Comment Re:Git? (Score 1) 141
More likely we would all be using some variant of BSD instead. But still, Linux is far greater than GIT. The list of alternatives to GIT is long.
More likely we would all be using some variant of BSD instead. But still, Linux is far greater than GIT. The list of alternatives to GIT is long.
Because it is unlikely to be true. Anyone can go to the Tesla website and check the prices. You will get the car at the price listed on the site, no more and no less.
If he is talking about financing, nothing forces you to finance the car through Tesla. In my part of the world one usually borrows the money in a bank and this is how it is done when buying from a dealer too.
If the power is out for 3 to 4 days you have no food, no water, no gasoline, no heat. The phone service is the least of your worries.
Truth is that people today have a much better chance of getting emergency services with their cell phones.
So, if you launch your spacecraft and it blows up raining debris down on my house - your home nation is clearly responsible under Article VII.
That does not mean that Denmark will pay you any damage on your house. It means you get to sue me under danish law. The danish citizen (me) will then pay you the damages, if so determined by the danish judge.
All the other speculation such as a $100 million USD bounds has no basis in danish law and so will not be required. If I can't pay you, that too will play out accordingly to danish laws. Most likely that means it is just too bad for you. You wont be getting anything from the danish government either way.
It is the only way a civilized country can act - by following the laws by that country. A country is not a person that you can say "they owe me because the treaty says they are responsible" - you are only owed money if the laws of the country concur. And let me tell you right ahead, there are no laws in Denmark to the effect that government will step in and pay damages on behalf of a citizen if said citizen is unable to pay. And neither is there any such law in the US to my knowledge. If a SpaceX rocket drops on my car, I get to sue SpaceX in an american court for a new car.
I have a speed test site provided by my ISP, which usually runs fine, but when the "attacks" are in full swing my download speed drops to 1 or 2 mbps (should be around 16)
Your tiny DSL would be overwhelmed by even the smallest DoS attack imaginable. You would not be getting 1 or 2 Mbps - you would be getting absolutely nothing through at all.
It is more likely that your DSL is having trouble delivering the usual 16 Mbps due to electrical interference. Your ISP may be able to fix it by lowering your speed, which sucks, but it might be more stable. Or there might be nothing that can be done unless you can locate the source of the noise. Trouble is that the source might not anywhere near your home.
I dont know what the robot would do. But you on the other hand would hit the baby and then crash after realizing that you just hit a baby.
E-Tag! That has to work, right?
ARGH!!!!!
Gee... I wonder if he's trying to tell me something like, oh I don't know, "I don't like being tracked".
By this point you are being tracked as the guy that blocked everything else. There is only going to be one of you.
DHCP is not used on home routers with ipv6. Your devices pick random addresses using privacy extension and duplicate address detection.
There are actually 2^128 possible IPv6 addresses. Ok, then you can cut it down by looking at BGP etc as proposed. But consider that the minimum IPv6 network every user gets is a
You can split an IPv6 address into blocks. The first 32 bits tells you what ISP. This is the part where the BGP trick can help. The next 32 bits is the network number. And the remaining 64 bits known as the interface identifier are more or less random assigned by the computers.
You can assume that the user router will respond to the all zero interface identifier. It would therefore be feasible to scan the routers. Every single ISP would take as long as scanning the entire IPv4 internet. But that means they could do it in 45 minutes apparently (longer for bigger ISPs with more
But actually hitting peoples computers, printers and so on, even assuming no firewalls, is simply not possible. It is not even the bandwidth of the attacker that limits you, but the bandwidth of the target user. How long would it take to transfer 2^64 packets down the average users crappy DSL?
On top of that you get privacy extension. This is a system where your computer changes address at random at regular intervals (at least once a day). If you did spend millions of years to do a scan, you would very likely never find a working address because the targets are moving.
Wonder if that happens with electric car batteries - how much do those cost again?
EV batteries deteriorate just like all other batteries. What you want to ask is how fast? That depends entirely on what car. Just like the batteries lasted much better on his old Mac.
Because the EV battery is such an expensive part of the car and a car is expected to last much longer than a laptop, they will do more to make it last longer. One trick is to stop charging at 80% and never go below 20%. Laptops will happily go to 100% even knowing this will kill the batteries quickly. And the user might run
Another is to climate control the battery. More expensive EVs like Tesla has climate control on the battery, so it will always be at optimum temperature. I have never seen a laptop with this feature. Nissan left this out on the first Leaf and got in a lot of trouble when the batteries started to deteriorate too fast in Arizona.
You should also remember that less capacity is not the same as failed. You probably would not replace the battery in an old EV just because it has shorter range now. Instead you sell it to someone who is fine with the shorter range. You will pay for it by getting a lesser resale value, but this is still cheaper than replacing the battery.
The 12V battery in an ICE car is something completely different. You can not assume that EV batteries will fail in 5 years, just because your 12V battery is crap. In fact may EVs come with 8 years of warranty on the battery.
Almost all Toyota Prius all the way back to the 1997 models are still running on their original battery.
This is not about getting 100 Gbps to your home. It is about building ISP networks with faster links. They are apparently not even trying to invent the 100 Gbps technology, they are just going to find out how it can be managed in a large network.
The ZDNET article only shows that Google has a
The Royal Pingdom article lists Sixxs as the source. That would be the same link as I initially provided and which now lists the
The Royal Pingdom article does claim that the next largest allocation is a
The DoD assignment does seem a bit excessive. But they are the exception not the rule. I also wonder what ARIN can really do when the government of the US tells them to jump. The only thing they can do is to ask "how high?".
The RIRs always spreads the assignments so there is nothing strange in that. The idea is that if one of those
It is also quite possible that IANA will ask ARIN to use some more of that
I was partly wrong in my first response. The Sixxs guys does not seem to keep proper track of things. Here is the allocations that the US Department of Defense has:
http://whois.arin.net/rest/org/USDDD/nets
They got 22x
There seems to be no foundation for the claim that Google got any exceedingly large allocations. They got two
Google also got a
Can you tell us what to the Google
The
Love makes the world go 'round, with a little help from intrinsic angular momentum.