Comment Re:Transistor count (Score 1) 219
However, I doubt that there's anything that completely duplicates a C64 or Apple II.
That should be "anyone"
However, I doubt that there's anything that completely duplicates a C64 or Apple II.
That should be "anyone"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bx__8XmMiv0 Play a piano with your brain and this stylish electrode hat
May 17, whatever
The moons are actually bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, but as you discovered with the zoom knob, they're too close to Jupiter for (almost) anyone to resolve.
People with unusually sharp vision have seen Venus as a crescent when it's close to Earth, and seen the Galilean moons attending Jupiter when they swing farthest from it. Last person I read about that could do this was an eagle-eyed Arab archer, interviewed IIRC by Arthur Schuster during his expedition to the May 18 1882 eclipse.
those God-awful lights they used to have with lenses situated on them so that you could NOT see what light was on at all
Those traffic lights are called High Visibility Signals.
Regular traffic lights are built like a desk lamp - a regular incandescent bulb in front of a reflector. The high visibility ones are built like a projector. They use a pair of lenses to focus the light coming out of a halogen bulb into a tight beam.
The high visibility signals are more expensive than regular traffic lights, twice as heavy, and require frequent bulb replacement. Their main uses are on curvy roads where through traffic might mistake a turn signal for the through light, and at intersections where a low sun washes out regular traffic lights by shining directly into them and bouncing off their reflectors.
LED traffic lights are basically immune to sun glare, because they don't need a big reflector at the back of their housing. Because of their lower maintenance costs, they've replaced most of the high visibility ones that were being used for that purpose.
It has since been replaced by the homonymous "for all intensive purposes".
The phrase in question is frequently misheard and then used in writing by people who have never seen it written. It hasn't been replaced by a homonym, it's being misused by people who don't read.
They already have bloody huge x-ray scanners installed at the border crossings for that. They can see people being smuggled inside steel containers or a truck's chassis.
more moderate forms of pomo
I highlighted your "pomo" to see if it had five letters.
make it so that distinguishing between ads and content is not programmatically detectable.
And require the site's visitors to fill out a captcha on every single web page for the privilege of viewing the ads contained therein?
Monolithic maybe, megalithic no.
Until you can get all hannibal lecter on them I see no issue.
These complainers have ZERO legitimacy as they apparently never have a problem with the BBC, NBC, CBS, FOX, ABC, HBO, and the rest showing violence, rape, torture, immoral and offensive behavior. Nope they are the first assholes to call the ACLU the moment someone complains about a fecal messiah, a picture of a prophet, or a work of art involving S&M imagery. The very people the demand TOLERANCE, resorting to violence frequently in the name of tolerance, once again show they are the most hipocritical intolerant SOBs walking Earth.
sadly, way more devices have wifi then have bluetooth. And in some nations the carriers loves disabling bluetooth profiles they do not like, and get payed extra to turn them back on...
the pan never really materialized, instead the devices converged.
So is every other business
I don't think so. MS had about $40 billion (with a "b") in the bank prior to the recession. Doesn't seem like they're operating on razor thin margins to me.
Maybe they should wisely spend their security budget, and stop wasting money for things/policies that don't actually make anyone safer.
So what do you propose they do instead?
Here's what I imagine part of the problem is: If the airline industry didn't do anything to increase security measures as observed, they'd be damned by the public. They'd be doubly damned if another 9/11-like attack or hijacking occurred. So, they come up with ridiculous policies to make it appear as though they're doing something that's genuinely protecting the public at large.
Ultimately, there really isn't anything that can be done. 9/11 showed that a well-organized, well-planned attack can be performed regardless of the security measures in place. Anyone determined enough could doubtlessly circumvent the draconian policies we have for air travel now. The difference? It looks like they're actually doing something.
I might also remind you that no one was expecting an attack of the magnitude we saw on Sept. 11th.
Where there's a will, there's a relative.