Very little uses crystal oscillators, they’re gigantic compared with electronics today and have very wonky performance over temperature and shock.
That's why this is just using off the shelf cartridges with commercial heads.
1 petabyte per 60 second scans implies a kind of comical data rate to storage, even at RAM speeds that’s implausible. Imagine we need to write these to hard drives, they happily sustain 150Mb/s on the high end, which…
xray, photomultiplier and laser tubes are still SOTA. PM tubes in particular have a huge number of glass feed through for the intermediate plate voltages.
The idea that you could buy any food that doesn’t fit that definition is silly, all foods have additives that’s why you can buy them and they last for more than 60 seconds on a shelf, all foods are processed because we…
It’s basically a wildcard, “ultra processed food” is a classification of nothing and everything. There’s nothing inherently bad about processing food, lots of food is terrible for you but that’s unrelated entirely.
There's actually a known prototype MacBook Pro from 2006 with a cellphone radio, and the release MacBook Pros from the time all have a weird looking area near the battery and RAM where the SIM slot was supposed to be,…
I had a thinkpad at one point that had a slot, but because it wasn't optioned for it you had to patch the BIOS or it wouldn't boot with anything in the slot, it seemed so hostile as to be worthless.
I somehow managed to get it working in 2016 with a lot of hackery, I'd still have it as a usable device if the weird little pouch cells it had didn't die, repacking those batteries seemed like enough of a fire hazard I…
The cause is just that the panel is mounted rotated on the device. It's supposed to be used in a tablet where the top is the short end and the side is the long end, opposite to a laptop.
The GDP devices are amazing except for the keyboard, which is some fever dream layout I've never been able to understand. https://img.website.xin/contents/sitefiles3601/18006016/imag...
I miss my Sony Vaio P series which fitted in a similar sort of niche, the cellphone radio made it just by far the best laptop I've ever used. Modern laptops don't seem to have provision for a LTE/5G radio which always…
They’re used for proofs sometimes, if you expect your security company to do a specific route they need to go to each token on it and touch them, you see iButtons glued to walls outside commercial buildings for that…
Proof of work doesn’t work here same as it doesn’t work for email. The effort to mint a valid PoW is always going to put the legitimate user at a disadvantage, whatever the implementation is. Someone with an incentive…
The authors profile is also just ridiculous, hundreds of commits a day and their entire profile is also just AI generated lists of AI generated projects each one filled with pompous sounding AI documentation with…
The whole website is AI slop, from the text down to the design. If it's an actual product who knows, sort of hard to care when the website came from a Claude prompt.
3D printed spring, magnet, hall effect sensor by the looks of it.
That video is very annoying and doesn't in any way replace just having a screenshot of it running.
Yeah I’ve had one, still do, it never gets used because it’s a project car. Compared with one button press and coming back to a print in a few hours, it’s a constant nightmare of debugging, print issues, and manually…
I’ve been running mine offline for years, I don’t know why other people haven’t been. They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself, but they’re obviously not completely trustworthy.…
Seems a little pointless, your keys can't be stolen but they can be instantly used by malware to persist across anything you have access to. The keys don't have any value in their own right, the access they provide does.
More or less, no desktop OS other than Qubes and MacOS (to a very limited extent) can handle the user being even vaguely compromised, much less a user with privilege. Keys to the kingdom are already in the user domain,…
Intentionally interfering with 911 would probably be a poor decision.
The ones you hear about are caught quickly, I’m more worried about the non obvious ones. So far none of these have been as simple as changing a true to a false and bypassing all auth for all products or something, and…
The language matters, but your original guess was actually correct, you can do tricks with sha256 where you only end up calculating a fraction of the total double hash in order to get a pass or fail. Modern bitcoin…
Very little uses crystal oscillators, they’re gigantic compared with electronics today and have very wonky performance over temperature and shock.
That's why this is just using off the shelf cartridges with commercial heads.
1 petabyte per 60 second scans implies a kind of comical data rate to storage, even at RAM speeds that’s implausible. Imagine we need to write these to hard drives, they happily sustain 150Mb/s on the high end, which…
xray, photomultiplier and laser tubes are still SOTA. PM tubes in particular have a huge number of glass feed through for the intermediate plate voltages.
The idea that you could buy any food that doesn’t fit that definition is silly, all foods have additives that’s why you can buy them and they last for more than 60 seconds on a shelf, all foods are processed because we…
It’s basically a wildcard, “ultra processed food” is a classification of nothing and everything. There’s nothing inherently bad about processing food, lots of food is terrible for you but that’s unrelated entirely.
There's actually a known prototype MacBook Pro from 2006 with a cellphone radio, and the release MacBook Pros from the time all have a weird looking area near the battery and RAM where the SIM slot was supposed to be,…
I had a thinkpad at one point that had a slot, but because it wasn't optioned for it you had to patch the BIOS or it wouldn't boot with anything in the slot, it seemed so hostile as to be worthless.
I somehow managed to get it working in 2016 with a lot of hackery, I'd still have it as a usable device if the weird little pouch cells it had didn't die, repacking those batteries seemed like enough of a fire hazard I…
The cause is just that the panel is mounted rotated on the device. It's supposed to be used in a tablet where the top is the short end and the side is the long end, opposite to a laptop.
The GDP devices are amazing except for the keyboard, which is some fever dream layout I've never been able to understand. https://img.website.xin/contents/sitefiles3601/18006016/imag...
I miss my Sony Vaio P series which fitted in a similar sort of niche, the cellphone radio made it just by far the best laptop I've ever used. Modern laptops don't seem to have provision for a LTE/5G radio which always…
They’re used for proofs sometimes, if you expect your security company to do a specific route they need to go to each token on it and touch them, you see iButtons glued to walls outside commercial buildings for that…
Proof of work doesn’t work here same as it doesn’t work for email. The effort to mint a valid PoW is always going to put the legitimate user at a disadvantage, whatever the implementation is. Someone with an incentive…
The authors profile is also just ridiculous, hundreds of commits a day and their entire profile is also just AI generated lists of AI generated projects each one filled with pompous sounding AI documentation with…
The whole website is AI slop, from the text down to the design. If it's an actual product who knows, sort of hard to care when the website came from a Claude prompt.
3D printed spring, magnet, hall effect sensor by the looks of it.
That video is very annoying and doesn't in any way replace just having a screenshot of it running.
Yeah I’ve had one, still do, it never gets used because it’s a project car. Compared with one button press and coming back to a print in a few hours, it’s a constant nightmare of debugging, print issues, and manually…
I’ve been running mine offline for years, I don’t know why other people haven’t been. They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself, but they’re obviously not completely trustworthy.…
Seems a little pointless, your keys can't be stolen but they can be instantly used by malware to persist across anything you have access to. The keys don't have any value in their own right, the access they provide does.
More or less, no desktop OS other than Qubes and MacOS (to a very limited extent) can handle the user being even vaguely compromised, much less a user with privilege. Keys to the kingdom are already in the user domain,…
Intentionally interfering with 911 would probably be a poor decision.
The ones you hear about are caught quickly, I’m more worried about the non obvious ones. So far none of these have been as simple as changing a true to a false and bypassing all auth for all products or something, and…
The language matters, but your original guess was actually correct, you can do tricks with sha256 where you only end up calculating a fraction of the total double hash in order to get a pass or fail. Modern bitcoin…