Transportation and Technology Thread

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#1612

A thread to discuss transportation and technology!

Your AirPods are destined to die

When your AirPod batteries finally go, even Apple’s employees are confused about your options. Across three separate support encounters in the store and online, they told me I had to buy a replacement pair for $138, nearly the price of a whole new set. But I remembered Apple had once told me it would service depleted batteries for $49. I reported that in The Post, along with my recommendation to buy AirPods. So what gives?

After weeks of back-and-forth with Apple — and refusing to take no for an answer at the store — I finally got answers:
– If your AirPods are less than a year old and the battery is not performing up to the promised five hours of listening time, an Apple store will replace them at no cost.
– Apple recently began selling its AppleCare+ warranty for $29, which covers the battery, too. But this extended warranty lasts only two years — which wouldn’t have been long enough to save my AirPods.
– If your AirPods are out of warranty, Apple will replace them for $49 per stick — so in reality, $98 total. A replacement for the charging case, which doesn’t wear out as quickly, is also $49. The key phrase to say is “battery service.” (Apple is providing additional training to customer service representatives on that point, but if you still have trouble, show them this link — or this column.)

Viewing 100 replies - 1 through 100 (of 184 total)
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  • #1636

    Did Iran Bump into a Secret Mach 10 U.S. Spy Plane?

    Or was it a UFO…

  • #2339

    Cross between a T-34 Tank & MiG-21 Jet. Putting oil well fires out like a boss

  • #2761

    Think You’re a Good Driver? Ford Performance Racing School Will Be the Judge of That

  • #2797

    Some people who have worked in large organisations will chuckle at this. Ofcom – the telecoms regulator in the UK – many years ago put in place a regulation that consumers switching phone providers could retain the same number.

    The entire exchange between massive telecoms providers like Vodaphone and BT has been running on a free Yahoo group. Yahoo have decided to shut the groups function down and they are now in a panic.

  • #4025

    THE 737 BUILT SOUTHWEST, AND THE 737 MAX COULD BE ITS UNDOING
    .
    SouthwestSouthwest Airlines began 2019 by celebrating its 46th straight year of profitability and a record-setting $2.5 billion in profits. Its low fares and wide network, with 753 aircraft serving 101 cities in North America, made Southwest the airline of choice for one out of every five domestic air travelers today. But now, Southwest’s bet on the Boeing 737 Max as its airplane of the future might end its streak — and threaten its bottom line for years to come.
    .
    Since 1987, Southwest has almost exclusively flown a single airplane model: the Boeing 737. That allowed the airline to save on training and maintenance (they would only need one type of simulator, and one common spare parts inventory), and to make skilled personnel such as pilots and mechanics essentially interchangeable, in case someone calls in sick or misses a connection. Southwest was scheduled to replace the oldest jets in their fleet with brand-new 737 Max airplanes, allowing them to burn 5 percent less fuel per flight while carrying up to 20 percent more passengers. And according to one analyst, almost 8 percent of Southwest’s flight capacity was supposed to be flown on its 34 new 737 Maxes.
    .
    Legacy carriers, such as American Airlines, have estimated that each grounded Max costs them just under $50,000 a day in lost revenue and efficiencies. For Southwest, it’s closer to $67,000 per day, per airplane. As the largest operator of Maxes in the world currently, Southwest has estimated that the groundings reduced their income by $225 million for the first six months of the year. For the remainder of the year, the number might balloon: American Airlines, for example, now believes the groundings will cost it $400 million for the full year, $50 million higher than it estimated back in April. And it only has 24 Maxes flying 5 percent of its total flight capacity.
    .
    Boeing, for its part, has earmarked over $5 billion before taxes to reimburse airlines for Max-related costs — enough to weather a yearlong grounding, assuming that most operators incur something like American Airlines’ estimate of $50,000 per day.
    .
    –SNIP–
    .
    But after two crashes and seven months of unrelenting bad press, the flying public has taken notice. In June, 70 percent of those surveyed by UBS said that they would “hesitate” to book a flight on a 737 Max; another survey run by Atmosphere Research Group found that 40 percent of likely flyers would be willing to take more expensive or “less convenient” flights to avoid the Max, and 20 percent would wait six months before flying one. To address their fears, airlines have announced that they will let passengers switch flights without penalties or change fees — although this is, for the time being, purely a hypothetical.
    .
    To help manage public perception, a rebrand is likely: even though Boeing’s CEO has publicly denied that the company will rename the Max, a Ryanair 737 Max was photographed sporting a new designation, the “737-8200,” in July.
    .
    –SNIP–
    .
    In the meantime, those low-cost airlines that hedged their future on the 737 Max will have to tighten their proverbial belts — preemptively canceling flights, halting service to and from certain airports, and raising fares. And, perhaps, revisiting their commitment to the 737 — and a central pillar of the low-cost carrier formula.

