Comment Re:Sigh.. (Score 1) 142
nothing postulated in the search for atomic energy violated the laws of physics "cough"
Isaac Newton would beg to differ.
nothing postulated in the search for atomic energy violated the laws of physics "cough"
Isaac Newton would beg to differ.
You've got that backwards (or I'm missing the sarcasm).
Dish has to pay Fox News to retransmit Fox's content (copyrights!), Fox wanted to increase the price and/or require Dish to carry additional Fox-owned channels as part of the same contract.
When Fox (or any other network in negotiations) claims that "Dish pulled the channel", they're stretching the truth. What they really mean is "the contract expired, and Dish cravenly stopped retransmitting our copyrighted content so we couldn't sue them for infringement."
This.
Also, Dish can't retransmit what it doesn't have a contract for, and the contract expired. The disagreement is over the terms of a new contract.
Apparently the various network heads haven't learned, despite plenty of opportunities to, that Charlie Ergen doesn't bluff.
The "hot glue gun" is just a tiny part, namely the extruder hot end. Add to that a precision (computer-controlled) feed mechanism for the "glue", temperature regulation to work optimally with different feed rates and "glue" types, and a precision, high-speed, XYZ positioning mechanism for that "glue gun" (and optionally, additional "glue guns" so you can switch materials in mid print), together with a computer and firmware to drive all, and you're approaching what even the lowest-end consumer 3D printer does.
"Glorified"? Yes, and it is glorious. Perfect? Of course not, not any more than a cheap consumer Epson or Brother printer is compared to an Espresso Book Machine.
If your southern California car dashboard is hitting the 200+ Celsius temperatures needed to melt typical printer filament materials, I'd say you probably have worse things to worry about.
But sure, for some things you need material properties that just don't work well with fused filament deposition.
The PLA (polylactic acid) filament used in many printers is actually made from cornstarch, not petrochemicals. It prints at a slightly lower temperature and doesn't need a heated bed the way ABS* does.
Of course you could probably make a case about the amount of petrochemicals (fuel, fertilizer, pesticide) typically used in growing the corn in the first place.
*And some of the more exotic (for now) filaments like polycarbonate or nylon, which require even higher temperatures.
My local library system (Arapahoe County, Colorado) has 3D printers in each (or most) of its branch libraries for patron use.
Yep, ditto for third-party javascript.
If you simply must have the latest javascript widget on your website, host it on your own damn server, don't link to a third party. I might trust you, but how the hell do I know I can trust them? (noscript ftw).
So in order for a website to remain free for the users use, they will need to post more advertisements to make up for it.
I think you've got that backwards.
It isn't costing the websites money, it's costing the advertisers who are paying for clicks without any potential sales from those clicks. In theory this just helps the websites.
How the guys running the fraud bots get anything out of the deal is a bit mysterious, unless they're in cahoots with the website owners. But then the mechanics of online advertising is way, way down on my interest list -- most ad-servers resolve to localhost on my system.
An iPad is a more power computer than any I had access to all through school
Yep, if you're talking about the innards.
It's also a more capable general-purpose computer than those Apple II-series computers and early MacOS 6/7/8 machines
Nope.
An iPad is an appliance for running apps, not a general-purpose computer. Go ahead, just try to program on it, or hook it up to manipulate some random gizmo.
Sure, it can be done -- by someone with the right development tools (which wont run on the iPad) and skills. A far cry from what school kids could teach themselves to do with Apple Basic or Hypercard.
Per year makes no sense. At a million dollars a year, a taxi operating 24/7 (with no breaks for fueling or maintenance) would have to make (above other operating expenses) just over $114.15 per hour just to pay for the medallion.
Not the same stuff. Carborundum is silicon carbide, corundum is aluminum oxide. They're both of similar hardness and both can be produced artificially, with SiC being produced for over a century.
Things of similar hardness will scratch each other.
Most people can tell that Happy Fluffy Kitty Screensaver doesn't really need to send SMS messages, know your location, or access the Internet.
Why does a phone even need a screensaver?
This -- although I don't even need your phone.
These days smartphones might as well just be GPS house-arrest bracelets with better PR.
It's Sunday. The usual read-slashdot-at-work crowd is offline.
Where there's a will, there's a relative.