Comment Re:Most are ill-prepared (Score 1) 191
Get a fuel-distillation permit and make/buy yourself a copper still. Have fun. If it's not for drinking, you're good.
Get a fuel-distillation permit and make/buy yourself a copper still. Have fun. If it's not for drinking, you're good.
Sorry to reply to myself, but here's a great example radio. In particular note it's submersible, and with some programmer work (or solder bridging if you want permanence) will let you transmit outside of band (just be super careful with that - you can get yourself into big trouble by accidentally transmitting that way without cause)
If you can, swap that radio out for one that can also do 70cm - especially if you can get it to work out of HAM bands. Remember, if there's threat to life/property and there are no other means, you are allowed to break rules.
The 70cm stuff might work better for you when there's crap all around - lower frequency stuff might not make it through the rebar but 70cm just might.
Also, you might want to put that in something sturdier than a rubbermaid. You can get surplus ammo containers easily for example, and a falling beam is much less likely to shatter that solar charger if it's in something a bit tougher than thin plastic.
Don't get rid of the rechargeable AAs, but do keep some of those AA/AAA compatible lithiums others have mentioned. They have a longer shelf life and a much wider operable temperature range.
Actually, yes.
It's better for the vehicle to terminate the flight, than to just give it it's best shot.
Nope. Engineering is the application of the results of Science.
The scientists and mathematicians figure out how a principle works, and the engineer figures out how to put it to use.
one of Discoveries smarter shows
See, you're just interpreting the name of the channels incorrectly!
I've never seen that happen, even when accidentally installing the wrong drivers back in Windows 98, when shit could actually catch fire instead of just crashing!
Must be nice. I have the same in both eyes, and the lenses would never sit still. Tilt my head for any reason, they would spin to align with gravity, making things worse. If I blinked, they would shift and take a (short, but noticeable) moment to move back. Looking near the extremes of my eyes would shift them (presumably pressure from my eyelids) also making things worse.
Basically they worked great for looking straight ahead with a perfectly level head. Anything else and they would make my vision worse.
Interesting... I'd like to pick your brain as I have astygmatism myself and am considering asking about laser correction.
Did you ever find the degree of... well, vision inaccuracy to fluctuate day to day? Some days one eye is worse off than another, some days all is better than normal. The glasses still help when it's all wierd, but not as much (which tells me the angle is the same but the degree is worse).
I'm afraid that if I get it corrected, the stable state won't be what is corrected for.
VR may not have been the reason, but one of many - and the one that tipped the scales for him.
By replying to obvious trolls?
I don't think culling baby photo posts counts as encouraging an echo chamber...
The plane has a data connection. You get access to a data connection via the on-board wifi.
You don't see a connection between the two? Let me fill it in for you: they share the same path outside the plane.
Note that this data connection isn't required for the plane to continue flying, but I don't know how it's used by in-cockpit warning or navigational stuff.
If A = B and B = C, then A = C, except where void or prohibited by law. -- Roy Santoro