    https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/23/20927213/boeing-737-max-southwest-planes-crash-budget-airlines-grounded-cost-maintenance

  • #4033

    17 Malware-Infested Apps You Need to Delete ASAP

  • #4054

    THE 737 BUILT SOUTHWEST, AND THE 737 MAX COULD BE ITS UNDOING

    AOG’s are the boogie man that keep you up at night in the aviation industry. They’re no joke. $50,000 is probably a low estimate. Boeing is going to be hurting from this. There will likely be huge lawsuits over this to recoup costs.
    .
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_on_ground

  • #4085

    Assuming there isn’t one already, I assume there will be an App that tells you what kind of aircraft you’re being booked onto and, when the Max goes back into service, I can see a lot of people using it and refusing to fly on them. Even if Boeing really has fixed the issue, the plane wont be popular.

  • #4093

    Assuming there isn’t one already, I assume there will be an App that tells you what kind of aircraft you’re being booked onto and, when the Max goes back into service, I can see a lot of people using it and refusing to fly on them. Even if Boeing really has fixed the issue, the plane wont be popular.

    The cases are probably being built but it’s unlikely the full legal process has started on these as the dust hasn’t settled yet. Boeing might push back on other suppliers and subcontractors if they were involved. It would likely kick off a little early if someone like Southwest is close to folding.
    .
    A lot of airlines will let you know what kind of plane you’ll be on when you’re booking. Though there may not be as big of a distinction between the 737 Max and other 737’s.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 1 month ago by RonnieM.
  • #4099

    It turns out that some travel Apps will provide this information;
    .
    https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/best-flight-tracking-apps/

  • #4283

  • #4497

    @sean_robinson
    https://www.automobilemag.com/news/2020-ford-mustang-shelby-gt500-first-drive-review-photos-specs/

  • #4880

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/oct/28/us-air-force-space-plane-nasa-kennedy-space-center

    A US Air Force space plane has returned to Earthafter a record-breaking secret mission.

    The X-37B landed at Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida early on Sunday. The Air Force is keeping quiet about what the plane did in orbit for the 780 days after it was launched on a SpaceX rocket in 2017.

    I’d want to know if it bought any talking apes back.

  • #4883

    I’d want to know if it bought any talking apes back.

    They brought back apes, but they’re bound by non-disclosure agreements.

  • #5001

    Optimus Prime Joins the U.S. Military: How ‘Transformer’ Robots Are Coming to a War Near You

    The Pentagon’s pet research agency wants robots that can reconfigure themselves on the fly as mission requirements change.

  • #5433

    @todd and @RonnieM and whoever else I was talking to about cars…
    .
    So I was going to keep people guessing until the end (mostly co-workers), but I’ve been blabbing, so might as well tell.
    I’ve ordered a 2020 Mustang from the factory.
    Hopefully find out soon the estimated time of arrival (late Dec.?)
    (My uncle is retired, but used to be the lease manager at a dealership, so they still let him do deals for family, and he will save me a bunch).
    .
    Didn’t get crazy, 2.3 Liter Ecoboost Turbo.
    Passed on the performance package and also the handling package. Kept the 3.15 axle.
    This has enough.
    Plus the thing about credit is you still have to pay it back, so I stayed realistic.
    .
    Can go to the Ford.com site or the Ford.ca site to “Build & Price”

    Ecoboost Premium Fastback
    – Paint – Rapid Red
    – Equipment package – 201A (upgrade over 201)
    Black Accent Package (wheels, roof, etc.)
    .
    Then my uncle phoned me the next day to say we didn’t do anything about the seats.
    Apparently the stock ones can be stiff/uncomfortable, so I’ve upgraded those.
    .
    He’s saving me a bunch. In Canadian money, after 7% provincial tax (PST) and 5% federal (GST) I’ll still be under $50,000.
    If I went without him, and like a month ago when I would’ve picked the higher packages then over $60,000
    .
    Yay me!
    .

    .

    .

  • #5456

    Congratulations!!!
    .
    I can’t wait to see pictures of you with the car.

  • #5459

    I can’t wait to see pictures of you with the car.

    Be warned Sean, he’s hoping for pics like this:

  • #5463

    Looks great, Sean. Hope you enjoy it.
    .
    In other automotive news, I got to drive a Tesla Model 3 owned by a coworker in Kentucky last week and it was incredible. He did a couple of acceleration runs while he was driving that made my stomach drop. I wasn’t brave enough to go that hard while driving his car. The main weird thing that stood out to me while driving it was that it starts to regeneratively brake when you lift off the gas. So that would take some getting used to or I assume it could be dialed in a bit. Other than that it functions pretty much the same if not better than a regular ICE car. The instant acceleration was incredible.

  • #5569

    Very Nice, Sean. I hope you get much enjoyment out of it. I would have thought you would have gone for Blue with Green highlights.

  • #5578

    Sean’s is blue. It only looks red because it’s moving away from you so rapidly.

  • #5583

    I see a grey dress.

  • #5586

    I see five lights.

  • #5589

    I see a little silhouetto of a man.

  • #5594

    I see dead people.

  • #7067

    Tesla’s new electric pickup truck looks inspired by several sci-fi movies.

     

  • #7076

    Or Robot Wars.

  • #7103

    Meant to put something up about this at the beginning of the week.  This is pretty exciting.  It looks to be a Tesla level (price, performance and design) entry into the battery EV for Ford to compete squarely with Tesla’s upcoming Model Y.  I’m definitely interested.

     

     

     

  • #7108

    Tesla’s new electric pickup truck looks inspired by several sci-fi movies.

    It looks cool but I call bullshit on this being the final design.  I can’t imagine some of the harder angles meeting modern safety requirements namely pedestrian safety and occupant safety.

  • #7147

    Tesla’s new electric pickup truck looks inspired by several sci-fi movies.

     

     

    That looks like something a 12 year old kid would design. Like, pretty cool.

  • #7152

    It looks cool but I call bullshit on this being the final design.

    They still have work to do anyway, in the demo they had a guy hit the side doors with a sledgehammer to show how tough it was, no dents at all. Then he threw metal balls at the ‘indestructible’ windows and they smashed.

     

  • #7159

    Video of the debacle at the link:

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/nov/22/elon-musk-net-worth-tesla-cybertruck

    Pretty funny stuff.

  • #7174

    Musk is controversial but you gotta have respect for him in some sense. He’s like the kid that thinks up crazy stuff and then just does it.

  • #7183

    A lot of airlines will let you know what kind of plane you’ll be on when you’re booking. Though there may not be as big of a distinction between the 737 Max and other 737’s.

    I always check to see the type of airplane I’m booking. KLM and Lufthansa always show it when you’re making a booking.

  • #7202

    You guys use iPad much?

  • #7240

    I use an iPod daily primarily to play games and read e-books; or I’ll bring it with me on vacation to stay up-to-date with Facebook and The Carrier.  Otherwise, I use a laptop PC at home and a desktop PC at work for most things.

  • #7254

    I use a Samsung Galaxy tablet daily. I don’t know how it compares with an iPad but it was around half the price.

  • #7262

    I use a Samsung Galaxy tablet daily. I don’t know how it compares with an iPad but it was around half the price.

    Ditto. Mine has lasted more than five years and is still working great.

  • #7269

    Not so sexy but VW are going big on EV with the new ID.3 range this coming.  Variety of trims and a choice of 3 battery sizes range 150 miles to 300+.

     

    They have put out contracts for something like $40 billion worth of batteries and have a dedicated EV factory so it is way mare than just intent.  Economies of scale mean much cheaper cars, starting at around $25,000.  Their expectation is 3million a year by 2025. Price parity with ICE expected not long after.

    Cutely, the engine is in back but apparently an extra one up front will become available for extra oomph.

     

     

  • #7275

    They still have work to do anyway, in the demo they had a guy hit the side doors with a sledgehammer to show how tough it was, no dents at all. Then he threw metal balls at the ‘indestructible’ windows and they smashed.

    To be fair to Musk, a normal window would have faired much worse against a large steel bearing.  It’s possible that the window would still stop a 9mm (in a similar manner to the way it stopped the ball) and it’s also possible the ball had more energy than a fired 9mm round due to its size but I doubt it.  His mistake was assuming the reliability test against an uncut piece was the same as a guy throwing it at an installed window.  He claims to have tested the stunt beforehand but I have my doubts.

