I don’t think you’ll ever see an INS going months without needing a correction. Imperfect gravitational compensation applies directly to the specific force measurements and those errors are then accumulated twice.
I don’t think you’ll ever see an INS going months without needing a correction. Imperfect gravitational compensation applies directly to the specific force measurements and those errors are then accumulated twice.
Even a perfect sensor will accumulate errors in the nav solution over time because there’s no such thing as a perfect gravity model. No free-running INS will ever replace GPS long term. This shit is so frustrating to see in the press.
Actually the bottomLuks generates most of the power.
We already knew how to farm before John Deere; should we have focused away from agricultural industrialization in order to preserve jobs?
I am insanely interested but the apple ecosystem sucks. I use a MacBook for work because it’s that or Windows, but good lord do i hate the closed source walled garden. Linux at home ftw.
I have the PS5 VR and it’s totally fine to use for long periods of time.
They went with a battery pack to keep the headset light, so ergonomically what you’re saying you want.
Never quit when a company intentionally makes your life shitty?
I’m on like day 2 of Garuda. Ran into corrupted packages during the install which wasn’t fun, but it’s up and running now. I’m hoping that maintaining it isn’t as much of a time suck as it sounds like pure Arch is.
Read your contract. They get first chance to buy it back, only if they decline can you sell it elsewhere.
I just made this exact switch a few months ago, so, yeah, it happens.
Honey smacks other coupon purveyors for substandard grifting.
I started by playing while standing and moving smoothly in game and I couldn’t last long before getting sick. Now I play seated with snapping in game movement and I can play for hours without issue. Depending on how you define it, I don’t think it’s surprising to see so many people say VR makes them sick.
Right? It’s awesome.
RTK requires a separate receiver which is located nearby and has a comms link (unlikely for a fast moving attack aircraft) and only reduces the accuracy from meters to cm. Not sure there’s much need there.
Yeah I mean who doesn’t read up to page 630 of the manual and then interpret the lack of automatic 2-sided scanning to mean it won’t even do manual 2-sided scanning, despite nearly every scanner on the market supporting that.
https://download.brother.com/welcome/doc100914/cv_hll3290cdw_use_oug_b.pdf
It is. There’s a feature table in the manual and it’s one of the glaring differences between the two. I never even thought to look into the details that closely, and even if it doesn’t have the hardware to flip the paper around and scan the back, it should be a simple software feature to add.
For some big stacks I’ve just got the pair doc_front.pdf and doc_back.pdf and I was thinking about making my own stupid script to interleave the two docs into one.
I spent a bunch of money a few years ago to get the laser(ish) print+scan+telegram+allthethings Brother MFC-L3750CDW. Imagine my rage when I found that this thing has a document feeder but no way to scan both sides of a document stack. Not even with a manual step in their software such as flipping the stack over and running the back sides through. Infuriating and I didn’t realize it until about a year later when I suddenly had to scan a ton of stuff. If someone knows of a good workaround, I’d love to hear it.
I saw several concerts there and it was awesome. You want to live a life without anything fun in it?