There's no reason they can't decide to start doing that for all updates.
There might be. For instance. Microsoft might have contractual obligations to release those patch descriptions publicly for Windows 7. They've kept whole operating systems going past EoL to handle government contracts before.
As far as I know, the US Navy is still paying $9,000,000 a year for XP support, but that is set to end in June of 2017. XP Point of Sale systems support also ends in 2017.
So I can ask if they spied on me and then almost certainly be put on a government list somewhere of people who have something to hide and/or are doing illegal things. Super.
Pretty sure using an Anonymous VPN Service will get the same result... One might even speculate that such a service would be a good thing to "operate" if you wanted to collect data.
If they were listening, yeah, they might. It would be the easiest thing to pick up from far away.
I hope so... because if they get that "I Love Lucy" theme music stuck in their heads (or torsos, or whatever they comprehend with) then they will send a Death Star on general principles...
No, a badger is easy to deal with, you just rub their belly until they stop eating your fingers. What you want is a moose. A moose once bit my sister... There is nothing worse than a moose running "Malevolent Moose"! Note that you will need to put about two feet of water in your living room so move your electrical outlets accordingly. While you don't have to walk a moose, you do have to get the hell out of the way once in a while... It's kind of like living with a pissed off Volkswagen.
The one beacon we have triggered repeatedly is nuclear explosions.... If the thousand or so tests the US did in the 1945-1996 period did not get anyone's attention, what else would? When we started monitoring for the Partial Test Ban Treaty, we noticed unexplained gamma bursts from off planet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vela_%28satellite%29 If all the EMP and gamma we tossed around developing and testing nukes did not get someone's attention, I Love Lucy reruns and America's Top 40 hardly stand a chance...
Indeed. What made this galaxy stand out is that they found it on the southbound 405 doing 35 mph... in the passing lane... with it's left turn indicator blinking...
All the demos are browser based, there may be no install at all. http://prosemirror.net/demo_basic.html
I like the collaborative part because that means it's OK to fOnt F iGh t!!!
What is wrong with a simple slot for the pen? Why do you need an ejection mechanism? All that does is add unnecessary parts and over complicate the design.
See, I was thinking the exact opposite... Have a mini-rail gun launch the pen so it can never get "stuck". As a bonus write an app that will use the whole battery potential to shoot the s-pen like a blowgun dart!
I did think about spinning a still... but it would have to maintain a steady temperature so that means spinning it in evenly heated air, or spinning it in a vacuum and putting the heaters on the inside (ok until cleaning time). Also, to get a meaningful amount of product it would be best to have a spinning space station... otherwise you have a giant gyro inside your habitat and that could turn maneuvering suddenly (to avoid space junk for example) into an exciting game of "Oh Crap, we can't go (x) direction unless we stop the 1000 kg still from rotating first... and that action alone is going to move the space station in some manner!" Really you get the same issue with a spinning space station, large gyros do not like to be pushed, unless you do it in an exact manner. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precession
Six years ago I was running a Core2 Quad (@ 2.5 gHz) with 8gB of RAM... 16 years ago I had an old CPU and 512mB of RAM. Can't count the number of systems I've had between them... But it was nicer when email attachments were the threat and javascript made images change on mouseover/mouseout.
Was the author drinking, whiskey when they titled this submission
I would think so, given that they are shipping already created whiskey up there to sit in zero G... This is about aging booze in zero-G, not creating it there. Having toured a distillery, I can tell you gravity is a very required component in fractional distillation... And during aging gravity helps move the alcohol inside the barrel, via convection.
The title really had me thinking about how you do fractional distillation when there's really no force separating liquid from vapor. Maybe you could use a laser or concentrated sunlight to heat the outside edge of a floating glob of wort and draw the vapor off with vacuum device... I don't think heating the whole mess to boiling would be very productive.
One interesting thing about getting out of a gravity well is everything we ever did before has to be adjusted for the lack of this pull we have been tied to forever. Maybe new alloys could be formed, or other chemical reactions might produce altered results, all from the lack of having a separating force missing from the process.
OK, so other than some flower vases, as well has hard to clean (but cool looking) beer glasses, what is the real utility?
Sorry for being a naysayer, but the whole 3D printed "revolution" has been underwhelming thus far. It has a really high cool factor, but I am still waiting to see a whole lot of useful stuff come from it.
When motorcycles were first spring up in the late 1800's, people had the same basic attitude. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcycle_history#First_commercial_products Now we have some devices that go from zero to 200+ mph so fast you can have a hard time remaining properly seated... and that's if your shorts stay clean. What something is at the prototype stage (and that's where 3d printing is now) has no bearing on what it may become. This is doubly true given we are just trying out zero gravity printing and biological printing. So I'll wait and not get too worked up about the pace of progress... I saw what the cell phone has become (so far) and I expect greater things from 3d printing.
This is from the CanaryWatch site FAQ (https://canarywatch.org/faq.html "We're not aware of any case where a court has upheld compelled false speech" It's in the fifth question up from the bottom of the FAQ
They (SpiderOak) started out doing it monthly, then realized that if anything happened to change the canary status, it would be after months of legal process and so they settled on six months. There is a fairy interesting FAQ on the topic of warrant canaries here: https://canarywatch.org/faq.html
OK, but I'm still on Panache 0.92.4!
Do I need to update to 1.1.x?
Also, it would seem that certain young women on the internet have Panache x.x.x.
There's no reason they can't decide to start doing that for all updates.
There might be. For instance. Microsoft might have contractual obligations to release those patch descriptions publicly for Windows 7. They've kept whole operating systems going past EoL to handle government contracts before.
As far as I know, the US Navy is still paying $9,000,000 a year for XP support, but that is set to end in June of 2017.
XP Point of Sale systems support also ends in 2017.
I would think it would be used to designate, as a group, the victims of a particular gang.
Usage~
Q: "Where's Jimmy?"
A: "I hear he got Encrypted!"
Damn...
MRA? Magnetic resonance angiography?
MILFs, Ready, Able...
This is something I can really get behind!
I refuse to be satisfied until my sci-fi fantasy is a reality!
Me too! But... you probably don't want to know what mine involves.
To seek out new life forms,
and explore strange new orifices!
*odds are high of occasionally discovering teeth...
For the same reason they ship in styrofoam. You want something nice and bloaty with no real substance to keep it safe.
Packing peanuts for your disk sectors!
It's 2015 and browsers are not properly sanitizing the URL bar?
That's why I'm waiting for the Lysol® browser... :-(
*Lysol® Browser does not sanitize the keyboard or mouse!
So I can ask if they spied on me and then almost certainly be put on a government list somewhere of people who have something to hide and/or are doing illegal things. Super.
Pretty sure using an Anonymous VPN Service will get the same result...
One might even speculate that such a service would be a good thing to "operate" if you wanted to collect data.
If they were listening, yeah, they might. It would be the easiest thing to pick up from far away.
I hope so... because if they get that "I Love Lucy" theme music stuck in their heads (or torsos, or whatever they comprehend with) then they will send a Death Star on general principles...
No, a badger is easy to deal with, you just rub their belly until they stop eating your fingers.
What you want is a moose.
A moose once bit my sister...
There is nothing worse than a moose running "Malevolent Moose"!
Note that you will need to put about two feet of water in your living room so move your electrical outlets accordingly.
While you don't have to walk a moose, you do have to get the hell out of the way once in a while...
It's kind of like living with a pissed off Volkswagen.
The one beacon we have triggered repeatedly is nuclear explosions....
If the thousand or so tests the US did in the 1945-1996 period did not get anyone's attention, what else would?
When we started monitoring for the Partial Test Ban Treaty, we noticed unexplained gamma bursts from off planet:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vela_%28satellite%29
If all the EMP and gamma we tossed around developing and testing nukes did not get someone's attention, I Love Lucy reruns and America's Top 40 hardly stand a chance...
Bennett, Bennett, Bennett, ...
Broke It!
Oldies are goodies.
Indeed. What made this galaxy stand out is that they found it on the southbound 405 doing 35 mph... in the passing lane... with it's left turn indicator blinking...
Amused Master Yoda is NOT!