     

    Also, everyone seems to forget (or never knew) Elon Musk was never the engineering brains behind Tesla.  He was the guy brought in for financing after he sold PayPal who then pushed just about everyone else out.

     

    I think Rivian will do much better with their truck.  They seemed to have thought through things people actually want in a large, electric truck.

     

  • #7277

    Variety of trims and a choice of 3 battery sizes range 150 miles to 300+.

    Economies of scale mean much cheaper cars, starting at around $25,000.

    The 150 mile range will likely have much more to do with the price than economies of scale.  The battery is by far the most expensive item an any BEV and the 250-300+ mile range in Tesla’s and other competitor is what is driving their price point.

  • #7279

    VW estimate battery cost amounts to half the manufacturing cost of a vehicle so you are right, since an ICE does not amount to that proportion of an ICE car.  The new ID.3, 77kwh battery option, is expected to give around a 340 mile range, similar to the Tesla and at around $100 per kwh should only, in theory, add  about $4000 to the basic price although I expect profit margins on top of that. We’ll see soon enough.

  • #7311

    Uber loses licence to operate in London

    Ride-hailing service to continue while it appeals against Transport for London decision

     

    Uber has lost its licence to operate private hire vehicles in London after authorities found that more than 14,000 trips were taken with uninsured drivers.

    Transport for London announced the decision not to renew the ride-hailing firm’s licence at the end of a two-month probationary extension granted in September. Uber was told then it needed to address issues with checks on drivers, insurance and safety, but has failed to satisfy the capital’s transport authorities.

  • #7316

    Cue wailing and gnashing of teeth from people who prefer uber and think it’s a stitch-up by the black cab companies.

    Of course you prefer uber, they’re cheaper. It’s quite remarkable how much you can keep costs down when you don’t have to do pesky admin such as, I don’t know, making sure your drivers actually have valid driving licenses and are not registered sex offenders :unsure:  

     

     

  • #7335

     

     

    (Huh. I thought that would embed.)

     

  • #7351

    As mentioned in the tech support thread, if you want to embed Twitter or Youtube links then click on the ‘text’ tab at the top right of the reply box. You lose all the fancy formatting but the embeds work. The visual editor is adding some HTML to the links which is hampering it.

  • #7353

    Also, everyone seems to forget (or never knew) Elon Musk was never the engineering brains behind Tesla.  He was the guy brought in for financing after he sold PayPal who then pushed just about everyone else out.

    If he wants to sell himself as the visionary behind Tesla then he doesn’t get to weasel out when they fuck up.

  • #7354

    If he wants to sell himself as the visionary behind Tesla then he doesn’t get to weasel out when they fuck up.

    That’s fair.

  • #7647

    Happy Thanksgiving, y’all!

     

     

  • #10322

    This Is What War Looks Like in 2029

  • #10498

    This Military Knife Packs a .22- Caliber Pistol in The Handle

  • #12254

    Microsoft, NSA confirm killer Windows 10 bug, but a patch is available

  • #12277

    Guess this wasn’t the best week to buy Microsoft stock.  :unsure:

  • #12283

    Guess this wasn’t the best week to buy Microsoft stock.  :unsure:

    Or to stop sniffing glue.

  • #12478

    Real-Life Iron Man? China is Developing Military Exoskeletons.

  • #13489

    After much delay, we are getting the NBN (National Broadband Network) connected at our house tomorrow. We already have a cable internet connection and it’s by all accounts pretty fast; certainly fast enough but all households are obligated to have a NBN service as the old networks is going to be switched off nationwide.

    This (government) project has been a bit of a mess, and many people have been screwed around in the process – which is why we held off as long as we could. Hopefully that the cable connection is already there, and the modem/router was delivered today, means it’s a quick, easy job.

    (This ISP contract also means we will sever our ties with Foxtel, the Murdoch controlled cable-TV service we’ve enjoyed to varying degrees for ~15 years.)

  • #14104

    Did China’s Army Just Copy Russia’s BMPT-72 Terminator Tank?

  • #14334

    So I finally received my car on January 26th (2 weeks ago).
    I ordered straight from the dealership (late Oct.), no test-drive, just an online visual.
    (My retired uncle is still allowed to do “family deals” and saved me a bunch.)

    A 2020 Ford Mustang Ecoboost – Fastback
    2.3 L Ecoboost Turbo Engine
    10 speed Automatic transmission
    Color is Rapid Red (exterior) and Showstopper Red (Interior)
    Black Accent Package
    (Note: passed on Performance package and Handling package)

    Wow. I love my new ride.
    I finally get the things I’ve heard about (heated steering wheel, heated seats, rear camera), plus a lot more.
    Ponies on the ground when I enter and exit the vehicle (at night) have me giddy (projected from Side-view mirrors).

