JetScootr
JetScootr t1_je5s2kb wrote
Reply to comment by Slimsaiyan in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
Really? Cuz we couldn't see shows on time travel until 2147.
JetScootr t1_je5r6tg wrote
Reply to comment by KNHaw in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
That's what Wild Weasels (piloted F4 phantoms) did in Viet Nam - they'd go in first to get the enemy to turn on their radars, which they would then shoot up with radar-seeking missiles.
JetScootr t1_je5nwbe wrote
Reply to comment by ZLUCremisi in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
My dad had a souvenir propeller - about 3 feet long. The drones he worked on had a 9 foot wingspan and were purpose built.
JetScootr t1_je4jyyu wrote
Reply to TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
My father was in the Navy during WWII, and was stationed on an aircraft carrier. His job was maintaining the drones that the gunners used for target practice.
When the kamakazi attacks started, the Navy ordered the drone pilots to fly the drones into the ship if the gunners didn't shoot them down. The aircraft carrier's command crew was not happy about these orders, but it was from Washington, so they had to.
I've had a hard time the last ten years or so even convincing people that radio controlled drones were even a thing that far back. Thanks for finding this link.
JetScootr t1_je0qo57 wrote
Reply to TIL that Chick-fil-A started in 1961, after founder S. Truett Cathy found a fryer that cooked chicken as quickly as a fast food burger. Chick-fil-A licensed the sandwich to 50 restaurants, including Waffle House, until 1967, when the first standalone Chick-fil-A was opened. by jdward01
This reads like an advertisement. Chick fil a is famous for its religiousity and forcing employees to obey their reigious rules as much as law allows.
JetScootr t1_jdqhyav wrote
Reply to A Disappointed Peer Appearance by ADHDinos_
I almost passed this by at first, thinking, oh just don't get it.
Then I noticed there was some very faint writing on it. Cmon really? White letters on pale blue?
JetScootr t1_jc2mwci wrote
Reply to comment by eliminatingaww in Giraffe stag in sand by Alex_Sisyphus
Still not a Giraffe.
JetScootr t1_ja2yclp wrote
Reply to comment by GalFisk in ELI5: in MS-DOS there were not-interchangeable audio cards and we had to manually select it to get sound, otherwise there was none at all. When and why this stopped being a problem? by 3RBlank
Odd, when you consider other (ie, mainframe) OSes had no problems with printers. Printer tech was already marching forward even before the PC revolution started because of the massive use mainframes made of printers.
JetScootr t1_ja2xpob wrote
Reply to comment by speculatrix in ELI5: in MS-DOS there were not-interchangeable audio cards and we had to manually select it to get sound, otherwise there was none at all. When and why this stopped being a problem? by 3RBlank
>DOS was barely an operating system, in the true sense
Everything you said is correct, but perhaps you're underplaying just how limited the hardware was in the DOS days. DOS, and its forerunner CPM, were squeezed down into (sometimes) as little as 4 or 8 thousand bytes of RAM, plus about that much ROM (not kilobytes. ANd what's a megabyte?).
PS before I start a flame war: CPM was the conceptual forerunner of QDos, which was the actual code forerunner of MS Dos.
PPS before my PS starts a flame war:QDOS
JetScootr t1_ja2x7gr wrote
JetScootr t1_j9xp54j wrote
Reply to comment by RotisserieChicken007 in [OC] Cost of Taking Down Unidentified Object Over Lake Huron by Metalytiq
Gotta train the troops anyway. Even pilots need practice. I consider it a plus, because in all likelihood, that's what they would have been doing anyway, just without a real target to really shoot at.
JetScootr t1_j7g8ddq wrote
There isn't any way in hell that a bug like this got through even the simplest testing. Microsoft's just "trying the waters" for full-on-pay-every-day for computing access, despite not providing anything useful that isn't available elsewhere without "subscriptions".
JetScootr t1_j6hzx66 wrote
I think his hand would be on his knee if it let it hang there. I suspect someone's played a little with the aspect ratio to make the gun look longer
JetScootr t1_iu9po55 wrote
I'm wondering where Lady Libertyis.
JetScootr t1_itzdefc wrote
I've got a great idea! Attach the wheels to the bottom of the train.
JetScootr t1_je657gw wrote
Reply to comment by buntopolis in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
Dad said they weren't allowed to talk about it then, but when he was telling me, it was because my brother had a RC model plane that Dad said was about the same level of tech - in a model plane a little bigger than a notebook. Dad didn't figure that the stuff he worked on was secret anymore :)