooling fan. Check.
Deep-six the ethernet port. Check.
As hard to otherwise repair as their gluey, gluey phones. Check.
Over time, my '09 15" MBP has had most of its innards replaced. Even the logic board was pretty easy to swap out.
Until Apple goes back to making machines that can actually be serviced and upgraded by their owners, I wouldn't consider buying one. I'd switch to *nix if Adobe would run on it. Haven't touched 'doze except to fix someone else's machine in some years now, or when (under duress) doing something in VirtualBox.
They really need to remove the "B" off their supposedly "Professional" portables until they get their act together and remember why they were so "Insanely Great" to start with...
The question isn't why *anyone* would buy a PC, but why *Tim Cook* would.
PC's are Personal Computers, not just an M$-only device.
Mr. Cook used to travel with a PC - a MacBook Pro - but stopped as he doesn't need to. He doesn't develop content
Just try doing any actual work on a tablet. Oh, sure, you say, you can add a bluetooth keyboard if you really need to type.
Then it's not a tablet anymore. It's a PC with a bluetooth keyboard.
You're known for being very opinionated and sure of yourself, quick to criticize mistakes made by others.
To the average Joe, this produces an aura of seeming infallibility.
It's good to be right, but statistically one has to be wrong every so often.
Programming-wise, what's the dumbest thing you've ever done?
Someone on the radio yesterday suggested having three people in the cockpit at all times.
That's not going to work in all situations, but what could work is drawing three people from a pool of available onboard staff (taken from pilots, air marshals when they exist, and flight attendants).
In a situation such as the tragedy that happened to Germanwings, any two of the three would be able to override the door lock, and hopefully regain control of the plane before things became dire.
Pilots and air marshals (when available) would always be part of the pool. Flight attendants would be picked randomly per flight, if necessary (due to current level of airline/government paranoia) being informed of their additional "duty" from the tower just before takeoff.
I never eat food containing DNA - it's bad for the digestion and ruins my diet.
And just how many legitimate small businesses run vpn over the open internet to connect their offices?
This is, alas the "guns don't kill people" argument all over again. The weapon (or in this case, technology) is in and of itself not the problem. It's the way it gets used by a small subset of those who employ it.
Reminds me of Fred Pohl's excellent 1954 story The Midas Plague ( https://archive.org/stream/gal... )
Wasn't that already done nearly 45 years ago, with the movie Watermelon Man?
Putting aside the "we'll all miss cursive" idea, let's at least hope they get past the 19th century and teach Dvorak.
Having used it for nearly 30 years, and playing guitar, I can't imagine what shape my fingers would be without it...
ahref=http://what-if.xkcd.com/rel=url2html-2231http://what-if.xkcd.com/>
The *real* reason ATT would object to 10Mbps as being the baseline for broadband is simply because they still have many, many DSL customers.
Get too far from the switch and you'll never see 10...
I know you're focusing on open source due to the high cost of Premiere, but these days you can get every Adobe app for $50/mo.
If in the past you had their products and upgraded when the new versions came out, you were looking at several hundred dollars or more depending on what you had; now that's all rolled into a much smaller monthly fee.
You can also get any single app for $20/mo.
Having used various Adobe apps for well over a decade, am used to the cost (which by going monthly is a smaller bite), and the tools (which keep improving).
It's not a Linksys, but since you're running Tomato I'd consider ASUS. Their RT-N66U is a good router, with a micro SD slot (have to pop the case though, so good-bye warranty), good for logs if you keep them and won't wear out the flash so fast.
The AC-66U adds AC support, and the newer AC-68U offers faster throughput than the AC-66U, though the spec hasn't quite settled yet so you may or may not actually be able to take advantage of it. Still, the AC-68U has been coming up the winner in several head-to-head router comparisons.
Plenty of memory and a fast CPU, pretty much a requirement these days for households with multiple streams going on.
You're looking at around $150 ~ $200 or so depending on model.
The Advanced Tomato - http://www.advancedtomato.com/ - firmware has been looking pretty good too, based on Shibby's mods but way-ajaxified, a good GUI design for when you have to get into it.
Solar Tower, anyone?
http://www.enviromission.com.au/
I believe California is building one of these in Arizona, and (at least the paperwork part of) another just got started in Texas. At a kilometer in height, one would generate around 250 megawatts.
