Comment Use a firewall (Score 2, Informative) 204
That's what I do on my android phone.
I have DroidWall installed and I simply block unwanted "services" from internet access.
There's other alternatives on android, such-as "freezing" services.
That's what I do on my android phone.
I have DroidWall installed and I simply block unwanted "services" from internet access.
There's other alternatives on android, such-as "freezing" services.
That wouldn't be cool.
They aren't actually increasing image quality.
What they're doing is reducing the image quality to make it easier to locate objects by blurring everything so the fine image detail wont confuse their object recognition engine. Once an object outline is set, they ""increase"" the quality by using the original (full quality) image.
This works nice for small things (notice the minimum level of panning in the video), but the only way it can be done that isn't easy to detect is if you had a powerful AI that would recognize all the objects and surfaces in the scene and recreate the missing data using a pre-existing visual database.
Once powerful AI systems go online, you would be able to generate any visuals you want that would be hard (maybe even impossible) to distinguish from reality.
We've been using Delphi to develop our project (see sig) for years and we find it very intuitive and friendly to design user-interface based Win32 applications. I personally feel that Pascal's syntax is much clearer than most languages and yet flexible and powerful enough to develop major projects, making it ideal for teaching client-side programming to newcomers.
The only sad thing about Delphi (which I hope will be rectified) is:
1. No 64bit compiler.
2. No mobile platform support (except maybe
Nice upscale for M86's filtering tech, designed to nanny kids, scaled up to nanny the whole country.
This tech, if ever made viable on a larger scale would be the perfect way to transfer solar energy to the ground, much more efficient than the currently proposed lasers.
When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle. - Edmund Burke