Comment Re:Earsplitting? (Score 1) 98
Crazy as it is, U.S. Navy combined with the US Marine Corps is the second-largest air force in the world. The US Navy has a variety of aircraft:
Crazy as it is, U.S. Navy combined with the US Marine Corps is the second-largest air force in the world. The US Navy has a variety of aircraft:
For what it's worth, measuring capacitance via rise time on a GPIO pin is very challenging without an integrated comparator and fast GPIO. The Pi has no integral comparator and working with GPIO through the Linux kernel is always a bit laggy. A microcontroller is definitely a better tool for the job.
In the era of Big Data, the current frequency spectrum crisis is one of the biggest challenges researchers are grappling with...
Articles that throw buzzwords around are annoying, but irrelevant buzzwords are even worse!
Gandi is a great registrar. They don't try and convince you to buy a bunch of extra services when you register your domain, they have a very user-friendly web interface for DNS record management, and they are very light on email (and any emails they send are in plaintext, nice and simple).
Free "private" registration to remove your contact info from the WHOIS data is another big plus. The only downside is that their prices seem to be a bit higher than some competitors.
I'm not sure if there if Angstrom ships with a better network manager, but Arch Linux Arm on the Beaglebone uses the netctl by default, which makes this process quite simple. Just copy and edit the ethernet-static config and systemctl start netctl@enp2s0.
CONNECTION='ethernet'
INTERFACE='enp2s0'
IP='static'
ADDR='192.168.0.200'
GATEWAY='192.168.0.1'
DNS=('192.168.0.1')
The city I work in (Jackson, MI) has an old prison that was converted to apartments. The accommodations are actually quite nice, although some windows still have bars on the outside.
If you don't like the redesign Mozilla has done with the new tab page and want to avoid the sponsored tiles, this extension reverts much of the new tab page appearance and allows a decent amount of customization.
These are around $6000 but it's the real deal: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
You may have lost a zero there--I wasn't able to find pricing on that machine specifically, but most pick and place machines of that caliber cost upwards of $50,000. There are some chinese ~$3,000 desktop machines like this http://dangerousprototypes.com..., but they have poor accuracy and no optical feedback.
A $300 pick and place machine would be awesome, but honestly anything around $2000 that can accurately place 0402 components with optical feedback would be amazing.
For anyone with ILO2-equipped servers that have frozen due to heartbleed vulnerability scanning, HP has released a (thankfully) free update to the ILO2 firmware to work around the issue. A physical power cycle of each server is required before the update may be applied, however. http://h20566.www2.hp.com/port...
...that might explain why my iLO locked up recently. It responds to pings, but is completely inaccessible from the web, ssh, and the host OS. Time to call my datacenter and have them power-cycle my server I guess...
There is some technology akin to 3d printing for books, such as the Espresso Book Machine which can print an entire book in a couple of minutes. Some universities have these machines, but I'm not sure if they will ever have much popularity outside of an academic setting.
“We reserve the right to monetise that footprint,” Peters explains. “YouTube implemented a very similar capability, which allows people to embed videos on a website, with the company generating revenue by serving advertising on that video.” And while Getty Images has yet to determine how these ads will appear, Peters is confident that this capability will be introduced in the near future.
TFA actually states that they plan on adding advertising soon, although they don't mention how these ads will be displayed in their "embedded player". I have no idea how they plan on advertising without being incredibly intrusive; I guess we'll just have to wait and see.
ublox modules are pretty nice for embedded designs, although the nv08c-csm is also a really awesome multi-constellation raw-supporting module that I'm starting to use more often.
A long list of startups have put forth a Herculean effort to find the best way to suggest new things for people to read, and former Slashdot editor-in-chief Rob Malda, also known as CmdrTaco, just unveiled his: Trove, a people-powered app initially available on the web and for iPhone and iPad.
Trove basically lets users opt in to feeds of stories that align with their interests. Users are encouraged to curate "troves," collections of stories that relate to a particular theme. You could create a trove for "Ukrainian Politics," "Dog Heroes," or "Best of The Verge," for example, to which other Trove users can subscribe.
"The core of the product is that people have many interests and rather than just giving them information through pure algorithms and picking particular publications, we want to connect them with people who share those interests, who can pick the best content in those topical areas," says Vijay Ravindran, CEO of Trove.
After the last of 16 mounting screws has been removed from an access cover, it will be discovered that the wrong access cover has been removed.