Comment too old (Score 1) 147
eh?
eh?
Eh, no talk stink! I turn 65 next month. And I've gone through more adaptation than most people our age. I'm now on my fifth favorite programming language (FORTRAN, Pascal, Lisp, Prolog, now Python; that doesn't count my unfavorite programming languages, like C, or my more exotic languages, like lexc/xfst and sfst.)
That doesn't mean I have to like changes, when there's no good reason for them. Menus just work fine for me, and they are written with alphabetic words, not hieroglyphics, thank you. (If I could get rid of the useless icons, the ribbon would become a badly organized menu.)
I'm hoping that some day the Ribbon will go the same way as New Coke, Windows 8, tail fins on cars, and the new-and-improved Google Maps. (Ok, the latter is just a hope.)
Briggs-Meyer is another theory that seems to assume U-shaped curves. For that reason (ok, other reasons too...) I'm skeptical of it. Why shouldn't most people score in the middle of the various personality scales B-M uses?
"For aircraft, altitude is still always reported in feet, presumably because changing would inevitably cost lives during the transition." Didn't someone try that on Mars? No lives were lost, but still.
And Spinel is a naturally occurring mineral.
But I _am_ fluent in the slide rule. Or at least I was in the 60s and 70s, and I still know how to use the C/D scales. I could probably figure out most of the others if you gave me a few minutes.
Morse code, not so much, my Boy Scout skills were barely enough to pass. And I've never heard Morris code.
But what I want to know is, why was the crew of the USS Enterprise (CVN-65, not the other one) didn't recognize Sulu.
Thanks.
I used to be on one of those steam turbine ships, a guided missile destroyer built in the early 60s. And yes, we could burn most kinds of oil (fortunately we were burning s.t. a little cleaner than they used to, which meant less cleaning of the boilers). The Navy had a few more steam turbine ships built up through the early 70s, as I recall (mostly destroyer escorts), but afaik they gave up on fossil-fuel steam turbines after that. Nucs are of course still steam turbines.
Where do gas turbines used on Navy ships land on this? (sorry 'bout the pun...)
The problem is the latency
I don't understand. Not saying you're wrong, I just don't understand.
Power usage already goes up and down, every time my heat pump comes on, say. I wouldn't think the power coming from solar panels would fluctuate that much. Sure, a cloud goes over the sun, or the sun comes out from the cloud. Does it make that much difference? Is the problem that the cloud/sun is more or less synchronized over a large number of houses that have solar, whereas the heat pumps are not?
Speak for yourself, human!
Nucs have steam turbines, but most modern warships (destroyers and such-like) have gas turbines. I was on one of the oil-fired steam turbine destroyers, the USS Goldsborough, last of the Adams-class to be decommissioned, and afaik (tell me if I'm wrong!) the last steam powered US destroyer (DDG). It had 1200psi steam, 975 degrees of superheat, and the plant was a bear to maintain. We estimated 5000 valves in the engineering spaces (including air lines, oil lines, and so forth, not just steam). From what I hear, the new gas turbine destroyers are much easier to keep in running shape. (Of course my ship was the best one
Not diesel engines, oil-fired steam turbines. (She might have had some diesels to power emergency electrical generators, I suppose. Destroyers of that era did; I know, I was on one.)
Why would an aircraft carrier have such a thick hull? They were in general designed for speed, unlike battleships. The Independence was built on a light cruiser hull; later light cruisers had a 3.5 to 5 inch belt, to protect from torpedoes. I don't know what thickness of a belt the Independence might have had, but I doubt it was more than that. And the belt would only have been there around the side, not (I think) on the bottom of the hull. So I doubt these radioactive barrels are all that well protected (and of course the hull has been flooded since the day it sunk).
Maybe they borrowed the idea from Microsoft Outlook. The new version says things like "We didn't find any messages to show here." We? What, are they my nurse?
"Beware of programmers carrying screwdrivers." -- Chip Salzenberg