How is it anything like Idiocracy? Camacho was an excellent leader who solicited input, identified the problem, and empowered his best SME to solve it with unlimited resources and the authority to destroy blockers with extreme prejudice.
What more could anyone want, the man is a dream boss.
Good, it's just natural gas with extra steps and I die a little inside every 4 or 5 years when somebody makes hydrogen a buzzword again. Everything about it is worse than what we already have.
The ancient multimillion dollar grinder in our shop is still running NT 3.5.
We've got some measuring machines that are still running totally custom eurorack hardware that contains a mix of m68030s and Z80s powering an 8' green CRT
This is the ransomware that Avast broke the keygen for and released a decryptor two weeks after this company got hit, they could've recovered the data then with no problems.
Yeah someone with major gaps in their financial education would pay cash for something when they're being offered 0% 0-fee financing.
Time value works in both directions.
From the video that's floating about it's clearly under control and suffering from a lack of power. My money's on bird strike or other FOD ingestion taking out both engines, second place bad fuel or engine oil starvation, third place an undocumented control mode that decided to shut down both engines for *reasons* because lol boeing
Google actively makes their search results worse because if you have to rephrase your query half a dozen times instead of getting an answer in one like it's 2009 they make 500% more impressions. It's all in the emails that came out in discovery for this lawsuit, check out Ed Zitron's podcast.
This seems timed to coordinate with the space debris status report they issue every year.
This year's is quite concerning as they have come straight out and said that kessler syndrome is inevitable without active removal of existing, historical space debris *even if we permanently cease all launch activities today*.
https://www.esa.int/Space_Safe...
As unreasonable as they are around licensing of their own Step7 and TIA Portal plc programming suites this couldn't have happened to a nicer bunch. It's almost as sweet as if it happened to Oracle.