    While waiting, I was getting worried that it may be too dark (visually). The Rapid Red is a dark(er) red and I got the Black Accent package (roof, wheels, spoiler).
    I absolutely love the color, and the black roof is just perfect!
    Meaner looking front end also a big plus.

    Also was worried while waiting that the leather seats with “Showstopper Red” maybe too bright for interior (I’m used to all-black).
    Another thing I absolutely love. Good choice by me as it feels a lot more positive than before.
    When I turn the car off the drivers seat goes all the way back making it so much easier on 50-somethings getting in and out (they must be listening to their demographic).

    Over 300 horsepower from a 4 cylinder? I figured they’d be fudging the numbers but oh boy does this have some power.
    Good pep off the line, effortlessly uphills, good all over. Very happy.
    (Disclaimer: this is great for me, racers and pros may be more discerning.)

    And what is a 10-speed Automatic transmission? Are 4 of them reverse gears?
    This is an absolute joy. Smooth as heck, computer spot-on on what it needs to be.
    (Disclaimer: I don’t have a comparison, but willing to bet a lot of people (including pros) like this).

    I passed on the performance and handling packages and glad I did.
    Don’t need them for where I am in my life, and it saved me a bunch.
    This is a very nice, powerful car. Really happy! Yay me!

    I’ll switch to my phone and post some pics. (hopefully)

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #14335

    And I’m getting Jpeg error messages (file too big).
    I’ll try again tomorrow.

  • #14908

  • #15858

    Air New Zealand, who thank to their rather remote location run some of the longest haul flights in the world, are looking at this setup for economy class flights:

    It actually makes economic sense because each row currently holds 3 people, this does too but vertically, allowing them a full bed to lie on. There’s maybe a slight issue with you needing to be reasonably young and fit to reach the higher bunks but that could be mitigated by booking those with less mobility into the lower tier.

    I do a lot of long haul flights and I’d definitely prefer this setup.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #15861

    Yeah, that looks pretty comfortable. The setup reminds me a little of the small cabins in cross-channel ferries that we used to use for night crossings on holidays when I was a kid.

    As someone who is pretty tall, legroom on planes is often a real problem for me, so as long as the beds were long enough this would be a step up from current seating arrangements.

  • #15870

    Yeah, I most commonly fly to the UK, Spain and the Netherlands and I’d be 100% fine with that setup for those flights.

  • #15871

    As someone who is pretty tall, legroom on planes is often a real problem for me, so as long as the beds were long enough this would be a step up from current seating arrangements.

    I suspect that may still be a bit of an issue for the taller folks. There’s a certain level of real estate available and I’m pretty short and take up most of the current 3 seat allocation which they’d be working with. However I’d say lying down with your legs a little bent would look to be preferable to the current setup.

    I can’t see this happening though for short haul flights of under 4 hours though, it doesn’t seem worth the effort.

     

  • #15873

    This is a bit of niche technology I miss: the old mechanical departure boards at railway stations and airports. When I was a kid, the numbers flapping around always looked cool and it felt futuristic even though it was all mechanical, and the actual high-tech TV screens that replaced them just feel mundane in comparison.

    It turns out I’m not the only person who misses them. Here’s a whole article about their history:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-51470599

  • #15893

    Newsflash: David prefers old things! :whistle:

    6 users thanked author for this post.
  • #15965

    Read a little more about the patent Air New Zealand have put out and the length of the economy beds (they are calling it Skynest) is 2 metres, so roughly 6′ 5″. That’s not bad really.

  • #15969

    I’d just about fit!

  • #16012

    Founder of 8chan Faces Arrest on ‘Cyberlibel’ Charge

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #16027

    Founder of 8chan Faces Arrest on ‘Cyberlibel’ Charge

    What a fucking tragedy.

    4 users thanked author for this post.
  • #17115

    DirecTV’s days are numbered

  • #18065

    Facebook run their moderation bu using an algorithm and then humans double check the posts being flagged. By all accounts they have sent the humans home (or rather been forced to by authorities) due to Covid-19 risks and people are getting very annoyed as all of today innocuous posts are being flagged and taken down for ‘violating community standards’.

    I suspect it may have happened to @tim earlier.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18111

    So what you’re basically saying is that the machines are now running things?

