Riced out is an adjective denigrating a badly customized sports car, "usually with oversized or ill-matched exterior appointments". ... Examples of "rice burner" used literally, meaning one who burns rice or rice fields, as in stubble burning, date to 1917. In 1935 it appeared in a US newspaper caption with a racial connotation, disparaging East Asian people. ... In some cases, users of the term assert that it is not offensive or racist, or else treat the term as a humorous, mild insult rather than a racial slur.
I was going to respond that those are both wrappers to ssh, but thought I'd verify first, and TIL "Paramiko is a pure-Python[1] (3.6+) implementation of the SSHv2 protocol [2]"
Yeah, and doesn't want to pay people to maintain that feature. It makes sense for them. Still, that feature and their maps were awesome. I hope they don't stop updating their maps that show the boundaries because IMHo they're better than anything else, though I think they may not meet FAA requirements. All the FAA maps I've seen look so primitive and have seemingly contradictory information.
I kinda hate this. What I'd really like is the option to turn it on or off. I live near an airport airspace boundary and it's nice to have that wall keeping me from straying into airspace I'm not authorized for, but at the same time, sometimes the drone freezes and won't come back, so it'd be great to be able to get full control back temporarily.
Their reasoning is to give responsibility back to the pilot. A responsible pilot might want that guard rail. Having it as an option only makes sense.
This is exactly the kind of thing a loser would say. Loser CEOs are always whining about people leaving their platform. Winners keep their head down and build something their users actually enjoy using.
They are not directly internet connected. Drones are very frequently flown in areas with no data service, because those places are often quite scenic. The drone communicates with the remote and goggles using WiFi bands, but afaik some of the protocols are proprietary. The remote is the only device that connects to the internet, and it uses WiFi.
AFAIK all consumer DJI drones work this way, but I could be wrong. Some high end drones like the Agras farming drones could be directly internet connected.
The point in question here is how public the event would be, not how effective. So in that regard, yes, Trump's and even Epstien's trials were quite public, regardless of how effective they were at rendering justice.
You're attacking a straw man, which is how effective the judicial system was. As for that attack, you're absolutely right. Those three instances had laughable results and dumbfounding failures of justice.
As a cloud systems engineer who has experienced data failures in multiple consumer cloud services, I do not trust cloud services as a backup just because they are cloud services.
As somebody who grew up with perfect tap water and then moved to Detroit, I used to think this.
Edit: I guess I should say I still think this for a lot of places. When I go to my parents house the first thing I do is drink a big cup of their amazing tap water.
I guess the same folks who branded "sexual harassment training"