Comment Re:Aren't those guys rocket scientists? (Score 1) 54
I'd think most expensive satellites have some form of thruster on them for retasking, station adjustment, and debris avoidance...?
I'd think most expensive satellites have some form of thruster on them for retasking, station adjustment, and debris avoidance...?
Or, one could fall back on terrestrial radio for all of these examples...
Please define "organic food."
All food is organic, because our metabolism is organic chemistry.
Just checked with Firefox, Safari, and IE. The only thing special is that Firefox has adblock plus on it.
No, that's dumb. Electrical appliances don't work without electricity. 2+2=4.
So why don't they focus on training to use the equipment they already have?
see if that fork
Good luck with that...
That still doesn't answer his question.
Yes, you can see that there is a thing that is 1/100th the width of a hair. Can you see what it is? Can you distinguish it from other similarly sized things in close proximity?
I've never once seen a browser do that, and if I did I would stop using it immediately. That's a huge security issue.
Honestly, I'd be OK with another space race. Even if we lose.
Just because he thinks you're an idiot doesn't necessarily mean he disagrees with what you said. Even a broken clock is right once a day, maybe he thinks you were just an idiot who happened to be right?
Makes sense to me - the primary function of the wings is to provide lift "up" - so for a more effective turn you pivot so that the maneuver is always "up" before you execute.
Yes, malloc() would have blown up on occurrence and the problem would have quickly been found and resolved. here's the skinny.
It's not the language that's at fault, it's the attitude that resulted in a gimpy "replacement" for malloc() being used for all platforms because some platforms had a slow malloc() once upon a time.
... likely because everyone thought someone else would have been looking at it.
"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne