Comment Re:Obvious prior art (Score 1) 126
Or a can of beans?
I mean, it's a header to tell you what's inside the packet. How is a label on a can not telling you what's inside the can?
Or a can of beans?
I mean, it's a header to tell you what's inside the packet. How is a label on a can not telling you what's inside the can?
There's lots that you are missing.
The issue isn't the input data, it's the processing method. The processing method mentioned here as "revolutionary" is just about exactly the method that Raymond Kurzweil posited: a hierarchy of "nodules" that pattern match on a cascading network of pattern matches....
We're living with a modern-day Turing. Do we give him ample credit?
If anything, the digital revolution obviates the need for tedious, drudgerous work. In the 1960s that was George Jetson speak! Poor George had to work an entire hour per day! But now that we've adopted far-right, archaic ideology and let the super-wealthy get all the spoils of the digital revolution, suddenly "eliminating drudgery" means "eliminating jobs".
The digital revoluion is set to disemploy up to 50% of Americans over the next 2 decades. It's going to get lots worse before it gets better. That is, unless you are a software engineer.
I'm a lifelong business owner, and this guy is calling it exactly, giving good advice, and all you can do is complain about autoplay? Just be decent and don't complain about cubicle life, OK?
Apparently, there is a C-64 emulator written in Javascript? (I don't know enough to try it)
On the other hand, I've recently been playing Sim City 2000, an ancient DOS game in a DOS Box, provided for free by EA....
Everyone knows that the military airplane became obsolete once radar was invented. (Sarcasm?)
The SR-71 was shot at too many times to count. Never once shot out of the sky. RADAR? Sure, they may have known she was there, and wasn't nothing to be done about it, as nothing could catch it.
The only reason why we parked the SR-71 is that satellites could do the same thing, cheaper, 24x7.
I would like to know about how smoking pot compares to smoking tobacco.
I don't *want* fancy electronics my car that doesn't adhere to some standard interface.
I want music to adhere to a standard interface, EG: RCA connectors. I don't expect navigation in the dash - I'm perfectly happy using my phone. I'd be good with it playing through the soundsystem via a standard interface, EG: bluetooth.
If you take care of them, cars last a long time. I'm *still* driving a 2001 Chrysler convertible, and it not only has a CD player, but also a cassette tape! I can't imagine using CDs or tapes - all my music is in my phone. The car only has 120k miles, I'll probably get another half decade out of it, at least. (And yes, I'm aware that the Chrysler convertibles have a bad reputation; emphasis on take care of them )
I want my car to be a car, and not try to include technology with a life cycle of 3-5 years. I don't *want* my car to have a built in cellular wifi, because the cellular network will likely be upgraded well before the car dies, making the feature worthless at best, but more likely a security or reliability concern. I don't *want* my car to have built-in navigation, as whatever system it has will be hopelessly obsolete long before I'm ready to turn in the drivetrain.
Instead, I propose that cars can have an in-dash screen that may (or may not) have it's own "smarts" but is also usable as a simple screen via something like HDMI with touch feedback so that later, I can use some new whiz bang thingie that hasn't been invented yet.
It's somewhat true that there's a bell curve in taxation, peaking with the middle class.
1) The poor have nothing to tax. They are generally on welfare or just off it, and struggling. The "freebies" a la "welfare" is not so much about the welfare receiving parents as giving their kids a chance to break out of the poverty trap, which they can't do if undernourished or uneducated.
2) The middle class has something to tax, but don't have the resources to defend themselves adequately. This is where the peak begins.
3) The upper middle class has a lot to tax, and is just starting to have enough resources to start to defend themselves, This is where the taxation peak starts to drop. (pretty much: between the 2% and the 0.5%)
3) The super wealthy hold all the cards. They can hire legions of lawyers and bankrupt countries if need be. This category controls or directly owns 50% of the world's wealth. Taxation doesn't even make sense to this class.
10+ years ago, I used to log all packets that didn't "fit" in expected services. It really was an eye opener, there are perpetual and constant probes of all sorts, all day long. We're not talking actual attacks, just the equivalent of walking around, trying doors to see if any are unlocked or even present.
At that time, I was logging well over 1,000/day on a *home 1.5 Mbit DSL modem*. Today, I would log that many actual attacks against our small-ish website every few minutes if I cared to log them. The Internet is an incredibly hostile place, and it's only because the routers, servers, and networks etc. are actually rather good at their job that we manage to make it such a useful tool.
Somebody had to see these notes, decide that they were worthless, and actually roll them up to make insulation. I want to punch that guy. How does this happen!?!?
Your traffic is always being tracked by cookies, government spies, whatever.
Please stop with the "sky is falling" routine - it only makes the problem worse and the stakes are too high to just throw your hands up in the air and give up in blissful ignorance.
Even https exists to serve this purpose. Certificates are just another cookie.
I suspect that, at a basic level, you have a fundamental misunderstanding as to what a "certificate" is and does.
1) A cookie is an identifier that allows you to tie numerous http(s) sessions together by domain. It can thus be used to track you by having many sites contain images or content from a common domain. (EG: doubleclick.com)
2) A certificate is used to negotiate a private session with a single domain. It's provided by the server and validated by the client to set up an encrypted connection. It allows you, the user, to verify that you are connected with the correct domain and *not* a nefarious person. The use of HTTPS and certificates foils the Verizon "supercookie" as they have no meaningful way to pierce the encryption provided between you and, say, Google.com.
I'm probably going to lose some karma for this...
I, too, could come with a half-dozen answers that would be "far superior" to what 100+ years of the finest minds in the industry could come up with. But in reality, I really, seriously doubt that my designs would hold up because there's a *reason* that things are done the way they are.
Mechanical engineering is a *very old* industry, and any radical, new design would have significant hurdles to pass before it could be accepted and used in a real scenario. The cost of failure is very high and there are real lives on the line.
My first thought was to use something like a caterpillar drive along the sides of the shaft, each of which would operate like a mini elevator for perhaps 10 floors. But, very quickly, I can see that this type of system would have many, many more moving parts and consequently many more points of failure.
So, I think it *might* be best to trust that 100+ years of experience are, in fact, at work, and that we should first understand that there is *real knowledge* at work before assuming that our half-baked and thoroughly unproven ideas hold any merit in reality.... ?
If they are making it easy to run "normal" Linux, why not install the appropriate libs and allow Linux apps to run side-by-side with Chrome apps?
Are you switching to BSD just for ZFS?
Learning BSD is probably a good investment, but ZFS on Linux is production/stable and is excellent. I've been using on CENTOS 6 for over a year and it has been even more stable than EXT4 in a production environment.
In computing, the mean time to failure keeps getting shorter.