rjp-is-vincent-van-gotothebox-old
rjp is Vincent Van GoToTheBox
rjp-is-vincent-van-gotothebox-old

I believe it was just a standalone documentary, but it may have been from a series.

There is a very good documentary available for streaming on Netflix. It was produced prior to the recent discovery of the wreckage site, and as such is a little out of date, but it explains the problems with the pitot tubes and what (at the time) was suspected to have happened.

@tomsomething: Yes. If it were removed, looking through it would give a cyan tint.

The "special glass" is the IR filter. When viewed at an angle, you're seeing reflected red and IR (not so much seeing this) light. If you were to remove it and look through it, it would take on a cyan tint, as well.

@Dickeydoo: Why did you buy just a key and not an OEM package? Your fault, IMO.

@AithePanda: It's the same technology. Modern digital image sensors are very sensitive in the IR spectrum. For consumer cameras that are trying to take color-accurate photos, this is bad. They put a high-pass filter in front of the sensor to cut out most IR light. You can buy a point and shoot and remove the IR filter

@ratdude1: I stopped reading about a paragraph in. The reason your rate is half of what it was 10 years ago is because 10 years ago was the height of the unsustainable tech bubble with inflated costs. The reason your rates haven't gone up so much is because of an increased interest across the board. Lots of students

By your own link, they are estimated to be paying about $30 for 16 GB of flash. Considering the quantities they're purchasing, I would imagine it to be lower than that by a bit, but that's about on par with what I have seen and would expect for quantities in the tens of thousands (I'd expect a bit more of a price

@Monty: I can very much tell you that 16, 32, or 64 GB of flash memory is not the driving cost factor in these tablets.

@parkur: Verizon already controls cable, internet and cell phones, except they don't, and neither would AT&T.

The wireframe 22B is always my favorite.

@Ret: I would guess Welsh.

3:36 going through the spruces looks a lot like Moosilauke, which the AT goes over. I was just up there last weekend in 30 mph wind and freezing fog.

@Barion: I live in NH, and I'm planning to take some time off, go up to Katahdin one day, and just start heading south until I get tired of it or run out of supplies. In the mean time, I'm working on my lists.

What if you want one device 10 feet to the left and one device 10 feet to the right? Now you need a 10 foot cable and a 20 foot cable? Daisy Chaining is inherently less versatile and I have no idea why someone would actually want it over a star topology.