Comment You missed the point.... (Score 1) 66
They Wrote a PAPER! which is really what science is about.
They Wrote a PAPER! which is really what science is about.
I manage a small cluster of 8 machines with 24 OCZ vertex 3s a piece.
My own experience was that all failures for these were based on bad firmware, either on the raid controller or on the disk themselves. We had massive failures for a while there... 1 a week, 2 a week...
then we upgraded the firmwares on both and it all just went away. We've lost 1 disk in 2 years since.
I only got a smartphone two-something years ago. Prior to that, I had a dumb phone with extended battery; after three and a half years, I still got 3-4 days between charges. When new, I charged it once a week, and that was with heavy talk usage. So even today's smartphones seem to have short lives compared to that.
I have an extended battery on my current phone (rooted Samsung droid charge), and I still have to charge it every day, at least during the week (but that's also because I now work in a large metal building with very poor signal inside). I don't use much data, either, but "cell standby" is usually in the top two list of power consumers on my phone.
I'd be happy with just an extended battery option on future phones, though it would be nice if things like cases and covers were available for phones fitted with said batteries.
The "thin!" mantra is getting ridiculous, though; when I got my current phone I asked about an extended battery and the sales people just got a blank look. "Why would you want that?" they asked. "You could get the wireless charger and then the phone would still be thin! You could get a car charger! Why would you make the phone not thin?!" It blew their minds that someone might not care about thinness, or might even prefer a little thickness.
I think it's got a lot lot more to do with:
- Big, bright displays
- Multicore, gigahertz CPU's regularly kept busy with background apps
- Far more sensors embedded in the unit to power - GPS, accelerometers, etc.
Plus, the whole obsession with "the phone must be THIN!!!1!"
If the manufacturers quit worrying about trying to fit the phone into the form factor of an index card, there would be enough thickness for a reasonable battery.
I am an aerospace engineer and a pilot. I came into this thread expecting fools to be spouting nonsense that needed correction. Fortunately, the situation appears to be handled. Well done, everybody!
He lost (note: "lose" and "lost" both have 1 "o", not 2) his house because of his own stupidity. See, a few years before, he set his house on fire doing something stupid, and they came and put it out (since it was a small fire) even though he hadn't paid his subscription. The fire department subsequently warned him that they wouldn't do that again, and told him to pay his fee.
Well, he refused. Then, his house caught fire again, and this time they stood by and watched it burn to the slab. He claims he even offered to pay the full cost right there, but it was too late. The whole point of a subscription rather than a bill-on-service setup is to ensure that equipment and training are in place before the fire.
The fire department was fully justified--no lives were in danger, and that fool, more than anyone else, should have known better.
I never understood why manufacturers feel the need to include crappy non-removable bloatware games and their own home-grown half-assed crappy UIs.
Doesn't matter much to me though; I'll just root and install what I want.
Your 1985 Civic would probably fail today's crash tests and emissions checks (in the areas that require them), and likely lacked features most consumers prefer these days.
-Higher crash standards demand more structure and additional equipment like airbags
-Higher emissions standards dictate more additional equipment (catalytic converters, etc.) and different combustion profiles
-Consumer expectations for performance (acceleration/handling), size, and comfort (features, sound insulation, etc) have gone up
All of the above add weight to the vehicle (making for inefficiency) Oh, and the mandated use of ethanol reduces mileage even further.
Is it kind of sad that I'm hoping the launch is scrubbed till Thursday, when I'll be down in the Cape Canaveral area? I've watched launches from there before while visiting my grandparents; I'd like to catch another one...
Living in a dense city with people all around me all the time sounds like a nightmare. Even if I didn't work in an industry that requires open, unpopulated space in which to make and operate our products, I wouldn't want to work in a city.
"Hell is other people."
there's so many pages of proposed legislation every year that if a senator or rep didn't have his staff to sift the wheat from the chaff he'd never have enough time to vote on anything.
I wouldn't consider that a bad thing.
I'm better off too... two promotions (and associated raises), 40lb lost, joined the fire department, just ran a half-Ironman, and about to start building my own airplane. Things are a lot better than four years ago--and that's despite Obama and much of Congress demonizing the industry I work in (business aviation)...
More precisely:
The National Firearms Act of 1934 says that:
-rifles with a barrel less than 16" long, or less than 26" long overall
-shotguns with a barrel less than 18" long, or less than 28" long overall
-suppressors
-firearms that shoot more than one projectile with a single trigger action (i.e., machine guns--shotguns are excluded provided they only fire one shell at a time)
are illegal unless a $200 tax is paid, and the owner passes a background check. The Hughes amendment further states that it is illegal to manufacture a new machine gun for civilian, non law-enforcement use after 1987, and illegal to posess such a weapon.
Provided that you you file the appropriate paperwork with the feds, pay for your tax stamp, and you stay in line with your state's regulations, you can manufacture a suppressor, short-barreled rifle, or shotgun, or convert an existing "regular" weapon into a short-barreled version. But you still can't manufacture machine guns.
Now, a semi-automatic (one round per trigger pull; also called "autoloading) rifle or handgun is a different matter; those are just "normal" firearms, except for a few states with "assault weapon" (read: painted black and/or looks scary) bans. Some states also have restrictions on hunting with semiautomatic weapons.
No, there is something worse. Try having 40+ guys sharing 2 stalls--or worse, 350 people sharing 7. Just take whatever the building code says for restroom requirements and triple it. Make sure you have a shower or two on site, as well as good ventilation for the bathrooms.
Next, install a couple of restaurant-level coffeemakers (they can handle a high duty cycle with abuse) and supply coffee, filters, and generic creamer/sugar.
A cafeteria is a little too much for a small company like the OP works at.
You can tune a piano, but you can't tuna fish. You can tune a filesystem, but you can't tuna fish. -- from the tunefs(8) man page