Comment Re:KISS (Score 1) 103
Ah, I see you're building a finger print database. Nice.
<Morbo>Touch screens do not work that way! Good night!</Morbo>
Ah, I see you're building a finger print database. Nice.
<Morbo>Touch screens do not work that way! Good night!</Morbo>
Not only that, the dough likely came from multiple different stalks of wheat, and the sauce was derived from a number of tomato vines. I'm not sure how any of this is relevant to the quality of the pizza, though.
People looking at the car have to be able to tell that that car is an electric vehicle and not an ICE, in order to properly appreciate how the EV owner is saving the planet. By making it ugly, they can also allow the owner to sacrifice further by not driving a good looking car.
That's the cynical answer.
The actual reason that EV cars often look strange is because the designers are trying to make them as aerodynamic as possible in order to extend their range.
As battery power density becomes more adequate, maximizing aerodynamic efficiency will become less of a priority, so in the future you can expect designs that make efficiency tradeoffs in order to get a better look.
There's an easy fix for that -- move to India where you can enjoy extremely cheap goods and services.
(or if that doesn't sound like an appealing option to you, ask yourself why it is you find it preferable to live in the USA despite the higher cost of living)
Sure, in 2015, it wouldn't be so hard for Microsoft to include an SSH client with their OS? I can't think of any other OS that doesn't come with one pre-installed.
How would they restrict them to something that someone with enough money couldn't buy their way around?
Now that it's known to be possible, the drug cartels don't even need to buy or steal the recipe. If necessary, they could just hire some genetic engineers to independently re-discover how to do it.
And that's a perfectly valid argument. The "We must do something!" crowd won't accept that, but it's valid nonetheless.
It seems like there might be a a way to solve this particular problem more cheaply. How much extra safety could be provided without upgrading any track? If we accept (for the sake of this thread) that this was a case of operator error, it seems like that accidents like this could be avoided by installing onto each train a speed governor linked to a GPS receiver and a known-speed-limits database. While that wouldn't handle all the possible issues that PTC would, I doubt that would cost anywhere near as much as upgrading thousands of miles of track. That might be a reasonable safeguard to install in the short term while waiting for a more comprehensive solution to be funded and installed.
they should be force-marched to Federal prison, like the rest of the hoi-palloi.
hoi-polloi means "the masses; the common people". That's quite a radical position you're taking there.
In NJ, you aren't allowed to pump your own gas so that you will keep the guy who pumps it employed.
An interesting side-effect of this might be that more full-serve gas-pumping jobs are created (outside of NJ of course). All those self-driving trucks aren't going to be able to pump their own gas...
In theory, the orange cones could have RFID or some other technology added that can be polled indicating that it's in a construction zone. Much like the invisible fence for the iRobot vacuum cleaners.
In practice, though, the self-driving vehicles are simply going to have to be able to see the orange cones, understand what they are and what they mean, and react appropriately. Blind drivers (human or otherwise) are not going to be tolerated on public roadways.
Who is going to do any of this when they're almost certain to be caught and put into prison?
In either case, the tricky part isn't stopping the truck or getting to the goods; the tricky part is getting away with the goods, without being identified and captured.
Robberies depend on anonymity to work. A truck full of two-way digital communications devices and sensors continuously recording its environment makes anonymity quite a bit more difficult to maintain than than the eyewitness testimony of a single (probably quite rattled) human driver with a CB radio.
In other words - reinventing a less efficient version of the railroad.
A railroad that has tracks that go everywhere, can share the tracks with automobiles, and has multiple lanes of tracks on every route so that the faster vehicles can pass slower ones (at any time or place, no less -- try that with a traditional train
Certainly it's less fuel-efficient (because the vehicles are shorter, so there's more weight-overhead per vehicle), but the additional flexibility may make up for that. Getting your goods from point A to point B on a train is great, but somewhat less great if you actually need them transported from point C to point D and have to first load them onto trucks, then onto the train, then back onto trucks again to accomplish that.
Cats kill at least an order of magnitude more birds than windmills do.
... while generating very little usable power. Practical cat-based renewable energy is at least 30 years away from commercial use.
The graphics workstations for special effects animations are still a very real market. They tend to have high end 10Gig, quite a lot of high speed RAM, flash drives for local processing, and very, very powerful video cards.
Hmm, can you give some example brand names or links? I googled around, and all I could find was this article on the evolution of workstations, which only lists the new Mac Pro and some (unnamed) souped-up Windows/Intel PCs as the modern equivalent of a Unix workstation.
Why spend several hundred thousand of dollars to try to rehabilitate a criminal?
Because rehabilitating a criminal saves society money. A rehabilitated criminal can be released into society and (by definition) won't commit any more crimes. He/she may even contribute productively to society. An unrehabilitated criminal, OTOH, must either be kept in prison indefinitely (which costs society around $60,000 per year per criminal), or gets released and commits more crimes (the costs of which will depend on the crimes, but can easily be more than $60,000 per year).
The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood