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Videos (677) | Sift Talk (43) | Blogs (37) | Comments (1000) |
Videos (677) | Sift Talk (43) | Blogs (37) | Comments (1000) |
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Steve Jobs Foretold the Downfall of Apple!
Apple still makes some good products, but their competition has had plenty of time to catch up. I mean look at the Microsoft Surface commercial that came out the day before last year's Macworld. It's everything that a modern iMac should be, but the basic design of the iMac hasn't changed in 5+ years.
Oh, and about Apple still having some decent products, iTunes isn't one of them.
Now every update to iTunes makes me cringe,
Elon Musk's 'Dota 2' Experiment is Disrupting Esports
Dunno if I'd call that cheating. I noticed in the showmatch it seemed to adjust its creep block without any vision of Dendi's, but I think they said since that the bot doesn't know what it doesn't have vision of. I mean, I agree it has a massive advantage due to a sort of almost latency free interface with the game while us humans have to do all sorts of shit before we can even begin to make a decision, but then nothing about this competition is equal. You might just as well say it is cheating because it was able to play more Dota 2 in two weeks than any human could in their lifetime...
It's not an apples to apples competition. The bot is cheating because it has perfect knowledge; it can look bounding spheres and exact positions, maybe even knows the enemy cooldowns, etc. Basically it's using an aimbot that can always react faster than a human.
What they need to do is require the bot use vision, either only give it access to the frame buffer, or better yet require it to use a camera pointed at the screen. (some day I'd require it to use a mouse and keyboard)
Elon Musk's 'Dota 2' Experiment is Disrupting Esports
It's not an apples to apples competition. The bot is cheating because it has perfect knowledge; it can look bounding spheres and exact positions, maybe even knows the enemy cooldowns, etc. Basically it's using an aimbot that can always react faster than a human.
What they need to do is require the bot use vision, either only give it access to the frame buffer, or better yet require it to use a camera pointed at the screen. (some day I'd require it to use a mouse and keyboard)
Adam Ruins Everything - Real Reason Hospitals Are So Costly
Here's another one - make it illegal for a Health Insurance company to own hospitals (some own many many hospitals).
Prices aren't going to go down until they have lower priced competition - i.e. single-payer "public option". Maybe in another 3.5 years it might be possible, but not anytime soon.
eric3579 (Member Profile)
They're only allowed 90 seconds for the auditions. I think that time frame increases the further along you 'make' it in the competition.
Do they actually sing abbreviated versions of songs on this show or is it somehow edited to get these small clips of the performance?
Also will he be on again and when would that be? I'd like to actually watch the performance if these small clips is all that is available on the internet.
Straight is the new gay - Steve Hughes
I live in NZ. There's very much a "she'll be right" attitude to H&S here. And in some ways, it's great. It's easier to set up sports clubs, if you want to go in the wilderness, you're pretty much on your own, etc.
But the flip side is the fact that we have a terrible rate of injuries and actual deaths in industry, especially in agriculture and forestry.
And quite honestly, I think this "H&S gone mad" attitude is actually promoted by companies who don't want to pay to keep their employees safe. And that's not hyperbole, there is literally an ongoing investigation into a company that skimped on safety resulting in the deaths of 29 miners.
I agree it can be taken too far, and maybe the UK really is insane, but in my experience, it's one of those things that people whine about when they don't understand the reasons behind it.
PC, we'll agree to disagree.
Smoking: again smoke if you want to, but just not around me. Why should I have to put up with smoke when I'm having a meal? More importantly, why should the staff who have to work there, have to put up with a toxic environment?
As for the competition argument, it doesn't really hold water. A few pubs in Ireland preempted the smoking ban, and they went out of business, because there's almost always one person in a group that smokes. Having it as a law makes a level playing field.
I've been in three countries now when smoking was banned in pubs. Every time, the hospitality industry said it would be the death of them. 10 years later, no one gives a damn. People still go to pubs and a lot less people smoke. It worked.
My inline comments in italics below \/.
Why The US Military Made GPS Free-To-Use
Interesting and good, but it missed an opportunity to talk about another reason that Clinton removed the scrambling that reduced accuracy to ~100m in 2000:
It was fairly easily circumvented.
