Comment USGS (Score 1) 460
The first place you should ever check if you feel a quake (or something like) is the USGS quake page. After that, if you want to delve into the high sig-to-noise ratio of twitter, go right ahead.
The first place you should ever check if you feel a quake (or something like) is the USGS quake page. After that, if you want to delve into the high sig-to-noise ratio of twitter, go right ahead.
And what precisely of the watcher's is the watcher's can going to watch?
I'm so confused...
We used ASI at my last job. Given how seedy their will call area was (been there more'n a few times), and some other things that occured over the years, I can't say as I'm surprised by this.
... the Planck length would be about as long as a tall cedar tree.
I prefer to measure my Plank lengths in redwood or pine, myself.
Oh, wait...
Just curious why you feel it's necessary to link the PDF in via a frame with some other stuff in the "sidebar" I could care less about.
Here's a direct link to the PDF:
Perfectly aware, and I was using a figure of speech. However, explain to me how they're supposed to conduct repairs at 65,000'?
It's amazing how trivial those problems are compared to protecting a blimp at 65,000'.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airborne_Laser:
"If the ABL achieves its design goals, it could destroy liquid-fueled ICBMs up to 600 km away. Tougher solid-fueled ICBM destruction range would likely be limited to 300 km"
65,000' is just a hair under 20 kilometers. That's beans compared to what the ABL is supposed to be able to do against a smaller, much faster moving target, from a mobile platform. You might need a stronger laser than the ABL carries, but as I said before, most blimps aren't particularily tough.
Hmm. Large gas-filled object, presumably with a not overly-thick skin to keep the weight down. Ground based laser of sufficient power to pop a hole in the giant balloon.
Yeah, this is gonna work real well.
Wtf are "${1}" and "$2" supposed to be?
Perl, foo.
s/([a-z])([A-Z])/${1}_$2/g
Real geeks don't strip spaces - they use underscores
(Unless you're a JavaScript programmer in which case I'm terribly sorry...)
One nice side effect, is the smashy smashy bit is a great stress reliever, just wear safety glasses and perhaps gloves.
In the case of a drive that really isn't prime for donation or repurosing (I'd rather see them reused than destroyed), I'll second this. It's also a great perk for a subordinate. One time we had a junior tech who was just having a hell of a week. I plucked an old 4gb scsi drive off the shelf, gave it to him, and said, take this out back and beat the crap out of it. When he came back in he had a huge grin on his face and he sure felt better about life.
The internet itself exists because the US military was seeking a way to maintain communications in the event that a major city was destroyed with an atomic bomb, causing a disruption in telephone communications.
Why, oh why do people keep trotting out this tired old myth?
The ARPANet wasn't created to survive a nuclear holocaust. Hey geniuses, it used common (though pricey and high speed) telco circuits - the same as carried telephone communications. They weren't hardened or anything like that. Explain to me how they'd stay put when everything else went kablooie?
The original purpose of the ARPANet was to allow resource sharing between research centers with computing resources that were being funded by and/or involved in defense level research. Even after the first dozen-odd IMPs (routers of their day, and amazingly only refrigerator sized, compared to the behemoths that they interconnected), they weren't even hardened.
Ironically, it would be over 20 years from the inception of the ARPANet that there would be a sufficiently large number of nodes and more imporantly links to give the Internet the level of robustness that might give it a reasonable chance of surviving an all out nuclear attack, the kind that people continually champion as its original raison d'être.
Anyone who's interested in learning more should really read the excellent book, _Where Wizards Stay Up Late_.
Speaking of one typo away from disaster...
Try jonesday.com
Your vocational test indicates you have excellent potential in... marketing!
Or children's entertainment.
Life is a healthy respect for mother nature laced with greed.