Suppose any part of this will be for finally converting TB to maildir format?
No, wait, that would suppose it's still actually in development. Why they let such a promising cross-platform app wither on the vine is beyond comprehension.
Advanced Tomato is a redesigned UI based on Shibby's releases. I'd recommend it.
http://at.prahec.com/
As others have said, when written it was assumed every citizen would be part of the militia, thus the terse text in amendment II.
;)
I've always thought a good way to enforce the spirit of the words would be to deny gun ownership to anyone who has not served their country.
It could be civil - postal worker (no 90's jokes please), firefighter or police, someone in the executive such as alderman, mayor, congressman - or active duty military.
This harks to the thinking of Robert Heinlein, who in Starship Troopers commented that if you wanted to vote, you needed to have served.
Having gone straight from high school to the Air Force, this has always seemed a sound principle.
Of course, certain individuals (the current NRA leader, for example, who claimed a nervous disorder to avoid the draft) may have different feelings on the matter...
I'm still wondering why Exxon, et. al don't get heavily into solar, tidal, etc. They've got to know what they're peddling will run out one day. Why not just corner the next market? They certainly have the resources.
Similarly, yes, folks will print more and more things on their own, but the end of the consumer chain is always the most expensive.
Today, printer ink is ridiculously higher in cost than petrol (try over $2,500 for a gallon of Black). For 3D, it's still pretty much all plastic filament. Five pounds of ABS white can run up to $50. Say, a couple of bookends if you're lucky.
Printers of tomorrow will be able to use many more raw ingredients as input. Right now it's all lamination, laying down layer after layer of the plastic filament until your object is complete; but down the road they'll act more like proteins, simply re-arranging supplied atoms into a new configuration and spitting them out the 'tray'.
Thus, the big winner will be the company that sells easy access to what you feed the printer.
And yes, DRM will creep into the hardware, ensuring the more-or-less law-abiding of us don't print bombs and such, though of course that will never stop the truly determined.
So sure, down the road you'll be able to print a house. But buying enough cartridges at the Depot will break you.
Sure, as soon as the eventual heat death of the universe stops changing the data!
Good idea helping a psychopath learn to turn on empathy. So long as it's on they would be more 'normal'.
Not sure though how it would work in practice.
Anyone remember Crichton's "The Terminal Man"?
I concur on the ASUS (their RT-N66U is around $150, but plenty stable and strong, with three external antennas. It even has a micro-SD card which can be used for saving VPN logs or whatever (saving on the built-in flash). Of course popping the lid to install that voids your warranty, but I've installed a bunch of these things and have yet to have a problem.
Have pretty much switched over to Tomato these days; the Shibby build is quite good. Only downside is I wish he'd move the "Apply" button to the top of the screen, but you can use your own custom CSS to override that.
Depending on how much you need to keep off, try Devin Skraelin's desk treadmill from Reamde
In Texas, our electronic voting machines do not require a paper trail, so there's no way to verify who really won.
While Governor and Federal Representative have been pretty much blue up until about 30 years ago, our Federal Senators have often been red.
This time around the Democratic Senatorial contender lost to a Tea Party candidate (the incumbent Republican retired), taking around 41% of the vote.
In Travis county, seat of the Texas government and Austin, any registered voter can now go to any polling place. Instead of the usual grade school, I chose the closest polling place, city hall of a small town of 500 surrounded by Austin's south side.
Walking in, there was no line, though all six booths were occupied. By the time I finished checking in, one booth was available. The entire ballot was around a half-dozen screens.
Except for the lack of an audit trail, that's how easy voting should be everywhere in this country.
Oh, not being a member of the Electoral College, I knew my vote for President would not truly matter. So, being pretty sure the state would go red, I felt obliged to enter a write-in for my favorite candidate, "Popular Vote".
For some years I used "PubicBroadcast" as id for the guest connection, partially to see if any neighbors would catch the typo, partially to annoy the extreme prude living across the street. The WPA2 key of course was "IReallyShouldPayForMyOwnWiFi"
How lovely when the mob rules. No 1st amendment issue here!
Like most corporations today, the Chocolate Factory has forgotten what our Founders knew was vital to a well-functioning society: Gotta remember the little guy. He may be annoying at times, but lock him in his room just for being a PITA, then who knows when it'll be your turn to enjoy the same?