Your GPS device isn't sending anything TO the satellites -- just receiving FROM them. So, the scrambling had to be done on a system-wide scale; it couldn't skew your location 37m to the west and your friend a block away 62m northeast. So, every device in a particular area (that can see the same satellites) would be skewed by essentially the same distance and direction.
That means that all you needed to circumvent the scrambling was a GPS device relatively nearby at a known latitude and longitude. Then you took the GPS reported coordinates of that device and compared them to the known coordinates, and badda-bing you've got the skew figured out.
I remember that system being used to overcome the scrambling in the late 90's for robotics / AI competitions where things like early versions of drones or other robots had to autonomously navigate a maze or move towards some particular target coordinates.
Basically, if nerdy robotics enthusiasts could circumvent the scrambling, surely a motivated enemy military or terrorist group could too. So, there wasn't much point in continuing it. Ending the scrambling was a good thing for Clinton to do, but I'm sure that impracticality played just as much if not more of a part in his decision as benevolence towards citizens of the Earth / potential economic rewards for American companies did...
Tabs v(ersu)s Spaces from Silicon Valley S3E6
That scene cracks me up every time.
@MilkmanDan nah, those are awesome. My favourites are the insane 99 bottles competitions:
#include <stdio.h>
main(){_=100;while(--_)printf("%i bottle%s of beer in the wall,\n%i bottle%"
"s of beer.\nTake one down, pass it round,\n%s%s\n\n",_,_-1?"s":"",_,_-1?"s"
:"",_-1?(char[]){(_-1)/10?(_-1)/10+48:(_-1)%10+48,(_-1)/10?(_-1)%10+48:2+30,
(_-1)/10?32:0,0}:"",_-1?"bottles of beer in the wall":"No more beers");}
Anyway, what good is any of this unless you can figure out mean jerk time...just sayin
The Man Behind the Most Grueling Footrace on Earth
I saw this last year on Netflix, it's very good. It's a brutal competition, it hurts just watching the documentary.
newtboy (Member Profile)
Your video, China Skyladder Competition, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
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At 84, the World’s Oldest Female Sharpshooter Doesn't Miss
10m with a rifle seems too easy. Even with a crappy air rifle (BB gun, really, so not even actually rifled and probably much lower velocity), I can put every shot in a one inch circle from that far away. They are shooting pretty small targets though, and you can make a competition out of mm differences so I guess it works.
I've never watched the shooting part of the olympics, but pistols seems cooler.
I wonder if there are groups who do this sort of thing around me. I like shooting, but since I live in the city, I don't really want to own a real gun. An airgun might be an interesting alternative.
At 84, the World’s Oldest Female Sharpshooter Doesn't Miss
Yeah. Also one thing awesome about this is the atheletes often dress in whatever is comfortable for them, and will wear glasses that sometimes have sighting lenses. So couple that with the super-customized guns and you get great photos of shooters looking like the pirate captains of some future space ships - http://images.indianexpress.com/2016/07/prakash-nanjappa-759.jpg - Here is the current world champ with his amazing looking pistol- http://www.trbimg.com/img-57ab598f/turbine/la-sp-sn-shooting-oly-2016-rio-20160810/600 - 10 meter air rifle competition is similar, but they wear some protective gear - http://accurateshooter.net/pix/ginwin1601.jpg
Okay, but pointing a gun at your face is still not something you do even if you are sure it's not loaded. I am really just making light, though. Probably you don't read the gauge while the air tank is attached to the gun.
The movie Passengers rearranged by Nerdwriter (spoilers)
Yeah, I think the ending is still, idk... like, the selfless sacrifice comes across too much as a sort of "look, he woke her up because he was like, really in lurv with her all along" kinda move, which just shallows the whole thing EYE EM OH.
also I just want Pratt's character to suffer for his choice.
also leave Jennifer alone, she's mine.
or at least wake me up too. What Chris? Afraid of a lil competition?
Cyclist Uses Aerodynamics Over Leg Strength
It's not a competition, they have no numbers. It's a training ride. you would never use a fixed gear bike in a road race. But they are great training tools to get a very even pedal cadence.
Not sure what competition this is, but that technique is certainly against the rules in Tour De France, as well as many other cycling competitions.
Cyclist Uses Aerodynamics Over Leg Strength
Not sure what competition this is, but that technique is certainly against the rules in Tour De France, as well as many other cycling competitions.
hmmm; would that be legal and effective in a race like the Tour De France?