  • #18166

    Facebook run their moderation bu using an algorithm and then humans double check the posts being flagged. By all accounts they have sent the humans home (or rather been forced to by authorities) due to Covid-19 risks and people are getting very annoyed as all of today innocuous posts are being flagged and taken down for ‘violating community standards’.

    I suspect it may have happened to @tim earlier.

    If there ever was a job that screamed “work from home”, I would think that would be it.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18178

    I would have thought so too but I know a decent chunk of it is done in the Philippines (The Guardian did a podcast about FB moderators last year and interviewed them). Manila is now in lockdown and if you base your support somewhere so you can pay low wages then that comes with them not necessarily having laptops and broadband at home.

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18182

    If there ever was a job that screamed “work from home”, I would think that would be it.

    I imagine there are concerns over the privacy/security of the information they’re dealing with that might make it harder for people to do it remotely en masse.

    Apparently Facebook have said that those recent glitches Gar mentioned are unrelated, though.

    Facebook says spam filter mayhem not related to coronavirus

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #25510

    Here’s the DARPA project it says could pull the Navy a decade forward in unmanned technology

    David B. Larter
    3 days ago

    A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency artists' rendering of a ship designed to operate completely without human intervention.
    A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency artists’ rendering of a ship designed to operate completely without human intervention. (Source: DARPA)

    WASHINGTON – A project inside the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has the potential to pull the Navy’s unmanned surface vessel aspirations forward a decade, a senior DARPA official said Wednesday at the annual C4ISR Conference.

    DARPA’s effort to develop a ship designed from the keel up to operate without humans, known as “NOMARS” for “no mariners,” is a separate effort from the Navy’s quest to develop a family of large and medium unmanned surface vessels. But the benefits of that program, if successful, could be a giant leap forward for the concept the Navy is developing, said Mike Leahy, who heads the Tactical Technology Office at DARPA.

    The Navy “will only be able to go so far with where the technology has matured,” Leahy said.

    “What we’re able to do is link to that group [developing USVs for the Navy], get information about what missions they are trying to accomplish, the sizing and other constraints, feed that into NOMARS project so that we can take the same class of ship – looking at the same ideas in terms of a hull form – and when we are successful we can dump that right into their tranche and pull that forward a decade from where it might have been on a traditional path.”

    The Sea Hunter, developed by DARPA, has launched the Navy down a path of developing a fleet of unmanned ships that could upend the way the Navy has fought since the Cold War. (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency)

    The Navy and DARPA have been closely linked in efforts to develop unmanned platforms but DARPA’s NOMARs will remain an independent effort, Leahy said.

    The Navy has “been involved in the source selection, they’re involved in the testing we’re doing, so that we can make sure that information is flowing,” Leahy said. “But we will reserve the right to take risks that may not be in the direction they want to go. Because sometimes learning what does not work is even more valuable than what does.

    “The physics is going to tell you what you need to know, and you can’t cheat it.”

    Maintaining separate lines of effort is important because DARPA has the freedom to fail whereas failure in an acquisition program has higher stakes, he said.

    “NOMARS is going and looking at ‘Can I take people completely off ships,’” he explained. “That’s a risky endeavor. We don’t know if we’re going to be able to do that. We don’t know if that’s going to pan out. You would not want to link an acquisition program directly to that.”

    Another Option

    The Navy is currently pursuing both a large and medium unmanned surface vessel that can perform missions for the surface Navy as a means of increasing aggregate naval power without wrapping a $2 billion hull around 96 missile tubes, as Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Michael Gilday has said publicly, referencing the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer.

    A recent study by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments said the Navy was barking up the wrong tree in its pursuit of an optionally manned large unmanned surface vessel, saying it should instead pursue an “optionally unmanned” corvette that could perform the normal range of peacetime surface Navy missions and perhaps be used as an unmanned external missile magazine in the event of conflict.

    The drive toward integrating unmanned surface vehicles in the force, which Navy officials suggested could make up a significant portion of the future fleet’s force structure, was kicked off in earnest with the rollout of the 2020 budget.

    Senior Navy officials have talked about the LUSV as a kind of external missile magazine that can autonomously navigate to and integrate with the force, then shoot its missiles and return for reload, keeping the big manned surface combatants in the fight and fielded longer.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #26920

    https://www.whichcar.com.au/news/the-cannonball-run-record-has-been-obliterated

    All the pearl-clutching about the morality of performing a Cannonball Run during a global pandemic seems to have been for nothing, with Ed Bolian reporting America’s most illegal record has been beaten seven times in the span of just five weeks.

