Comment Re: Science... Yah! (Score 1) 958
Wok is amazing. You can make something really nice with not much time, and you can scale it quite easily from one to four persons.
Wok is amazing. You can make something really nice with not much time, and you can scale it quite easily from one to four persons.
A receiver like that would have a power draw that is almost infinitessimal compared to the power draw of the motors. A simple radio receiver adequate for the job would possibly reduce the flight time by less than a second.
>retort from a respected scientist
I'm sure he has his faithful followers.
With the exception of BGA a decent soldering iron is fine for SMD. I can solder a 144 pin 0.5mm QFP quicker than I can solder a through hole 40 pin DIP component.
But it's usually not those things that actually fail. Most of the random failures on electronics I've seen recently are:
* bad memory modules in computers (trivial to fix)
* bad capacitors (easy to fix)
* linear power regulators breaking their solder joints to the PCB due to heating/cooling (easy to fix)
Although we did have some LCD backlights that failed because as the capacitors started to fail, the power transistor in the DC-DC converter would also go (but it was extremely easy to spot due to the melted hole in the power transistor). We just replaced the LCD backlight DC-DC converter rather than doing any soldering.
It's very rare that some BGA chip is the thing that died in your gadget.
SMD components are not hard to replace (with the exception of BGA and their ilk). But the usual 0.5mm pitch QFP type stuff, to get the dead one off I use a hot air gun, and to put the new one on, flux, solder, normal soldering iron, solder braid and kapton tape are the tools I use.
Also I design most of my hobby electronics stuff to use SMD. Smaller PCB = lower price for the PCB, and a lot of the interesting chips only come in some SMD package.
What requires incredibly fancy machinery to fix?
While it takes some knowledge to fix a lot of things, fixing for example a faulty washing machine most of the time needs nothing more than basic hand tools and the ability to diagnose what is actually broken, then buying the replacement part.
There are some things that will require fancier stuff to fix, for instance replacing a chip in a BGA package on a circuit board requires specialist tools but a huge number of repairs don't require this kind of thing to be done.
Unfortunately ftp has far from died. There are so many other organizations I deal with that haven't been hit with the ssh/sftp clue stick and can't do anything other than ftp. Or worse still, ftps which is a firewall administrator's nightmare.
We even deal with one company who not only refuses to use sftp, but they refuse ftp in passive mode and want us to connect to an ftp server of theirs that only supports active mode. Their admin reckons ftp in passive mode is insecure and won't deal with sftp. Sigh. They are of course a Windows-only shop. Most of the companies who are stuck on ftp are Windows shops.
While I don't know whether "rebirth of VR" is hype or not I can say this.
Elite Dangerous through the Oculus Rift is mindblowing. VR that came before simply doesn't compare, it's like trying to compare a modern Lamborghini with a model T.
It's ridiculous that not only does the article not mention Erlang or Haskell, but no high modded comment does either.
Sad. Erlang's been around for more than 25 years with its successful lockless model.
Actually that model works very well. In many countries the internet provision is better and cheaper with more ISPs to choose from than in the US.
I live on a small island with 80000 inhabitants. We have an incumbent telecom company which owns the last mile, but they must sell that last mile wholesale. As a result, we have not one but four ISPs we can choose from at a decent price, and you can get at least 50Mbit/sec service pretty much everywhere despite the rural spread-out nature of our population.
We don't get the terrible Comcast-only situation many in the US have to deal with.
If it works in Kerbal Space Program, what the hell, go for it
Signing certificates are normally encrypted. Stealing the file will do no good unless you know the decryption passphrase. For example, to get a package into our local debian repository such that it can install/upgrade in our production environment, you'd not only need the gpg signing keys, but the 60+ character passphrase (which is NOT written down) to go with it.
> Would you want to hire someone who was convicted of violent assault?
It depends why. Were they the initiator of agression, and beat up their spouse? Perhaps not.
Were they defending themselves from a bully? Yes, I would hire them.
A 40 year old who was convicted at age 17 when he flew off the handle for some reason, but has not been in trouble since? Yes, I would hire them.
A computer scientist is someone who fixes things that aren't broken.