

There is a tipping culture, there’s just no tipping for the bare minimum service of taking an order and bringing the ordered food to the table.


There is a tipping culture, there’s just no tipping for the bare minimum service of taking an order and bringing the ordered food to the table.
professor in a cyber security class
Maybe she was funded by the NSA?


Sure, if you consider every tiny microcontroller to be a computer, it’s probably more than 100.


Don’t worry, they’ll find something on YouTube that’ll confirm their bias. They won’t watch a 1.5h video though.


That’s the problem with the negotiations. USA negotiates with Iran while the conflict is between Israel and Iran, USA is just a useful idiot for Israel.


will sink like a stone
Microsoft already tested underwater data centres ages ago.


They’re all susceptible to the same attack. It’s “just” jamming.


All it takes is a low-power burst to overwhelm the GPS network because it runs on such low powered, sensitive signals.
The signals aren’t very sensitive, quite the opposite, they’re chosen because they can be very easily detected even at low powers. If you want to jam GNSS from the ground you don’t need a lot of power because the satellites are so far away and their signal is so low. If you want to jam it from a satellite you need quite a lot of power, especially if you consider that the suspected satellite constellation has twice the apogee of the GPS constellation. Also you don’t need a burst of power, you need sustained power to really jam GNSS, the suspected satellites only did bursts because they’re suspected of just testing their system.


Apparently he has a “deus vult” tattoo.


It’s not too different from what I can tell. They seem to just exploit the fact that beamforming information (BFI) is transmitted back to the access point. BFI is ultimately not so different from CSI. What they exploit is that they can just listen in and intercept the BSI without access to the AP.


Sensing is officially going to be part of 6G, might not be deployed everywhere, but it’s going to be in the standard.


They’re not all sending at the same time. Worst case they just block themselves and each other with their backoff logic and then none of them sends anything at all.


Nice to see the UI hasn’t changed much in the last 10 years.


Project Gutenberg has around 50 times more than Standard Ebooks (~75 000 vs. ~1 400) and in a lot of different languages, Standard Ebooks only cares about English. Putting only 1/5 of the amount of work into it would be a drop in the bucket.
Edit: In general I agree, it’s hard to figure out how to contribute to Project Gutenberg.


Wikipedia has a detailed breakdown of the voting results for jury and televoting. Finland gave 12 points to Israel in the televoting, the jury gave no points to Israel.
I disagree. It’s easy if you want to use a community as your personal blog without any interaction from others. It’s hard to get an actual community running.


Han refers to the Han river, which flows through Seoul. It barely borders North Korea, but it’s north of the river, so the name Bukhan works in a way. Joseon is a reference to a historic name of Korea from the Joseon dynasty. It refers to the entirety of the Korean peninsula, not the best name to refer to just North Korea. Similar with the name Korea which comes from Goryeo, the name of unified Korea before the Joseon era.


Almost 12 days down in the last 90 days.


It’s way worse than that
Let me rephrase that: It’s even better than that
Yeah, it’s for exceptional service, most service isn’t exceptional.