Exactly. It’s as if we have enough noise pollution to go around, we have to artificially add to it.
Exactly. It’s as if we have enough noise pollution to go around, we have to artificially add to it.
He can’t drive anymore because, if you remember how he’s been complaining about his arm being numb, well... he loses it.
That argument might work pre-2012. If people now are easily influenced with whatever they barely see on the internet, having an article of WSJ, regardless if it’s an op-ed, is already 10x more credible than what they get on Twitter or Facebook.
Regardless if batteries are more pollutant (which is not), is that by going to the electric transportation infrastructure, we are moving away from the fossil fuel infrastructure. Sure, we may be inefficient now with electric, but the faster we adopt electric, the more we improve the tech and efficiency.
That bothered me for a while about that scene, but then it got me thinking. What if that timeline they were on already had Steve Rogers in the past all along? I’m guessing coming back to the time just after the cancellation of Agent Carter.
Also to add, I’m pretty sure Nebula was at Tony Stark’s funeral.
New Asgard had to be on Earth, unless alien Fortnite in alien Xbox exists. Plus, it was probably easier for them to move in considering majority of the population is gone.
Wasteland on C64. My first CRPG. After that, went back to Ultima series, then Bards Tale, then Pools of Radiance...
This can only mean one thing: we need to watch it again!
Pretty sure the belly was a product of a lot of drinking considering the amount of empty barrels outside the house.
It was a type of sleeve in which only his polarized glasses could detect if he turns his head. (Not really, but that would be pretty cool)
When Iron Man came out, I was totally psyched about it after being betrayed by the horrible X-Men Last Stand. The feel was different: the acting, the humor, and the fuck-yeah! moments. It totally set up the feel for the rest of the MCU movies.
What Boeing did with 737 Max was unethical. To put it plainly, they had an old design of an airplane and to reduce cost of modernization to meet new standards, they cut corners. I don’t think safety was their ultimate objective; it was more like “what’s the requirement so I can fulfill it at bare minimum” It was…
I get your being pedantic with the definition, but I get what he’s trying to say in context of the discussion. We’re not 1.0 AI.
Actually, the DMV handbook indicates that you should also ensure that your vehicle is regularly and properly maintained. But we don’t, because it’s inconvenient.
“If the car is steering itself, but I have to keep my hands on the wheel and monitor its steering constantly, then what the hell is the point of autopilot? I’m still driving, I’m just wrestling a computer for decisionmaking control”
“The reality is that Elon can’t get there on vision alone. He needs sensing in the out-of-visible spectrum.”
The way I will be convinced of Lidar is for Waymo to test their vehicles in LA traffic.
Yup. In addition, what Tesla is doing is not just “seeing” the obstacle’s volume. It’s also recognizing what object it sees and it’s context. Also, if you have seen the path prediction demo, it actually predicts the path of the road ahead, even around corners it could not see. That’s what the new 144 TOPs@<100W system…
Forget about snow or rain. Question is, can lidar even detect a stop light or road signs?