Comment I read that as RFID (Score 2, Insightful) 282
And wondered was M$ chipping their employees now
And wondered was M$ chipping their employees now
The early A2000 had bugs, but the B2000 was a great machine. Very upgradable.
I had one from early 88 until I left the country in july 2002
eventually I had a GVP '030 board in the CPU slot, with 12 megs of RAM, running the SCSI hard drives (biggest was 1 gig) and a CDROM, a flicker fixer in the video slot, and a GVP I/O card with faster serial ports (to run the BBS) and an extra printer port. THe original parallel port was used to PARNET to the A1200
I don't want a Fiat currency
I want a Ferrari currency
There hasn't been a good one since David Tennant
"The kiwi looks like a mouse"
But it doesn't have a scroll wheel
"water dragons look like iguanas"
Are they from Harry Potter, LOTR, or Anne McCaffreys books?
Most military assets are not in geostationary orbit. You get a better view from closer up, and you move around to cover more area.
Geostationary orbit is mostly for communications.
64K is 65635
"Exercise should be fun - you just need to find a sport/activity that you enjoy enough so that it doesn't seem like a chore."
Exercise that has a reason is good. Walking or cycling as a form of transportation (like to/from work or the shops) is a good example, plus you save on CO2 emmissions and cost of gasoline. Of course cycling may not be possible in winter if you live in a northern state, but walking should be. Of course if you live too far away from your work maybe you could just walk part wayu and use public transport for the rest.
"he passed someone on the interstate at 94 mph."
Thats called tthe autobahn over there, and at 150km/hr everyone else passes YOU
"4) Happier plants since they need CO2
But plants don't vote. "
And I am sure plants in Australia don't want it any hotter. Neither do the animals living there. But they don't get to vote either.
But the Antarctic area claimed by aussie will become habitable eventually
It means that if you have 2 objects, one of negative mass and one of normal mass (and nothing else around) The negative mass object will fall toward the normal one, and the normal one will be repelled by the negative one. The negative mass chases the normal mass and accelerates.
As the speed increases, the acceleration increases (once you get to a significant fraction of the speed of light)
It makes a good 'space drive'.
I wish I had patented the idea back in 1976 when I first thought of it when I was taking physics 101
20 knots isn't that fast, when the marines already have the LCAC that does 40+ knots and can carry an Abrams ashore and across the beach
Who are we planning to invade anyway?
The place that hosts my domains sends me an email, and then charges my credit card automatically if I don't respond.
And Prime only costs $100 per year ($10 per month is $120 per year) and Prime gives you the free 2 day shipping and access to free Prime videos and music
I'll stick witht my existing Prime suscription.
"Yes and no tsunami will hit any reactors on a mountain!"
No tsunamis, but lahars, pyroclastic flows and lava are probably more dangerous to a reactor
"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"