Comment Re:Business Model (Score 4, Insightful) 311
Or perhaps they could disrupt a profitable market, sell at an appreciable margin, and make lots of money before trying to build massive, Toyota-scale factories out of nothing?
Or perhaps they could disrupt a profitable market, sell at an appreciable margin, and make lots of money before trying to build massive, Toyota-scale factories out of nothing?
A few quibbles:
The computer can't fire the gun--it just makes the trigger incredibly hard to pull until you're on target.
The worst malware could do is let you pull the trigger regardless of your aim, which just happens to be how every other gun works.
Shifting is fun. There's no need to be defensive about not knowing how.
Q: What kind of mind thinks traffic lights that don't work during blizzards without a round-the-clock crew of bulb sweeps is a good idea?
A: The same one that considers "snow" an example of American exceptionalism.
My teenage boys enjoy them and so do I
I take this to mean that there are at least three of you.
So far still count in base 10 and 2 working eyes.
Two working eyes... You should have at least six of those. O nocuous magnets!
Relax. We're laughing that "think of the children" claimed your toys, too.
Congratulations on not only invoking race, religion, and sex within two posts (in a story about bees, no less), but also on your exceptionally obnoxious use of emoticons.
4/10, 'cuz I replied.
A gunman, seeking vengeance for Aaron Swartz, unseen by anyone other than the caller, and magically disappears into thin air when police arrive?
That's not a hoax. Aaron confirmed for haunting MIT.
The difference is labor laws. In America, for example, you can actually fire someone.
I haven't seen an error like that since the Longhorn beta. I don't doubt that you ran into that problem, but "it happens a lot" is just wrong.
Don't sell yourself short! You already know where all the keys are, so learning to touch type won't take you long at all. Just rest your fingers on home row (index fingers on the "F" and "J" keys with the notches, thumbs on the spacebar.) Strike each key with the nearest finger, and return the hand to home row afterwards. Ta da! You're a typist. I'd be surprised if it took you longer than an afternoon to get back to your old speed, and you'll keep getting faster as you continue to type.
And don't say it's "irrelevant"--that's like some naughts gentleman wondering why anyone would pay for broadband when his AOL always worked just fine. Just change where you rest your hands, and you'll get a free broadband upgrade.
That's also true, but not insurmountable--buy a nice, bull barrel and put it on a well-machined gun.
Getting a full-auto receiver into an AR-15, on the other hand, typically needs some drilling and welding, since the ATF dislikes anything that's easily convertible to a machine gun.
Yes. My point is that it should come as a surprise to no one that fully-automatic weapons, designed to take fully-automatic trigger groups, sears, and disconnects, are easily converted to full auto. That also goes for burst-fire weapons and other "machine guns."
Yes, you can file down the sears on most other weapons, if you don't mind them instantly mag-dumping like that guy's Glock. And don't care about jamming or open breach detonations.
You're going to be hard pressed to find a gun that's easily converted to a safe, practical auto, simply because the ATF works it's darndest to ensure that those guns don't exist.
"Highly uneducated idiots?" "Lifetime supply of ammo?" Reloading supplies are also getting increasingly difficult to find, and you're going to need a lot more than a reloading turret if you want to be self-sufficient in primers, powder, and fresh cases.
What you have will likely last you until the AWB panic peters out, but you haven't thought this through any more than the pre-Connecticut "idiots" who weren't reloading 9mm.
Always look over your shoulder because everyone is watching and plotting against you.