Comment Not going anywhere fast (Score 1) 4
is right: it's going nowhere.
Adapters are your friend. Undo that knot in your pants.
is right: it's going nowhere.
Adapters are your friend. Undo that knot in your pants.
> HOW ABOUT we use a lifting body like an airship instead?
It's not immediately clear that a larger airplane would need a larger airport. The size of the runway needed really depends on the minimum speed needed to take off and stay aloft, and how quickly it can reach that speed from a standstill. A huge plane with large, efficient wings and powerful engines that can take off in 5000 feet of runway with a 100+ ton load can still use just about any existing airport.
Meanwhile you can't even get an airship out of its hangar if it's a bit windy, and it's not like a construction site for wind turbines would have any strong wind, right?
=Smidge=
Not only has it been done before, we now have drone technology that make it even easier to synchronize multiple aircraft.
A dozen extra large drones, some slings, and a chase helicopter with the operator. Seems very doable.
=Smidge=
There's nothing contradictory about it. Do you want people leaving their political $0.02 on your car windshield? I'd guess probably not. And whatever rationale you might come up with for why it's okay to do it to Tesla owners can just as easily be flipped around by someone on the opposite side of the aisle.
Or again based on faulty census data and pension fraud?
Not too long. It's defense in depth; it's not meant to be outright impenetrable, just very (very) hard to get through.
Someone with enough drive, enough time, and enough resources will eventually put together an exploit chain that doesn't require an invalid tagged memory access. But if that raises the manpower requirement by 10-fold (to pull a number out of my ass), then it makes it that much more expensive to attack a phone. At some point, the Apple juice won't be worth the squeeze.
I want to hire you as prompt engineer! - Sorry I meant types-question guy.
I did it as a teenager and I'm close to retirement.
There's even a movie about it from that time period.
I live near the arctic circle and this is common knowledge.
FORTRAN is the language of Powerful Computers. -- Steven Feiner