Comment Re:Ignore ground stations? (Score 1) 108
I don't think so because it's possible to bounce RF off the ionosphere.
I don't think so because it's possible to bounce RF off the ionosphere.
This has been solved already, use a 5 sensor combination with multiple redundant systems.
1. GPS
2. VOR
3. Inertial
4. Celestial
5. Image recognition of observable landmasses
I opted out for the most part a long time ago. Most of my time now is working in my garage, playing with my cnc, 3d printer, and taking chemistry classes.
Read the article here - https://archive.is/TOiEP
Mary Erdoes is no different than the rest of middle management and C level execs at most major fortune 50 or higher companies. These numbers are the "lets justify a budget and my paycheck" numbers presented to the board and shareholders. I wish I was as dumb as these people are, maybe I would be making more money than I am today. I wonder how many security jobs were just terminated when Citigroup wasted 20k employees?
What happened to state rights again? Texas is close to kicking out all federal officials and hopefully more states will follow.
I've noticed a couple of trends for Security jobs lately.
1) Somehow having 6+ years of python / go development has become a requirement for many jobs that has never required development experience.
2) Around 30% of the jobs are offering 120k or less compensation for Senior Security Engineer roles.
3) CISSP seems to be in high demand.
4) Azure is becoming more popular than AWS and GCP experience is the least desired.
5) More companies are pushing for a move back into the office. The few hiring managers I've spoken with regarding this were set on having people in the office 2-3 days a week and were unaccepting of different hybrid time schedule like 1 week a month.
The future is pretty screwed.
It's nice they care, but it doesn't matter, things are going to be buried up there in the course of colonizing the moon. It's going to happen one way or another, so they should just accept the writing on the walls and be appreciative we have a backup plan for getting off earth.
Buying a car from a dealership (aka stealership) is like dancing with a meth addicted cobra in 2023. 99% of the dealerships are pure scum, they exist solely to take money out of your wallet, waste your time and provide shitty service. Dealerships are legalized scams because they've lobbied for laws that protect them from being snuffed out and keep consumers from dealing direct with manufacturers. NADA (National Automobile Dealer Association) does most of the lobbying to prevent consumers from getting the best deals. Consumers would be blown away if they knew the real price of vehicles, what they go for at dealer auctions and the distance the industry goes to keep ripping off consumers.
This year I bought a vehicle, I spent 3 months dealing with scam artist trying to make 20k off me in profit. Finally I went nuclear, broke some laws, setup a fake car wholesale company, which eventually led me to getting the deal I wanted. I spent 53k on a vehicle that would have cost 70k on the consumer market.
I've been "banned" from a few places who add fees to the final bill for take out orders, because I only pay enough cash to cover the cost of the food (advertised price + tax). The key is custom food orders that can't be easily resold so it's either take the cash or the complete loss on the order. Two places died on the hill saying they wanted an additional 5-10% in fees, so I walked away and ordered from some place else.
America cares about those tax dollars.
I'm okay with this and any other foreign business Infosys or other India tech contracting companies lose. I had direct experience with Infosys in 2010 and their developers and services were subpar to say the least.
The victim should cancel and sue Verizon for 100 million dollars and make as much noise as possible over it. Need to sway as much public opinion that Verizon is bad, evil, and the way they give up our data is not okay.
Canada is the problem. Canada's piss poor forest management could have prevented the majority of western Canada from burning. I understand it's remote and nobody lives out there, maybe it's time to give up that area to another group of people that wants to inhabit and manage it correctly.
You could have registered it to any name you wanted, just setup a dedicated email address on protonmail.
23&Me data simply isn't detailed enough to reliably do much with. Honestly, I doubt any of it has serious blackmail potential, and the personal information - at least in America - is available for a few dollars from personal data scrapers.
It's useful for painting a full picture of someone's family and possible exploitation targets that can't be figured out from facebook. I had some Russians call my mom's half sister (my half aunt) and try to get information about me, from her, under the premise that I've been arrested. The weird part is my half aunt didn't even share my mom's maiden name and was always a distant family member we only saw once every 3-4 years. I have no idea how they made the link that she was my half aunt and this was back in 2016.
My data would have been taken in this even though and I wonder how it's going to be used against me. I'm 2nd cousins with a famous musician...
Machines have less problems. I'd like to be a machine. -- Andy Warhol