    According to Bolian, who has been in contact with the new record holders, the time to beat is now less than 26 hours. A sub 28-hour Cannonball Run was once unthinkable.

    While he has not disclosed the exact time, that frame of reference means the drivers would have had to achieve an average speed of at least 173km/h for the 4507km journey.

    To set a Cannonball Run record, you must traditionally start at the Red Ball Garage in Manhattan, then traverse the entire United States of America as fast as possible to finish at the Portofini Inn in Redondo Beach, California.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by Andrew.
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  • #33525

    Pretty annoying that Microsoft have not made their Covid flourishing Teams software compatible with the very popular, widely used Apple Airpods.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #33538

    Have you considered that Apple have not made their Airpods compatible with the very popular, widely used Microsoft Teams software?

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  • #33540

    How absurd.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #33561

    I’m with David M. Apple is notorious for incompatibility. go get yourself ANY other bluetooth earbuds and I bet you don’t have that problem any more.

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  • #33576

    I’m with David M. Apple is notorious for incompatibility

    It’s an inherent part of their business model. You buy into their ecosystem and don’t get tempted outside.

  • #33613

    In this case Teams is newer than Airpods.

    The Apple headphones work with windows PCs, Teams on Mac and apparently the Teams iOS app – just not Teams on Windows. It’s particularly dumb of Microsoft.

    Apple is notorious for incompatibility. go get yourself ANY other bluetooth earbuds

    See above; the compatibility issue sits with Microsoft in this case. Why should I get yet another pair of headphones when I already have these amazing ones (they were a life changer; I listen to music more as a result of them, and podcasts too).

    You buy into their ecosystem and don’t get tempted outside

    That’s not so much of a thing anymore – but it makes sense from a business POV but also from a consumer POV; you can be much more sure that the peripheral will immediately, instantly work with the device. The last peripheral I bought for my PC was a printer – it’s crap. Doesn’t connect when it should. Similarly in-car media software (outside of Apple CarPlay) is often a hassle. I used to have to pull over and turn my car off and on again to get it to recognise the Bluetooth connection.

     

  • #33616

    It’s an advantage yes, a limited hardware portfolio means testing compatibility is easier.

    Bluetooth though I find is a generally unreliable technology, it’s quite frustrating. I did multiple testing on mobile printers for my business on iOS and Android and the amount of time they can’t see or connect properly or disconnect randomly is a pain in the arse. At home I’ve ditched both a Bluetooth printer and speaker to go back to wired because it works every time.

  • #33621

    My understanding of the specifics is limited (because it’s boring) but I believe the Airpods use a different kind of connection to standard Bluetooth; it’s a stronger connection over a longer distance and much more responsive to gestures.

    Yeah – they really need to do something about Bluetooth – I leave my old phone loaded up with music in the car, Bluetooth on – every now and then it’s not connected when I start the vehicle (it does work most of the time so if you’re not a Spotify/streamer, I recommend it as a good use for phones no longer in use).

  • #34174

    https://www.lifehacker.com.au/2020/07/yes-you-should-quit-using-google-chrome/

    I still recommend Opera (browser), people.

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  • #34291

    here is the first comment on the above article. i found the comment informative. read this before give the article’s author a click

    What an absolute hack job. “Chrome is so bloated and slow” who the hell is saying this? Can the author provide a single source? Chrome still crushes Firefox and Safari in benchmarks, did the author see a meme about “Haha, Chrome uses so much RAM” and decide to write an article just about that?
    Also, if the author had a shred of knowledge on the topic, they would know that Chrome uses more RAM due to process level isolation of every tab, and every extension inside every tab, which is what makes it so secure. But apparently other browsers are more secure, even though the Chrome team has the best bug bounty program and consistently improves the standard for security on the web.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 4 months ago by Rocket.
  • #35965

    I am feeling pretty damn smug at the moment.

    I’m not sure if I mentioned this, possibly in the video games thread, but when I played Kingdom Hearts Birth By Sleep Fragmentary Passage (not even it’s full name) recently, I noticed I was getting the edges of HUD cut off. I’d sort of suspected the same while playing South Park Fractured But Whole a month or two earlier as well. I looked into it and it turned out that it’s to do with the overscan – where the edges of the screen picture are cut off – something old analogue CRTs used to do, LCD TVs carried on doing despite not needing to and that games consoles especially have stopped making allowances for. Most modern TVs have a display option that lets you adjust for it, but my TV, an 8 year old Bush HDTV doesn’t.

