Comment Re:Gallium? (Score 1) 260
The right of the people to bear arms shall not be infringed.
Darn skippy.
And I'm only going to use my homemade tactical nukes for duck hunting.
Nuke bonus: ducks come out cooked, and ready to serve!
The right of the people to bear arms shall not be infringed.
Darn skippy.
And I'm only going to use my homemade tactical nukes for duck hunting.
Nuke bonus: ducks come out cooked, and ready to serve!
Name any chemical and I'll find a way to make a bomb out of that crap.
Argon.
Challenge accepted:
Highly compressed argon used to air dissipate a very large quantity of Lycopodium powder.
Delay ignition to allow oxygen to mix in.
Boom.
Locks keep honest people honest. They barely slow down a professional.
Damn straight.
Another thing people don't take into consideration is that about 40% of vehicle thefts are tow-aways.
That way they can work on the locks and security in the safety of their chop shops.
...The cure is to lock and unlock your car with a physical key to prevent reading of the code. The other step is to add a switch to simply turn off the RF trancievers in the car when parking...
Great point.
Once hackers started popping passenger doors remotely, I found out you could disable remote door unlock just by pulling the fuse on the receiver.
Now you need a physical smart key turn to open the door and disable the alarm.
Just picking the lock won't work either, because it's the smart key that disables the alarm.
Simple:
1. Put your conventional, fan-cooled PC inside a completely sealed all-metal case. (With water-tight ports for CAT-5, USB, whatever.)
2. Line the inside of the case with Peltier junctions wired to power, through a thermostat.
3. On the outside of the case, aligned with each Peltier junction, you place a heat sink. Heat to be transferred through the metal case.
4. If the thermostat detects high temp inside the case, it energizes the Peltier junctions to be cold on the inside, hot on the case side.
5. If the thermostat detects low temps inside the case, it energizes the Peltier junctions to be hot on the inside, cold on the case side.
I think I see an animal in there...
You're right. It's a (now nearly extinct) Babirusa or ‘pig-deer’:
http://i.guim.co.uk/static/w-6...
...and it's actually a very accurate representation:
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-GScX...
They do a good job of cleaning it up in this video:
It gets better , when you realize most rooms only need one jack or none at all.
I would argue false economy on this. Cable is cheap and labour is expensive (even if it is your own time) if you are pulling a single cable to a room, pull at least 2.
No need to pull two cables. Every time you run a line, tie in a double-long length of braided poly rope. If you ever need to run another cable in the future (who knows what it will be; fiber, CAT 9, 10?) attach it to the poly rope and pull it through.
Because it's double-long, you can pull it back in to the 'starting position' when you're done and it will be ready for the next pull.
If it's not produced, then technically it isn't "coming".
OK. It's not "coming"
they should have just changed the whole name from "windows" to "Balmers gone, and its safe to us windows again, please come back".
Have you tried it?
It's neither safe nor pleasant.
Win 7 was out under Balmer, and it was quite good.
Er, if you have a wireless LAN, you might as well have router to an always-on internet connection, and say a Beaglebone Black for smarts to collect the data and forward it. That way you don't need any of these modules at all.
Excellent point!
Perhaps this would still be useful where no always-on internet connection is available - like an RV, or on a fleet of shipping trucks where you want to monitor a constellation of activities= speed, gas level, lights, engine status, reefer temps, etc.
Or, where you don't want to spend money for an always-on internet connection, like a vacation cabin (when empty).
So I have 10 devices I want to hook up. The AC, the lights, refrigerator, washing machine, toaster, whatever. Does that mean I need 10 phone and data contracts with AT&T...
Perhaps you could have a little wireless LAN in the house that each device could talk to, with all the data coming into this module for remote monitoring and control. That way you only need one module.
There has been 'repo' tech in place for a while now.
While offering a buyer the factory "theft prevention GPS tracker" the dealership retains the right to share the tracking data.
While passive, (it doesn't do the engine cut-off described above) if someone starts to miss payments, the repo boys know just where to find the car.
This has been in place for at least 5 years.
It is possible one has evidence of something. It is possible that one does not have evidence of something.
Still waiting to hear your evidence...
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I am a bit tired of Dawkins and I never did get around to reading him...
I typically read an author first, and then see if I get tired of him/her.
Perhaps I've been doing it wrong.
Try "Selfish Gene", write back and let me know what you think.
Variables don't; constants aren't.