Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Two Cents from the Atlantic (Score 1) 2219

Dear Slashdot Overlords,

The primary reason I prefer Slashdot to, say, Ars Technica is the user interface. The classic interface provides needed functions in a compact, unobtrusive and clear manner. It puts content first, presented logically sorted by date.

After testing Beta, I'm afraid I dislike it. Beta uses excessive space for each article, and the titles are not collapsible. The contrast of the text on the background makes the summaries difficult to read (and I'm only 30 - imagine what it must be for any presbyopic 50 year olds). The square theme - while not offensive itself - indicates a desire to follow the trend, rather than be a trend setter. The reliance on a Java or JavaScript environment is annoying. I spend up to three months aboard ocean going ships, where our fastest Internet connection is akin to the 56K dial-up of yesteryear (but sometimes slower). We don't need any help making web pages load slowly. And finally, if you must use a persistent rollover menu, please put it on the left hand side of the page and not on the top. Wide-screen monitors already rob me of enough vertical space.

In short, I find the square, hard to read, slow loading, space wasting layout of Beta to be intolerable and would not willingly use it.

Regards
-A
@ Sea: Lat: 35 45.1N Lon: 006 30.2W

Submission + - SpaceX Grasshopper launch filmed from drone helicopter. (suasnews.com)

garymortimer writes: Instantly in at number one as my favourite drone footage, this filming does not show bits of leg or propeller is not GoPro bent out of shape and pans up beautifully and holds the desired shot. For once I am glad they left the sound recording running to catch the noise of the blast off. Top banana. Make sure you watch it in hi res.

SpaceX’s Grasshopper flew 325 m (1066 feet)–higher than Manhattan’s Chrysler Building–before smoothly landing back on the pad. For the first time in this test, Grasshopper made use of its full navigation sensor suite with the F9-R closed loop control flight algorithms to accomplish a precision landing. Most rockets are equipped with sensors to determine position, but these sensors are generally not accurate enough to accomplish the type of precision landing necessary with Grasshopper.

Comment Re:DUMB (Score 1) 171

Correct, boilers have multiple safety devices. Alarms, shutdowns, and safety relief valves will trigger in succession to prevent damage to personal, equipment and the facilities. I work with marine boilers - aboard commercial cargo ships - and while some of the monitoring systems are networked, all the actual control is done by an isolated PLC locally. It is very hard to make them explode. Perhaps the boilers in NYC are different - but I strongly doubt it. -A

Slashdot Top Deals

The reward for working hard is more hard work.

Working...