Comment Re: The book burning has begun (Score 1) 65
Well, your buying power would be crippled.
Well, your buying power would be crippled.
After an Iranian missile hit, at least, the parking lot of Microsoft Israel, several reports came out saying that they were helping the IDF with genocide operations in Gaza.
I don't know if it's true but those are the real reports.
The timing and 'quiet' character suggests Pakistan might have told them to get the hell out.
"Developing story" as they say.
Put reflective and sacrificial armor on it
The armor will evaporate and push the vehicle off course.
The trick is to have the lasers far enough from the target
Close range laser systems we have since a decade.
Especially Germany and Austria.
Those are not suitable against hypersonic missiles, but work well against grenades and ordinary bazooka like missiles.
They are neither impractical nor expensive. They are fixed mounted to defend a base, yes, that is it. Actually we have some on trucks
the faster you are going one direction, the more acceleration required to change it.
Nope.
You failed at physics.
The acceleration is the same: s = 1/2 a * t^2, or v = a * t
Perhaps you mean something different? The faster you are reaching the target, and the closer you are, and realize you miss: the more abrupt (hence higher acceleration) your course reaction needs to be.
The SR 71 flew Mach 3, not Mach 5.
And a turning radius that big is utter nonsense. The turn is basically determined by how much g-forces the pilot wants to take, for how long. In case of the SR 71, the limiting factor is the size of the wings, they are to small for tight curves.
See: https://aviation.stackexchange... Check the accepted answer (the first answer has a math error)
When flown with the maximum allowable load factor of 1.5 g at 80.000 ft (48Â bank), the turn radius at Mach 3.2 (equivalent to v = 953.3 m/s in 80.000 ft) will be 83.5 km. To be more precise, you will need to add the effects of earth rotation, but for now I leave this away. As you can see, the turn will still need 163 km or 103.7 miles, but not the distance from San Francisco to Seattle which is more than 6 times bigger.
However you are right here: Hypersonic weapons are unlikely to really be maneuverable.
But then again wrong here: They are also unlikely to be very accurate.
They are super accurate for fixed targets like buildings, e.g. hospitals, bridges, oil refineries and such
How common of a name is Soham Parekh in India?
At one time I was in a tech group with three Mike Johnsons. Assuredly different people, though slightly confusing.
But I don't really feel sorry for these startups going for global minimum wage and getting burned.
Hire an American named Steve from Akron and you'll be less likely to be scammed.
Probably depends on its characteristics.
He had quite an amusing series of papers popping the bubbles of all the 'debunkers'.
He never proved what it was but he sure proved many things that it wasn't, as claimed by ThE eXpErTs.
Midwit scientists abhor an unknown and run to bad ideas like a safety blanket.
FWIW his grad student at the time had the better ideas, involving relative motion of solar systems within the Galactic Plane. His models were the best fit for the available data.
It *does* explain why he needs so much of your money for expenses . . .
>It's not clear this is a stepping stone to anything else.
perhaps to one-way trips for celebrities? I could get behind that!
(In space, noone has to hear Katy Perry sing)
hawk
>I didn't watch Independence Day that close. Did the aliens win or the people?
It starts as a win for the people, as the aliens destroy DC.
Unfortunately, they later turned out to be hostile.
Sure, itâ(TM)s quite possible for two people to exchange offhand remarks about the local weather apropos of nothing, with no broader point in mind. It happens all the time, even, I suppose, right in the middle of a discussion of the impact of climate change on the very parameters they were discussing.
CD players were standard until 2019, when luxury brands started to phase them out.
The last manufacturer to have them standard was Subaru, through 2023.
You must be a lessee?
My truck never had a CD player. I replaced the head unit with a cassette player with a $30 Walmart bluetooth unit a few years ago, and it's legit the fastest bluetooth connection I own. About a second after it gets power it's linked to the phone.
It's good to own multiple paid-for vehicles.
ThriftBooks has great deals on DVD's and CD's.
And I was hoping to rip the disk to MP3. Darn it, Universal!
One good anachronistic music format deserves another, I always say!
The way they used the "Crowdstrike Outage" to hide crimes was to reboot into a WinPE environment and 'do recovery' while wiping evidence.
I haven't used a Mac in a while but it used to be booting from external media was easy.
I can imagine ways to require keys from secure boot and hardware to decrypt the main drive but I haven't seen those deployed myself.
So, reboot from external, copy data, reboot normally.
Somebody can tell me if Apple already provides a way to avoid this.
If graphics hackers are so smart, why can't they get the bugs out of fresh paint?