I get that it looks good but how does it perform? Can it run Crysis2?
I get that it looks good but how does it perform? Can it run Crysis2?
I understand what you are saying but of all the things that a pilot needs, in emergency or not, air is the number one. They could have put it as a foot pedal (like old parking breaks) or put it along the interior wall of the cock pit. Wedging it in next to the seat just sounds stupid.
My question... why is the on switch/pin for the backup oxygen system not part of the console? Squeezing it into a slot next to a seat (those cockpits aren't exactly roomy) just seems stupid. Considering that probably nothing else is over there except the ejection handle I don't see why they couldn't move it.
I think the judge may be a fan of the show The League, and had just watched the episode with Taco's 'MY Face' board.
Oh like 'myface' in the League lol
It even goes beyond that, because normally you could claim that it is the action of a rogue element, but how can there be a rogue element when no one is labeled as 'part' of the non rogue piece.
Yeah but by choosing to remain anonymous, without a clear communication channel that represents them or a clear mission statement that they stick to they forgo the right to 'the benefit of the doubt' because literally anyone can hijack their message/cause. It is the same as the occupy wall street movement. At first it…
But... but... he has a Guy Fawkes mask and an 'anyonymous' SN! Doesn't that make everything he says ethically right and simultaneously ironic?!?!?!
Again, not much needed their in the way of training, especially since a failure rate of 10% or higher before reaching the enemy would have been more then acceptable.
holy crap, that would be the best chain email spoof ever, breaking handsets as it goes lol
A chinook isn't a fair comparison to a drone, one is for strike / surveillance and the other is for transport. A drone compared to a super cobra or combat mod huey would be more like it
Those guys wouldn't have been cheap except for the fact that A) they were flying turbo props which weren't too complicated (especially since they were flying dumbed down flying bomb versions at the end of the war) and B) they didn't have to learn to land which is one of the more time consuming things to train a pilot…
30 million is cheap compared to a 130 million fighter bomber with a priceless (from a moral stand point) pilot who has millions in training.
I type quick and use spell check to pick the right word without really paying attention. Sue me lol
I have a problem with the tone and tenor of this article. It is widely excepted nuclear doctrine that the initial faze in a first strike is to lob a solitary missile over the enemy to detonate a few war heads in strategic areas to A) reduce retaliatory effectiveness through nuclear destruction and B) cripple as wide…
Think of it this way, the heat output would be constant unlike in a conventional reactor where the heat output would grow exponentially without regulation. This means that you have a much lower maximum heat threshold that you have to deal with in the event that you needed to sequester the reactor.
I watched a video on the wave reactors and the easiest way to think about them is as a big nuclear battery.
Actually, he isn't. I watched a video on the wave reactors and the easiest way to think about them is as a big nuclear battery.
Not really, I was just letting you know that Owen may not have intended to approve the comment. Also, your name is hilarious
Replying to a comment is an auto approve.