Comment Re:Wow... (Score 1) 629
That is very true, I was being somewhat facetious when I commented there. But if the camera is limited to when there is no traffic, when the lights seem to change `unfairly', I honestly can't see the problem.
That is very true, I was being somewhat facetious when I commented there. But if the camera is limited to when there is no traffic, when the lights seem to change `unfairly', I honestly can't see the problem.
It is still against the rules of the road to enter an intersection if you aren't positive that you can't get out again
A4 isn't meant to be equal to the golden ratio. It is meant to be 1/Root2, or Root2, depending on your outlook on life. Designed such that if you stick two of them together, you get the next size up. Or on cutting one in half, get the next size down; again, depending on your outlook on life.
Which is even more the case if you virtualise an operating system.
Fluid dynamics basically says that at very close distances to a surface, it doesn't matter how fast the fluid is flowing, the wind speed at the surface is very low, and approaches zero. So maybe he made it!
All this is going to do is drive up piracy. More expensive computer games won't stop people getting them, it will just make more people decide they dont want to pay £50 or whatever they will charge for them, and download it instead.
Truly fantastic idea...
Don't you mean, there are only 10 types of women?
And where does this money come from? Certainly not from a sense of entrepreneurship.
I myself have used vlite to rip out things I considered useless in Vista, including IE. This caused me an entire world of pain, however. As the parent said, Help CHM files rely on IE libraries, and so does anything else, even steam if I remember correctly. The truth is, that IE is so hopelessly embedded into Windows, it will probably take a lot of work to extract it, and even more to convince 3rd party vendors to not rely on its presence.
I don't see the inherent problem with using a click track. If we take a band like Dream Theater, where both John Petrucci (guitar) and Jordan Rudess (Keyboards) play ridiculous solos, generally 'dueling' with each other. This would be impossible if the rhythm section was speeding up and slowing down. I would much rather hear crisp, perfectly synchronised solos, with that hint of mechanisation, than muddy, out of time solos that finish at different times.
However, this does not mean I think click tracks are always good. They are only required for an act such as Dream Theater, because quite often the band are pushing their technical skills as far as they can go, and I believe they need that extra help. In the case of a band playing something at a somewhat gentle 60 - 80 bpm, there shouldn't really be any excuse.
Saying that, I used to play trombone in a classical orchestra, and the conductor was vital in all pieces of music. Whether he is as vital in a 5 piece band as a 100 piece orchestra, however, is up for debate.
How much throughput that could equal is going to depend on the way that the system is set up, how much noise there is on a given frequency, dopler shift and what kind of spectrum management is used, but no matter how you cut it it won't be much. Assuming only one to one overlapping of cells (which is very generous) and very low noise you might get a total of 4 megabits combined up and downstream to be shared by all users in a given area.
You mention doppler shift, despite the fact these are electromagnetic waves, and you have to be in something moving very very fast to observe this effect. Anything land based won't get near those speeds
Anyone can make an omelet with eggs. The trick is to make one with none.