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  2. I'm gonna hold my thoughts about what I heard. Partly because of spoilers. Partly because my brain is having just as much trouble processing it as certain characters probably should (depending on whether it's actually going to be acknowledged in-universe what is insanely obvious to the audience, or if it's going to be handwaved as a completely coincidental thing that has no relation to in-universe events).
  3. That has got to be the most memorable season ending yet. Looking forward to next season, wherever it may end up.
  4. That's a weird change, did they have to re-engineer the leg packs to stay on better?
  5. Today
  6. Received my copy. Just on a cursory glance it looks like instead of a single slot on the leg (near the foot) for the attachments, there are now two slots above and below the center line. Probably why the armor parts will no longer fit.
  7. Anything other than just a repaint. There’s still a couple destroids, the scout regult and the power armors from the show, not to mention the movie versions as well
  8. But at the consumer level, taking into price+quality+availability----it looked surprisingly dead. I kept wondering why I couldn't really find much, until I realized, it looks like almost everyone jumped ship already to pure M.2. And I don't doubt the PS5 is part of the reason. A zillion M2's were sold because of it (I bought one!). And so competition/development of that segment of the consumer market was and still is high. My now-dead 2.5in SATA was in the coolest spot in the PC and all alone in a suspended cage.
  9. I wish HM-R would give us ANYYYYTHIINNNGG SDF-Macross again....😟
  10. 2.5" drives aren't really dead. At least not the form factor, in the data center. It's just that we've hit the 6-Gbit/s bandwidth limit on SATA and with M.2 far outpacing that bandwidth (cuz it uses PCIE), there's no headroom left in the SATA protocol. Even SAS (SATA's datacenter cousin) can't keep up topping out at 22.5-Gbit/s. The 2.5" format are still used in NASs/SANs cuz as that format is easy to work with in large scale (the drive is a 2.5" drive but runs on the M.2 protocol/PCI-E bus, see Kioxia's CD-series datacenter drives). Once nice thing about old SATA 2.5" SSDs is that they don't suffer from heat issues like NVMe drives cuz the bandwidth limit is lower, generating less SSD controller heat vs NVMe.
  11. WRT the previous and how it applies to drone aircraft. Remotely operated or semiautonomous aircraft like the MQ-9 typically operate at altitudes and in areas where there are few to no collision risks. These more forgiving conditions allow drones to adopt default behaviors like autonomously circling over an area or returning to base in the event that the control signal is lost. They're typically low enough that a possibility of collision with another aircraft is minimal outside of intentional attempts to collide, but high enough that terrain, buildings, and foliage pose no risk either. Being able to maneuver in three dimensions to avoid any possible collisions also makes matters far more forgiving. Using dedicated base stations and military satellite networks helps the network congestion and latency issues too.
  12. Good job on that @Photogirl! Looks fire! As @Big s says @pengbuzz at least the crew is alive and, judging by the guy on the left, enjoying the close call!
  13. It's possible in theory, but you absolutely wouldn't want to attempt it in practice. Even in perfect conditions, the additional latency involved in offboard control would be a major safety risk. You typically have between 0.7 and 1.5 seconds to react in the event of a potential collision. Cellular data networks are not the fastest, and you'll typically see a ping of around 50-500ms depending on how good your signal is, how contested the local network is, and what network you're on. The car would not be able to send sensor data to the cloud and get a reaction back fast enough to avoid collisions in a lot of cases. Toss in issues with network disruptions due to weather, distance to the nearest tower, noise, jamming, etc. and it becomes a nightmare scenario. Local control is much faster and more reliable, with an end-to-end communication and reaction time faster than what humans are capable of in most circumstances. That's one of the problems with limited onboard computer hardware... even with advanced radar, optical cameras, and LIDAR, autonomous vehicles can end up stuck when having to deal with flesh and blood drivers that dont' follow the rules of the road as rigidly as the machines do. It's particularly bad when there are unclear markings on the road, or road markings just aren't visible due to weather or wear and tear, since they depend on those to orient themselves. There's a prank that's sometimes pulled by drawing a do-not-cross double line in salt or spray paint around an autonomous vehicle, trapping it with its own refusal to disobey traffic laws... and this is some of the most advanced autonomous AI we have. We're a long, LONG way from something like Sharon Apple. Teslas are even more prone to such issues since they lack LIDAR arrays and try to get by purely with ultrasonics, radar, and optical cameras. They often completely miss signage, fail to identify obstacles, and run into stationary objects they failed to see when visibility's poor or their camera lenses get dirty.
  14. @PhotogirlLooks great!
  15. Nice job! For the Strike Cannon, try here: https://www.ebay.com/itm/224701195212?mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=711-53200-19255-0&campid=5338722076&customid=&toolid=10050
  16. At least the crew survived
  17. I’ve seen Waymo’s cars getting stuck just going around in parking lots, so they tend to get confused even with the onboard hardware. I’d imagine that having everything off the vehicle might even be worse, but I’m nowhere near being an expert in these. But it was a hilarious video on YouTube with the guy trying to get to an airport and the car kept driving him in circles through a random lot while he was in the back trying to call tech support for help.
  18. Just finished my Jetfire conversion. Started out as a yellowed Jetfire. used toyhax labels, waterslides, and some stickers of my own design to fill in what was missing. Wish there were 3D files for the strike canon.
  19. does anyone have files for the Strike parts of the booster? (the canon)
  20. From my failed Shuttle model: originally, these two figures were the same pose and such. I cut apart one of them, repositioned the arms, legs and head, then built an MMU pack for it.
  21. I do, I was just looking to see what was available as a replacement for the dead one, which was a 2.5" SATA. My only M.2 slot is already being used by my OS drive. I didn't want to buy a new mobo solely to be able to have 2 direct-mount M.2's simultaneously. And 2.5" seems pretty dead, if you want a name brand.
  22. Could such a computer be land-based and have telemetry sent to it/ commands sent back via cell/ radio? I know the issues with that (loss of signal/ signal degradation, hacking vulnerability, data corruption, signal crossover, signal jamming. blocking, spots on your dishes in the dishwasher, etc.); I just thought that might be another approach...
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