>Driving scooters to work is impossible in many places due to distance or weather. People do this all over the world. Maybe some folks need to take a moment to deal with a little discomfort. Or better yet, build out…
It's kinda like the early 2000s where someone on their cellphone (and later bluetooth pieces) had the appearance of must be important because they're on the phone.
Well yeah. Otherwise what are you suppose to just sit there awkwardly in public?
I've tried Affinity. Unfortunately a literal lifetime of photoshop has made it basically impossible to switch. It's like getting into a car and all the buttons are rearranged and behave different. The jokes on me. I…
Hopefully a cure comes as a form of vaccine so some folks can be totally against that. I don't think mental stimulation correlates to the development of alzheimers anyway. The papers I've touched on the subject seem to…
I wouldn't expect these initial baseband implementations to be fantastic software wise.
Windows doesn't need explorer to actually function, it's just another component that adds optional extras to the desktop environment such as the task bar and desktop icons. Kill explorer.exe, your desktop and taskbar…
Files will always exist conceptually as a way of expressing data. The notion of sharing exists because of sandboxing and the need to exchange data between apps. This has been extended beyond just apps to sharing between…
It seems to require the actual windows explorer to be running. Which kinda negates its potential as a shell replacement.
Right. That's what I added. You have to reverse engineer what's going on. As with anything if you don't know how it works. If your IC is producing crazy readings, or you look under a thermal camera, probably can blame…
It depends on the manufacturer. Some are better than others. Some document pretty well but are overshadowed by crap manufacturing. Personally I really like how Tesla did their online service manual. It's a good balance…
Newer cars do have lower maintenance and repair costs. This is why vehicles with over 100k miles still fetch a fair amount of money. Computers are very good at doing the same thing over again indefinitely, unlike fully…
Not really. The issue with modern automobiles they don't really report much useful information about themselves beyond general upstream faults. One issue can flag errors in five modules, and it depends on the tech to…
Same thing that happens if a brake line pops, steering wheel locks up, or the throttle gets jammed open. There are ways of designing redundancies into those systems. Multiple communication channels, reserve sources of…
It depends on the utility company. Some are better than others. The grid is a utility. They weren't originally built with the idea of customers sending power back at a small scale. So it's tricky to maintain power…
> Win32 Applications will be bundled under the new Win32 App Isolation model, which provides the security benefits of UWP sandboxing & clean uninstalls without the API limitations of UWP. Wow that thing they probably…
Not so much snow, as you have rapidly changing road conditions such as ice and freezing rain. And then factor in poor road markings and not always abundantly clear path finding. The nice thing about EVs like they're…
Yeah animated mouse wheel zoom will do it. And as a bonus "Photos" takes a lot longer to load. And what's this? "Edit an image using AI". Yeah, the pop ups. Unfortunately you have to patch in photo viewer in order to…
> contemplating a 32 or 43 Definitely a 32. 43 is a bit much. Edit: Unless you're an office manager and plan on watching football most of the day.
We have direct access to people's visual cortex and audio processing with handsets. Folks are receiving a stream of data tailored specifically to their life and experiences. It's pretty direct while still being…
The nature article shows some sort of cmos like sensor with a surface made of pegs which seem to be conveniently close in size to the wavelengths of visible light. That passes through some sort of meta optic which…
From what I can tell it's using a neural network to derive an image from the interference patterns of light. I imagine you could do this using a standard computational model, it would just be very intensive. So I guess…
I mean. If you find a way of harnessing enough energy.
We've always had this sort of stuff. Back in the 70s you had cameras the size of lighters. There's solutions for anyone determined enough. Even with authoritarian states, you'll find counter measures with sufficient…
Well if you can propel something forward you can propel it backwards as well. I'm assuming some sort of fixed laser type propulsion mechanism would leverage a type of solar sail technology. Maybe you could send a phased…
>Driving scooters to work is impossible in many places due to distance or weather. People do this all over the world. Maybe some folks need to take a moment to deal with a little discomfort. Or better yet, build out…
It's kinda like the early 2000s where someone on their cellphone (and later bluetooth pieces) had the appearance of must be important because they're on the phone.
Well yeah. Otherwise what are you suppose to just sit there awkwardly in public?
I've tried Affinity. Unfortunately a literal lifetime of photoshop has made it basically impossible to switch. It's like getting into a car and all the buttons are rearranged and behave different. The jokes on me. I…
Hopefully a cure comes as a form of vaccine so some folks can be totally against that. I don't think mental stimulation correlates to the development of alzheimers anyway. The papers I've touched on the subject seem to…
I wouldn't expect these initial baseband implementations to be fantastic software wise.
Windows doesn't need explorer to actually function, it's just another component that adds optional extras to the desktop environment such as the task bar and desktop icons. Kill explorer.exe, your desktop and taskbar…
Files will always exist conceptually as a way of expressing data. The notion of sharing exists because of sandboxing and the need to exchange data between apps. This has been extended beyond just apps to sharing between…
It seems to require the actual windows explorer to be running. Which kinda negates its potential as a shell replacement.
Right. That's what I added. You have to reverse engineer what's going on. As with anything if you don't know how it works. If your IC is producing crazy readings, or you look under a thermal camera, probably can blame…
It depends on the manufacturer. Some are better than others. Some document pretty well but are overshadowed by crap manufacturing. Personally I really like how Tesla did their online service manual. It's a good balance…
Newer cars do have lower maintenance and repair costs. This is why vehicles with over 100k miles still fetch a fair amount of money. Computers are very good at doing the same thing over again indefinitely, unlike fully…
Not really. The issue with modern automobiles they don't really report much useful information about themselves beyond general upstream faults. One issue can flag errors in five modules, and it depends on the tech to…
Same thing that happens if a brake line pops, steering wheel locks up, or the throttle gets jammed open. There are ways of designing redundancies into those systems. Multiple communication channels, reserve sources of…
It depends on the utility company. Some are better than others. The grid is a utility. They weren't originally built with the idea of customers sending power back at a small scale. So it's tricky to maintain power…
> Win32 Applications will be bundled under the new Win32 App Isolation model, which provides the security benefits of UWP sandboxing & clean uninstalls without the API limitations of UWP. Wow that thing they probably…
Not so much snow, as you have rapidly changing road conditions such as ice and freezing rain. And then factor in poor road markings and not always abundantly clear path finding. The nice thing about EVs like they're…
Yeah animated mouse wheel zoom will do it. And as a bonus "Photos" takes a lot longer to load. And what's this? "Edit an image using AI". Yeah, the pop ups. Unfortunately you have to patch in photo viewer in order to…
> contemplating a 32 or 43 Definitely a 32. 43 is a bit much. Edit: Unless you're an office manager and plan on watching football most of the day.
We have direct access to people's visual cortex and audio processing with handsets. Folks are receiving a stream of data tailored specifically to their life and experiences. It's pretty direct while still being…
The nature article shows some sort of cmos like sensor with a surface made of pegs which seem to be conveniently close in size to the wavelengths of visible light. That passes through some sort of meta optic which…
From what I can tell it's using a neural network to derive an image from the interference patterns of light. I imagine you could do this using a standard computational model, it would just be very intensive. So I guess…
I mean. If you find a way of harnessing enough energy.
We've always had this sort of stuff. Back in the 70s you had cameras the size of lighters. There's solutions for anyone determined enough. Even with authoritarian states, you'll find counter measures with sufficient…
Well if you can propel something forward you can propel it backwards as well. I'm assuming some sort of fixed laser type propulsion mechanism would leverage a type of solar sail technology. Maybe you could send a phased…