Guess I should boil that water first.
I use bottled purified water (used to be called "distilled") for my neti pot.
What customer service do Uber/Lyft provide?
Providing transport in something that does not smell like a taxi is a good start...
So what you're saying is that this is the year of Linux on the desktop... in the cloud?
So... "Cloudtop"?
All the demos are browser based, there may be no install at all.
http://prosemirror.net/demo_basic.html
I like the collaborative part because that means it's OK to f O n t F iGh t!!!
What is wrong with a simple slot for the pen? Why do you need an ejection mechanism? All that does is add unnecessary parts and over complicate the design.
See, I was thinking the exact opposite... Have a mini-rail gun launch the pen so it can never get "stuck".
As a bonus write an app that will use the whole battery potential to shoot the s-pen like a blowgun dart!
Now I'm seeing a MacGyver comeback for the digital age!
We will need the modern version of a mullet though...
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&site=imghp&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=1293&bih=658&q=MacGyver&oq=MacGyver&gs_l=img.3..0l10.2805.2805.0.5079.1.1.0.0.0.0.213.213.2-1.1.0....0...1ac..64.img..0.1.213.elR9Fw1feVI
I did think about spinning a still... but it would have to maintain a steady temperature so that means spinning it in evenly heated air, or spinning it in a vacuum and putting the heaters on the inside (ok until cleaning time). Also, to get a meaningful amount of product it would be best to have a spinning space station... otherwise you have a giant gyro inside your habitat and that could turn maneuvering suddenly (to avoid space junk for example) into an exciting game of "Oh Crap, we can't go (x) direction unless we stop the 1000 kg still from rotating first... and that action alone is going to move the space station in some manner!" Really you get the same issue with a spinning space station, large gyros do not like to be pushed, unless you do it in an exact manner.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precession
Six years ago I was running a Core2 Quad (@ 2.5 gHz) with 8gB of RAM...
16 years ago I had an old CPU and 512mB of RAM.
Can't count the number of systems I've had between them...
But it was nicer when email attachments were the threat and javascript made images change on mouseover/mouseout.
Was the author drinking, whiskey when they titled this submission
I would think so, given that they are shipping already created whiskey up there to sit in zero G... This is about aging booze in zero-G, not creating it there. Having toured a distillery, I can tell you gravity is a very required component in fractional distillation... And during aging gravity helps move the alcohol inside the barrel, via convection.
The title really had me thinking about how you do fractional distillation when there's really no force separating liquid from vapor. Maybe you could use a laser or concentrated sunlight to heat the outside edge of a floating glob of wort and draw the vapor off with vacuum device... I don't think heating the whole mess to boiling would be very productive.
One interesting thing about getting out of a gravity well is everything we ever did before has to be adjusted for the lack of this pull we have been tied to forever. Maybe new alloys could be formed, or other chemical reactions might produce altered results, all from the lack of having a separating force missing from the process.
OK, so other than some flower vases, as well has hard to clean (but cool looking) beer glasses, what is the real utility?
Sorry for being a naysayer, but the whole 3D printed "revolution" has been underwhelming thus far. It has a really high cool factor, but I am still waiting to see a whole lot of useful stuff come from it.
When motorcycles were first spring up in the late 1800's, people had the same basic attitude.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcycle_history#First_commercial_products
Now we have some devices that go from zero to 200+ mph so fast you can have a hard time remaining properly seated... and that's if your shorts stay clean.
What something is at the prototype stage (and that's where 3d printing is now) has no bearing on what it may become. This is doubly true given we are just trying out zero gravity printing and biological printing. So I'll wait and not get too worked up about the pace of progress... I saw what the cell phone has become (so far) and I expect greater things from 3d printing.
This is from the CanaryWatch site FAQ (https://canarywatch.org/faq.html
"We're not aware of any case where a court has upheld compelled false speech"
It's in the fifth question up from the bottom of the FAQ
They (SpiderOak) started out doing it monthly, then realized that if anything happened to change the canary status, it would be after months of legal process and so they settled on six months. There is a fairy interesting FAQ on the topic of warrant canaries here:
https://canarywatch.org/faq.html