    Which is a shame, because it’s brilliant otherwise and has everything I want – full 1080p HD, no annoying smart features, three HDMI ports, two SCART ports, S-video, composite, component, USB and is a perfect size for the space I have (26″). I can’t find a new TV of the same size with even the same amount of HDMI ports, let alone S-video and SCART. If it can’t disable the overscan, fine, I can live with it, but it seemed a bit odd that it couldn’t.

    So I looked into it and could barely find any mention of the TV online, let alone settings for it. Went through a scan of the manual and nothing in there I didn’t know just from using it. I contacted Bush’s product support, which is really just Argos customer support and to say they were less than helpful is an understatement. They knew even less than I did, clearly didn’t recognise the model number (they asked for that, then the serial number, then for a photo of the sticker on the back of the TV that has those and the guy still seemed clueless and had to go ask a colleague) and their help extended to “press the aspect ratio button on the remote to change between the presets”.

    That was a dead-end and I pretty much gave up, until tonight, when in a moment of boredom tonight I tried Googling again. I happened upon an eBay listing which claimed to be the main PCB guts of my TV model, but it had a different number stamped on the board. It’s actually made by a company called Haier and just rebadged by Bush. Following that thread, I was able to find a manual for another rebadged version of the same TV, from Poland, seemingly. This manual has a section the Bush one doesn’t, including a button code you can enter to access the factory settings menus. The manual seems almost embarrassed by these menus and says, in broken English, “you only need worry with system update option”. I can just imagine an Eastern European accent saying “do not concern yourselves with these menus, they are not for you!”

    But I did concern myself with them because one of them lets you fine tune the picture display for each input port, meaning I’ve been able to manually disable the overscan for the port my PS4’s connected to! Huzzah. In your face, useless Argos people who said it couldn’t be done. Admittedly it’s taken a bit more fiddling than I’d hoped to get it sorted (not just a case of whacking every setting down to 0) but it seems correct now and means my TV is genuinely perfect.

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  • #36004

    It’s actually made by a company called Haier and just rebadged by Bush.

    I was curious as I have never seen anything by Bush for decades (we do get Haier TVs here though). Seems everything they do is rebadged and they don’t actually make anything any more.

    There are always odd curios like that. I remember having a Matsui stereo when I was teenager and finding out they were actually Currys own brand, the name was just because people thought Japanese electronics were good.

    Matsui – Introduced in the 1980s by Currys as a brand for its consumer electronics goods assembled in the United Kingdom, using imported components. Products in the Matsui line involved neither Japanese parts nor Japanese labour, but were branded with a Japanese sounding name, a rising sun symbol and the motto “Japanese Technology Made Perfect”‘

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  • #37201

    https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/08/29/us/flying-car-successful-test-in-japan-trnd/index.html

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #41580

    https://www.vyzrtech.com/

  • #41614

    https://www.vyzrtech.com/

    A part of me thinks “awesome!”, but I am fighting back ‘rolling my eyes’.

    If you have the money, I suppose.
    But a bunker?! now that’s money well spent…

  • #41619

    https://www.vyzrtech.com/

    My birthday is April 30th, I will accept early presents.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #41652

  • #41657

    Rebellion, the company behind many games and 2000ad have built one of those near Oxford. I saw some footage of some Arthurian looking show being made there but they are also supposedly doing a Mega City One programme.

  • #43647

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  • #43709

    Tesla Model S no longer ‘recommended’ by Consumer Reports due to reliability concerns

  • #43717

    Tesla Model S no longer ‘recommended’ by Consumer Reports due to reliability concerns

    Correct, what you need is the new Mercedes.

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #43761

    I’ve never really understood Tesla, it seems to be hugely valued for designing high performance electric cars nobody much can afford. It has a market value of $185bn but only makes relatively modest profits from trading environmental credits with companies making gas guzzling trucks and SUVs, not from selling cars.

    I may be missing something but it seems to me that the regular car manufacturers are just going to also make more electric cars, like the Nissan Leaf for example or Volvo are going all electric, and people are going to buy those instead. That’ll also mean they have no credits to trade as the other car companies will fall within guidelines, or at least some will and have them to trade too.

    It’s screaming out to me as the Betamax of electric car production, first to market, higher quality, everyone’ll buy the cheaper one with better marketing.

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