Comment Re:U.S. (Score 1) 451
She should have told that to Blagojevich!
She should have told that to Blagojevich!
Skin drag of the air along the interior walls of the wind tunnel will generate heat and will probably destroy your servers.
I used to work in a closed circuit wind tunnel. It was about 30 ft tall, with the upper test section measuring about 6'x5'x4'. The top speed in the upper test section was about 200mph. After running tests for 4 hours at speeds no greater than 60mph, the temperature inside the test section was 105F. And no, it wasn't from the motor, that was actually outside the tunnel and a shaft protruded in with a prop at the end.
I'd love to see the pictures. I might even be able to tell you something about it...I work at a company heavily involved in GPS technology development that uses its powers for good...
Read TFA. The TSA wanted to put goons on private aircraft and make GA pilots submit data for background checks on their passengers. I'm a private pilot, and like many of my peers, have a seething hatred of the TSA. They seriously dreamed of being able to check over who was going to be in the other seat in a two seat airplane. They have backed off the GA community because of stuff mentioned in TFA.
Vorro, the Fawkes of Cunning and Free!
Vorro, he makes the sign of the "V"!
*swish, swish!*
I'm doing my part to shove LightSquared's illegal and treasonous business plan squarely up Mr. Falcone's posterior. They are without a clue.
No, I was on the OS platform tools development team for the phones. In the US, T-mobile will let you put just about anything on their network. They don't really care as long as you don't break things. Strangely, I think the same may still be true about AT&T. So long as the IMEI is valid, you're good, and the phone will work without trouble.
My daily use phone is a first-run engineering prototype and does not have a valid production IMEI. My hacking phones have valid IMEIs, but IMEI tools on the web only understand that they are valid, but can't figure out what kind of phone they are.
They are linux/qtopia based phones. Unfortunately, user builds can't do this. With an engineering build though, I can pretty much just say "echo $NEW_IMEI > imei" in a special device directory and restart the phone software. They are very similar to Openmoko Freerunners though, so I imagine you could probably accomplish the same thing on those.
I'm glad I have a box full of cell phones that I can spoof the IMEI on by running a single command on them.
My employer makes spiffy gadgets for the automotive market, and you may own one of our products. Commonly, developers have VS for building code in a simulator and CodeWright for developing code to run on an embedded device. Version control is done with Git, CI with Jenkins, code review with Gerrit, issue tracking with Jira.
On the balloon I helped send up a couple weeks ago, we used APRS transmitting location from a Garmin GPS18.
Yes, I guess this does work. My credit was good enough to get a good deal on a mortgage for a house and for a nice new car. But, its low enough that most places won't give me a credit card (I don't need one, so I don't give a damn). I did have someone try to open a card in my name and they got rejected.
My N900 has horrible battery life. Getting it to last a day is a miracle.
Don't count your chickens before they're hatched. Several senators, congressmen, the FAA, and the DoD are against LightSquared.
The Kansas KTAG system uses RFID. The transponder is actually a sticker you affix to your windshield. You can see the huge antenna and little chip in the middle of the sticker. Unfortunately, these do not operate at highway speed, and you must slow down to 20mph or even stop since the KTAG lanes are gated.
Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek